table of contents
AUTORANDR(1) | General Commands Manual | AUTORANDR(1) |
NAME¶
autorandr - automatically select a display configuration based on connected devices
SYNOPSIS¶
autorandr [OPTION] [PROFILE]
DESCRIPTION¶
This program automatically detects connected display hardware and then loads an appropriate X11 setup using xrandr. It also supports the use of display profiles for different hardware setups.
Autorandr also includes several virtual configurations including off, common, clone-largest, horizontal, and vertical. See the documentation for explanation of each.
OPTIONS¶
- -h, --help
- Display help text and exit
- -c, --change
- Automatically load the first detected profile
- -d, --default PROFILE
- Make profile PROFILE the default profile. The default profile is used if no suitable profile can be identified. Else, the current configuration is kept.
- -l, --load PROFILE
- Load profile PROFILE
- -s, --save PROFILE
- Save the current setup to profile PROFILE
- -r, --remove PROFILE
- Remove profile PROFILE
- --batch
- Run autorandr for all users with active X11 sessions
- --current
- List only the current (active) configuration(s)
- --config
- Dump the variable values of your current xrandr setup
- --cycle
- Cycle through all detected profiles
- --debug
- Enable verbose output
- --detected
- List only the detected (i.e. available) configuration(s)
- --dry-run
- Don't change anything, only print the xrandr commands
- --fingerprint
- Fingerprint the current hardware setup
- --match-edid
- Match displays based on edid instead of name
- --force
- Force loading or reloading of a profile
- --list
- List all profiles
- --skip-options [OPTION] ...
- Set a comma-separated list of xrandr arguments to skip both in change detection and profile application. See xrandr(1) for xrandr arguments.
- --version
- Show version information and exit
FILES¶
Configuration files are searched for in the autorandr directory in the colon separated list of paths in $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS - or in /etc/xdg if that var is not set. They are then looked for in ~/.autorandr and if that doesn't exist, in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/autorandr or in ~/.config/autorandr if that var is unset.
In each of those directories it looks for directories with config and setup in them. It is best to manage these files with the autorandr utility.
AUTHOR¶
Phillip Berndt <phillip.berndt@googlemail.com>
See https://github.com/phillipberndt/autorandr for a full list of
contributors.
REPORTING BUGS¶
Report issues upstream on GitHub:
https://github.com/phillipberndt/autorandr/issues
Please attach the output of xrandr --verbose to your bug report if
appropriate.
SEE ALSO¶
For examples, advanced usage (including predefined per-profile & global hooks and wildcard EDID matching), and full documentation, see https://github.com/phillipberndt/autorandr.