2.8 KiB
Also applies to Arch & other distributions based on it, how do you change the display manager, aka login screen.
--needed
makes pacman not install packages that are already installed.- uncommented line = line that doesn’t begin with
#
. - to change DM you don’t need to reboot, you can also
sudo systemctl stop olddm
andsudo systemctl start newdm
, but this logs you out. - my personal recommendation is using LightDM if it works for you,
otherwise sddm. I personally use LightDM, because sddm is missing
support for
sudo passwd -de user
sddm/sddm#472
LightDM gtk greeter
Many lightdm issues are caused by greeter, so I am telling how to change it. However if you encounter issues with Antergos default greeter, report them at github.com/Antergos/antergos-packages/issues! If they are already reported, give the issues a +1 from top right of the issue details box (looks like +☺).
sudo pacman --needed -S lightdm lightdm-gtk-greeter accountsservice numlockx
Edit the file /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf
and find the
uncommented line that starts with greeter-session=
and
change it to greeter-session=lightdm-gtk-greeter
.
If you have keyboard with numpad you might want to
enable Num Lock by default by finding the uncommented line starting with
greeter-setup-script=
and changing it to
greeter-setup-script=/usr/bin/numlockx on
. If there isn’t
uncommented line anywhere in the file, just uncomment one or add it
under the commented line.
Then enable it by running
sudo systemctl enable -f lightdm
and reboot.
sddm
sudo pacman --needed -S sddm
SDDM is simple display manager for all desktop environments and is successor of KDM which is the KDE Display Manager.
To create a config file and enable it for next reboot:
sddm --example-config | sudo tee /etc/sddm.conf
sudo systemctl enable -f sddm
The lines you might want to change are the one starting with
Nucmlock=
and I recommend changing it to
Numlock=on
if you have the numpad. The other line
starts with Current=
and is used to select the current
theme. Available themes can be seen with
ls /usr/share/sddm/themes
.
KDE users might also want to install sddm-kcm
which
gives GUI for controlling sddm.
gdm
sudo pacman --needed -S gdm
The last display manager I am mentioning is the Gnome Display Manager
and is only for Gnome users and I am not so familiar with it and I
believe using it is just sudo systemctl enable -f gdm
.