How to add startup applications in lubuntu?











up vote
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Is there a 'Startup applications' app for lubuntu?
Or how do I add apps to startup? I attempted a tutorial to add entries to ~/.config/autostart, but it did not work. Isn't there an easy way? Any ideas please?










share|improve this question




























    up vote
    27
    down vote

    favorite
    13












    Is there a 'Startup applications' app for lubuntu?
    Or how do I add apps to startup? I attempted a tutorial to add entries to ~/.config/autostart, but it did not work. Isn't there an easy way? Any ideas please?










    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      27
      down vote

      favorite
      13









      up vote
      27
      down vote

      favorite
      13






      13





      Is there a 'Startup applications' app for lubuntu?
      Or how do I add apps to startup? I attempted a tutorial to add entries to ~/.config/autostart, but it did not work. Isn't there an easy way? Any ideas please?










      share|improve this question















      Is there a 'Startup applications' app for lubuntu?
      Or how do I add apps to startup? I attempted a tutorial to add entries to ~/.config/autostart, but it did not work. Isn't there an easy way? Any ideas please?







      lubuntu startup-applications






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Dec 28 '16 at 14:29









      Anwar

      55.6k22143252




      55.6k22143252










      asked Jul 3 '12 at 8:40









      melvincv

      3961619




      3961619






















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          24
          down vote













          There is a default application for this on the Lubuntu. Check it out:




          1. Press the Lubuntu icon on the bottom left;

          2. Select "Preferences" > "Default applications for LXSession";

          3. In the opened window, select the option "Autostart";

          4. Now you can enable or disable the autostarted applications, check/uncheck one in the listm or set manually on the field and pressing the "Add" button.






          share|improve this answer




























            up vote
            17
            down vote













            You can install the programm lxsession-edit from the software center. It will give you an interface like the "startup applications" app.



            Or you can add programs by editing the file /etc/xdg/lxsession/LXDE/autostart. (In new Lubuntu is path /etc/xdg/lxsession/Lubuntu/autostart)

            To do this press Alt+F2 and type gksu gedit.



            Or the cleanest way (that didn't work for you) adding .desktop files to /home/username/.config/autostart and make sure they're marked as executables.



            Here is a default syntax for a .desktop file with some of the most important entries.



            [Desktop Entry]
            Type=Application
            Encoding=UTF-8
            Name="NAME OF THE APPLICATION"
            Comment="WHAT DOES THE APP DO?"
            Exec="EXECUTABLE PATH OF APPLICATION"
            Hidden=false
            NoDisplay=false
            Terminal=false


            Example:



            [Desktop Entry]
            Type=Application
            Encoding=UTF-8
            Name=Firefox
            Comment=Firefox Web Browser
            Exec=firefox
            Hidden=false
            NoDisplay=false
            Terminal=false


            For applications that have their binaries in /usr/bin, you don't have to put the full path, just the name of the executable.



            Save as YOUR_APPNAME.desktop in ~/.config/autostart/.



            Log out and back in and it should have worked.






            share|improve this answer























            • Thanks, that is part of lubuntu 12.04. But I need to ADD new applications to the startup list.
              – melvincv
              Jul 3 '12 at 9:13










            • Let's go for the cleanest way again. How do I create and format a .desktop file properly? Easy ways preferred.
              – melvincv
              Jul 3 '12 at 9:27










            • I'm trying for per user startup.
              – melvincv
              Jul 3 '12 at 9:27






            • 1




              alright I'll write a walkthrough for you as soon as I'm home cause my phone won't get the formatting right
              – Daniel W.
              Jul 3 '12 at 10:11










            • oh were there anymore problems? Because my answer was unaccepted
              – Daniel W.
              Jun 5 '14 at 12:58


















            up vote
            1
            down vote













            You should be able to add the .desktop file to the directory you listed: ~/.config/autostart



            Did you log out and back in?



            The easiest way I have found to do this is to:




            1. Open up PCmanFM and go to /usr/share/applications.

            2. Find the application you're looking for and copy it.

            3. Open up ~/.config/autostart in PCmanFM.

            4. Paste in the application you copied.

            5. Logout


            Once you log back in, it should be working. If it's not, it may be a question of the app, not the autostart process. Which app are you trying to autostart? Maybe we can help you better with more details.






            share|improve this answer






























              up vote
              0
              down vote













              This works for Lubuntu based on Ubuntu 18.10:

              Preferences -> LXQt settings -> Session Settings -> Autostart






              share|improve this answer





















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                4 Answers
                4






                active

                oldest

                votes








                4 Answers
                4






                active

                oldest

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                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes








                up vote
                24
                down vote













                There is a default application for this on the Lubuntu. Check it out:




                1. Press the Lubuntu icon on the bottom left;

                2. Select "Preferences" > "Default applications for LXSession";

                3. In the opened window, select the option "Autostart";

                4. Now you can enable or disable the autostarted applications, check/uncheck one in the listm or set manually on the field and pressing the "Add" button.






                share|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  24
                  down vote













                  There is a default application for this on the Lubuntu. Check it out:




                  1. Press the Lubuntu icon on the bottom left;

                  2. Select "Preferences" > "Default applications for LXSession";

                  3. In the opened window, select the option "Autostart";

                  4. Now you can enable or disable the autostarted applications, check/uncheck one in the listm or set manually on the field and pressing the "Add" button.






                  share|improve this answer























                    up vote
                    24
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    24
                    down vote









                    There is a default application for this on the Lubuntu. Check it out:




                    1. Press the Lubuntu icon on the bottom left;

                    2. Select "Preferences" > "Default applications for LXSession";

                    3. In the opened window, select the option "Autostart";

                    4. Now you can enable or disable the autostarted applications, check/uncheck one in the listm or set manually on the field and pressing the "Add" button.






                    share|improve this answer












                    There is a default application for this on the Lubuntu. Check it out:




                    1. Press the Lubuntu icon on the bottom left;

                    2. Select "Preferences" > "Default applications for LXSession";

                    3. In the opened window, select the option "Autostart";

                    4. Now you can enable or disable the autostarted applications, check/uncheck one in the listm or set manually on the field and pressing the "Add" button.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered May 9 '14 at 1:12









                    André Marinho

                    680522




                    680522
























                        up vote
                        17
                        down vote













                        You can install the programm lxsession-edit from the software center. It will give you an interface like the "startup applications" app.



                        Or you can add programs by editing the file /etc/xdg/lxsession/LXDE/autostart. (In new Lubuntu is path /etc/xdg/lxsession/Lubuntu/autostart)

                        To do this press Alt+F2 and type gksu gedit.



                        Or the cleanest way (that didn't work for you) adding .desktop files to /home/username/.config/autostart and make sure they're marked as executables.



                        Here is a default syntax for a .desktop file with some of the most important entries.



                        [Desktop Entry]
                        Type=Application
                        Encoding=UTF-8
                        Name="NAME OF THE APPLICATION"
                        Comment="WHAT DOES THE APP DO?"
                        Exec="EXECUTABLE PATH OF APPLICATION"
                        Hidden=false
                        NoDisplay=false
                        Terminal=false


                        Example:



                        [Desktop Entry]
                        Type=Application
                        Encoding=UTF-8
                        Name=Firefox
                        Comment=Firefox Web Browser
                        Exec=firefox
                        Hidden=false
                        NoDisplay=false
                        Terminal=false


                        For applications that have their binaries in /usr/bin, you don't have to put the full path, just the name of the executable.



                        Save as YOUR_APPNAME.desktop in ~/.config/autostart/.



                        Log out and back in and it should have worked.






                        share|improve this answer























                        • Thanks, that is part of lubuntu 12.04. But I need to ADD new applications to the startup list.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:13










                        • Let's go for the cleanest way again. How do I create and format a .desktop file properly? Easy ways preferred.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:27










                        • I'm trying for per user startup.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:27






                        • 1




                          alright I'll write a walkthrough for you as soon as I'm home cause my phone won't get the formatting right
                          – Daniel W.
                          Jul 3 '12 at 10:11










                        • oh were there anymore problems? Because my answer was unaccepted
                          – Daniel W.
                          Jun 5 '14 at 12:58















                        up vote
                        17
                        down vote













                        You can install the programm lxsession-edit from the software center. It will give you an interface like the "startup applications" app.



                        Or you can add programs by editing the file /etc/xdg/lxsession/LXDE/autostart. (In new Lubuntu is path /etc/xdg/lxsession/Lubuntu/autostart)

                        To do this press Alt+F2 and type gksu gedit.



                        Or the cleanest way (that didn't work for you) adding .desktop files to /home/username/.config/autostart and make sure they're marked as executables.



                        Here is a default syntax for a .desktop file with some of the most important entries.



                        [Desktop Entry]
                        Type=Application
                        Encoding=UTF-8
                        Name="NAME OF THE APPLICATION"
                        Comment="WHAT DOES THE APP DO?"
                        Exec="EXECUTABLE PATH OF APPLICATION"
                        Hidden=false
                        NoDisplay=false
                        Terminal=false


                        Example:



                        [Desktop Entry]
                        Type=Application
                        Encoding=UTF-8
                        Name=Firefox
                        Comment=Firefox Web Browser
                        Exec=firefox
                        Hidden=false
                        NoDisplay=false
                        Terminal=false


                        For applications that have their binaries in /usr/bin, you don't have to put the full path, just the name of the executable.



                        Save as YOUR_APPNAME.desktop in ~/.config/autostart/.



                        Log out and back in and it should have worked.






                        share|improve this answer























                        • Thanks, that is part of lubuntu 12.04. But I need to ADD new applications to the startup list.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:13










                        • Let's go for the cleanest way again. How do I create and format a .desktop file properly? Easy ways preferred.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:27










                        • I'm trying for per user startup.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:27






                        • 1




                          alright I'll write a walkthrough for you as soon as I'm home cause my phone won't get the formatting right
                          – Daniel W.
                          Jul 3 '12 at 10:11










                        • oh were there anymore problems? Because my answer was unaccepted
                          – Daniel W.
                          Jun 5 '14 at 12:58













                        up vote
                        17
                        down vote










                        up vote
                        17
                        down vote









                        You can install the programm lxsession-edit from the software center. It will give you an interface like the "startup applications" app.



                        Or you can add programs by editing the file /etc/xdg/lxsession/LXDE/autostart. (In new Lubuntu is path /etc/xdg/lxsession/Lubuntu/autostart)

                        To do this press Alt+F2 and type gksu gedit.



                        Or the cleanest way (that didn't work for you) adding .desktop files to /home/username/.config/autostart and make sure they're marked as executables.



                        Here is a default syntax for a .desktop file with some of the most important entries.



                        [Desktop Entry]
                        Type=Application
                        Encoding=UTF-8
                        Name="NAME OF THE APPLICATION"
                        Comment="WHAT DOES THE APP DO?"
                        Exec="EXECUTABLE PATH OF APPLICATION"
                        Hidden=false
                        NoDisplay=false
                        Terminal=false


                        Example:



                        [Desktop Entry]
                        Type=Application
                        Encoding=UTF-8
                        Name=Firefox
                        Comment=Firefox Web Browser
                        Exec=firefox
                        Hidden=false
                        NoDisplay=false
                        Terminal=false


                        For applications that have their binaries in /usr/bin, you don't have to put the full path, just the name of the executable.



                        Save as YOUR_APPNAME.desktop in ~/.config/autostart/.



                        Log out and back in and it should have worked.






                        share|improve this answer














                        You can install the programm lxsession-edit from the software center. It will give you an interface like the "startup applications" app.



                        Or you can add programs by editing the file /etc/xdg/lxsession/LXDE/autostart. (In new Lubuntu is path /etc/xdg/lxsession/Lubuntu/autostart)

                        To do this press Alt+F2 and type gksu gedit.



                        Or the cleanest way (that didn't work for you) adding .desktop files to /home/username/.config/autostart and make sure they're marked as executables.



                        Here is a default syntax for a .desktop file with some of the most important entries.



                        [Desktop Entry]
                        Type=Application
                        Encoding=UTF-8
                        Name="NAME OF THE APPLICATION"
                        Comment="WHAT DOES THE APP DO?"
                        Exec="EXECUTABLE PATH OF APPLICATION"
                        Hidden=false
                        NoDisplay=false
                        Terminal=false


                        Example:



                        [Desktop Entry]
                        Type=Application
                        Encoding=UTF-8
                        Name=Firefox
                        Comment=Firefox Web Browser
                        Exec=firefox
                        Hidden=false
                        NoDisplay=false
                        Terminal=false


                        For applications that have their binaries in /usr/bin, you don't have to put the full path, just the name of the executable.



                        Save as YOUR_APPNAME.desktop in ~/.config/autostart/.



                        Log out and back in and it should have worked.







                        share|improve this answer














                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer








                        edited Mar 5 '16 at 16:17









                        Jogi

                        15




                        15










                        answered Jul 3 '12 at 8:54









                        Daniel W.

                        2,99821631




                        2,99821631












                        • Thanks, that is part of lubuntu 12.04. But I need to ADD new applications to the startup list.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:13










                        • Let's go for the cleanest way again. How do I create and format a .desktop file properly? Easy ways preferred.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:27










                        • I'm trying for per user startup.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:27






                        • 1




                          alright I'll write a walkthrough for you as soon as I'm home cause my phone won't get the formatting right
                          – Daniel W.
                          Jul 3 '12 at 10:11










                        • oh were there anymore problems? Because my answer was unaccepted
                          – Daniel W.
                          Jun 5 '14 at 12:58


















                        • Thanks, that is part of lubuntu 12.04. But I need to ADD new applications to the startup list.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:13










                        • Let's go for the cleanest way again. How do I create and format a .desktop file properly? Easy ways preferred.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:27










                        • I'm trying for per user startup.
                          – melvincv
                          Jul 3 '12 at 9:27






                        • 1




                          alright I'll write a walkthrough for you as soon as I'm home cause my phone won't get the formatting right
                          – Daniel W.
                          Jul 3 '12 at 10:11










                        • oh were there anymore problems? Because my answer was unaccepted
                          – Daniel W.
                          Jun 5 '14 at 12:58
















                        Thanks, that is part of lubuntu 12.04. But I need to ADD new applications to the startup list.
                        – melvincv
                        Jul 3 '12 at 9:13




                        Thanks, that is part of lubuntu 12.04. But I need to ADD new applications to the startup list.
                        – melvincv
                        Jul 3 '12 at 9:13












                        Let's go for the cleanest way again. How do I create and format a .desktop file properly? Easy ways preferred.
                        – melvincv
                        Jul 3 '12 at 9:27




                        Let's go for the cleanest way again. How do I create and format a .desktop file properly? Easy ways preferred.
                        – melvincv
                        Jul 3 '12 at 9:27












                        I'm trying for per user startup.
                        – melvincv
                        Jul 3 '12 at 9:27




                        I'm trying for per user startup.
                        – melvincv
                        Jul 3 '12 at 9:27




                        1




                        1




                        alright I'll write a walkthrough for you as soon as I'm home cause my phone won't get the formatting right
                        – Daniel W.
                        Jul 3 '12 at 10:11




                        alright I'll write a walkthrough for you as soon as I'm home cause my phone won't get the formatting right
                        – Daniel W.
                        Jul 3 '12 at 10:11












                        oh were there anymore problems? Because my answer was unaccepted
                        – Daniel W.
                        Jun 5 '14 at 12:58




                        oh were there anymore problems? Because my answer was unaccepted
                        – Daniel W.
                        Jun 5 '14 at 12:58










                        up vote
                        1
                        down vote













                        You should be able to add the .desktop file to the directory you listed: ~/.config/autostart



                        Did you log out and back in?



                        The easiest way I have found to do this is to:




                        1. Open up PCmanFM and go to /usr/share/applications.

                        2. Find the application you're looking for and copy it.

                        3. Open up ~/.config/autostart in PCmanFM.

                        4. Paste in the application you copied.

                        5. Logout


                        Once you log back in, it should be working. If it's not, it may be a question of the app, not the autostart process. Which app are you trying to autostart? Maybe we can help you better with more details.






                        share|improve this answer



























                          up vote
                          1
                          down vote













                          You should be able to add the .desktop file to the directory you listed: ~/.config/autostart



                          Did you log out and back in?



                          The easiest way I have found to do this is to:




                          1. Open up PCmanFM and go to /usr/share/applications.

                          2. Find the application you're looking for and copy it.

                          3. Open up ~/.config/autostart in PCmanFM.

                          4. Paste in the application you copied.

                          5. Logout


                          Once you log back in, it should be working. If it's not, it may be a question of the app, not the autostart process. Which app are you trying to autostart? Maybe we can help you better with more details.






                          share|improve this answer

























                            up vote
                            1
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            1
                            down vote









                            You should be able to add the .desktop file to the directory you listed: ~/.config/autostart



                            Did you log out and back in?



                            The easiest way I have found to do this is to:




                            1. Open up PCmanFM and go to /usr/share/applications.

                            2. Find the application you're looking for and copy it.

                            3. Open up ~/.config/autostart in PCmanFM.

                            4. Paste in the application you copied.

                            5. Logout


                            Once you log back in, it should be working. If it's not, it may be a question of the app, not the autostart process. Which app are you trying to autostart? Maybe we can help you better with more details.






                            share|improve this answer














                            You should be able to add the .desktop file to the directory you listed: ~/.config/autostart



                            Did you log out and back in?



                            The easiest way I have found to do this is to:




                            1. Open up PCmanFM and go to /usr/share/applications.

                            2. Find the application you're looking for and copy it.

                            3. Open up ~/.config/autostart in PCmanFM.

                            4. Paste in the application you copied.

                            5. Logout


                            Once you log back in, it should be working. If it's not, it may be a question of the app, not the autostart process. Which app are you trying to autostart? Maybe we can help you better with more details.







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited Dec 28 '16 at 14:30









                            Anwar

                            55.6k22143252




                            55.6k22143252










                            answered Jul 3 '12 at 10:09









                            algebralives

                            608612




                            608612






















                                up vote
                                0
                                down vote













                                This works for Lubuntu based on Ubuntu 18.10:

                                Preferences -> LXQt settings -> Session Settings -> Autostart






                                share|improve this answer

























                                  up vote
                                  0
                                  down vote













                                  This works for Lubuntu based on Ubuntu 18.10:

                                  Preferences -> LXQt settings -> Session Settings -> Autostart






                                  share|improve this answer























                                    up vote
                                    0
                                    down vote










                                    up vote
                                    0
                                    down vote









                                    This works for Lubuntu based on Ubuntu 18.10:

                                    Preferences -> LXQt settings -> Session Settings -> Autostart






                                    share|improve this answer












                                    This works for Lubuntu based on Ubuntu 18.10:

                                    Preferences -> LXQt settings -> Session Settings -> Autostart







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered Dec 2 at 7:24









                                    karoli

                                    1




                                    1






























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