sddm
hawck
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sddm | hawck | |
---|---|---|
83 | 8 | |
1,783 | 520 | |
2.1% | - | |
7.9 | 3.5 | |
12 days ago | 4 months ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
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sddm
- SDDM 0.20.0 released!
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Plasma users rejoice: SDDM just had a new release!
Well, it seems it is still considered experimental https://github.com/sddm/sddm/pull/1737
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Slow-reboot SDDM bug fix may soon be upstreamed by KDE
There are dozens of threads everywhere about it since around early 2021. KDE will take over the SDDM project and that bug fix may soon finally be up-streamed.
- sddm patch required by fish shell users
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Plz don't downvote this is cry for help
LMAO the login issue was this https://github.com/sddm/sddm/issues/1592
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SDDM trouble
Wayland autologin does not work with sddm (if you're using such a configuration) https://github.com/sddm/sddm/issues/1676
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sddm & wayland config
Thanks everyone for your time - installing xorg-minimal solved the issue; next version should solve the issue topic discussed in sddm github. I leave the following here just in case someone with skill & time comes across - seems a bit of love would not hurt sddm: https://github.com/sddm/sddm/issues/1471
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[SDDM] [Fedora 38] [Nvidia] SDDM extremely laggy, not respecting keyboard layout
Relevant to your keyboard configuration issue: https://github.com/sddm/sddm/issues/703
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Plasma 6: “Better defaults” – Adventures in Linux and KDE
Also fixed in -git
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Kubuntu changed my login screen
No, the picture shows that the login manager is still sddm, but somehow the login theme used by sddm has been reverted to the sddm default of the 'maui' instead of the 'breeze' theme used by default in Kubuntu. The package shipping the breeze theme (sddm-theme-breeze) may have become uninstalled, or sddm config changed somehow to not use breeze.
hawck
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Unpacking Elixir: Syntax
That is actually very smart and helpful, thanks! :) My only gripe with autokey is that it's the only thing holding me back from wayland. Hawck is supposed to work with wayland but I never got it to work, was a while ago I though
https://github.com/snyball/Hawck
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Curious to know what are your general experiences on using keyboard and mouse input automations on Wayland...
Autokey does not work yet, but there is Hawck and Espanso that you could play around with. And there is ydotool if all you need is simulating basic input (as in ydotool mousemove -x -10 -y -10, ydotool type 'Hello world!' and so on).
- Hawck – Linux AutoKey alternative that also works in Wayland
- Looking for a program similar to AHK on windows
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Are they any good multi-key keyboard shortcut remapping daemons?
Hawck?
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Linux Touchpad Like MacBook Update: Touchpad Gestures Now Shipping
>Creating a "standardized experience" like Windows usually means that configurability goes right out the window. It's how you get abominations like dconf or the GNOME music player
I don't understand how you connected these dots and I'd suggest against calling things abominations. You don't have to use dconf or the GNOME music player, those aren't standardized. If someone does like them I think they're perfectly fine, they do exactly what they're advertised to do. It's also fine if you don't like them, they're just two options from the many configuration databases and media players that you can choose from.
>But why shouldn't I be able to run xbindkeys or sxhkd or whatever hotkey dameon I want?
In some ways you actually can but it depends on the hotkey daemon and how it's implemented. The reason for that is technical, those are implemented with X grabs which have a number of usability and security issues. There are a few key rebinding daemons that use evdev directly so they work with Wayland:
https://github.com/samvel1024/kbct
https://github.com/snyball/Hawck
But these also do have similar security issues to X key grabs, in that they effectively operate as keyloggers. If you're looking for an API that works purely within Wayland and lets unprivileged clients request key rebinding, that doesn't exist yet. Somebody would need to specify what that API looks like and figure out a good way to make it secure. What would the end goal of the API be, and how could the system (and by extension, the user) tell the difference between a legitimate hotkey daemon and a malicious keylogger? And would it actually be any better than the approach of snooping evdev? I don't know the answer to these questions but you may have more experience with this than I do.
- Key Remapping in Linux — 2021 Edition
What are some alternatives?
manjaro-sway - manjaro linux with wayland 🖼, sway 🌴 and a lot of ♥
keymapper - A cross-platform context-aware key remapper.
lightdm - Login screen using the LightDM framework.
compute-runtime - Intel® Graphics Compute Runtime for oneAPI Level Zero and OpenCL™ Driver
wayland-protocols - Wayland protocol development (mirror)
gtkplatform - Run Qt applications using gtk+ as a windowing system.
labwc - A Wayland window-stacking compositor
therubyracer - Embed the V8 Javascript Interpreter into Ruby
lightdm - Display Manager
Waybar - Highly customizable Wayland bar for Sway and Wlroots based compositors. :v: :tada:
wayfire - A modular and extensible wayland compositor
macrodevice - Turn any input device into a dedicated macrodevice.