6.3 KiB
Linux
Fonts
Many scripts assume you have access to Meslo LGM NerdFont. These can be replaced easily with any other nerd font. Other fonts may lack support for the right character set
$ mv -i downloaded-fonts/* ~/.local/share/fonts
# mv -i downloaded-fonts/* /usr/local/share/fonts
See the ArchWiki for more information. TexLive downloads a lot of additional fonts by default too
xRemap
Remapping keys is done through xremap
. Despite the name, it works flawlessly
on Wayland, at least in Sway
Depending on your environment, you need to install a different binary, all of
which are available through cargo
. For example cargo install xremap --features sway
. Check here for more
options.
If you're using systemd, run the following:
# ln -s ~/.configs_pointer/xremap/config{_console,}.yml
# mkdir -p /etc/xremap
# ln -s {~/.configs_pointer,/etc}/xremap/config.yml
# cp ~/.configs_pointer/systemd/xremap.service /etc/systemd/system/xremap.service
# cp ~/.cargo/bin/xremap /usr/local/bin/xremap
# systemctl enable xremap.service
# systemctl start xremap.service
# switch_keyboards.sh pc
You can toggle between Mac-style keyboard and standard keyboard with
switch_keyboards.sh
see the doc-comment vi $(which switch_keyboards.sh)
for
more information
sway/config
acts as a hotkey daemon and wtype
can synthesize input
Sway
To run sway, install the sway
and swaylock
packages. Both configs reference
default_wallpaper.png
in their respective directories. Put your wallpaper
there or change the corresponding config
file
If sway is acting up, try setting/unsetting WAYLAND_DISPLAY
and SWAYSOCK
.
swaymsg
also takes an -s
option which can specify the socket manually
Sway doesn't adjust the gamma on external displays. Compared to MacOS,
everything looks very washed-out and low contrast. Using wl-sunset
with -t 4000 -T 6500 -g 0.9
brings MacOS-like gamma curves
For more information about sway, read the i3 User's Guide. Particularly chapters 3 and 4 are very important for sway
Multilingual input (fcitx)
IME-style inputs require a complicated setup on wayland. The method described here unfortunately scales like Xwayland. That is to say it's very blurry on a HiDPI display. Also, IMEs don't work in Alacritty yet. Consider foot terminal if this is important
If you only need an IME in Chromium, Google Input Tools is a pretty decent solution. It scales properly on wayland and doesn't require a spotty setup. However, it doesn't work in the search bar and makes network calls for kanji lookups, which can be really slow
Otherwise you can use fcitx5. Choose a supported IME based on what language you need here. For the example below we'll install Mozc
please pacman -S fcitx5 fcitx5-configtool fcitx5-gtk fcitx5-qt fcitx5-mozc
please pacman -S gtk4 # For Chromium support
Next add these lines to /etc/environment
GTK_IM_MODULE=fcitx
QT_IM_MODULE=fcitx
XMODIFIERS=@im=fcitx
MOZ_ENABLE_WAYLAND=1
Currently, Chromium will only interface with fcitx5 when it's running on the
non-default gtk4. Add --gtk-version=4
to ~/.config/chromium-flags.conf
. As
of writing, this breaks Chromium's built-in file manager, the one for picking
files. Use Firefox for a better fcitx5 experience
Open fcitx5-configtool to set the required keyboards and change the global hotkey. For Mozc, you'd move the Mozc keyboard to the left. Not the other Japanese keyboards, those are not IME-based
You may need to reboot wayland or possibly the entire system. Fcitx5 will now be
available will the following command. Consider adding the following to
sway/config
if you want it on startup, or use <M-i>
to toggle in on/off
fcitx5 -d --replace
AV1 media
AV1 is the hottest new codec on the block, providing compression levels better than h265. I've seen it 200x smaller than png, with the same resolution and color space
To store images as avif, use magick convert my_image_name.{png,avif}
. viu
has no support for avif. imv
supports it out of the box. vimiv
requires a qt
plugin for support:
please pacman -S libavif
# Get the latest release from below, for example
# https://github.com/novomesk/qt-avif-image-plugin/releases/latest
curl -LO 'https://github.com/novomesk/qt-avif-image-plugin/archive/refs/tags/v0.5.0.tar.gz'
tar xf qt-avif-image-plugin-0.5.0.tar.gz
cd qt-avif-image-plugin-0.5.0
./build_libqavif_dynamic.sh
please make install
Chromium
Chromium does not support screen sharing by default on wayland. To add support
go into chrome://flags
and enable the "WebRTC PipeWire support" flag. Next
download the following a reboot to allow screen sharing
please pacman -S xdg-desktop-portal-wlr libpipewire02
Consider disabling "Continue running background apps when Chromium is closed" in settings
Fix the default fonts in chrome://settings/fonts
. These are the fallback fonts
For the really daring, change your download location to /dev/shm
. This is a
ramdisk which clears all its content on reboot
Firefox
Firefox will start on xorg by default, unless the MOZ_ENABLE_WAYLAND=1
environment variable is set. Incognito is enabled through the --private-window
flag
Firefox uses about:config
stored in
~/.mozilla/firefox/<random-hash>.default-release/prefs.js
. These are the
equivalent of Chromium flags. For these configs, simply switch
ui.key.menuAccessKeyFocuses
to false, to avoid conflicts with xremap
Backlights
Laptops usually control the backlight via apci. One program to control this is light. By default light requires the use of root privileges to modify devices. Use systemd rules and the video group to allow unprivileged users to run it normally:
curl -LO 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/haikarainen/light/master/90-backlight.rules'
please mkdir -p /usr/lib/udev/rules.d
please cp 90-backlight.rules /usr/lib/udev/rules.d
# Add your user to the video group
please usermod -aG video emiliko