screenruster

X11 screen saver and locker.


Keywords
graphics, x11
License
GPL-3.0

Documentation

ScreenRuster

An X11 screen saver and locker.

Installation

To install the daemon you will need a nightly Rust toolchain, then you can install it with Cargo:

cargo install screenruster

Once that's done you can create a configuration file at $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/screenruster/config.toml ($XDG_CONFIG_HOME defaults to ~/.config/) or copy one from assets/config.toml.

Screen savers have to be in $PATH and the executable name has to start with screenruster-saver-.

A sample screen saver can be installed with Cargo:

cargo install screenruster-saver-laughing_man

The sample configuration file already has default settings for it.

Usage

First, start the daemon.

screenruster daemon &

Then if you want to activate the screen saver manually:

screenruster activate

Or if you want to lock manually:

screenruster lock

To unlock, simply type your password and press enter.

Authorization

Authorization is handled by various modules, each module tries to authenticate, the first successful authentication unlocks the screen.

Internal

The internal module uses a password specified in the configuration file, this was initially made for testing, and you should probably not use it.

[auth.internal]
password = "password"

PAM

This module uses the Pluggable Authentication Module for authentication, you will need to install a configuration file for it in /etc/pam.d/screenruster.

auth	include		system-auth

If you want PAM account management to be respected, make sure to build with the auth-pam-accounts feature.

Available savers

This is a list of available screen savers that will be updated over time, if you made a saver and want it added here just open a pull request.

Why?

Because I wanted to make a fancy screen saver and xscreensaver would have been a bigger pain to work with than to make this from scratch.

Why should I use this instead of xscreensaver?

If you feel adventurous and want to use a screen locker that hasn't been tested as thorougly as xscreensaver.

Or if you like any of the screen savers made for ScreenRuster.

Theoretically ScreenRuster should be safer than xscreensaver because it's written in Rust and the architecture is slightly different from the one from xscreensaver further reducing the attack surface.

Practically ScreenRuster is still young and there's some unsafe code around the usage of PAM (but it's small enough to be safe).

Why should I use this instead of gnome-screensaver?

Because ScreenRuster is still safer than gnome-screensaver and it implements the same DBus interface, so it should work even with the rest of the GNOME environment.

But really, just use xscreensaver for now, anything is better than gnome-screensaver.

Architecture

The architecture loosely follows xscreensaver because it's the best approach, keep the screen locking simple and delegate the fancy graphics to a separate proccess, this has the nice property of making buggy savers not bring down the whole locking mechanism, thus protecting from vulnerabilities.

The savers can be written in any language that can draw to an X11 window, parse and generate JSON, write to stdout and read from stdin.

JSON is used for IPC between the daemon and the saver, the daemon writes to the saver process stdin, reads from the process stdout and forwards anything coming from stderr to allow for debugging or logging.

The job of the saver is merely to do the rendering, this includes any fade in/out or dialog boxes, this further reduces the attack surface of the locker. Note that the saver does not actually get the input, it just gets Insert or Delete events, so it can fill its dialog box.

Protocol

The protocol is line based, where each line contains a JSON encoded message, each message has a type field with the name of the message, the parameters are attributes on the same object.

Requests

Requests are messages sent from the daemon to the spawned saver process.

Configuration

The configuration request is part of the handshake and it's the first request sent when a process is spawned.

The configuration is monolithic and managed by the daemon in a TOML file, the related TOML map is converted to JSON and sent to the saver.

  • type = "config"
  • config = Object

Target

The target request is part of the handshake and is the second request sent when a process is spawned.

It contains the details required to get the X11 window, the display name, the screen number and the window XID.

  • type = "target"
  • display = String
  • screen = Integer
  • window = Integer

Resize

The resize request is sent when a locker window is resized, this can happen if XRandr is used to change resolution or rotate the screen.

  • type = "resize"
  • width = Integer
  • height = Integer

Throttle

The throttle request is sent when the saver should try and reduce power usage.

  • type = "throttle"
  • throttle = Boolean

Blank

The blank request is sent when the screen has been blanked or unblanked.

  • type = "blank"
  • throttle = Boolean

Pointer

The pointer request is sent when a pointer event on the saver window has happened.

  • type = "pointer"
  • move = Object { x, y }
  • button = Object { x, y, button, press }

Password

The password request is sent when any authorization related changes happened, this includes when characters are being inserted or deleted, the password is being checked or authorization failed or succeded.

  • type = "password"
  • password = "insert", "delete", "reset", "check", "success", "failure"

Start

The start request is sent when the saver should start its rendering, this may include a fade in or other fancy graphics.

  • type = "start"

Lock

The lock request is sent when the screen has been locked, this is useful to render a notification that the screen is currently locked.

  • type = "lock"

Stop

The stop request is sent when the saver should stop its rendering, this may include a fade out or other fancy graphics.

  • type = "stop"

Responses

Responses are messages sent from the spawned saver process to the daemon.

Initialized

The initialized response is sent after the handshake is done and the saver is ready to start, since fancy graphics may require loading textures and such, the saver is given some leeway to get ready to render.

  • type = "initialized"

Started

The started response is sent after a start request has been received and the saver started its rendering, it tells the daemon it can show the window.

  • type = "started"

Stopped

The stopped response is sent after a stop request has been received and the saver stopped its rendering, it tells the daemon it can hide the window.