Spyke

Where I work just switching into a TTY would be enough to keep anyone out.

13

Kscreenlocker because it came as default and I made it look identical to sddm

7

I use i3 lock, scrot and imagemagik to make my lock screen a blurred version of my actual screen

6

Swaylock, but the one with effects. Using it to leave a blurred picture of the current screen without anything readable. Works well for two years now, is wayland only

6

By screen locker, what do you mean exactly? Do you mean a setting that automatically locks your screen after a preset amount of time? If so, yes I do.

5
beehaw.org

I just use XScreenSaver because I haven't ever looked into changing it.

5

slock. i don't really use anything else from the suckless people, but i like how minimal slock is

3

Whatever one comes with Manjaro KDE.

Because I don't really care.

3

None.

Why? Erm, living by myself I don't need to lock myself out ;)

2

Waylock, because it keeps sway locked even if the screen locker crashes.

2

I've always used i3lock. I also made a script to randomly select a background. Plus the login password circle thing looks cool. Would definitely recommend.

2

None currently, because I live with my family and if I wanted to hide anything from them (which I don't), I could just switch to a tty, or log out. Most of my work is done in VSCodium or Vivaldi, which save their sessions, although I have considered doing one just in case.

2

Still haven't gotten around to setting one up but I plan to. Speaking of which, recommendations for Wayland screen lockers that can also act as a screensaver?

1

@senslayer As a longtime XFCE user, I've mainly used xflock4. I've tried others over time, but xflock4 is the one that I've used the most....

1

i3lock triggered manually with ctrl-alt-L from OpenBox. It's a force of habit to lock it manually, so no timer necessary. I3lock is lightweight, supports a background image, and has a nice fast password prompt with support for ctrl-u etc.

1

There was one I used to use that just made the screen black and had no visuals to indicate typing or anything working. Typing the correct password and hitting enter would unlock. I think there was some thing about it not being secure after some shift in typical Linux distro defaults and now I just use the default kde locker because lazy

1

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What screen locker do you use and why? | Spyke