Using different wallpapers on multiple monitors (Gnome 2 + Compiz)
Edit (2019): Nitrogen is no longer maintained. Nitrogen doesn't fully work on newer Ubuntu distros.
You can use nitrogen
To install it, run the following command in terminal:
sudo apt-get install nitrogen
Because nitrogen
doesn't have a desktop file by default when is installed, you need to run the following command from terminal to start it:
nitrogen
How to use it?
In it's Preferences, add your wallpaper folder, then at the bottom [...] select Screen 1, 2, etc., to set a different wallpaper for each monitor:
To be able to set a different wallpaper for each monitor, you must disable the file manager from handling the desktop. This means you'll no longer have folders on the desktop.
In GNOME / Unity, install GNOME Tweak Tool:
sudo apt-get install gnome-tweak-tool
Then open GNOME Tweak Tool and on the Desktop section, set Icons on Desktop (previously Have file manager handle the desktop) to OFF.
And finally, to have the wallpapers restored each time you log in, add the following command:
nitrogen --restore
to your Startup Applications.
Source: UBUNTU MULTI-MONITOR TWEAKS (FULL SCREEN FLASH FIXES, SPAN WALLPAPER ACROSS MONITORS, MORE)
From webupd8.org it seems there are 2 options. (copy from the website plus some extra things added by me):
The default Ubuntu Appearance settings doesn't let you span a single large wallpaper across both monitors or use a different wallpaper for each monitor, but there are two applications that you can use to do this.
The first one is SyncWall. Install it in Ubuntu using the following commands:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8 sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install syncwall
Here's how my desktops looks like after using SyncWall:
Current Features
- Scheduling : you can change wallpaper at start-up, by interval or at fixed time
- Ability to use/define system hot-keys to change wallpaper manually.
- Basic multi-monitor support in order to share the wallpaper across screens
- Ability to add some special effects (emboss, edge, blur, ...) to the displayed wallpaper.
- Ability to rate images in order to display them more often (if random order is selected)
- Several resizing methods and background filling
- Network synchronization of wallpaper change by defining a server and clients. Display parameters are shared across the network (same resizing type on all the desktops)
- Supported files :SyncWall uses Qt plugins to load image, so by default it can read basic formats as BMP, PNG, JPG. You can add more formats if needed by using bridge plugins to the FreeImage or the Devil libraries.
- For linux platform, the common windows managers are supported (Gnome, Gnome3, KDE3, KDE4, XFCE, ...).
Another such tool is nitrogen , which besides being able to set the same wallpaper to extend across displays, it can also be used to set a different wallpaper to each monitor.
Nitrogen is available in the official Ubuntu repositories so to install it, search for it in Ubuntu Software Center or use the following command:
sudo apt-get install nitrogen
Nitrogen doesn't have a desktop file, so run it from the command line:
nitrogen
To be able to set a different wallpaper for each monitor, you must disable the file manager from handling the desktop. This means you'll no longer have folders on the desktop.
In GNOME / Unity, install GNOME Tweak Tool:
sudo apt-get install gnome-tweak-tool
Then open GNOME Tweak Tool and on the "Desktop" section, set "Have file manager handle the desktop" to OFF.
And finally, to have the wallpapers restored each time you log in, add "nitrogen --restore" to your startup applications.
Here's how my desktop looks like with different wallpapers for each monitor:
Features :
- Multihead and Xinerama support.
- Recall mode to restore wallpapers via startup script.
- Uses freedesktop.org standard for thumbnails.
- Can set GNOME background.
- Command line set modes for script usage.
- Inotify monitoring of browsed directories.
- Lazy loading of thumbnails - conserves memory (new in 1.3).
- "Automatic" set mode - determines best mode to set an image based on its size. (new in 1.4).
- Display preview images in a tiled icon layout (new in 1.5).
Nitrogen seems to be the best option. Syncwall seems to be using the hack you described (large image to split across several monitors.
the XFCE Desktop Manager Plugin (that comes in the xubuntu-desktop package) allows you to edit each display individually while still retaining the folders on your desktops.
A screenshot of my 2 desktops with the manager open :
in the yellow box it says "Move this dialog to the display you want to edit the settings for."
I'm sorry i cant be more help as to giving instruction on to how to install it, nor what the actual plug in is called ( I tried to find it but decided to re-install the whole package instead ) - But hopefully this leads you or somebody on the right track, and this answer can be improved through edits.