Add 1200+ line GUIDE.md documenting OpenMaui Linux sample applications. Covers prerequisites, installation, building, and running three sample apps (ShellDemo, TodoApp, WebViewDemo). Includes detailed sections on: - Creating new Linux MAUI applications - Adding OpenMaui Linux support to existing projects - Implementing navigation patterns (Shell and NavigationPage) - Working with themes and styling - API reference for MauiProgram, platform entry points, and dialogs - Troubleshooting common issues Update README.md with improved overview and links to user guide.
OpenMaui Linux Samples
Sample applications demonstrating OpenMaui Linux - .NET MAUI on Linux desktop with SkiaSharp rendering.
Table of Contents
- Overview
- Sample Applications
- Requirements
- Installation
- Quick Start
- Building and Deployment
- Sample Details
- Project Structure
- Development Guide
- API Usage Examples
- Related Resources
- License
Overview
This repository contains production-ready sample applications showcasing OpenMaui Linux - a .NET MAUI implementation for Linux desktop environments. These samples demonstrate how to build cross-platform applications using familiar MAUI APIs with native Linux rendering via SkiaSharp and optional GTK integration.
Key Features:
- Full .NET MAUI API compatibility
- SkiaSharp-based rendering for high-performance graphics
- X11 window management support
- GTK integration for WebView and native dialogs
- Light/Dark theme support with dynamic switching
- Navigation (NavigationPage, Shell, push/pop)
- Data binding and MVVM patterns
- Comprehensive control coverage
Sample Applications
| Sample | Description | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| TodoApp | Full-featured task manager | NavigationPage, XAML data binding, CollectionView, value converters, theme switching |
| ShellDemo | Comprehensive control showcase | Shell navigation, flyout menu, all core controls, event logging |
| WebViewDemo | Web browser with WebKitGTK | WebView, JavaScript evaluation, GTK integration, HTML rendering |
Requirements
Software:
- .NET 9.0 SDK or later
- Linux with X11 display server (Wayland not yet supported)
- Supported distributions: Ubuntu 20.04+, Fedora 35+, Debian 11+, or similar
System Dependencies:
# Ubuntu/Debian
sudo apt-get install libfontconfig1-dev libfreetype6-dev
# Fedora/RHEL
sudo dnf install fontconfig-devel freetype-devel
# For WebView support (WebViewDemo)
sudo apt-get install libwebkit2gtk-4.0-dev # Ubuntu/Debian
sudo dnf install webkit2gtk3-devel # Fedora/RHEL
Installation
Clone the Repository
git clone https://git.marketally.com/open-maui/maui-linux-samples.git
cd maui-linux-samples
Install .NET SDK
If you don't have .NET 9.0 SDK installed:
# Download and install .NET SDK
wget https://dot.net/v1/dotnet-install.sh
chmod +x dotnet-install.sh
./dotnet-install.sh --channel 9.0
# Add to PATH (add to ~/.bashrc for persistence)
export DOTNET_ROOT=$HOME/.dotnet
export PATH=$DOTNET_ROOT:$PATH
Verify Installation
dotnet --version # Should show 9.0.x or later
Quick Start
Run TodoApp
cd TodoApp
dotnet run
The todo application will launch with sample tasks. You can:
- Add new tasks with the "+" button
- Tap tasks to view/edit details
- Mark tasks as completed
- Delete tasks
- Toggle between light and dark themes
Run ShellDemo
cd ../ShellDemo
dotnet run
The control gallery will open with a flyout menu. Navigate through different pages to explore:
- Button styles and events
- Text input controls (Entry, Editor, SearchBar)
- Selection controls (CheckBox, Switch, Slider)
- Pickers (Picker, DatePicker, TimePicker)
- CollectionView with dynamic data
- Progress indicators
- Grid layouts with various configurations
Run WebViewDemo
cd ../WebViewDemo
dotnet run
A web browser window will open. You can:
- Navigate to any URL
- Use back/forward buttons
- Load custom HTML content
- Execute JavaScript
- Toggle themes
Building and Deployment
Debug Build
# Build without running
dotnet build
# Output location: bin/Debug/net9.0/
Release Build
# Build optimized release version
dotnet build -c Release
Publish for Distribution
Create self-contained executables for specific Linux architectures:
# Linux x64 (most desktops)
dotnet publish -c Release -r linux-x64 --self-contained
# Linux ARM64 (Raspberry Pi, ARM servers)
dotnet publish -c Release -r linux-arm64 --self-contained
# Framework-dependent (requires .NET runtime installed)
dotnet publish -c Release -r linux-x64 --no-self-contained
Published applications will be in bin/Release/net9.0/linux-x64/publish/ and can be distributed as standalone executables.
Create Desktop Launcher
# Make the run script executable
chmod +x TodoApp/run.sh
# Create a .desktop file for your application
cat > ~/.local/share/applications/openmaui-todo.desktop << EOF
[Desktop Entry]
Type=Application
Name=OpenMaui Todo
Exec=/path/to/maui-linux-samples/TodoApp/run.sh
Icon=utilities-terminal
Terminal=false
Categories=Utility;
EOF
Sample Details
TodoApp
A complete task management application demonstrating production-ready patterns.
Features:
- NavigationPage with toolbar and back navigation
- CollectionView with item selection and data templates
- XAML data binding with INotifyPropertyChanged
- Value converters for dynamic styling (alternating rows, completed tasks)
- DisplayAlert dialogs for confirmations
- Theme switching (Light/Dark) with AppThemeBinding
- Grid layouts with star sizing
- Entry and Editor for text input
- Alternating row colors with theme support
Architecture:
TodoItem.cs- Data model with property change notificationsTodoService.cs- Business logic with ObservableCollectionTodoListPage.xaml- Main list view with data templatesTodoDetailPage.xaml- Detail/edit viewNewTodoPage.xaml- Create new task view- Value converters for visual state management
Code Example - Data Binding:
<!-- TodoListPage.xaml -->
<CollectionView ItemsSource="{Binding Todos}" SelectionMode="Single">
<CollectionView.ItemTemplate>
<DataTemplate>
<Grid Padding="15,10"
BackgroundColor="{Binding Index, Converter={StaticResource AlternatingRowColorConverter}}">
<Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<ColumnDefinition Width="4"/>
<ColumnDefinition Width="*"/>
</Grid.ColumnDefinitions>
<!-- Status indicator -->
<BoxView Grid.Column="0"
BackgroundColor="{Binding IsCompleted, Converter={StaticResource CompletedToColorConverter}, ConverterParameter=indicator}"/>
<!-- Task content -->
<VerticalStackLayout Grid.Column="1" Spacing="4">
<Label Text="{Binding Title}"
FontSize="16"
TextColor="{Binding IsCompleted, Converter={StaticResource CompletedToColorConverter}}"
TextDecorations="{Binding IsCompleted, Converter={StaticResource CompletedToTextDecorationsConverter}}"/>
<Label Text="{Binding Notes}"
FontSize="12"
MaxLines="2"
LineBreakMode="TailTruncation"
TextColor="{Binding IsCompleted, Converter={StaticResource CompletedToColorConverter}, ConverterParameter=notes}"/>
</VerticalStackLayout>
</Grid>
</DataTemplate>
</CollectionView.ItemTemplate>
</CollectionView>
Logging:
Application logs are written to ~/todoapp.log for debugging.
ShellDemo
A comprehensive control gallery showcasing all supported MAUI controls with Shell navigation.
Features:
- Shell navigation with flyout menu
- All core controls: Button, Entry, Editor, SearchBar, CheckBox, Switch, Slider, Stepper
- Pickers: Picker, DatePicker, TimePicker
- CollectionView with various data types and selection modes
- ProgressBar and ActivityIndicator
- Grid layouts with demonstrations of:
- Auto, Star, and Absolute sizing
- Row and column spanning
- Spacing and padding
- Mixed sizing strategies
- Real-time event logging for all interactions
- Push/pop navigation examples
- Theme switching support
Navigation Structure:
// AppShell.xaml.cs - Shell with flyout menu
public partial class AppShell : Shell
{
public AppShell()
{
InitializeComponent();
// Register routes for push navigation
Routing.RegisterRoute("detail", typeof(DetailPage));
}
}
Code Example - Grid Layouts:
// GridsPage.xaml.cs - Programmatic grid creation
private View CreateStarSizingDemo()
{
var grid = new Grid
{
ColumnDefinitions =
{
new ColumnDefinition { Width = new GridLength(1, GridUnitType.Star) },
new ColumnDefinition { Width = new GridLength(2, GridUnitType.Star) },
new ColumnDefinition { Width = new GridLength(1, GridUnitType.Star) }
}
};
// Add cells with proportional sizing: 25% | 50% | 25%
grid.Children.Add(CreateCell("1*", "#BBDEFB"));
grid.Children.Add(CreateCell("2* (double)", "#C8E6C9"));
grid.Children.Add(CreateCell("1*", "#FFECB3"));
return grid;
}
Logging:
Application logs are written to ~/shelldemo.log for debugging.
WebViewDemo
A web browser application demonstrating WebView integration with WebKitGTK.
Features:
- WebView with full HTML5 support
- WebKitGTK backend (same engine as GNOME Web)
- Navigation controls (back, forward, reload)
- URL entry with automatic https:// prefix
- JavaScript evaluation via
EvaluateJavaScriptAsync - HTML content loading from strings
- Progress indicator with animations
- Theme switching support
- GTK mode for native WebView rendering
Important: Requires GTK mode enabled in Program.cs:
// WebViewDemo/Program.cs
LinuxApplication.Run(app, args, options =>
{
options.UseGtk = true; // Required for WebView
});
Code Example - JavaScript Evaluation:
private async void OnEvalJsClicked(object? sender, EventArgs e)
{
try
{
var result = await MainWebView.EvaluateJavaScriptAsync("document.title");
StatusLabel.Text = $"JS Result: {result ?? "(null)"}";
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
StatusLabel.Text = $"JS Error: {ex.Message}";
}
}
Code Example - Loading HTML:
private void OnLoadHtmlClicked(object? sender, EventArgs e)
{
var html = @"
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<style>
body { font-family: Arial; margin: 40px; }
button { padding: 15px 30px; font-size: 1.1em; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Hello from OpenMaui!</h1>
<button onclick=""alert('Hello from JavaScript!')"">Click Me!</button>
</body>
</html>";
MainWebView.Source = new HtmlWebViewSource { Html = html };
}
Logging:
Application logs are written to ~/webviewdemo.log for debugging.
Project Structure
Each sample follows a similar structure:
SampleApp/
├── Program.cs # Linux platform entry point
├── MauiProgram.cs # MAUI app configuration
├── App.xaml # Application resources and theme definitions
├── App.xaml.cs # Application lifecycle
├── SampleApp.csproj # Project configuration
├── Pages/ # XAML pages and code-behind
│ ├── MainPage.xaml
│ └── MainPage.xaml.cs
├── Resources/ # Images, fonts, icons
│ ├── AppIcon/
│ └── Images/
└── run.sh # Launcher script
Project Configuration
All samples use conditional compilation for cross-platform support:
<!-- SampleApp.csproj -->
<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">
<PropertyGroup>
<TargetFramework>net9.0</TargetFramework>
<OutputType>Exe</OutputType>
<AllowUnsafeBlocks>true</AllowUnsafeBlocks>
</PropertyGroup>
<!-- Linux: Use OpenMaui -->
<PropertyGroup Condition="$([MSBuild]::IsOSPlatform('Linux'))">
<RuntimeIdentifiers>linux-x64;linux-arm64</RuntimeIdentifiers>
</PropertyGroup>
<!-- Local development -->
<ItemGroup Condition="$([MSBuild]::IsOSPlatform('Linux')) AND Exists('../../maui-linux/OpenMaui.Controls.Linux.csproj')">
<ProjectReference Include="../../maui-linux/OpenMaui.Controls.Linux.csproj" />
</ItemGroup>
<!-- CI/CD or standalone -->
<ItemGroup Condition="$([MSBuild]::IsOSPlatform('Linux')) AND !Exists('../../maui-linux/OpenMaui.Controls.Linux.csproj')">
<PackageReference Include="OpenMaui.Controls.Linux" Version="*" />
</ItemGroup>
</Project>
Development Guide
Creating a New Linux MAUI App
- Create project structure:
mkdir MyApp
cd MyApp
dotnet new console -n MyApp
- Edit MyApp.csproj:
<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">
<PropertyGroup>
<OutputType>Exe</OutputType>
<TargetFramework>net9.0</TargetFramework>
<AllowUnsafeBlocks>true</AllowUnsafeBlocks>
<EnableDefaultXamlItems>true</EnableDefaultXamlItems>
</PropertyGroup>
<ItemGroup>
<PackageReference Include="OpenMaui.Controls.Linux" Version="*" />
</ItemGroup>
</Project>
- Create Program.cs:
using Microsoft.Maui.Platform.Linux;
namespace MyApp;
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var app = MauiProgram.CreateMauiApp();
LinuxApplication.Run(app, args);
}
}
- Create MauiProgram.cs:
using Microsoft.Maui.Hosting;
using Microsoft.Maui.Platform.Linux.Hosting;
namespace MyApp;
public static class MauiProgram
{
public static MauiApp CreateMauiApp()
{
var builder = MauiApp.CreateBuilder();
builder.UseMauiApp<App>();
builder.UseLinux();
return builder.Build();
}
}
-
Create App.xaml and App.xaml.cs (see samples for examples)
-
Build and run:
dotnet build
dotnet run
Exception Handling
All samples include comprehensive exception handling:
// Global exception handlers in Program.cs
AppDomain.CurrentDomain.UnhandledException += (sender, e) =>
{
var ex = e.ExceptionObject as Exception;
Console.WriteLine($"[FATAL] Unhandled exception: {ex?.Message}");
Console.WriteLine($"[FATAL] Stack trace: {ex?.StackTrace}");
};
TaskScheduler.UnobservedTaskException += (sender, e) =>
{
Console.WriteLine($"[FATAL] Unobserved task exception: {e.Exception?.Message}");
e.SetObserved(); // Prevent crash
};
Logging
All samples redirect console output to log files in the user's home directory:
var logPath = Path.Combine(
Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.UserProfile),
"myapp.log");
using var logWriter = new StreamWriter(logPath, append: false) { AutoFlush = true };
var multiWriter = new MultiTextWriter(Console.Out, logWriter);
Console.SetOut(multiWriter);
Console.SetError(multiWriter);
API Usage Examples
Navigation
NavigationPage (TodoApp):
// App.xaml.cs - Create NavigationPage
protected override Window CreateWindow(IActivationState? activationState)
{
NavigationPage = new NavigationPage(new TodoListPage())
{
BarBackgroundColor = Color.FromArgb("#5C6BC0"),
BarTextColor = Colors.White
};
return new Window(NavigationPage);
}
// Push a page
await Navigation.PushAsync(new TodoDetailPage(todo));
// Pop back
await Navigation.PopAsync();
Shell Navigation (ShellDemo):
// AppShell.xaml.cs - Register routes
Routing.RegisterRoute("detail", typeof(DetailPage));
// Navigate using route
await Shell.Current.GoToAsync("detail?item=MyItem");
// Navigate with parameters
await Shell.Current.GoToAsync($"detail?item={Uri.EscapeDataString(itemName)}");
// Use LinuxViewRenderer for direct navigation
LinuxViewRenderer.NavigateToRoute("Buttons");
LinuxViewRenderer.PushPage(new DetailPage());
LinuxViewRenderer.PopPage();
Data Binding
Observable Collections:
public class TodoService
{
public ObservableCollection<TodoItem> Todos { get; } = new();
public TodoItem AddTodo(string title, string notes = "")
{
var todo = new TodoItem { Title = title, Notes = notes };
Todos.Add(todo);
return todo;
}
}
INotifyPropertyChanged:
public class TodoItem : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
private bool _isCompleted;
public bool IsCompleted
{
get => _isCompleted;
set
{
if (_isCompleted != value)
{
_isCompleted = value;
OnPropertyChanged(nameof(IsCompleted));
}
}
}
public event PropertyChangedEventHandler? PropertyChanged;
protected void OnPropertyChanged(string propertyName)
{
PropertyChanged?.Invoke(this, new PropertyChangedEventArgs(propertyName));
}
}
Value Converters
Theme-Aware Color Converter:
public class CompletedToColorConverter : IValueConverter
{
private static readonly Color AccentColorLight = Color.FromArgb("#26A69A");
private static readonly Color AccentColorDark = Color.FromArgb("#4DB6AC");
public object? Convert(object? value, Type targetType, object? parameter, CultureInfo culture)
{
bool isCompleted = value is bool b && b;
bool isDarkMode = Application.Current?.RequestedTheme == AppTheme.Dark;
if (isCompleted)
return Color.FromArgb("#9E9E9E");
return isDarkMode ? AccentColorDark : AccentColorLight;
}
public object? ConvertBack(object? value, Type targetType, object? parameter, CultureInfo culture)
{
throw new NotImplementedException();
}
}
Register in App.xaml:
<Application.Resources>
<local:CompletedToColorConverter x:Key="CompletedToColorConverter"/>
</Application.Resources>
Theme Switching
Toggle Theme:
private void OnThemeToggleClicked(object? sender, EventArgs e)
{
if (Application.Current == null) return;
var isDarkMode = Application.Current.UserAppTheme == AppTheme.Dark;
Application.Current.UserAppTheme = isDarkMode ? AppTheme.Light : AppTheme.Dark;
}
AppThemeBinding in XAML:
<Border BackgroundColor="{AppThemeBinding Light=#FFFFFF, Dark=#1E1E1E}">
<Label TextColor="{AppThemeBinding Light=#212121, Dark=#FFFFFF}"
Text="Theme-aware text"/>
</Border>
Programmatic AppThemeBinding:
label.SetAppThemeColor(Label.TextColorProperty,
Colors.Black, // Light theme
Colors.White); // Dark theme
Dialogs
DisplayAlert (using LinuxDialogService):
private async void OnDeleteClicked(object? sender, EventArgs e)
{
var confirmed = await LinuxDialogService.ShowAlertAsync(
"Delete Task",
$"Are you sure you want to delete \"{_todo.Title}\"?",
"Delete",
"Cancel");
if (confirmed)
{
_service.DeleteTodo(_todo);
await Navigation.PopAsync();
}
}
WebView
Load URL:
MainWebView.Source = new UrlWebViewSource { Url = "https://dotnet.microsoft.com" };
Load HTML:
MainWebView.Source = new HtmlWebViewSource
{
Html = "<html><body><h1>Hello!</h1></body></html>"
};
Execute JavaScript:
var result = await MainWebView.EvaluateJavaScriptAsync("document.title");
Navigation Events:
private void OnNavigating(object? sender, WebNavigatingEventArgs e)
{
Console.WriteLine($"Navigating to: {e.Url}");
// e.Cancel = true; // Cancel navigation if needed
}
private void OnNavigated(object? sender, WebNavigatedEventArgs e)
{
Console.WriteLine($"Navigated: {e.Result} - {e.Url}");
}
Related Resources
- OpenMaui Linux Framework - The core framework repository
- NuGet Package - Install via NuGet
- .NET MAUI Documentation - Official Microsoft documentation
- SkiaSharp Documentation - Graphics rendering engine
License
MIT License - See LICENSE for details.
Copyright (c) 2024 OpenMaui
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
OpenMaui Linux Samples - User Guide
A collection of sample applications demonstrating .NET MAUI applications running on Linux using the OpenMaui Linux platform. These samples showcase various MAUI controls, navigation patterns, and features working with SkiaSharp-based rendering on Linux desktop.
Table of Contents
- Overview
- Getting Started
- Sample Applications
- Common Workflows
- Project Structure
- API Reference
- Tips and Best Practices
- Troubleshooting
Overview
This repository contains three production-ready sample applications that demonstrate different aspects of building .NET MAUI applications for Linux:
- ShellDemo: Comprehensive showcase of MAUI controls (buttons, text input, lists, pickers, grids) with Shell-based navigation
- TodoApp: Full-featured task management app demonstrating NavigationPage, MVVM patterns, and data binding
- WebViewDemo: Web browser application showcasing WebKitGTK integration with HTML rendering and JavaScript execution
All samples are built on the OpenMaui.Controls.Linux platform, which brings .NET MAUI to Linux desktop using SkiaSharp for rendering.
Getting Started
Prerequisites
Before you begin, ensure you have the following installed on your Linux system:
- .NET 9.0 SDK or later
- OpenMaui.Controls.Linux package or source
- GTK 3 (for WebView support)
- WebKitGTK (for WebViewDemo)
Install system dependencies on Ubuntu/Debian:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install dotnet-sdk-9.0 libgtk-3-dev libwebkit2gtk-4.0-dev
Installation
Clone the repository:
git clone https://github.com/openmaui/maui-linux-samples.git
cd maui-linux-samples
The samples support two development modes:
Local Development (with OpenMaui source):
# Clone OpenMaui alongside the samples
cd ..
git clone https://github.com/openmaui/maui-linux.git
cd maui-linux-samples
Package Reference (using NuGet):
# Set environment variable to use package reference
export UsePackageReference=true
Building the Samples
Build all samples in the solution:
dotnet build maui-linux-samples.sln
Build a specific sample:
cd ShellDemo
dotnet build
Build for release:
dotnet build -c Release
Running the Applications
Each sample includes a run.sh script for easy execution:
cd ShellDemo
./run.sh
Or run directly with dotnet:
cd ShellDemo
dotnet run
Run from the compiled output:
cd ShellDemo/bin/Debug/net9.0
./ShellDemo
Sample Applications
ShellDemo
A comprehensive demonstration of MAUI controls and Shell navigation patterns.
Features:
- Shell-based navigation with flyout menu
- Button controls with various styles and events
- Text input controls (Entry, Editor, SearchBar)
- Selection controls (CheckBox, Switch, Slider)
- Pickers (Picker, DatePicker, TimePicker)
- CollectionView with selection and data binding
- Progress indicators (ProgressBar, ActivityIndicator)
- Grid layouts with various sizing options
- Theme switching (Light/Dark mode)
- Push/pop navigation for detail pages
Key Files:
AppShell.xaml- Shell configuration with flyout menuPages/HomePage.xaml- Welcome page with feature cardsPages/ButtonsPage.xaml- Button demonstrationsPages/ListsPage.xaml- CollectionView examplesPages/GridsPage.xaml- Grid layout demonstrations
Running ShellDemo:
cd ShellDemo
./run.sh
Example: Navigating to a detail page
// From any page in ShellDemo
private void OnPushDetailClicked(object? sender, EventArgs e)
{
var success = LinuxViewRenderer.PushPage(new DetailPage("My Item"));
Console.WriteLine($"Navigation result: {success}");
}
Log File Location:
ShellDemo writes diagnostic logs to ~/shelldemo.log for debugging.
TodoApp
A full-featured task management application demonstrating real-world MAUI patterns.
Features:
- NavigationPage-based navigation
- CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete)
- Data binding with INotifyPropertyChanged
- ObservableCollection for reactive lists
- Custom value converters for UI logic
- Alternating row colors in lists
- Task completion tracking with statistics
- Confirmation dialogs for destructive actions
- Theme support with dynamic color updates
Key Files:
App.xaml.cs- NavigationPage setupTodoItem.cs- Data model with property change notificationsTodoService.cs- Business logic and data managementPages/TodoListPage.xaml- Main list view with statisticsPages/TodoDetailPage.xaml- Task editing and deletionPages/NewTodoPage.xaml- Task creation form
Running TodoApp:
cd TodoApp
./run.sh
Example: Adding a new task
// In NewTodoPage.xaml.cs
private async void OnSaveClicked(object? sender, EventArgs e)
{
var title = TitleEntry.Text?.Trim();
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(title))
{
TitleEntry.Placeholder = "Title is required!";
TitleEntry.PlaceholderColor = Colors.Red;
return;
}
TodoService.Instance.AddTodo(title, NotesEditor.Text ?? "");
await Navigation.PopAsync();
}
Example: Custom value converter
// Converter for alternating row colors with theme support
public class AlternatingRowColorConverter : IValueConverter
{
public object? Convert(object? value, Type targetType, object? parameter, CultureInfo culture)
{
bool isDarkMode = Application.Current?.RequestedTheme == AppTheme.Dark;
if (value is int index)
{
if (isDarkMode)
return index % 2 == 0 ? Color.FromArgb("#1E1E1E") : Color.FromArgb("#2A2A2A");
return index % 2 == 0 ? Colors.White : Color.FromArgb("#F5F5F5");
}
return isDarkMode ? Color.FromArgb("#1E1E1E") : Colors.White;
}
public object? ConvertBack(object? value, Type targetType, object? parameter, CultureInfo culture)
{
throw new NotImplementedException();
}
}
Log File Location:
TodoApp writes diagnostic logs to ~/todoapp.log.
WebViewDemo
A web browser application showcasing WebKitGTK integration with MAUI.
Features:
- WebView with WebKitGTK backend
- URL navigation with address bar
- Back/forward navigation history
- Page reload functionality
- HTML content loading (local and remote)
- JavaScript execution and evaluation
- Progress indication during page loads
- Theme switching
- Double-click to select all in URL entry
Key Files:
Pages/WebViewPage.xaml- Main browser interfaceProgram.cs- GTK mode initialization for WebView
Running WebViewDemo:
cd WebViewDemo
./run.sh
Example: Loading a URL
private void Navigate()
{
var url = UrlEntry.Text?.Trim();
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(url))
return;
// Add https:// if not present
if (!url.StartsWith("http://") && !url.StartsWith("https://"))
url = "https://" + url;
MainWebView.Source = new UrlWebViewSource { Url = url };
UrlEntry.Text = url;
}
Example: Loading HTML content
private void OnLoadHtmlClicked(object? sender, EventArgs e)
{
var html = @"
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>OpenMaui WebView</title>
<style>
body { font-family: Arial; margin: 40px; }
h1 { color: #667eea; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Hello from OpenMaui Linux!</h1>
<p>This HTML is rendered by WebKitGTK.</p>
</body>
</html>";
MainWebView.Source = new HtmlWebViewSource { Html = html };
}
Example: Evaluating JavaScript
private async void OnEvalJsClicked(object? sender, EventArgs e)
{
try
{
var result = await MainWebView.EvaluateJavaScriptAsync("document.title");
StatusLabel.Text = $"Page title: {result}";
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
StatusLabel.Text = $"Error: {ex.Message}";
}
}
GTK Mode Requirement:
WebViewDemo requires GTK mode to be enabled in Program.cs:
LinuxApplication.Run(app, args, options =>
{
options.UseGtk = true;
});
Log File Location:
WebViewDemo writes diagnostic logs to ~/webviewdemo.log.
Common Workflows
Creating a New Linux MAUI App
Create a new .NET MAUI application that runs on Linux:
Step 1: Create project structure
mkdir MyLinuxApp
cd MyLinuxApp
dotnet new console -n MyLinuxApp
Step 2: Update the .csproj file
<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">
<PropertyGroup>
<OutputType>Exe</OutputType>
<TargetFramework>net9.0</TargetFramework>
<ImplicitUsings>enable</ImplicitUsings>
<Nullable>enable</Nullable>
<AllowUnsafeBlocks>true</AllowUnsafeBlocks>
<ApplicationTitle>My Linux App</ApplicationTitle>
<ApplicationId>com.mycompany.mylinuxapp</ApplicationId>
<ApplicationVersion>1.0.0</ApplicationVersion>
<SingleProject>true</SingleProject>
<EnableDefaultXamlItems>true</EnableDefaultXamlItems>
</PropertyGroup>
<PropertyGroup Condition="$([MSBuild]::IsOSPlatform('Linux'))">
<RuntimeIdentifiers>linux-x64;linux-arm64</RuntimeIdentifiers>
</PropertyGroup>
<ItemGroup Condition="$([MSBuild]::IsOSPlatform('Linux'))">
<PackageReference Include="OpenMaui.Controls.Linux" Version="*" />
</ItemGroup>
</Project>
Step 3: Create Program.cs
using Microsoft.Maui.Platform.Linux;
namespace MyLinuxApp;
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var logPath = Path.Combine(
Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.UserProfile),
"mylinuxapp.log");
using var logWriter = new StreamWriter(logPath, append: false) { AutoFlush = true };
var multiWriter = new MultiTextWriter(Console.Out, logWriter);
Console.SetOut(multiWriter);
Console.WriteLine($"Starting MyLinuxApp at {DateTime.Now}");
var app = MauiProgram.CreateMauiApp();
LinuxApplication.Run(app, args);
}
}
class MultiTextWriter : TextWriter
{
private readonly TextWriter[] _writers;
public MultiTextWriter(params TextWriter[] writers) => _writers = writers;
public override System.Text.Encoding Encoding => System.Text.Encoding.UTF8;
public override void Write(char value) { foreach (var w in _writers) w.Write(value); }
public override void WriteLine(string? value) { foreach (var w in _writers) w.WriteLine(value); }
}
Step 4: Create MauiProgram.cs
using Microsoft.Maui.Hosting;
using Microsoft.Maui.Platform.Linux.Hosting;
namespace MyLinuxApp;
public static class MauiProgram
{
public static MauiApp CreateMauiApp()
{
var builder = MauiApp.CreateBuilder();
builder.UseMauiApp<App>();
builder.UseLinux();
return builder.Build();
}
}
Step 5: Create App.xaml and App.xaml.cs
<!-- App.xaml -->
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<Application xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/dotnet/2021/maui"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2009/xaml"
x:Class="MyLinuxApp.App">
<Application.Resources>
<ResourceDictionary>
<!-- Add your resources here -->
</ResourceDictionary>
</Application.Resources>
</Application>
// App.xaml.cs
using Microsoft.Maui.Controls;
namespace MyLinuxApp;
public partial class App : Application
{
public App()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
protected override Window CreateWindow(IActivationState? activationState)
{
return new Window(new MainPage());
}
}
Step 6: Build and run
dotnet build
dotnet run
Adding OpenMaui Linux Support
Add Linux support to an existing MAUI project:
Step 1: Update .csproj conditionally
<!-- Linux-specific configuration -->
<PropertyGroup Condition="$([MSBuild]::IsOSPlatform('Linux'))">
<RuntimeIdentifiers>linux-x64;linux-arm64</RuntimeIdentifiers>
</PropertyGroup>
<!-- Add OpenMaui package for Linux -->
<ItemGroup Condition="$([MSBuild]::IsOSPlatform('Linux'))">
<PackageReference Include="OpenMaui.Controls.Linux" Version="*" />
</ItemGroup>
Step 2: Update MauiProgram.cs
using Microsoft.Maui.Hosting;
using Microsoft.Maui.Platform.Linux.Hosting;
public static class MauiProgram
{
public static MauiApp CreateMauiApp()
{
var builder = MauiApp.CreateBuilder();
builder.UseMauiApp<App>();
// Add Linux platform support
builder.UseLinux();
return builder.Build();
}
}
Step 3: Create Linux entry point (Program.cs)
using Microsoft.Maui.Platform.Linux;
namespace YourApp;
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var app = MauiProgram.CreateMauiApp();
LinuxApplication.Run(app, args);
}
}
Implementing Navigation
OpenMaui Linux supports multiple navigation patterns:
Shell Navigation (ShellDemo pattern)
// AppShell.xaml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<Shell xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/dotnet/2021/maui"
xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2009/xaml"
xmlns:local="clr-namespace:MyApp"
x:Class="MyApp.AppShell">
<FlyoutItem Title="Home">
<ShellContent ContentTemplate="{DataTemplate local:HomePage}" />
</FlyoutItem>
<FlyoutItem Title="Settings">
<ShellContent ContentTemplate="{DataTemplate local:SettingsPage}" />
</FlyoutItem>
</Shell>
// AppShell.xaml.cs
public partial class AppShell : Shell
{
public AppShell()
{
InitializeComponent();
// Register routes for push navigation
Routing.RegisterRoute("details", typeof(DetailsPage));
}
}
// Navigate using routes
await Shell.Current.GoToAsync("details?id=123");
NavigationPage Pattern (TodoApp pattern)
// App.xaml.cs
protected override Window CreateWindow(IActivationState? activationState)
{
var navigationPage = new NavigationPage(new MainPage())
{
BarBackgroundColor = Color.FromArgb("#5C6BC0"),
BarTextColor = Colors.White
};
return new Window(navigationPage);
}
// Push a new page
await Navigation.PushAsync(new DetailsPage());
// Pop back
await Navigation.PopAsync();
Direct Push/Pop with LinuxViewRenderer
// Push a page directly
var success = LinuxViewRenderer.PushPage(new DetailPage());
// Pop the current page
var success = LinuxViewRenderer.PopPage();
// Navigate to a Shell route
LinuxViewRenderer.NavigateToRoute("settings");
Working with Themes
All samples support Light and Dark themes with dynamic switching.
Step 1: Define theme resources in App.xaml
<Application.Resources>
<ResourceDictionary>
<!-- Light theme colors -->
<Color x:Key="PrimaryLight">#5C6BC0</Color>
<Color x:Key="BackgroundLight">#FFFFFF</Color>
<Color x:Key="TextPrimaryLight">#212121</Color>
<!-- Dark theme colors -->
<Color x:Key="PrimaryDark">#3949AB</Color>
<Color x:Key="BackgroundDark">#121212</Color>
<Color x:Key="TextPrimaryDark">#FFFFFF</Color>
</ResourceDictionary>
</Application.Resources>
Step 2: Use AppThemeBinding in XAML
<Label Text="Hello World">
<Label.TextColor>
<AppThemeBinding Light="{StaticResource TextPrimaryLight}"
Dark="{StaticResource TextPrimaryDark}" />
</Label.TextColor>
</Label>
Step 3: Use SetAppThemeColor in code
var label = new Label { Text = "Hello World" };
label.SetAppThemeColor(
Label.TextColorProperty,
Color.FromArgb("#212121"), // Light
Color.FromArgb("#FFFFFF") // Dark
);
Step 4: Toggle theme programmatically
private void OnThemeToggleClicked(object? sender, EventArgs e)
{
if (Application.Current == null) return;
var currentTheme = Application.Current.UserAppTheme;
var newTheme = currentTheme == AppTheme.Dark ? AppTheme.Light : AppTheme.Dark;
Application.Current.UserAppTheme = newTheme;
}
Step 5: Respond to theme changes
protected override void OnAppearing()
{
base.OnAppearing();
UpdateThemeUI();
}
private void UpdateThemeUI()
{
var isDark = Application.Current?.UserAppTheme == AppTheme.Dark ||
(Application.Current?.UserAppTheme == AppTheme.Unspecified &&
Application.Current?.RequestedTheme == AppTheme.Dark);
ThemeIcon.Source = isDark ? "light_mode.svg" : "dark_mode.svg";
}
Project Structure
All sample projects follow a consistent structure:
SampleApp/
├── Program.cs # Linux platform entry point
├── MauiProgram.cs # MAUI app configuration
├── App.xaml # Application resources and theme
├── App.xaml.cs # Application code-behind
├── AppShell.xaml # Shell navigation (ShellDemo only)
├── Pages/ # Application pages
│ ├── HomePage.xaml
│ ├── HomePage.xaml.cs
│ └── ...
├── Resources/ # Images, icons, fonts
│ ├── AppIcon/
│ └── Images/
├── run.sh # Launch script
└── SampleApp.csproj # Project file
Key Components:
| File | Purpose |
|---|---|
Program.cs |
Platform entry point, sets up logging and exception handling |
MauiProgram.cs |
Configures MAUI app with UseLinux() extension |
App.xaml |
Application-level resources, themes, and styles |
AppShell.xaml |
Shell navigation structure (flyout, tabs, routes) |
*.csproj |
Project configuration with conditional Linux support |
run.sh |
Convenience script for launching the app |
API Reference
MauiProgram Configuration
Configure your MAUI app for Linux in MauiProgram.cs:
using Microsoft.Maui.Hosting;
using Microsoft.Maui.Platform.Linux.Hosting;
public static class MauiProgram
{
public static MauiApp CreateMauiApp()
{
var builder = MauiApp.CreateBuilder();
// Register your app
builder.UseMauiApp<App>();
// Add Linux platform support (registers all handlers)
builder.UseLinux();
// Configure fonts (optional)
builder.ConfigureFonts(fonts =>
{
fonts.AddFont("OpenSans-Regular.ttf", "OpenSansRegular");
fonts.AddFont("OpenSans-Semibold.ttf", "OpenSansSemibold");
});
return builder.Build();
}
}
Platform Entry Point
Create a Linux entry point in Program.cs:
using Microsoft.Maui.Platform.Linux;
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Optional: Set up logging
var logPath = Path.Combine(
Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.UserProfile),
"myapp.log");
using var logWriter = new StreamWriter(logPath, append: false) { AutoFlush = true };
var multiWriter = new MultiTextWriter(Console.Out, logWriter);
Console.SetOut(multiWriter);
Console.SetError(multiWriter);
// Optional: Global exception handlers
AppDomain.CurrentDomain.UnhandledException += (sender, e) =>
{
var ex = e.ExceptionObject as Exception;
Console.WriteLine($"[FATAL] Unhandled exception: {ex?.Message}");
};
try
{
var app = MauiProgram.CreateMauiApp();
// Run with default options
LinuxApplication.Run(app, args);
// Or run with GTK mode (required for WebView)
// LinuxApplication.Run(app, args, options =>
// {
// options.UseGtk = true;
// });
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
Console.WriteLine($"[FATAL] Exception in Main: {ex.Message}");
throw;
}
}
}
Navigation APIs
Navigate between pages using these APIs:
LinuxViewRenderer.PushPage
// Push a new page onto the navigation stack
bool success = LinuxViewRenderer.PushPage(new DetailPage());
LinuxViewRenderer.PopPage
// Pop the current page from the navigation stack
bool success = LinuxViewRenderer.PopPage();
LinuxViewRenderer.NavigateToRoute
// Navigate to a registered Shell route
LinuxViewRenderer.NavigateToRoute("settings");
Navigation Property (in NavigationPage)
// Push a page
await Navigation.PushAsync(new DetailPage());
// Pop a page
await Navigation.PopAsync();
// Pop to root
await Navigation.PopToRootAsync();
Shell Navigation
// Navigate to a route
await Shell.Current.GoToAsync("details");
// Navigate with parameters
await Shell.Current.GoToAsync($"details?id={itemId}");
// Navigate back
await Shell.Current.GoToAsync("..");
Dialog Services
Show alerts and confirmation dialogs:
LinuxDialogService.ShowAlertAsync
// Show confirmation dialog
bool confirmed = await LinuxDialogService.ShowAlertAsync(
"Delete Task",
"Are you sure you want to delete this task?",
"Delete",
"Cancel");
if (confirmed)
{
// User clicked "Delete"
DeleteTask();
}
DisplayAlert (MAUI standard)
// Show alert with OK button
await DisplayAlert("Success", "Task saved successfully", "OK");
// Show confirmation dialog
bool answer = await DisplayAlert(
"Confirm",
"Delete this item?",
"Yes",
"No");
Tips and Best Practices
Performance
-
Use compiled bindings for better performance:
<Label Text="{Binding Title, Mode=OneWay}" /> -
Virtualize lists with CollectionView (default behavior):
<CollectionView ItemsSource="{Binding Items}" /> -
Avoid excessive property change notifications:
private string _title; public string Title { get => _title; set { if (_title != value) // Only notify if changed { _title = value; OnPropertyChanged(nameof(Title)); } } }
Logging and Debugging
-
All samples write logs to
~/appname.log:tail -f ~/shelldemo.log -
Add console logging throughout your app:
Console.WriteLine($"[MyPage] Button clicked at {DateTime.Now}"); -
Use global exception handlers (see
Program.csexamples)
Theme Support
-
Always use AppThemeBinding for colors that should change with theme:
<Label.TextColor> <AppThemeBinding Light="#212121" Dark="#FFFFFF" /> </Label.TextColor> -
Test both themes during development:
Application.Current.UserAppTheme = AppTheme.Dark; // Test dark mode -
Update UI when theme changes:
Application.Current.RequestedThemeChanged += (s, e) => { UpdateThemeSpecificUI(); };
Resource Management
-
Use embedded resources for images:
<ItemGroup> <EmbeddedResource Include="Resources/Images/*.svg" /> </ItemGroup> -
Reference images in XAML:
<Image Source="logo.svg" />
Navigation Patterns
- Use Shell for complex navigation (flyout, tabs, routes)
- Use NavigationPage for simple hierarchical navigation
- Register routes for type-safe navigation:
Routing.RegisterRoute("details", typeof(DetailsPage));
Data Binding
-
Implement INotifyPropertyChanged for reactive data:
public class TodoItem : INotifyPropertyChanged { private bool _isCompleted; public bool IsCompleted { get => _isCompleted; set { if (_isCompleted != value) { _isCompleted = value; OnPropertyChanged(nameof(IsCompleted)); } } } public event PropertyChangedEventHandler? PropertyChanged; protected void OnPropertyChanged(string propertyName) { PropertyChanged?.Invoke(this, new PropertyChangedEventArgs(propertyName)); } } -
Use ObservableCollection for lists:
public ObservableCollection<TodoItem> Todos { get; } = new();
Troubleshooting
Application won't start
Problem: App crashes immediately on launch
Solutions:
-
Check the log file (
~/appname.log):cat ~/shelldemo.log -
Verify .NET SDK is installed:
dotnet --version -
Ensure OpenMaui package is referenced:
dotnet restore dotnet build -
Check for missing dependencies:
ldd bin/Debug/net9.0/ShellDemo
WebView not working
Problem: WebView shows blank or crashes
Solutions:
-
Verify WebKitGTK is installed:
sudo apt-get install libwebkit2gtk-4.0-dev -
Ensure GTK mode is enabled in
Program.cs:LinuxApplication.Run(app, args, options => { options.UseGtk = true; }); -
Check WebView logs:
cat ~/webviewdemo.log | grep WebView
Navigation not working
Problem: PushPage or PopPage returns false
Solutions:
-
Ensure you're in a NavigationPage or Shell context:
// Check if navigation is available if (Navigation != null) { await Navigation.PushAsync(new DetailPage()); } -
For Shell navigation, register routes:
Routing.RegisterRoute("details", typeof(DetailsPage)); -
Check console output for navigation errors:
grep "Navigation" ~/shelldemo.log
Theme not updating
Problem: UI doesn't update when theme changes
Solutions:
-
Use
AppThemeBindinginstead of static colors:<!-- Wrong --> <Label TextColor="#212121" /> <!-- Correct --> <Label> <Label.TextColor> <AppThemeBinding Light="#212121" Dark="#FFFFFF" /> </Label.TextColor> </Label> -
Subscribe to theme change events:
Application.Current.RequestedThemeChanged += (s, e) => { UpdateUI(); }; -
Force UI refresh in
OnAppearing:protected override void OnAppearing() { base.OnAppearing(); UpdateThemeUI(); }
Build errors on Linux
Problem: Build fails with missing references
Solutions:
-
Restore packages:
dotnet restore -
Clean and rebuild:
dotnet clean dotnet build -
Check .csproj conditional compilation:
<ItemGroup Condition="$([MSBuild]::IsOSPlatform('Linux'))"> <PackageReference Include="OpenMaui.Controls.Linux" Version="*" /> </ItemGroup> -
Verify you're on Linux:
uname -a
Images not displaying
Problem: Images show as blank or missing
Solutions:
-
Check image paths are correct:
<Image Source="logo.svg" /> <!-- Looks in Resources/Images/ --> -
Verify images are included in .csproj:
<ItemGroup> <EmbeddedResource Include="Resources/Images/*.svg" /> </ItemGroup> -
Use absolute paths for testing:
Image.Source = ImageSource.FromFile("/full/path/to/image.png");
Performance issues
Problem: App is slow or unresponsive
Solutions:
-
Use virtualization for long lists (CollectionView does this by default)
-
Avoid binding to expensive properties:
// Bad: Computed property called on every frame public string ExpensiveProperty => ComputeExpensiveValue(); // Good: Cache the value private string _cachedValue; public string CachedProperty => _cachedValue ??= ComputeExpensiveValue(); -
Profile with console timestamps:
var sw = System.Diagnostics.Stopwatch.StartNew(); // ... operation ... Console.WriteLine($"Operation took {sw.ElapsedMilliseconds}ms");
For more information, visit the OpenMaui GitHub repository or check the individual sample README files.
MIT License Copyright (c) 2024 OpenMaui Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.