Hyprland's idle daemon
- based on the
ext-idle-notify-v1
wayland protocol - support for dbus' loginctl commands (lock / unlock / before-sleep)
- support for dbus' inhibit (used by e.g. firefox / steam)
Configuration is done via ~/.config/hypr/hypridle.conf
in the standard
hyprland syntax.
general {
lock_cmd = notify-send "lock!" # dbus/sysd lock command (loginctl lock-session)
unlock_cmd = notify-send "unlock!" # same as above, but unlock
before_sleep_cmd = notify-send "Zzz" # command ran before sleep
after_sleep_cmd = notify-send "Awake!" # command ran after sleep
ignore_dbus_inhibit = false # whether to ignore dbus-sent idle-inhibit requests (used by e.g. firefox or steam)
}
listener {
timeout = 500 # in seconds
on-timeout = notify-send "You are idle!" # command to run when timeout has passed
on-resume = notify-send "Welcome back!" # command to run when activity is detected after timeout has fired.
}
You can add as many listeners as you please. Omitting on-timeout
or on-resume
(or leaving them empty)
will make those events ignored.
- wayland
- wayland-protocols
- hyprlang >= 0.4.0
- sdbus-c++
cmake --no-warn-unused-cli -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE:STRING=Release -S . -B ./build
cmake --build ./build --config Release --target hypridle -j`nproc 2>/dev/null || getconf NPROCESSORS_CONF`
sudo cmake --install build
Hypridle should ideally be launched after logging in. This can be done by your compositor or by systemd.
For example, for Hyprland, use the following in your hyprland.conf
.
exec-once = hypridle
If, instead, you want to have systemd do this for you, you'll just need to enable the service using
systemctl --user enable --now hypridle.service
-c <config_path>, --config <config_path>: specify a config path, by default
set to ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/hypr/hypridle.conf
-q, --quiet
-v, --verbose