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Table of Contents
Packages
Lidm relies on its community to package lidm for distributions and make the installation easier for everyone. Please raise any issues on the packages themselves and not the source repository.
If you packaged lidm for any distribution not listed here or keep your own version of an inactive package, feel free to contact me to be added here. (could be a GitHub discussion or an email if you don't use GitHub)
These packages just install lidm, once installed you have to enable it. It depends on your init system, but if you're using systemd (most likely), first find your currently active display manager (if any, examples are sddm, gdm, ly) and disable it:
systemctl disable <display manager name here>
And then enable lidm:
systemctl enable lidm
Lidm now should show on the next boot!
If you are on a TTY and don't wish to reboot, you should be able to use --now with both commands. It's likely to kill your current desktop evironment if it was launched from it.
Fedora
Thanks to @KernelFreeze there's a COPR repo available at https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/celestelove/lidm/ to install lidm. (https://github.com/javalsai/lidm/discussions/92)
AUR
AUR packages will automatically install most files.
Caution
service files have to be manually installed by now.
Nix Flake
You can install by doing
nix profile install github:javalsai/lidm
or try it out without installing by:
nix run github:javalsai/lidm
Caution
This doesn't include service files neither
Nix Module
Sidenote
The nix module lacks on several aspects, if you know much about nix and know how to improve this package, feel free to open an issue or a PR to help. The nix package maintainer position is open too.
Lidm includes a nix module in assets/pkg/nix/module.nix that you can add
(along the included nix files) and import in your configuration.nix.
Once imported you'll need to add:
services.displayManager.enable = true;
systemd.services.lidm.enable = true;
Optionally, you can configure it setting services.lidm.config. You can either
pass:
- A string to copy the config from a theme in
themes/with said name (name, e.g"cherry"). - An attribute tree with the same names as the config file, e.g:
with config.lidm.keysEnum; {
strings = {
f_poweroff = "custom_poweroff";
};
behavior = {
include_defshell = true;
source = [
"path1"
"path2"
];
};
functions = { poweroff = F1; };
# etc...
};
it's not necessary to cover all keys and anything can be put there, even if it's not valid config
Note
service files are included and enabled
Installing from Source
Firstly, you'll need to build the package, this also includes man pages, default config, themes and other files you might need.
To build it you only need to have some basic packages (should come pre-installed in almost all distros): make, gcc or another gccish compiler, and libpam headers. If it builds, it surely works anyways.
git clone https://github.com/javalsai/lidm.git
cd lidm
make # 👍
Note
There's pre-built binaries on the releases tab too.
Then you can install the files onto your filesystem with:
make install
And additionally, to install service files (start-up behavior). more docs
# automatically detects your init system
# and install service file (for tty7)
make install-service
# or if you don't like autodetection
make install-service-systemd # systemd
make install-service-dinit # dinit
make install-service-runit # runit (/etc/sv)
make install-service-runit-etc # runit (/etc/runit/sv)
make install-service-openrc # openrc
make install-service-s6 # s6 (/etc/sv)
make install-service-s6-etc # s6 (/etc/s6/sv)
# For runit and s6, some distros (e.g. Artix) like to put it in /etc/<init>/sv
# to better isolate their packages while other distros (e.g. Void) just put it
# in /etc/sv