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nixpkgs/nixos/modules/services/x11/display-managers/default.nix

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# This module declares the options to define a *display manager*, the
# program responsible for handling X logins (such as xdm, gdb, or
# SLiM). The display manager allows the user to select a *session
# type*. When the user logs in, the display manager starts the
# *session script* ("xsession" below) to launch the selected session
# type. The session type defines two things: the *desktop manager*
# (e.g., KDE, Gnome or a plain xterm), and optionally the *window
# manager* (e.g. kwin or twm).
{ config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
with lib;
let
cfg = config.services.xserver;
xorg = pkgs.xorg;
fontconfig = config.fonts.fontconfig;
xresourcesXft = pkgs.writeText "Xresources-Xft" ''
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${optionalString (fontconfig.dpi != 0) ''Xft.dpi: ${toString fontconfig.dpi}''}
Xft.antialias: ${if fontconfig.antialias then "1" else "0"}
Xft.rgba: ${fontconfig.subpixel.rgba}
Xft.lcdfilter: lcd${fontconfig.subpixel.lcdfilter}
Xft.hinting: ${if fontconfig.hinting.enable then "1" else "0"}
Xft.autohint: ${if fontconfig.hinting.autohint then "1" else "0"}
freetype: 2.6.5 -> 2.7.1 The Infinality bytecode interpreter is removed in favor of the new v40 TrueType interpreter. In the past, the Infinality interpreter provided support for ClearType-style hinting instructions while the default interpreter (then v35) provided support only for original TrueType-style instructions. The v40 interpreter corrects this deficiency, so the Infinality interpreter is no longer necessary. To understand why the Infinality interpreter is no longer necessary, we should understand how ClearType differs from TrueType and how the v40 interpreter works. The following is a summary of information available on the FreeType website [1] mixed with my own editorializing. TrueType instructions use horizontal and vertical hints to improve glyph rendering. Before TrueType, fonts were only vertically hinted; horizontal hints improved rendering by snapping stems to pixel boundaries. Horizontal hinting is a risk because it can significantly distort glyph shapes and kerning. Extensive testing at different resolutions is needed to perfect the TrueType hints. Microsoft invested significant effort to do this with its "Core fonts for the Web" project, but few other typefaces have seen this level of attention. With the advent of subpixel rendering, the effective horizontal resolution of most displays increased significantly. ClearType eschews horizontal hinting in favor of horizontal supersampling. Most fonts are designed for the Microsoft bytecode interpreter, which implements a compatibility mode with TrueType-style (horizontal and vertical) instructions. However, applying the full horizontal hints to subpixel-rendered fonts leads to color fringes and inconsistent stem widths. The Infinality interpreter implements several techniques to mitigate these problems, going so far as to embed font- and glyph-specific hacks in the interpreter. On the other hand, the v40 interpreter ignores the horizontal hinting instructions so that glyphs render as they are intended to on the Microsoft interpreter. Without the horizontal hints, the problems of glyph and kerning distortion, color fringes, and inconsistent stem widths--the problems the Infinality interpreter was created to solve--simply don't occur in the first place. There are also security concerns which motivate removing the Infinality patches. Although there is an updated version of the Infinality interpreter for FreeType 2.7, the lack of a consistent upstream maintainer is a security concern. The interpreter is a Turing-complete virtual machine which has had security vulnerabilities in the past. While the default interpreter is used in billions of devices and is maintained by an active developer, the Infinality interpreter is neither scrutinized nor maintained. We will probably never know if there are defects in the Infinality interpreter, and if they were discovered they would likely never be fixed. I do not think that is an acceptable situtation for a core library like FreeType. Dropping the Infinality patches means that font rendering will be less customizable. I think this is an acceptable trade-off. The Infinality interpreter made many compromises to mitigate the problems with horizontal hinting; the main purpose of customization is to tailor these compromises to the user's preferences. The new interpreter does not have to make these compromises because it renders fonts as their designers intended, so this level of customization is not necessary. The Infinality-associated patches are also removed from cairo. These patches only set the default rendering options in case they aren't set though Fontconfig. On NixOS, the rendering options are always set in Fontconfig, so these patches never actually did anything for us! The Fontconfig test suite is patched to account for a quirk in the way PCF fonts are named. The fontconfig option `hintstyle` is no longer configurable in NixOS. This option selects the TrueType interpreter; the v40 interpreter is `hintslight` and the older v35 interpreter is `hintmedium` or `hintfull` (which have actually always been the same thing). The setting may still be changed through the `localConf` option or by creating a user Fontconfig file. Users with HiDPI displays should probably disable hinting and antialiasing: at best they have no visible effect. The fontconfig-ultimate settings are still available in NixOS, but they are no longer the default. They still work, but their main purpose is to set rendering quirks which are no longer necessary and may actually be detrimental (e.g. setting `hintfull` for some fonts). Also, the vast array of font substitutions provided is not an appropriate default; the default setting should be to give the user the font they asked for. [1]. https://www.freetype.org/freetype2/docs/subpixel-hinting.html
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Xft.hintstyle: hintslight
'';
mkCases = session:
concatStrings (
mapAttrsToList (name: starts: ''
(${name})
${concatMapStringsSep "\n " (n: n.start) starts}
;;
'') (lib.groupBy (n: n.name) session)
);
# file provided by services.xserver.displayManager.session.wrapper
xsessionWrapper = pkgs.writeScript "xsession-wrapper"
''
#! ${pkgs.bash}/bin/bash
# Shared environment setup for graphical sessions.
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. /etc/profile
cd "$HOME"
${optionalString cfg.startDbusSession ''
if test -z "$DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS"; then
exec ${pkgs.dbus.dbus-launch} --exit-with-session "$0" "$@"
fi
''}
${optionalString cfg.displayManager.job.logToJournal ''
if [ -z "$_DID_SYSTEMD_CAT" ]; then
export _DID_SYSTEMD_CAT=1
exec ${config.systemd.package}/bin/systemd-cat -t xsession "$0" "$@"
fi
''}
${optionalString cfg.displayManager.job.logToFile ''
exec &> >(tee ~/.xsession-errors)
''}
# Start PulseAudio if enabled.
${optionalString (config.hardware.pulseaudio.enable) ''
# Publish access credentials in the root window.
if ${config.hardware.pulseaudio.package.out}/bin/pulseaudio --dump-modules | grep module-x11-publish &> /dev/null; then
${config.hardware.pulseaudio.package.out}/bin/pactl load-module module-x11-publish "display=$DISPLAY"
fi
''}
# Tell systemd about our $DISPLAY and $XAUTHORITY.
# This is needed by the ssh-agent unit.
#
# Also tell systemd about the dbus session bus address.
# This is required by user units using the session bus.
${config.systemd.package}/bin/systemctl --user import-environment DISPLAY XAUTHORITY DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS
# Load X defaults. This should probably be safe on wayland too.
${xorg.xrdb}/bin/xrdb -merge ${xresourcesXft}
if test -e ~/.Xresources; then
${xorg.xrdb}/bin/xrdb -merge ~/.Xresources
elif test -e ~/.Xdefaults; then
${xorg.xrdb}/bin/xrdb -merge ~/.Xdefaults
fi
# Speed up application start by 50-150ms according to
# http://kdemonkey.blogspot.nl/2008/04/magic-trick.html
rm -rf "$HOME/.compose-cache"
mkdir "$HOME/.compose-cache"
# Work around KDE errors when a user first logs in and
# .local/share doesn't exist yet.
mkdir -p "$HOME/.local/share"
unset _DID_SYSTEMD_CAT
${cfg.displayManager.sessionCommands}
# Allow the user to execute commands at the beginning of the X session.
if test -f ~/.xprofile; then
source ~/.xprofile
fi
# Start systemd user services for graphical sessions
${config.systemd.package}/bin/systemctl --user start graphical-session.target
# Allow the user to setup a custom session type.
if test -x ~/.xsession; then
eval exec ~/.xsession "$@"
fi
if test "$1"; then
# Run the supplied session command. Remove any double quotes with eval.
eval exec "$@"
else
# Fall back to the default window/desktopManager
exec ${cfg.displayManager.session.script}
fi
'';
# file provided by services.xserver.displayManager.session.script
xsession = wm: dm: pkgs.writeScript "xsession"
''
#! ${pkgs.bash}/bin/bash
# Legacy session script used to construct .desktop files from
# `services.xserver.displayManager.session` entries. Called from
# `sessionWrapper`.
# Expected parameters:
# $1 = <desktop-manager>+<window-manager>
# The first argument of this script is the session type.
sessionType="$1"
if [ "$sessionType" = default ]; then sessionType=""; fi
# The session type is "<desktop-manager>+<window-manager>", so
# extract those (see:
# http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/syntax/pe#substring_removal).
windowManager="''${sessionType##*+}"
: ''${windowManager:=${cfg.windowManager.default}}
desktopManager="''${sessionType%%+*}"
: ''${desktopManager:=${cfg.desktopManager.default}}
# Start the window manager.
case "$windowManager" in
${mkCases wm}
(*) echo "$0: Window manager '$windowManager' not found.";;
esac
# Start the desktop manager.
case "$desktopManager" in
${mkCases dm}
(*) echo "$0: Desktop manager '$desktopManager' not found.";;
esac
${optionalString cfg.updateDbusEnvironment ''
${lib.getBin pkgs.dbus}/bin/dbus-update-activation-environment --systemd --all
''}
test -n "$waitPID" && wait "$waitPID"
${config.systemd.package}/bin/systemctl --user stop graphical-session.target
exit 0
'';
# Desktop Entry Specification:
# - https://standards.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/latest/
# - https://standards.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/latest/ar01s06.html
mkDesktops = names: pkgs.runCommand "desktops"
{ # trivial derivation
preferLocalBuild = true;
allowSubstitutes = false;
}
''
mkdir -p "$out/share/xsessions"
${concatMapStrings (n: ''
cat - > "$out/share/xsessions/${n}.desktop" << EODESKTOP
[Desktop Entry]
Version=1.0
Type=XSession
TryExec=${cfg.displayManager.session.script}
Exec=${cfg.displayManager.session.script} "${n}"
Name=${n}
Comment=
EODESKTOP
'') names}
${concatMapStrings (pkg: ''
if test -d ${pkg}/share/xsessions; then
${xorg.lndir}/bin/lndir ${pkg}/share/xsessions $out/share/xsessions
fi
'') cfg.displayManager.extraSessionFilePackages}
${concatMapStrings (pkg: ''
if test -d ${pkg}/share/wayland-sessions; then
mkdir -p "$out/share/wayland-sessions"
${xorg.lndir}/bin/lndir ${pkg}/share/wayland-sessions $out/share/wayland-sessions
fi
'') cfg.displayManager.extraSessionFilePackages}
'';
in
{
options = {
services.xserver.displayManager = {
xauthBin = mkOption {
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internal = true;
default = "${xorg.xauth}/bin/xauth";
description = "Path to the <command>xauth</command> program used by display managers.";
};
xserverBin = mkOption {
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type = types.path;
description = "Path to the X server used by display managers.";
};
xserverArgs = mkOption {
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type = types.listOf types.str;
default = [];
example = [ "-ac" "-logverbose" "-verbose" "-nolisten tcp" ];
description = "List of arguments for the X server.";
};
nixos/xserver: Implement configuration of NVIDIA Optimus via PRIME This adds configuration options which automate the configuration of NVIDIA Optimus using PRIME. This allows using the NVIDIA proprietary driver on Optimus laptops, in order to render using the NVIDIA GPU while outputting to displays connected only to the integrated Intel GPU. It also adds an option for enabling kernel modesetting for the NVIDIA driver (via a kernel command line flag); this is particularly useful together with Optimus/PRIME because it fixes tearing on PRIME-connected screens. The user still needs to enable the Optimus/PRIME feature and specify the bus IDs of the Intel and NVIDIA GPUs, but this is still much easier for users and more reliable. The implementation handles both the X configuration file as well as getting display managers to run certain necessary `xrandr` commands just after X has started. Configuration of commands run after X startup is done using a new configuration option `services.xserver.displayManager.setupCommands`. Support for this option is implemented for LightDM, GDM and SDDM; all of these have been tested with this feature including logging into a Plasma session. Note: support of `setupCommands` for GDM is implemented by making GDM run the session executable via a wrapper; the wrapper will run the `setupCommands` before execing. This seemed like the simplest and most reliable approach, and solves running these commands both for GDM's X server and user X servers (GDM starts separate X servers for itself and user sessions). An alternative approach would be with autostart files but that seems harder to set up and less reliable. Note that some simple features for X configuration file generation (in `xserver.nix`) are added which are used in the implementation: - `services.xserver.extraConfig`: Allows adding arbitrary new sections. This is used to add the Device section for the Intel GPU. - `deviceSection` and `screenSection` within `services.xserver.drivers`. This allows the nvidia configuration module to add additional contents into the `Device` and `Screen` sections of the "nvidia" driver, and not into such sections for other drivers that may be enabled.
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setupCommands = mkOption {
type = types.lines;
default = "";
description = ''
Shell commands executed just after the X server has started.
This option is only effective for display managers for which this feature
is supported; currently these are LightDM, GDM and SDDM.
'';
};
sessionCommands = mkOption {
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type = types.lines;
default = "";
example =
''
xmessage "Hello World!" &
'';
description = ''
Shell commands executed just before the window or desktop manager is
started. These commands are not currently sourced for Wayland sessions.
'';
};
hiddenUsers = mkOption {
type = types.listOf types.str;
default = [ "nobody" ];
description = ''
A list of users which will not be shown in the display manager.
'';
};
extraSessionFilePackages = mkOption {
type = types.listOf types.package;
default = [];
description = ''
A list of packages containing xsession files to be passed to the display manager.
'';
};
session = mkOption {
default = [];
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example = literalExample
''
[ { manage = "desktop";
name = "xterm";
start = '''
''${pkgs.xterm}/bin/xterm -ls &
waitPID=$!
''';
}
]
'';
description = ''
List of sessions supported with the command used to start each
session. Each session script can set the
<varname>waitPID</varname> shell variable to make this script
wait until the end of the user session. Each script is used
to define either a window manager or a desktop manager. These
can be differentiated by setting the attribute
<varname>manage</varname> either to <literal>"window"</literal>
or <literal>"desktop"</literal>.
The list of desktop manager and window manager should appear
inside the display manager with the desktop manager name
followed by the window manager name.
'';
apply = list: rec {
wm = filter (s: s.manage == "window") list;
dm = filter (s: s.manage == "desktop") list;
names = flip concatMap dm
(d: map (w: d.name + optionalString (w.name != "none") ("+" + w.name))
(filter (w: d.name != "none" || w.name != "none") wm));
desktops = mkDesktops names;
script = xsession wm dm;
wrapper = xsessionWrapper;
};
};
job = {
preStart = mkOption {
type = types.lines;
default = "";
example = "rm -f /var/log/my-display-manager.log";
description = "Script executed before the display manager is started.";
};
execCmd = mkOption {
type = types.str;
example = literalExample ''
"''${pkgs.slim}/bin/slim"
'';
description = "Command to start the display manager.";
};
environment = mkOption {
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type = types.attrsOf types.unspecified;
default = {};
example = { SLIM_CFGFILE = "/etc/slim.conf"; };
description = "Additional environment variables needed by the display manager.";
};
logToFile = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
description = ''
Whether the display manager redirects the output of the
session script to <filename>~/.xsession-errors</filename>.
'';
};
logToJournal = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = true;
description = ''
Whether the display manager redirects the output of the
session script to the systemd journal.
'';
};
};
};
};
config = {
services.xserver.displayManager.xserverBin = "${xorg.xorgserver.out}/bin/X";
systemd.user.targets.graphical-session = {
unitConfig = {
RefuseManualStart = false;
StopWhenUnneeded = false;
};
};
};
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imports = [
(mkRemovedOptionModule [ "services" "xserver" "displayManager" "desktopManagerHandlesLidAndPower" ]
"The option is no longer necessary because all display managers have already delegated lid management to systemd.")
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];
}