SDDM is a modern display manager for X11 and Wayland aiming to be fast, simple and beautiful. It uses modern technologies like QtQuick, which in turn gives the designer the ability to create smooth, animated user interfaces.
SDDM is extremely themeable. We put no restrictions on the user interface design, it is completely up to the designer. We simply provide a few callbacks to the user interface which can be used for authentication, suspend etc.
To further ease theme creation we provide some premade components like a textbox, a combox etc.
There are a few sample themes distributed with SDDM. They can be used as a starting point for new themes.
SDDM is developed by volunteers, please consider donating money that can be used to support the features that you most desire.
- Issue tracker
- Wiki
- Mailing List
- IRC channel
#sddm
on chat.freenode.net
Qt >= 5.8.0 is required to use SDDM.
SDDM runs the greeter as a system user named "sddm" whose home directory needs
to be set to /var/lib/sddm
.
If pam and systemd are available, the greeter will go through logind which will give it access to drm devices.
Distributions without pam and systemd will need to put the "sddm" user into the "video" group, otherwise errors regarding GL and drm devices might be experienced.
Source code of SDDM is licensed under GNU GPL version 2 or later (at your choosing). QML files are MIT licensed and images are CC BY 3.0.
Add this at the bottom of the Xsetup script:
if [ -e /sbin/prime-offload ]; then
echo running NVIDIA Prime setup /sbin/prime-offload, you will need to manually run /sbin/prime-switch to shut down
/sbin/prime-offload
fi
SDDM reads user icon from either ~/.face.icon or FacesDir/username.face.icon
You need to make sure that SDDM user have permissions to read those files. In case you don't want to allow other users to access your $HOME you can use ACLs if your filesystem does support it.
setfacl -m u:sddm:x /home/username
setfacl -m u:sddm:r /home/username/.face.icon
In order to set custom DPI for high resolution screens you should configure Xorg yourself. An easy way is to pass an additional argument to Xorg.
Edit /etc/sddm.conf
, go to the X11
section and change ServerArguments
like this:
ServerArguments=-nolisten tcp -dpi 192
to set DPI to 192.
As an alternative you can edit Xorg configuration xorg.conf
, please refer to the
Xorg documentation.