In Lubuntu, there's no 'Add New Program...' button in Desktop Session Settings. Is there an easy way to add new autostart programs in Lubuntu?
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I followed Exeleration-G's graphical plan for adding VirtualBox in autostart. I expected it to work when I logged out and in again, but the first time it didn't. I rebooted the computer and it started right up. Ever since then, it loads when I log out and log back in again even when I closed V'Box before logging out. I am using Lubuntu 16.04 LTS. |
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For Lubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 / 12.10 / 13.04 / 14.04 / 14.10 / 16.04Open the file manager (by default PCManFM), go to You may have to create the |
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you can manage them after installing lxsession-edit but don't know if that's what you want to achieve. otherwise the other answers are pretty good, the "official" guide is here: http://wiki.lxde.org/en/LXSession#Autostarted_applications_using_lxsession |
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There's a thread about this on the Ubuntu Forums. I'm using Lubuntu 13.04 on a Samsung NC110 netbook, 2GB RAM. A procedure that worked for me was:
Directly putting cli commands in autostart file causes lxsession user preferences to not load, thus I added I had originally wanted to try to
Again, hope everyone can learn from my mistake. Definitely do not put regular cli commands directly into Autostart and expect them to execute normally, neither my desktop background, pcmanfm preferences (specifically the directory would open in icon view rather than my preference which is detailed view), nor my symbolic links loaded each time after bootup, and I was left with a desolate gray screen. As soon as I deleted the cli commands and replaced it with bash file names, everything went back to normal. |
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For Lubuntu 13.10In my example, I'll autostart
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For Lubuntu 13.10
If you want to do it graphically, go to |
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Make a new shorcut to the program in your ~/.config/autostart directory. For example, to make the drop-down terminal Guake start automatically, type this in a terminal:
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I've had to do this a few times and the .desktop 'trick' never works for me. add the command to the autostart file: See this question for details. |
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