labwc/docs/autostart
Johan Malm b50d0ea4c8 docs/autostart: use wlopm with *
With swayidle timeout/resume, use wlopm --off/--on with * instead of
specifying output names. When * is given as parameter to an operation
wlopm will do the operation for all discovered outputs.

https://git.sr.ht/~leon_plickat/wlopm/tree/master/item/wlopm.1#L68
2022-05-04 21:52:20 +01:00

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# Example autostart file
# Set background color.
swaybg -c '#113344' >/dev/null 2>&1 &
# Configure output directives such as mode, position, scale and transform.
# Use wlr-randr to get your output names
# Example ~/.config/kanshi/config below:
# profile {
# output HDMI-A-1 position 1366,0
# output eDP-1 position 0,0
# }
kanshi >/dev/null 2>&1 &
# Launch a panel such as yambar or waybar.
waybar >/dev/null 2>&1 &
# Enable notifications. Typically GNOME/KDE application notifications go
# through the org.freedesktop.Notifications D-Bus API and require a client such
# as mako to function correctly. Thunderbird is an example of this.
mako >/dev/null 2>&1 &
# Lock screen after 5 minutes; turn off display after another 5 minutes.
#
# Note that in the context of idle system power management, it is *NOT* a good
# idea to turn off displays by 'disabling outputs' for example by
# `wlr-randr --output <whatever> --off` because this re-arranges views
# (since a837fef). Instead use a wlr-output-power-management client such as
# https://git.sr.ht/~leon_plickat/wlopm
swayidle -w \
timeout 300 'swaylock -f -c 000000' \
timeout 600 'wlopm --off \*' \
resume 'wlopm --on \*' \
before-sleep 'swaylock -f -c 000000' >/dev/null 2>&1 &