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. Note that i3lock is not an image manipulation software. If you need to resize the image to fill the screen or similar, use existing tooling to do this before passing it to i3lock.
-
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.
See the i3lock home page.
- pkg-config
- libxcb
- libxcb-util
- libpam-dev
- libcairo-dev
- libxcb-xinerama
- libxcb-randr
- libev
- libx11-dev
- libx11-xcb-dev
- libxkbcommon >= 0.5.0
- libxkbcommon-x11 >= 0.5.0
- libxcb-image
- libxcb-xrm
To test i3lock, you can directly run the i3lock
command. To get out of it,
enter your password and press enter.
For a more permanent setup, we strongly recommend using xss-lock
so that the
screen is locked before your laptop suspends:
xss-lock --transfer-sleep-lock -- i3lock --nofork
On OpenBSD the i3lock
binary needs to be setgid auth
to call the
authentication helpers, e.g. /usr/libexec/auth/login_passwd
.
We recommend you use the provided package from your distribution. Do not build i3lock unless you have a reason to do so.
First install the dependencies listed in requirements section, then run these commands (might need to be adapted to your OS):
autoreconf --force --install
rm -rf build/
mkdir -p build && cd build/
../configure \
--prefix=/usr \
--sysconfdir=/etc \
--disable-sanitizers
make
Please submit pull requests to https://github.com/i3/i3lock