This is a shameless copy of James Hoover's XFCE Effects.
All credits goes to Kalideva. This package is just a port of xfce-effects to Archlinux
Visit : https://www.kalideva.com/ for more details.
I have included the below steps which is similar to the original package.
If you run it without sudo privileges, the next time you reboot the entire WM would be gone and you'll only get black screen. So be careful.
Xfwm Effects adds depth and color harmony to the Xfce4 Desktop Environment by modifying the Xfwm4 compositing window manager's code.
Xfwm Effects adds depth and color harmony to the appearance of the desktop, without adding distraction. It does so by creating an image of the desktop when necessary, then uses the Imlib2 library to blur the desktop image, then uses Xlib compositing commands to composite the blurred background image onto desktop windows, panels, menus, and popovers. The effect is reminiscent of Apple's 'vibrancy' effect. Using this method sidesteps the computationally expensive need to continually generate gaussian blur, which can slow the responsiveness of the desktop environment.
Also included is an app (xfwm-effects) that allows the user to turn the effect on and off, to adjust the amount of blur, and to adjust the amount of white composited (for light themes). Note that to see the effects, 'Compositor > Enable Display Compositing' must be selected (i.e., active) in the Window Manager Tweaks app (the compositor is used to draw the effect). Adjusting the sliders on the Compositor tab of the Window Manager Tweaks app toward 'Transparent' will make the effect more pronounced. On the other hand, if the sliders on that tab are all slid to the 'Opaque' position, you will not see the effect at all.
Additional effects are possible via a file path setting that is accessible in the xfce4-settings-editor app (channel: xfwm-effects, property: image-path). This allows the user to specify an image to be composited over windows. For example, the desktop background image might be a picture of a person, while the composited background image might be a picture of a similarly positioned skeleton, giving the windows an X-Ray effect. This effect cannot be combined with the other 'blurred background' effect. Note that the X-Ray effect's file path is ignored if the "Use xlib instead of imlib2..." option is selected in the settings app.
Xfwm4 version 4.16. Xfwm4 is the Xfce4 desktop environment's window manager. 'xfce4-about' in a terminal to see what version you have.
-xfwm4 (hacked version) -xfwm-effects (settings app)
Imlib2 (the libimlib2 package) for image processing
Before you begin, run Software Updater and install any needed updates.
1) extract the archived folder (xfwm-blur-effects-main.zip) containing the needed files, which include:
-README.txt -xfwm4 -xfwm-effects -xfwm-effects.desktop -xfwm-effects.glade -xfwm-effects.svg -xfwm-effects.xml -xfwm-effects-install.sh
2) open a terminal window, "cd" to the file path of the install folder you just unarchived and type:
sudo bash xfwm-effects-install.sh or sudo ./xfwm-effects-install.sh
If it doesn't work, then type the below command before bash execution:
chmod +x xfwm-effects-install.sh
then enter your password if prompted.
-this script will install the files; user password will be required if not root -it will also install the imlib2 library, needed for image processing, using apt-get (it may prompt you to type "y" for "yes" to approve this).
if OS is running on real hardware, log out and log back in at this point. This action does not appear to be necessary when OS is running on a virtual machine.
3) now to start the effect, in a terminal window, type:
/usr/local/bin/xfwm4 --replace & disown
Note: the 'replace' part exits the stock window manager (at /usr/bin) and starts up the hacked version (at /usr/local/bin/); the 'disown' part disconnects the new process from the terminal.
4) start Window Manager Tweaks, select the Compositor tab, select Enable Display Compositing, and move the sliders on that tab somewhat closer to 'Transparent' (since you will not see the effect when they are set at 'Opaque', which is the default position)
5) Xfwm Effects works best with dark themes (selected in Appearance) and dark window frames (selected in Window Manager), so try these first. A good one is appearance: Adwaita-dark; window manager theme: Default.
Note: keep the 'White amount' slider of the Xfwm Effects panel at zero for all dark themes; keep the 'White amount' slider above zero for all light themes. This is because the 'White amount' setting not only adjusts the amount of white added, but also changes type type of compositing that is done (one type favors light themes and one favors dark themes).
Also note: some apps have their own transparency settings, such as Whisker menu and the Xfce4 panel. Changing the 'opacity' level for these apps in their properties settings will adjust the effect.
Shadows under windows are almost invisible when the slider for frame opaqueness in Window Manager Tweaks is set closer to the 'Transparent' setting, so you probably won't see shadows under the windows when the effect is active.
X-Ray effect file path is ignored if "Use xlib instead of imlib2..." setting is selected in the settings app. Also, "Use xlib instead of imlib2..." will not work if imlib2 is not installed because imlib2 is not loaded conditionally.
If you run into problems, first try logging out and logging back in, and if that does not work then try reinstalling xfwm effects.
Note Well: You can restart the original (unmodified) xfwm4 window manager at the terminal with:
/usr/bin/xfwm4 --replace & disown
You may need to log out and log back in for it to take effect!
If you wish, you can then delete the "xfwm effects" version of xfwm4 with:
'sudo rm /usr/local/bin/xfwm4'