Greetd: Difference between revisions

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# User '''greetd''' also needs [Wayland#XDG_RUNTIME_DIR|XDG_RUNTIME_DIR]]. If [[Wayland#Use mkrundir|mkrundir]] is used, a simple wrapper script named <code>sway-greeted</Code> can be created as follows: {{Cat|/usr/local/bin/sway-greetd|#!/bin/sh
# User '''greetd''' also needs [[Wayland#XDG_RUNTIME_DIR|XDG_RUNTIME_DIR]]. If [[Wayland#Use mkrundir|mkrundir]] is used, a simple wrapper script named <code>sway-greeted</Code> can be created as follows: {{Cat|/usr/local/bin/sway-greetd|#!/bin/sh
export XDG_RUNTIME_DIR{{=}}$(mkrundir)
export XDG_RUNTIME_DIR{{=}}$(mkrundir)
exec sway $@}}
exec sway $@}}

Latest revision as of 07:39, 21 December 2024


greetd is a minimal and flexible login manager daemon that makes no assumptions about what you want to launch. It is recommended to read the greetd wiki first.

Installation

greetd needs to be combined with a greeter. You can find a list of available greeters here: greetd-*. This page shows the graphical greeter gtkgreet which is packaged as greetd-gtkgreet. Install the main package and the greeter:

# apk add greetd greetd-gtkgreet

Install a lightweight wayland compositor to be used with greetd login session.(If using Sway, no need for cage).

# apk add cage

Configuration

Graphical greeters like gtkgreet require either seatd or elogind.

If using cage, the config file appears as follows:

Contents of /etc/greetd/config.toml

[default_session] command = "cage -s -- gtkgreet" user = "greetd"

Instead of cage, sway or any other wayland compositor can be used by setting the greetd config file:

Contents of /etc/greetd/config.toml

[default_session] command = "sway --config /etc/greetd/sway-config" user = "greetd"

When seatd is used, following additional configuration is required.

  1. For graphical greeters like gtkgreet, the user greetd needs the seatd group:

    # adduser greetd seat

  2. Append rc_need=seatd in the following file:

    Contents of /etc/conf.d/greetd

    ... rc_need=seatd
  3. User greetd also needs XDG_RUNTIME_DIR. If mkrundir is used, a simple wrapper script named sway-greeted can be created as follows:

    Contents of /usr/local/bin/sway-greetd

    #!/bin/sh export XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=$(mkrundir) exec sway $@
  4. Make it executable using # chmod +x /usr/local/bin/sway-greetd and replace sway by sway-greetd in the greetd config file:

    Contents of /etc/greetd/config.toml

    [default_session] command = "sway-greetd --config /etc/greetd/sway-config" user = "greetd"

Create a dedicated sway config file that runs the greeter and terminates when it dies:

Contents of /etc/greetd/sway-config

exec "gtkgreet -l -s /etc/greetd/gtkgreet.css; swaymsg exit"

Edit/create the list of login environments for gtkgreet, which is by default read from /etc/greetd/environments. Instead of listing sway a wrapper script like sway-run can be used.

Contents of /etc/greetd/environments

sway-run

Once you have completed the above configuration, Enable and start greetd:

# rc-update add greetd # rc-service greetd start

For text based greeters you want to make sure that vt is set in:

Contents of /etc/greetd/config.toml

[terminal] # The VT to run the greeter on. Can be "next", "current" or a number # designating the VT. vt = 7

See Also