Package Details: lightdm-git 1.30.0.r9.g03f21898-1

Git Clone URL: https://aur.archlinux.org/lightdm-git.git (read-only, click to copy)
Package Base: lightdm-git
Description: A lightweight display manager
Upstream URL: https://launchpad.net/lightdm
Licenses: GPL3, LGPL3
Conflicts: lightdm
Provides: lightdm
Submitter: SolarAquarion
Maintainer: SolarAquarion
Last Packager: SolarAquarion
Votes: 280
Popularity: 0.000000
First Submitted: 2017-12-18 19:45 (UTC)
Last Updated: 2019-12-15 20:56 (UTC)

Required by (46)

Sources (9)

Latest Comments

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<deleted-account> commented on 2012-10-03 16:29 (UTC)

gtk-greeter is 'teh basick' webkit-greeter need many tweaks, by default practically all are commented or point to nonexisten archives (in ./webkit-greeter.conf) unity-greeter, need patch ar changed deps for pointing to Archlinux in place of for example ubuntu-wallpapers crowd-greeter, I not try it kde/qt-greeter need a TON of KDE deps This info is for future users wanting a greeter

swiftgeek commented on 2012-09-29 20:30 (UTC)

I also think that "Greeter session" should be set to a symlink provided by this package ;) Eg. "/etc/lightdm/lightdm-greeter" I guess that by placing it in /etc it wont be overwritten on upgrade.

dgbaley27 commented on 2012-09-29 02:50 (UTC)

Out of curiosity, what are most people using for the greeter? The gtk-greeter sucks. I want something that shows up to around 6 users at a time and uses icons.

dgbaley27 commented on 2012-09-29 02:42 (UTC)

> accountsservice should be an optional dependency +2

swiftgeek commented on 2012-09-29 02:38 (UTC)

accountsservice should be an optional dependency

logos commented on 2012-09-23 09:52 (UTC)

When is going to be lightdm in general packages? It's one of the most used display managers!

flan_suse commented on 2012-09-20 01:28 (UTC)

@dgbaley Isn't that an option in NetworkManager (per connection) to have a wireless connection globally available (to all users)? I forgot to mention that I actually disabled "Available to all users" in my wireless connections. At least LightDM still passes the (user login) password to gnome-keyring to unlock the default keyring (used by NetworkManager.)

dgbaley27 commented on 2012-09-20 00:27 (UTC)

Wouldn't you prefer your network passwords to be stored in /etc/NetworkManager so that all users can access them? NM should only store user-specific connections in the keyring.

flan_suse commented on 2012-09-19 23:52 (UTC)

@Morfeo Thank you! It works great now. I just tested this on Xfce using NetworkManager (nm-applet) with multiple wireless routers (WPA2). For others who are interested, I have the gnome-keyring package installed and this is enabled in my Xfce startup applications: Secret Storage Service (GNOME Keyring: Secret Service) /usr/bin/gnome-keyring-daemon --start --components=secrets After the first time I tried to connect to a wireless router, I was asked for the WPA2 key, then I was asked to enter a new default keyring password. I used the same exact password as my user account's. Upon connecting to the wireless again, I was greeted with a prompt for the default keyring password, with the option to "Remember". Now, whenever I login with LightDM, I do not need to enter my default keyring password anymore! It works the same, just like on a standard GNOME desktop with GDM.