Stizzah@lemmygrad.mltoProgramming@programming.dev•Why Don’t Tech Companies Pay Their Engineers to Stay?
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3 months agoIt’s just PR for his company, Athena or whatever the fuck is called. The real and simple answer is: employers want to pay workers the minimum necessary, ideally zero, while extracting as much work they can from them. The natural consequence is that the smartest workers will job-hopping until they can, to work less for more money. Long story short: it’s how capitalism work.
I have the same setup (EndeavourOS / KDE plasma 6 / Wayland / SDDM / 2 monitors) and had the same problem. The worst thing is that typing the password in the “active” login prompt (the one with the focus) wasn’t working anyway, so I had to use the mouse to give focus to the other monitor first, and then type the password. Absolutely annoying.
The solution I found (sorry I forgot where, some forum) is to disable all the detected monitors except one in
/usr/share/sddm/scripts/Xsetup
. Basically your secondary monitor will not get any signal until you type the password and log in. At that point any other monitor will be reactivated automatically.This is my Xsetup:
#!/bin/sh xrandr --output DisplayPort-0 --mode 2560x1440 --pos 0x0 --rotate normal xrandr --output DisplayPort-1 --off xrandr --output HDMI-A-0 --off xrandr --output HDMI-A-1 --off
IMPORTANT
Check out the output of
xrandr
in Wayland on my system:$ xrandr | grep ' connected' DP-1 connected primary 2560x1440+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 590mm x 334mm DP-2 connected 2560x1440+2560+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 590mm x 334mm
DP-1 and DP-2 are the names used by Wayland, but they don’t work in Xsetup because X11 calls the ports DisplayPort-0 and DisplayPort-1 - and I don’t remember if HDMI ports are also called differently.
So you need to log in X11 first, get the names with xrandr, create or update Xsetup and reboot.