Table of Contents
This document defines how to construct a user-visible hierarchy of applications, typically displayed as a menu. It allows third-party software to add menu items that work for all desktops, and allows system administrators to edit menus in a way that affects all desktops.
The basic scheme is very simple. Information about each application (menu item) is stored in a desktop entry (see Desktop Entry Standard). Then an XML configuration file defines the hierarchical arrangement (layout) of menu items, and which menu items are actually displayed.
Things are complicated somewhat by the need to support legacy desktop entry hierarchies, and the need to allow third parties to extend the menu layout. Both of these issues are addressed by the idea of merging two menu layouts.
In addition to a strict definition of the contents of each menu this specification also foresees in a number of layout / presentation hints. This part of the specification is optional, implementations may chose to ignore these hints.
Files involved in this specification are located according to the "desktop base directory specification".
Here are the files defined by this specification:
$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
/menus/${XDG_MENU_PREFIX}
applications.menu
This file contains the XML definition of the main application
menu layout. The first file found in the search path should be
used; other files are ignored. This implies that if the user
has their own ${XDG_MENU_PREFIX}
applications.menu,
it replaces the system wide one.
(Though the user's menu may explicitly merge the system wide
one.)
Systems that offer multiple desktop environments and that want
to use distinct menu layouts in the different environments can
use differently prefixed .menu files. In this case the
$XDG_MENU_PREFIX
environment variable must
be set by the system to reflect the .menu file that is being
used.
For example if a system contains both the GNOME and the KDE
desktop environments it can decide to use
gnome-applications.menu as the menu layout in GNOME sessions
and kde-applications.menu as the menu layout in KDE sessions.
To correctly reflect this, it should set the
$XDG_MENU_PREFIX
environment variable to
"gnome-" respectively "kde-".
Implementations may chose to use .menu files with other names for tasks or menus other than the main application menu. Such usage is not covered by this specification.
$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
/menus/applications-merged/The default merge directories included in the <DefaultMergeDirs> element. By convention, third parties may add new <Menu> files in this location to create their own sub-menus.
Note that a system that uses either gnome-applications.menu or kde-applications.menu depending on the desktop environment in use must still use applications-merged as the default merge directory in both cases.
Implementations may chose to use .menu files with names other than application.menu for tasks or menus other than the main application menu. In that case the first part of the name of the default merge directory is derived from the name of the .menu file.
For example in a system that uses a preferences.menu file to
describe an additional menu, the default merge directories
included in the <DefaultMergeDirs> element in the
preferences.menu file would become
$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
/menus/preferences-merged/
$XDG_DATA_DIRS
/applications/
This directory contains a .desktop file for each possible menu
item. Each directory in the $XDG_DATA_DIRS
search path should be used (i.e. desktop entries are collected
from all of them, not just the first one that exists). When two
desktop entries have the same name, the one appearing earlier in
the path is used.
The <DefaultAppDirs> element in a menu file indicates that this default list of desktop entry locations should be scanned at that point. If a menu file does not contain <DefaultAppDirs>, then these locations are not scanned.
$XDG_DATA_DIRS
/desktop-directories/This directory contains directory entries which may be associated with folders in the menu layout. Each directory in the search path should be used. Only files ending in .directory are used; other files are ignored.
The <DefaultDirectoryDirs> element in a menu file indicates that this default list of directory entry locations should be scanned at that point. If a menu file does not contain <DefaultDirectoryDirs>, then these locations are not scanned.
This specification adds three new fields to desktop
entries: Categories
,
OnlyShowIn
and NotShowIn
.
The Categories
field is a list of strings used to
classify menu items. For example, applications in the
AudioVideo
category might end up in the
"Sound & Video" submenu. Appendix A, Registered Categories
enumerates the standard categories. Categories not in this document
must be prefixed by the string "X-" indicating that they are extensions.
Categories are case-sensitive.
Desktop entries should list all categories that clearly apply. They should not list categories that only vaguely or possibly apply, because the user will end up seeing the same desktop entry in a half-dozen places. But it's typical that several categories will apply to a given desktop entry.
The OnlyShowIn
field is a list of strings identifying
the environments that should display a given menu item. If an
OnlyShowIn
field is present, a given environment should
only display the menu item if the string identifying that environment is
present. The strings are case-sensitive. Appendix B, Registered OnlyShowIn Environments enumerates the strings to use for
some common environments.
The NotShowIn
field is a list of strings identifying
the environments that should not display a given menu item. If an
NotShowIn
field is present, a given environment should
only display the menu item if the string identifying that environment is
not present. The strings are case-sensitive. Appendix B, Registered OnlyShowIn Environments enumerates the strings to use for
some common environments.
Environments not in this document must be prefixed by the string "X-" indicating that they are extensions. Environments are case-sensitive.
A desktop entry for a Qt-based image viewer might contain
this Categories
line:
Categories=Qt;Graphics;RasterGraphics;Viewer;
A desktop entry for Octave, a command-line mathematics program (which
would also have the field Terminal=true
), might have:
Categories=ConsoleOnly;Math;
A desktop entry for a GNOME-specific calculator program that should only appear in GNOME might have:
Categories=GNOME;Utility; OnlyShowIn=GNOME;
Note that the OnlyShowIn
field is a
list and thus ends in a semicolon.
Menu files must be well-formed XML files and end in the extension ".menu". They should also conform to the menu file DTD which implies that implementation-specific extensions to the file format are not allowed. Implementations may stop processing if they encounter a menu file which does not comply with the associated DTD. Note that the associated DTD may differ in version from the one defined in this document.
When an implementation updates an existing menu file it may need to update the identifier to a newer version of the DTD. Implementations should never update the identifier of an existing menu file to an older version. In order to remain compatible with newer versions, implementations should ignore and preserve any XML elements, attributes and attribute values that it does not know how to handle.
Menu files for this version of the specification must use the following namespace, public and system identifiers:
http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/menu
PUBLIC "-//freedesktop//DTD Menu 1.0//EN"
http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/menu-spec/menu-1.0.dtd
Here is a sample document type declaration:
<!DOCTYPE Menu PUBLIC "-//freedesktop//DTD Menu 1.0//EN" "http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/menu-spec/menu-1.0.dtd">
All menu files MUST include the document type declaration, so that implementations can adapt to different versions of this specification (and so implementations can validate the menu file against the DTD).
The root element is <Menu>. Each <Menu> element may contain any number of nested <Menu> elements, indicating submenus.
This element may only appear below <Menu>. The content of this element is a directory name. Desktop entries in this directory are scanned and added to the pool of entries which can be included in this <Menu> and its submenus. Only files ending in ".desktop" should be used, other files are ignored.
Desktop entries in the pool of available entries are identified
by their desktop-file id (see Desktop-File Id).
The desktop-file id of a desktop entry is equal to its filename,
with any path components removed.
So given a <AppDir>
/foo/bar
and desktop entry
/foo/bar/Hello.desktop
the desktop
entry would get a desktop-file id of Hello.desktop
If the directory contains sub-directories then these sub-directories
should be (recursively) scanned as well. The name of the subdirectory
should be added as prefix to the desktop-file id together with a dash character ("-")
So given a <AppDir>
/foo/bar
and desktop entry
/foo/bar/booz/Hello.desktop
the desktop
entry would get a desktop-file id of booz-Hello.desktop
A desktop entry /foo/bar/bo/oz/Hello.desktop
would result
in a desktop-file id of bo-oz-Hello.desktop
<AppDir> elements appearing later in the menu file have priority in case of collisions between desktop-file ids.
If the filename given as an <AppDir> is not an absolute path, it should be located relative to the location of the menu file being parsed.
Duplicate <AppDir> elements (that specify the same directory) should be ignored, but the last duplicate in the file should be used when establishing the order in which to scan the directories. This is important when merging (see the section called “Merging”). The order of <AppDir> elements with respect to <Include> and <Exclude> elements is not relevant, also to facilitate merging.
This element may only appear below <Menu>. The element has
no content. The element should be treated as if it were a list
of <AppDir> elements containing the default app dir
locations
(datadir
/applications/ etc.). When expanding
<DefaultAppDirs> to a list of <AppDir>, the default
locations that are earlier in the search path go later in the
<Menu> so that they have priority.
This element may only appear below <Menu>. The content of this element is a directory name. Each directory listed in a <DirectoryDir> element will be searched for directory entries to be used when resolving the <Directory> element for this menu and its submenus. If the filename given as a <DirectoryDir> is not an absolute path, it should be located relative to the location of the menu file being parsed.
Directory entries in the pool of available entries are identified by their relative path (see Relative path).
If two directory entries have duplicate relative paths, the one from the last (furthest down) element in the menu file must be used. Only files ending in the extension ".directory" should be loaded, other files should be ignored.
Duplicate <DirectoryDir> elements (that specify the same directory) are handled as with duplicate <AppDir> elements (the last duplicate is used).
This element may only appear below <Menu>. The element has
no content. The element should be treated as if it were a list
of <DirectoryDir> elements containing the default desktop dir
locations
(datadir
/desktop-directories/ etc.). The default
locations that are earlier in the search path go later in the
<Menu> so that they have priority.
Each <Menu> element must have a single <Name> element. The content of the <Name> element is a name to be used when referring to the given menu. Each submenu of a given <Menu> must have a unique name. <Menu> elements can thus be referenced by a menu path, for example "Applications/Graphics." The <Name> field must not contain the slash character ("/"); implementations should discard any name containing a slash. See also Menu path.
Each <Menu> element has any number of <Directory> elements. The content of the <Directory> element is the relative path of a directory entry containing meta information about the <Menu>, such as its icon and localized name. If no <Directory> is specified for a <Menu>, its <Name> field should be used as the user-visible name of the menu.
Duplicate <Directory> elements are allowed in order to simplify menu merging, and allow user menus to override system menus. The last <Directory> element to appear in the menu file "wins" and other elements are ignored, unless the last element points to a nonexistent directory entry, in which case the previous element should be tried instead, and so on.
Each <Menu> may contain any number of <OnlyUnallocated> and <NotOnlyUnallocated> elements. Only the last such element to appear is relevant, as it determines whether the <Menu> can contain any desktop entries, or only those desktop entries that do not match other menus. If neither <OnlyUnallocated> nor <NotOnlyUnallocated> elements are present, the default is <NotOnlyUnallocated>.
To handle <OnlyUnallocated>, the menu file must be analyzed in two conceptual passes. The first pass processes <Menu> elements that can match any desktop entry. During this pass, each desktop entry is marked as allocated according to whether it was matched by an <Include> rule in some <Menu>. The second pass processes only <Menu> elements that are restricted to unallocated desktop entries. During the second pass, queries may only match desktop entries that were not marked as allocated during the first pass. See the section called “Generating the menus”.
Each <Menu> may contain any number of <Deleted> and <NotDeleted> elements. Only the last such element to appear is relevant, as it determines whether the <Menu> has been deleted. If neither <Deleted> nor <NotDeleted> elements are present, the default is <NotDeleted>. The purpose of this element is to support menu editing. If a menu contains a <Deleted> element not followed by a <NotDeleted> element, that menu should be ignored.
An <Include> element is a set of rules attempting to match some of the known desktop entries. The <Include> element contains a list of any number of matching rules. Matching rules are specified using the elements <And>, <Or>, <Not>, <All>, <Filename>, and <Category>. Each rule in a list of rules has a logical OR relationship, that is, desktop entries which match any rule are included in the menu.
<Include> elements must appear immediately under <Menu> elements. The desktop entries they match are included in the menu. <Include> and <Exclude> elements for a given <Menu> are processed in order, with queries earlier in the file handled first. This has implications for merging, see the section called “Merging”. See the section called “Generating the menus” for full details on how to process <Include> and <Exclude> elements.
Any number of <Exclude> elements may appear below a <Menu> element. The content of an <Exclude> element is a list of matching rules, just as with an <Include>. However, the desktop entries matched are removed from the list of desktop entries included so far. (Thus an <Exclude> element that appears before any <Include> elements will have no effect, for example, as no desktop entries have been included yet.)
The <Filename> element is the most basic matching rule. It matches a desktop entry if the desktop entry has the given desktop-file id. See Desktop-File Id.
The <Category> element is another basic matching
predicate. It matches a desktop entry if the desktop entry has
the given category in its Categories
field.
The <All> element is a matching rule that matches all desktop entries.
The <And> element contains a list of matching rules. If each of the matching rules inside the <And> element match a desktop entry, then the entire <And> rule matches the desktop entry.
The <Or> element contains a list of matching rules. If any of the matching rules inside the <Or> element match a desktop entry, then the entire <Or> rule matches the desktop entry.
The <Not> element contains a list of matching rules. If any of the matching rules inside the <Not> element matches a desktop entry, then the entire <Not> rule does not match the desktop entry. That is, matching rules below <Not> have a logical OR relationship.
Any number of <MergeFile> elements may be listed below a <Menu> element, giving the name of another menu file to be merged into this one. the section called “Merging” specifies how merging is done. The root <Menu> of the merged file will be merged into the immediate parent of the <MergeFile> element. The <Name> element of the root <Menu> of the merged file are ignored.
If the type attribute is missing or set to "path" then the contents of the <MergeFile> element indicates the file to be merged. If this is not an absolute path then the file to be merged should be located relative to the location of the menu file that contains this <MergeFile> element.
Duplicate <MergeFile> elements (that specify the same file) are handled as with duplicate <AppDir> elements (the last duplicate is used).
If the type attribute is set to "parent" and the file that
contains this <MergeFile> element is located under one
of the paths specified by $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
,
the contents of the element should be ignored and the remaining
paths specified by $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
are
searched for a file with the same relative filename. The first
file encountered should be merged. There should be no
merging at all if no matching file is found.
Compatibility note: The filename specified inside the <MergeFile> element should be ignored if the type attribute is set to "parent", it should however be expected that implementations based on previous versions of this specification will ignore the type attribute and that such implementations will use the filename inside the <MergeFile> element instead.
Example 1: If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
is "~/.config/" and
$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
is "/opt/gnome/:/etc/xdg/"
and the file ~/.config/menus/applications.menu contains
<MergeFile type="parent">/opt/kde3/etc/xdg/menus/applications.menu</MergeFile>
then the file /opt/gnome/menus/applications.menu
should be merged if it exists. If that file does not exists
then the file /etc/xdg/menus/applications.menu
should be merged instead.
Example 2: If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
is "~/.config/" and
$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
is "/opt/gnome/:/etc/xdg/"
and the file /opt/gnome/menus/applications.menu contains
<MergeFile type="parent">/opt/kde3/etc/xdg/menus/applications.menu</MergeFile>
then the file /etc/xdg/menus/applications.menu should be merged
if it exists.
Any number of <MergeDir> elements may be listed below a <Menu> element. A <MergeDir> contains the name of a directory. Each file in the given directory which ends in the ".menu" extension should be merged in the same way that a <MergeFile> would be. If the filename given as a <MergeDir> is not an absolute path, it should be located relative to the location of the menu file being parsed. The files inside the merged directory are not merged in any specified order.
Duplicate <MergeDir> elements (that specify the same directory) are handled as with duplicate <AppDir> elements (the last duplicate is used).
This element may only appear below <Menu>. The element has no content. The element should be treated as if it were a list of <MergeDir> elements containing the default merge directory locations. When expanding <DefaultMergeDirs> to a list of <MergeDir>, the default locations that are earlier in the search path go later in the <Menu> so that they have priority.
This element may only appear below <Menu>. The text content of this element is a directory name. Each directory listed in a <LegacyDir> element will be an old-style legacy hierarchy of desktop entries, see the section called “Legacy Menu Hierarchies” for how to load such a hierarchy. Implementations must not load legacy hierarchies that are not explicitly specified in the menu file (because for example the menu file may not be the main menu). If the filename given as a <LegacyDir> is not an absolute path, it should be located relative to the location of the menu file being parsed.
Duplicate <LegacyDir> elements (that specify the same directory) are handled as with duplicate <AppDir> elements (the last duplicate is used).
The <LegacyDir> element may have one attribute,
prefix
. Normally, given a <LegacyDir>
/foo/bar
and desktop entry
/foo/bar/baz/Hello.desktop
the desktop
entry would get a desktop-file id of Hello.desktop
.
Given a prefix of boo-
, it would instead be
assigned the desktop-file id boo-Hello.desktop
.
The prefix should not contain path separator ('/') characters.
This element may only appear below <Menu>. The element has
no content. The element should be treated as if it were a list
of <LegacyDir> elements containing the traditional desktop
file locations supported by KDE with a hard coded prefix of "kde-".
When expanding <KDELegacyDirs> to a list of <LegacyDir>, the
locations that are earlier in the search path go later in the
<Menu> so that they have priority.
The search path can be obtained by running kde-config --path apps
This element may only appear below <Menu>. The <Move> element contains pairs of <Old>/<New> elements indicating how to rename a descendant of the current <Menu>. If the destination path already exists, the moved menu is merged with the destination menu (see the section called “Merging” for details).
<Move> is used primarily to fix up legacy directories. For example, say you are merging a <LegacyDir> with folder names that don't match the current hierarchy; the legacy folder names can be moved to the new names, where they will be merged with the new folders.
<Move> is also useful for implementing menu editing, see the section called “Menu editing”.
This element may only appear below <Move>, and must be followed by a <New> element. The content of both <Old> and <New> should be a menu path (slash-separated concatenation of <Name> fields, see Menu path). Paths are interpreted relative to the menu containing the <Move> element.
This element may only appear below <Move>, and must be preceded by an <Old> element. The <New> element specifies the new path for the preceding <Old> element.
The <Layout> element is an optional part of this specification. Implementations that do not support the <Layout> element should preserve any <Layout> elements and their contents as far as possible. Each <Menu> may optionally contain a <Layout> element. If multiple elements appear then only the last such element is relevant. The purpose of this element is to offer suggestions for the presentation of the menu. If a menu does not contain a <Layout> element or if it contains an empty <Layout> element then the default layout should be used. The <Layout> element may contain <Filename>, <Menuname>, <Separator> and <Merge> elements. The <Layout> element defines a suggested layout for the menu starting from top to bottom. References to desktop entries that are not contained in this menu as defined by the <Include> and <Exclude> elements should be ignored. References to sub-menus that are not directly contained in this menu as defined by the <Menu> elements should be ignored.
The <DefaultLayout> element is an optional part of this specification. Implementations that do not support the <DefaultLayout> element should preserve any <DefaultLayout> elements and their contents as far as possible. Each <Menu> may optionally contain a <DefaultLayout> element which defines the default-layout for the current menu and all its sub-menus. If a menu has a <DefaultLayout> element then this will override any default-layout specified by a parent menu. The default-layout defines the suggested layout if a <Menu> element does either not have <Layout> element or if it has an empty <Layout> element. For explanations of the various attributes see the <Menuname> element. If no default-layout has been specified then the layout as specified by the following elements should be assumed: <DefaultLayout show_empty="false" inline="false" inline_limit="4" inline_header="true" inline_alias="false"><Merge type="menus"/><Merge type="files"/></DefaultLayout>
This element may only appear as a child of a <Layout> or <DefaultLayout> menu. Its contents references an immediate sub-menu of the current menu as defined with the <Menu> element, as such it should never contain a slash. If no such sub-menu exists the element should be ignored. This element may have various attributes, the default values are taken from the DefaultLayout key. The show_empty attribute defines whether a menu that contains no desktop entries and no sub-menus should be shown at all. The show_empty attribute can be "true" or "false". It may have an inline attribute that can be either "true" or "false". If the inline attribute is "true" the menu that is referenced may be copied into the current menu at the current point instead of being inserted as sub-menu of the current menu. The optional inline_limit attribute defines the maximum number of entries that can be inlined. If the sub-menu has more entries than inline_limit, the sub-menu will not be inlined. If the inline_limit is 0 (zero) there is no limit. The optional inline_header attribute defines whether an inlined menu should be preceded with a header entry listing the caption of the sub-menu. The inline_header attribute can be either "true" or "false". The optional inline_alias attribute defines whether a single inlined entry should adopt the caption of the inlined menu. In such case no additional header entry will be added regardless of the value of the inline_header attribute. The inline_alias attribute can be either "true" or "false". Example: if a menu has a sub-menu titled "WordProcessor" with a single entry "OpenOffice 4.2", and both inline="true" and inline_alias="true" are specified then this would result in the "OpenOffice 4.2" entry being inlined in the current menu but the "OpenOffice 4.2" caption of the entry would be replaced with "WordProcessor".
This element may only appear as a child of a <Layout> or <DefaultLayout> menu. It indicates a suggestion to draw a visual separator at this point in the menu. <Separator> elements at the start of a menu, at the end of a menu or that directly follow other <Separator> elements may be ignored.
This element may only appear as a child of a <Layout> or <DefaultLayout> menu. It indicates the point where desktop entries and sub-menus that are not explicitly mentioned within the <Layout> or <DefaultLayout> element are to be inserted. It has a type attribute that indicates which elements should be inserted: type="menus" means that all sub-menus that are not explicitly mentioned should be inserted in alphabetical order of their visual caption at this point. type="files" means that all desktop entries contained in this menu that are not explicitly mentioned should be inserted in alphabetical order of their visual caption at this point. type="all" means that a mix of all sub-menus and all desktop entries that are not explicitly mentioned should be inserted in alphabetical order of their visual caption at this point. Each <Layout> or <DefaultLayout> element shall have exactly one <Merge type="all"> element or it shall have exactly one <Merge type="files"> and exactly one <Merge type="menus"> element. An exception is made for a completely empty <Layout> element which may be used to indicate that the default-layout should be used instead.
Sometimes two menu layouts need to be merged. This is done when folding in legacy menu hierarchies (see the section called “Legacy Menu Hierarchies”) and also for files specified in <MergeFile> elements. A common case is that per-user menu files might merge the system menu file. Merging is also used to avoid cut-and-paste, for example to include a common submenu in multiple menu files.
Merging involves a base <Menu> and a merged <Menu>. The base is the "target" menu and the merged <Menu> is being added to it. The result of the merge is termed the "combined menu."
As a preparatory step, the goal is to resolve all files into XML elements. To do so, traverse the entire menu tree. For each <MergeFile>, <MergeDir>, or <LegacyDir> element, replace the <MergeFile>, <MergeDir>, or <LegacyDir> element with the child elements of the root <Menu> of the file(s) being merged. As a special exception, remove the <Name> element from the root element of each file being merged. To generate a <Menu> based on a <LegacyDir>, see the section called “Legacy Menu Hierarchies”.
Continue processing until no <MergeFile>, <MergeDir>, or <LegacyDir> elements remain, taking care to avoid infinite loops caused by files that reference one another.
Once all files have been loaded into a single tree, scan the tree recursively performing these steps to remove duplicates:
Consolidate child menus. Each group of child <Menu>s with the same name must be consolidated into a single child menu with that name. Concatenate the child elements of all menus with the same name, in the order that they appear, and insert those elements as the children of the last menu with that name. Delete all the newly empty <Menu> elements, keeping the last one.
Expand <DefaultAppDirs> and <DefaultDirectoryDirs> elements to <AppDir> and <DirectoryDir> elements. Consolidate duplicate <AppDir>, <DirectoryDir>, and <Directory> elements by keeping the last one. For <Directory> elements that refer to distinct directory entries, all of them should be kept - if the last one points to a nonexistent file, the one before that can be used instead, and so forth.
Recurse into each child <Menu>, performing this list of steps for each child in order.
After recursing once to remove duplicates, recurse a second time to resolve <Move> elements for each menu starting with any child menu before handling the more top level menus. So the deepest menus have their <Move> operations performed first. Within each <Menu>, execute <Move> operations in the order that they appear. If the destination path does not exist, simply relocate the origin <Menu> element, and change its <Name> field to match the destination path. If the origin path does not exist, do nothing. If both paths exist, take the origin <Menu> element, delete its <Name> element, and prepend its remaining child elements to the destination <Menu> element.
If any <Move> operations affect a menu, then re-run the steps to resolve duplicates in case any duplicates have been created.
Finally, for each <Menu> containing a <Deleted> element which is not followed by a <NotDeleted> element, remove that menu and all its child menus.
Merged menu elements are kept in order because <Include> and <Exclude> elements later in the file override <Include> and <Exclude> elements earlier in the file. This means that if the user's menu file merges the system menu file, the user can always override what the system menu specifies by placing elements after the <MergeFile> that incorporates the system file.
To prevent that a desktop entry from one party inadvertently cancels out the desktop entry from another party because both happen to get the same desktop-file id it is recommended that providers of desktop-files ensure that all desktop-file ids start with a vendor prefix. A vendor prefix consists of [a-zA-Z] and is terminated with a dash ("-"). Open Source projects and commercial parties are encouraged to use a word or phrase, preferably their name, as prefix for which they hold a trademark. Open Source applications can also ask to make use of the vendor prefix of another open source project (such as GNOME or KDE) they consider themselves affiliated with, at the discretion of these projects.
For example, to ensure that GNOME applications start with a vendor prefix of "gnome-",
it could either add "gnome-" to all the desktop files it installs in
or it could
install desktop files in a datadir
/applications/
subdirectory. When including legacy menu hierarchies the datadir
/applications/gnomeprefix
argument
of the <LegacyDir> element can be used to specify a prefix.
After merging the menus, the result should be a single menu layout description. For each <Menu>, we have a list of directories where desktop entries can be found, a list of directories where directory entries can be found, and a series of <Include> and <Exclude> directives.
For each <Menu> element, build a pool of desktop entries by collecting entries found in each <AppDir> for the menu element. If two entries have the same desktop-file id, the entry for the earlier (closer to the top of the file) <AppDir> must be discarded. Next, add to the pool the entries for any <AppDir>s specified by ancestor <Menu> elements. If a parent menu has a duplicate entry (same desktop-file id), the entry for the child menu has priority.
Next, walk through all <Include> and <Exclude> statements. For each <Include>, match the rules against the pool of all desktop entries. For each desktop entry that matches one of the rules, add it to the menu to be displayed and mark it as having been allocated. For each <Exclude>, match the rules against the currently-included desktop entries. For each desktop entry that matches, remove it again from the menu. Note that an entry that is included in a menu but excluded again by a later <Exclude> is still considered allocated (for the purposes of <OnlyUnallocated>) even though that entry no longer appears in the menu.
Two passes are necessary, once for regular menus where any entry may be matched, and once for <OnlyUnallocated> menus where only entries which have not been marked as allocated may be matched.
The result is a tree of desktop entries, of course.
Traditionally, menus were defined as a filesystem hierarchy, with each filesystem directory corresponding to a submenu. Implementations of this specification must be able to load these old-style hierarchies as specified in this section.
The general approach is: the legacy hierarchy is converted into a <Menu>, and then this menu layout is merged with the menu that specified <LegacyDir>.
Desktop entries in the legacy hierarchy should be added to the pool of desktop entries as if the <LegacyDir> were an <AppDir>. Directory entries in the legacy hierarchy should be added to the pool of directory entries as if the <LegacyDir> were a <DirectoryDir>. This can be trivially implemented by adding appropriate <AppDir> and <DirectoryDir> statements to the root legacy <Menu>. There is one slight complexity, namely the "prefix" attribute of <LegacyDir>.
The menu layout corresponds conceptually to the following, though actually generating the XML is not necessary:
For each directory in the legacy hierarchy, a <Menu> is created with the same <Name> as the directory on disk.
This menu then contains an <Include> element that includes
each desktop entry in the directory. That is, it should have a
<Filename>Foo/Bar/foo.desktop
</Filename>
for each desktop entry in the directory.
As a special exception, if a desktop entry in a directory contains
a Categories
field, that desktop entry should
not be included in the legacy menu.
That is, no <Include> element should be generated for
the entry. This allows a desktop entry to be installed
in a legacy location but still work optimally with the
menu system specified in this document.
If the legacy directory contains a ".directory" file, then a <Directory> element should be generated that points to said ".directory" file.
Legacy desktop entries should not be assigned any
Categories
fields if they didn't have them
already, except that all legacy entries should have the
"Legacy" category added to allow menu files to treat them
specially. (If the same directory is given as both
a <LegacyDir> and an <AppDir>, its desktop
entries should be labeled "Legacy" only if the <LegacyDir>
appears later in the file than the <AppDir>.)
For example, say we have the following legacy directory hierarchy:
/usr/share/applnk /usr/share/applnk/.directory /usr/share/applnk/bar.desktop /usr/share/applnk/System /usr/share/applnk/System/.directory /usr/share/applnk/System/foo.desktop
Conceptually that is converted to the following <Menu>:
<!DOCTYPE Menu PUBLIC "-//freedesktop//DTD Menu 1.0//EN" "http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/menu-spec/menu-1.0.dtd"> <Menu> <Name>Applications</Name> <AppDir>/usr/share/applnk</AppDir> <DirectoryDir>/usr/share/applnk</DirectoryDir> <Directory>.directory</Directory> <Include> <Filename>bar.desktop</Filename> </Include> <Menu> <Name>System</Name> <AppDir>/usr/share/applnk/System</AppDir> <DirectoryDir>/usr/share/applnk/System</DirectoryDir> <Directory>.directory</Directory> <Include> <Filename>foo.desktop</Filename> </Include> </Menu> </Menu>
This <Menu> is then merged as if it were in a file and loaded with <MergeFile>.
<!DOCTYPE Menu PUBLIC "-//freedesktop//DTD Menu 1.0//EN" "http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/menu-spec/menu-1.0.dtd"> <Menu> <Name>Applications</Name> <Directory>Applications.directory</Directory> <-- Search the default locations --> <DefaultAppDirs/> <DefaultDirectoryDirs/> <-- Merge third-party submenus --> <MergeDir>applications-merged</MergeDir> <-- Merge legacy hierarchy --> <LegacyDir>/usr/share/applnk</LegacyDir> <-- Define default layout --> <DefaultLayout> <Merge type="menus"/> <Merge type="files"/> <Separator/> <Menuname>More</Menuname> </DefaultLayout> <-- some random moves, maybe to clean up legacy dirs, maybe from menu editing --> <Move> <Old>Foo</Old> <New>Bar</New> <Old>Foo2</Old> <New>Bar2</New> </Move> <-- A preferences submenu, kept in a separate file so it can also be used standalone --> <Menu> <Name>Preferences</Name> <Directory>Preferences.directory</Directory> <MergeFile>preferences.menu</MergeFile> </Menu> <-- An Office submenu, specified inline --> <Menu> <Name>Office</Name> <Directory>Office.directory</Directory> <Include> <Category>Office</Category> </Include> <Exclude> <Filename>foo.desktop</Filename> </Exclude> </Menu> </Menu>
This section contains a number of well known categories and suggestions on how to use them:
The list of Main Categories consists of those categories that every conforming desktop environment MUST support.
The list of Additional Categories provides categories that can be used to provide more fine grained information about the application.
The list of Reserved Categories contains categories that have a desktop-specific meaning.
Note that category names are case-sensitive.
By including one of the Main Categories in an application's desktop entry file, the application will be ensured that it will show up in a section of the application menu dedicated to this category. If multiple Main Categories are included in a single desktop entry file, the entry may appear more than once in the menu.
Category-based menus based on the Main Categories listed in this specification do not provide a complete ontology for all available applications. Category-based menu implementations SHOULD therefore provide a "catch-all" submenu for applications that cannot be appropriately placed elsewhere.
The table below lists all Main Categories.
Main Category | Description | Notes |
---|---|---|
AudioVideo | Application for presenting, creating, or processing multimedia (audio/video) | |
Audio | An audio application | Desktop entry must include AudioVideo as well |
Video | A video application | Desktop entry must include AudioVideo as well |
Development | An application for development | |
Education | Educational software | |
Game | A game | |
Graphics | Application for viewing, creating, or processing graphics | |
Network | Network application such as a web browser | |
Office | An office type application | |
Science | Scientific software | |
Settings | Settings applications | Entries may appear in a separate menu or as part of a "Control Center" |
System | System application, "System Tools" such as say a log viewer or network monitor | |
Utility | Small utility application, "Accessories" |
The Related Categories column lists one or more categories that are suggested to be used in conjunction with the Additional Category. If the Related Categories column is blank, the Additional Category can be used with any Main Category.
The table below describes Additional Categories.
Additional Category | Description | Related Categories |
---|---|---|
Building | A tool to build applications | Development |
Debugger | A tool to debug applications | Development |
IDE | IDE application | Development |
GUIDesigner | A GUI designer application | Development |
Profiling | A profiling tool | Development |
RevisionControl | Applications like cvs or subversion | Development |
Translation | A translation tool | Development |
Calendar | Calendar application | Office |
ContactManagement | E.g. an address book | Office |
Database | Application to manage a database | Office or Development or AudioVideo |
Dictionary | A dictionary | Office or TextTools |
Chart | Chart application | Office |
Email application | Office or Network | |
Finance | Application to manage your finance | Office |
FlowChart | A flowchart application | Office |
PDA | Tool to manage your PDA | Office |
ProjectManagement | Project management application | Office or Development |
Presentation | Presentation software | Office |
Spreadsheet | A spreadsheet | Office |
WordProcessor | A word processor | Office |
2DGraphics | 2D based graphical application | Graphics |
VectorGraphics | Application for viewing, creating, or processing vector graphics | Graphics;2DGraphics |
RasterGraphics | Application for viewing, creating, or processing raster (bitmap) graphics | Graphics;2DGraphics |
3DGraphics | Application for viewing, creating, or processing 3-D graphics | Graphics |
Scanning | Tool to scan a file/text | Graphics |
OCR | Optical character recognition application | Graphics;Scanning |
Photography | Camera tools, etc. | Graphics or Office |
Publishing | Desktop Publishing applications and Color Management tools | Graphics or Office |
Viewer | Tool to view e.g. a graphic or pdf file | Graphics or Office |
TextTools | A text tool utility | Utility |
DesktopSettings | Configuration tool for the GUI | Settings |
HardwareSettings | A tool to manage hardware components, like sound cards, video cards or printers | Settings |
Printing | A tool to manage printers | HardwareSettings;Settings |
PackageManager | A package manager application | Settings |
Dialup | A dial-up program | Network |
InstantMessaging | An instant messaging client | Network |
Chat | A chat client | Network |
IRCClient | An IRC client | Network |
Feed | RSS, podcast and other subscription based contents | Network |
FileTransfer | Tools like FTP or P2P programs | Network |
HamRadio | HAM radio software | Network or Audio |
News | A news reader or a news ticker | Network |
P2P | A P2P program | Network |
RemoteAccess | A tool to remotely manage your PC | Network |
Telephony | Telephony via PC | Network |
TelephonyTools | Telephony tools, to dial a number, manage PBX, ... | Utility |
VideoConference | Video Conference software | Network |
WebBrowser | A web browser | Network |
WebDevelopment | A tool for web developers | Network or Development |
Midi | An app related to MIDI | AudioVideo;Audio |
Mixer | Just a mixer | AudioVideo;Audio |
Sequencer | A sequencer | AudioVideo;Audio |
Tuner | A tuner | AudioVideo;Audio |
TV | A TV application | AudioVideo;Video |
AudioVideoEditing | Application to edit audio/video files | Audio or Video or AudioVideo |
Player | Application to play audio/video files | Audio or Video or AudioVideo |
Recorder | Application to record audio/video files | Audio or Video or AudioVideo |
DiscBurning | Application to burn a disc | AudioVideo |
ActionGame | An action game | Game |
AdventureGame | Adventure style game | Game |
ArcadeGame | Arcade style game | Game |
BoardGame | A board game | Game |
BlocksGame | Falling blocks game | Game |
CardGame | A card game | Game |
KidsGame | A game for kids | Game |
LogicGame | Logic games like puzzles, etc | Game |
RolePlaying | A role playing game | Game |
Shooter | A shooter game | Game |
Simulation | A simulation game | Game |
SportsGame | A sports game | Game |
StrategyGame | A strategy game | Game |
Art | Software to teach arts | Education or Science |
Construction | Education or Science | |
Music | Musical software | AudioVideo or Education |
Languages | Software to learn foreign languages | Education or Science |
ArtificialIntelligence | Artificial Intelligence software | Education or Science |
Astronomy | Astronomy software | Education or Science |
Biology | Biology software | Education or Science |
Chemistry | Chemistry software | Education or Science |
ComputerScience | ComputerSience software | Education or Science |
DataVisualization | Data visualization software | Education or Science |
Economy | Economy software | Education or Science |
Electricity | Electricity software | Education or Science |
Geography | Geography software | Education or Science |
Geology | Geology software | Education or Science |
Geoscience | Geoscience software, GIS | Education or Science |
History | History software | Education or Science |
Humanities | Software for philosophy, psychology and other humanities | Education or Science |
ImageProcessing | Image Processing software | Education or Science |
Literature | Literature software | Education or Science |
Maps | Software for viewing maps, navigation, mapping, GPS | Education or Science or Utility |
Math | Math software | Education or Science |
NumericalAnalysis | Numerical analysis software | Education;Math or Science;Math |
MedicalSoftware | Medical software | Education or Science |
Physics | Physics software | Education or Science |
Robotics | Robotics software | Education or Science |
Spirituality | Religious and spiritual software, theology | Education or Science or Utility |
Sports | Sports software | Education or Science |
ParallelComputing | Parallel computing software | Education;ComputerScience or Science;ComputerScience |
Amusement | A simple amusement | |
Archiving | A tool to archive/backup data | Utility |
Compression | A tool to manage compressed data/archives | Utility;Archiving |
Electronics | Electronics software, e.g. a circuit designer | |
Emulator | Emulator of another platform, such as a DOS emulator | System or Game |
Engineering | Engineering software, e.g. CAD programs | |
FileTools | A file tool utility | Utility or System |
FileManager | A file manager | System;FileTools |
TerminalEmulator | A terminal emulator application | System |
Filesystem | A file system tool | System |
Monitor | Monitor application/applet that monitors some resource or activity | System or Network |
Security | A security tool | Settings or System |
Accessibility | Accessibility | Settings or Utility |
Calculator | A calculator | Utility |
Clock | A clock application/applet | Utility |
TextEditor | A text editor | Utility |
Documentation | Help or documentation | |
Adult | Application handles adult or explicit material | |
Core | Important application, core to the desktop such as a file manager or a help browser | |
KDE | Application based on KDE libraries | QT |
GNOME | Application based on GNOME libraries | GTK |
XFCE | Application based on XFCE libraries | GTK |
DDE | Application based on DDE libraries | Qt |
GTK | Application based on GTK+ libraries | |
Qt | Application based on Qt libraries | |
Motif | Application based on Motif libraries | |
Java | Application based on Java GUI libraries, such as AWT or Swing | |
ConsoleOnly | Application that only works inside a terminal (text-based or command line application) |
Reserved Categories have a desktop-specific meaning that has not been standardized (yet). Desktop entry files that use a reserved category MUST also include an appropriate OnlyShowIn= entry to restrict themselves to those environments that properly support the reserved category as used.
The table below describes Reserved Categories.
Reserved Category | Description |
---|---|
Screensaver | A screen saver (launching this desktop entry should activate the screen saver) |
TrayIcon | An application that is primarily an icon for the "system tray" or "notification area" (apps that open a normal window and just happen to have a tray icon as well should not list this category) |
Applet | An applet that will run inside a panel or another such application, likely desktop specific |
Shell | A shell (an actual specific shell such as
bash or tcsh , not a TerminalEmulator) |
Remember, these are case-sensitive. "KDE" not "kde" should be used.
OnlyShowIn Value | Environment |
---|---|
GNOME | GNOME Desktop |
GNOME-Classic | GNOME Classic Desktop |
GNOME-Flashback | GNOME Flashback Desktop |
KDE | KDE Desktop |
LXDE | LXDE Desktop |
LXQt | LXQt Desktop |
MATE | MATÉ Desktop |
Razor | Razor-qt Desktop |
ROX | ROX Desktop |
TDE | Trinity Desktop |
Unity | Unity Shell |
XFCE | XFCE Desktop |
EDE | EDE Desktop |
Cinnamon | Cinnamon Desktop |
Pantheon | Pantheon Desktop |
DDE | Deepin Desktop |
Old | Legacy menu systems |
The following steps describe how a third party application can add menu items to the menu system:
Install desktop entries to
datadir
/applications/ for each menu
item. Please namespace the filename, as in "vendor-foo.desktop", or
use a subdirectory of
datadir
/applications/ so you have
"vendor/foo.desktop." Please be sure all desktop entries are valid
(see the
desktop-file-utils package for a validation utility).
Install an XML menu file to sysconfdir
/menus/applications-merged/ to add any submenus, if your desktop entries aren't already
included in some common categories.
Install any directory entries needed for your submenus to datadir
/desktop-directories/, taking care to namespace and validate
the directory entries.
If an application is intended to be installed by root on a system wide
basis then /usr/share is recommended to be used as value for
datadir
and /etc/xdg is recommended to be
used as value for sysconfdir
.
In case the /usr/share hierarchy is not writable it is recommended to
use /usr/local/share as value for datadir
instead.
If an application is intended to be installed by an unprivileged user
for exclusive use by that user only then
$XDG_DATA_HOME
should be used as value
for datadir
and
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME
should be used as value
for sysconfdir
.
If $XDG_DATA_HOME
is not set, the default value of
$HOME/.local/share should be used for it.
If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
is not set, the default value of
$HOME/.config should be used for it.
The company ShinyThings Inc. has developed an application named WebMirror 1.0 and would like to add its own submenu to the system menus consisting of a WebMirror menu item and a WebMirror Admin Tool menu item. The company will use "shinythings" as its vendor id. For the purpose of this example all menu items will be available in two languages, English and Dutch. The language code for Dutch is nl.
First the company needs to create two .desktop files that describe the two menu items:
datadir
/applications/shinythings-webmirror.desktop:
[Desktop Entry]
Encoding=UTF-8
Type=Application
Exec=webmirror
Icon=webmirror
Name=WebMirror
Name[nl]=WebSpiegel
and
datadir
/applications/shinythings-webmirror-admin.desktop:
[Desktop Entry]
Encoding=UTF-8
Type=Application
Exec=webmirror-admintool
Icon=webmirror-admintool
Name=WebMirror Admin Tool
Name[nl]=WebSpiegel Administratie Tool
A .directory file needs to be installed to provide a title and icon for the sub-menu itself:
datadir
/desktop-directories/shinythings-webmirror.directory:
[Desktop Entry]
Encoding=UTF-8
Icon=webmirror
Name=WebMirror
Name[nl]=WebSpiegel
And finally, a .menu file needs to be provided that links it all together:
sysconfdir
/menus/application-merged/shinythings-webmirror.menu:
<!DOCTYPE Menu PUBLIC "-//freedesktop//DTD Menu 1.0//EN"
"http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/menu-spec/menu-1.0.dtd">
<Menu>
<Name>Applications</Name>
<Menu>
<Name>WebMirror</Name>
<Directory>shinythings-webmirror.directory</Directory>
<Include>
<Filename>shinythings-webmirror.desktop</Filename>
<Filename>shinythings-webmirror-admin.desktop</Filename>
</Include>
</Menu>
For a limited time, installing a directory hierarchy to the old GNOME/KDE specific locations such as /usr/share/applnk and /usr/share/gnome/apps will continue to work as way to add your application to the menu system as well. There are two ways to support both the old and new menu systems at the same time:
If you add a Categories
line to the desktop
entries in the legacy hierarchy, implementations of this
specification will ignore their location in the legacy hierarchy,
and arrange them according to Categories
instead.
This allows you to install a single desktop file that works in all
cases, though on the down side it's in a legacy location.
If you add the line OnlyShowIn=Old;
to a desktop
entry, then old legacy implementations that ignore
OnlyShowIn
will still show the desktop entry, but
implementations of this specification will not. Thus you can
add an "OnlyShowIn=Old;
" entry to the legacy
hierarchy, and a new-style desktop entry to
datadir
/applications/, and still get
only one entry in the menus.
To implement menu editing, the intent is that a per-user file is
created. The per-user file should specify a <MergeFile> with the
system wide file, so that system changes are inherited. When the user
deletes a menu item, you add
<Exclude><Filename>foo.desktop</Filename></Exclude>
. If
the user adds a menu item, you use
<Include><Filename>foo.desktop</Filename></Include>
.
If the user moves a folder you can use <Move> elements to represent the move. <Move> elements used for menu-editing should always be added to the most top-level menu to ensure that moves are performed in the order in which they are specified; moves specified in child menus are always performed before moves specified in a more top level menu regardless of their location in the menu file.
To delete a folder, simply append the <Deleted> element.
When adding a new folder or moving an existing folder, menu editing implementations are advised not to re-use the menu path of a previously deleted folder.
Menu editors probably need to do some kind of consolidation/compression to avoid an XML tree that grows infinitely over time.
This glossary defines some of the terms used in this specification.
A desktop entry is a file with a name ending in the ".desktop"
extension which conforms to the desktop
entry specification with Type=Application
.
It describes a menu item, including a name, an icon, and what to do when the item is selected.
Desktop entries are also known as ".desktop files."
The ID to identify a desktop entry with.
For desktop files installed in $XDG_DATA_DIRS/applications, this
is the same as the desktop file ID defined in the Desktop Entry Specification.
In addition, if /opt/ude
is defined
as <LegacyDir prefix="foo-"> then
/opt/ude/Settings/bar.desktop
has
the desktop-file id foo-bar.desktop
A directory entry is a file with a name ending in the ".directory"
extension which conforms to the desktop
entry specification with Type=Directory
.
It provides a localized name and an icon for a submenu.
Directory entries are also known as ".directory files."
A "menu path" is the path to a particular menu. Menu paths are always "relative" so never start with a slash character. The path to a menu is simply the <Name> of each parent of the menu, followed by the <Name> of the menu itself. For example, "Foo/Bar/Baz" is a valid menu path.
The canonical path to a directory entry, relative to the
<DirectoryDir> containing the
entry. For example, if /usr/share/desktop-directories
is
specified as an <DirectoryDir>, the relative path to
/usr/share/desktop-directories/foo/bar.directory
is
foo/bar.directory
.