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Light is a program to control backlight controllers under GNU/Linux:
Let's get started with a few examples! See the following sections for the detailed descriptions of all available commands, options and how to access different controllers.
Get the current brightness in percent
light -G
or
light
Increase brightness by 5 percent
light -A 5
Set the minimum cap to 2 in raw value on the acpi_video0 controller:
light -cr -s acpi_video0 -S 2
Try to set the brightness to 0 after that, it will be changed to the minimum 2:
light -r -s acpi_video0 -S 0
Find keyboard controllers:
light -k -L
Activate ScrollLock
LED, here input15
is used, but this varies
between different systems:
light -k -s "input15::scrolllock" -S 100
Usually, LEDs only take 0 or 1 in raw value (i.e. for off/on), so you can instead write:
light -kr -s "input15::scrolllock" -S 1
Verify by reading back the max brightness, you should get a value of 1:
light -kr -m -s "input15::scrolllock
-G
: Get (read) brightness/data from controllers/files-S VAL
: Set (write)brightness/data to controllers/files-A VAL
: Like -S
, but adds the given value-U VAL
: Like -S
, but subtracts the given value-O
: Save the current brightness for later use (usually used on shutdown)-I
: Restore the previously saved brightness (usually used on boot)-L
: List available controllers, see below -k
option as wellWithout any options (below) the commands operate on the brightness of an
automatically selected controller. Values are given in percent, unless
the below r
option is also given.
Note: like most UNIX applications, light only gives output on
errors. If something goes wrong try the verbosity option -v VAL
:
Values may be given, or presented, in percent or raw mode. Raw mode is the format specific to the controller. The default is in percent, but raw mode may be required for precise control, or when the steps are very few, e.g. for most keyboard backlight controllers.
-p
: Percent, default-r
: Raw modeBy default the screen is the active target for all commands, use -k
to
select the keyboard instead. In either case you may need to select a
different controller, see below.
-l
: Act on screen backlight, default-k
: Act on keyboard backlight and LEDsBy default commands act on the brightness property, which is read+write. The maximum brightness is a read-only property. The minimum brightness cap is a feature implemented to protect against setting brightness too low, since some controllers make the screen go pitch black at 0%. For controllers like that it is recommended to set this value.
-b
: Current brightness of selected controller, default-m
: Max. brightness of selected controller-c
: Min. brightness (cap) of selected controller (recommend raw mode)Controller is automatically done to select the controller with maximum
precision. It can however also be done manually and we recommend the
-L
and -Lk
commands to list available controllers:
-a
: Automatic controller selection-s ARG
: Manual controller selectionNote: Without the -s
flag on every command light will default
to automatic controller selection.
If you run Arch Linux, there exists 2 packages;
We recommend you go with light-git as you might miss important features and bugfixes if you do not.
Fedora already has light packaged in main repos, so just run:
dnf install light
and you're good to go.
We recommended downloading a versioned tarball from the relases page on GitHub. Download and untar the archive:
tar xf light-x.yy.tar.gz
cd light-x.yy/
./configure && make
sudo make install
However, should you want to try the latest GitHub source you first need
to clone the repository and run the autogen.sh
script. This requires
automake
and autoconf
to be installed on your system.
./autogen.sh
./configure && make
sudo make install
The configure
script and Makefile.in
files are not part of GIT
because they are generated at release time with make release
.
Optionally, instead of the classic SUID root mode of operation, udev rules can be set up to manage the kernel sysfs permissions. Use the configure script to enable this mode of operation:
./configure --with-udev && make
sudo make install
This installs the 90-backlight.rules
into /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/
.
If your udev rules are located elsewhere, use --with-udev=PATH
.
Note, in this mode light
runs unpriviliged, so the /etc/light
directory (for cached settings) is not used, instead the per-user
specific ~/.cache/light
is used.
Copyright (C) 2012-2018 Fredrik Haikarainen
This is free software, see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE