.github | ||
m4 | ||
pam | ||
.clang-format | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
blur.c | ||
blur.h | ||
blur_simd.c | ||
CHANGELOG | ||
configure.ac | ||
cursors.h | ||
i3lock.1 | ||
i3lock.c | ||
i3lock.h | ||
I3LOCK_VERSION | ||
LICENSE | ||
lock.sh | ||
Makefile.am | ||
randr.c | ||
randr.h | ||
README.md | ||
screenshot.png | ||
tinyexpr.c | ||
tinyexpr.h | ||
todo.md | ||
unlock_indicator.c | ||
unlock_indicator.h | ||
xcb.c | ||
xcb.h |
i3lock - improved screen locker
This is just a re-patched version of i3lock with the commits from i3lock-color; all the credit for the color functionality goes to eBrnd !
i3lock is a simple screen locker like slock. After starting it, you will see a white screen (you can configure the color/an image). You can return to your screen by entering your password.
Many little improvements have been made to i3lock over time:
-
i3lock forks, so you can combine it with an alias to suspend to RAM (run "i3lock && echo mem > /sys/power/state" to get a locked screen after waking up your computer from suspend to RAM)
-
You can specify either a background color or a PNG image which will be displayed while your screen is locked.
-
You can also specify additional color options with the following command-line options:
--insidevercolor=rrggbbaa
-- Inside of the circle while the password is being verified--insidewrongcolor=rrggbbaa
-- Inside of the circle when a wrong password was entered--insidecolor=rrggbbaa
-- Inside of the circle while typing/idle--ringvercolor=rrggbbaa
-- Outer ring while the password is being verified--ringwrongcolor=rrggbbaa
-- Outer ring when a wrong password was entered--ringcolor=rrggbbaa
-- Outer ring while typing/idle--linecolor=rrggbbaa
-- Line separating outer ring from inside of the circle--separatorcolor=rrggbbaa
-- Lines delimiting the highlight segments--textcolor=rrggbbaa
-- Text ("verifying", "wrong!")--keyhlcolor=rrggbbaa
-- Keypress highlight segments--bshlcolor=rrggbbaa
-- Backspace highlight segments--line-uses-ring
,-r
-- the line between the inside and outer ring uses the ring color for its color--line-uses-inside
,-s
-- the line between the inside and outer ring uses the inside color for its color
-
The following additional options have been added:
-
-S, --screen
-- specifies which display to draw the unlock indicator on -
-k, --clock
-- enables the clock display.--indicator
-- forces the indicator to always show, even if there's no activity.--composite
-- enables checking for compositors and trying to grab the compositor window, since that causes issues with some compositors.- NOTE: This can potentially allow sensitive information to display over the screen locker, so take care when you use this option.
-
-B=sigma, --blur
-- enables Gaussian blur. Sigma is the blur radius.- Note: You can still composite images over the blur (but still under the indicator) with -i.
- Eventually there might be an
imagepos
arg, similar totime
anddatepos
.
- Note: You can still composite images over the blur (but still under the indicator) with -i.
- Eventually there might be an
-
--indpos="x+(w/2):y+(h/2)"
-- position of the unlock indicator. Expressions using the variables x (current screen's x value), y (current screen's y value), w (screen width), h (screen height), and r (indicator radius) can be used. -
--timestr="%H:%M:%S"
-- allows custom overriding of the time format string. Acceptsstrftime
formatting. Default is"%H:%M:%S"
. -
--timepos="ix:iy-20"
-- position of the time. All the variables inindpos
can be used here, as well as the additional values ix (indicator x position), iy (indicator y position), cw (clock width), and ch (clock height). -
--timecolor=rrggbbaa
-- color of the time string -
--timefont="sans-serif"
-- font used for the time display -
--timesize=32
-- font size for the time display -
--datestr="%A, %m %Y"
-- allows custom overriding of the date format string. Acceptsstrftime
formatting. Default is"%A, %m %Y"
. -
--datepos="ix:iy-20"
-- position of the date. All the variables inindpos
andtimepos
can be used here, as well as the additional values tx (time x) and ty (time y). -
--datecolor=rrggbbaa
-- color of the date string -
--datefont="sans-serif"
-- font used for the date display -
--datesize=14
-- font size for the date display -
--veriftext="verifying…"
-- text to be shown while verifying -
--wrongtext="wrong!"
-- text to be shown upon an incorrect password being entered -
--statusfont="sans-serif"
-- font used for the status text -
--textsize=28
-- font size for the status text -
--modsize=14
-- font size for the modifier keys listing -
--radius=90
-- the radius of the circle indicator -
--ring-width=7
-- the width of the indicator ring -
The readme's list of options might be a bit out of date - please check the manpage, or look at the list of options in i3lock.c.
-
-
You can specify whether i3lock should bell upon a wrong password.
-
i3lock uses PAM and therefore is compatible with LDAP etc. On OpenBSD i3lock uses the bsd_auth(3) framework.
Building
Before you build - check and see if there's a packaged version available for your distro (there usually is, either in a community repo/PPA).
If there's no packaged version available - think carefully, since you're using a forked screen locker at your own risk.
i3lock now uses GNU autotools for building; you'll need to do something like autoreconf -i && ./configure && make
to build.
Required Packages
- pkg-config
- libxcb
- libxcb-util
- libpam-dev
- libcairo-dev
- libxcb-composite0
- libxcb-composite0-dev
- libxcb-xinerama
- libxcb-randr
- libev
- libx11-dev
- libx11-xcb-dev
- libxkbcommon >= 0.5.0
- libxkbcommon-x11 >= 0.5.0
(On centos/RHEL/etc, the packages tend to look like cairo-devel
instead of libcairo-dev
. Use yum provides \*/<header.h>
to figure out what packages you need.)
Ubuntu
sudo apt-get install pkg-config libxcb1 libpam-dev libcairo-dev libxcb-composite0 libxcb-composite0-dev libxcb-xinerama0-dev libev-dev libx11-dev libx11-xcb-dev libxkbcommon0 libxkbcommon-x11-0 libxcb-dpms0-dev libxcb-image0-dev libxcb-util0-dev libxcb-xkb-dev libxkbcommon-x11-dev libxkbcommon-dev
Aur Package
Running i3lock
Simply invoke the 'i3lock' command. To get out of it, enter your password and press enter.
A sample script is included in this repository. Here is a short clip of that script in action!
On OpenBSD the i3lock
binary needs to be setgid auth
to call the
authentication helpers, e.g. /usr/libexec/auth/login_passwd
.
Upstream
Please submit pull requests for i3lock things to https://github.com/i3/i3lock and pull requests for color things to me at https://github.com/chrjguill/i3lock-color.