You should use redshift-gtk
instead. That's what I use :)
See Issue #178.
The xflux
program that Fluxgui traditionally used to change the
screen color hasn't worked on most modern systems since 2016, it's a
closed source program that is not part of this project, and there are
no plans to fix it. Because of this, Fluxgui by default now uses
Redshift to control your screen color,
which should be supported on all systems.
See Issue #27 for why xflux
probably won't work on your system and
how to test if it can.
Better lighting for your computer
The f.lux indicator applet fluxgui
is an indicator applet that uses
xflux
or redshift
to make the color of your computer's display
adapt to the time of day: warm at night, and like sunlight during the
day. Reducing blue light exposure in the evening can help you fall
asleep at night. See https://justgetflux.com/research.html or
http://jonls.dk/redshift/ for more details.
This project -- https://github.com/xflux-gui/fluxgui -- is only
concerned with the fluxgui
indicator applet program, not with the
underlying xflux
or redshift
program the indicator applet
controls. The xflux
or redshift
program is responsible for
actually changing the color of your screen. See
https://justgetflux.com/linux.html for more information about xflux
.
The xflux
program is downloaded automatically when installing
fluxgui
. You can install redshift
via the redshift
package on
most Linux distros. Simply run fluxgui
in your terminal after
installation to open the applet. You can also easily configure the
applet to auto-start on login.
The fluxgui
is only known to work with Python 3.
The PPA was last updated in 2019 (last supported Ubuntu version is 18.04 - bionic) and so you probably want to do a manual install!
To install via apt:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:nathan-renniewaldock/flux
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install fluxgui
See ubuntuhandbook.org instructions for more details.
While sudo apt-get update
there is an error #144
E: The repository 'http://ppa.launchpad.net/nathan-renniewaldock/flux/ubuntu focal Release' does not have a Release file.
To solve:
sudo vim /etc/apt/sources.list.d/nathan-renniewaldock-ubuntu-flux-focal.list
- Replace
focal
withbionic
or whatever distro you're using and save it. - Repeat above mentioned steps from line 2.
If you have trouble with the PPA version try the manual install below.
There is no Fedora package provided yet. Please use Manual Install below.
To install manually you first install the dependencies using your package manager, and then install fluxgui
using the provided setup.py
. The manual install can be done locally or system wide.
For the appindicator
implementation, both plain appindicator
and the Ayatana ayatanaappindicator
are supported.
Partial list of Python 3 dependencies (after the upgrade to GTK+ 3 in PR #112. If you discover the correct deps, please submit a PR):
sudo apt-get install python3-pexpect python3-distutils python3-xdg gir1.2-ayatanaappindicator3-0.1 gir1.2-gtk-3.0 redshift
According to this comment, these deps may also be needed:
gir1.2-appindicator3-0.1 python3-gi python3-gi-cairo
Out of date Python 2 dependencies; the remaining Python 3 deps should be similar:
sudo apt-get install git python-gconf python-gtk2 python-glade2 libxxf86vm1 libcanberra-gtk-module
WARNING: these dependencies may be out of date after the upgrade to GTK+ 3 in PR #112. If you discover the correct deps, please submit a PR.
sudo yum install git python-appindicator python2-pyxdg python3-pexpect gnome-python2-gconf pygtk2 pygtk2-libglade redshift
There are separate instructions in the code below for installing system wide and for installing locally in your user directory; choose one.
# Download fluxgui
cd /tmp
git clone "https://github.com/xflux-gui/fluxgui.git"
cd fluxgui
./download-xflux.py
# EITHER install system wide
sudo ./setup.py install --record installed.txt
# EXCLUSIVE OR, install in your home directory
#
# The fluxgui program installs
# into ~/.local/bin, so be sure to add that to your PATH if installing
# locally. In particular, autostarting fluxgui in Gnome will not work
# if the locally installed fluxgui is not on your PATH.
./setup.py install --user --record installed.txt
# Run flux
fluxgui
If you manually installed instead of using package manager, you can uninstall
by making setup.py
tell you where it installed files and then
removing the installed files.
# EITHER uninstall globally
#
# The 'installed.txt' is generated when you install. Reinstall first if you
# as described above if you don't have an 'installed.txt' file.
sudo xargs rm -vr < installed.txt
sudo glib-compile-schemas "$(dirname "$(grep apps.fluxgui.gschema.xml installed.txt)")"
# EXCLUSIVE OR uninstall in your home directory
xargs rm -vr < installed.txt
glib-compile-schemas "$(dirname "$(grep apps.fluxgui.gschema.xml installed.txt)")"
The fluxgui
applet is released under the MIT License. The underlying xflux
program that actually controls the screen color is closed source.
Try to stick to the same coding style that is already used in the file you are editing.
In particular, don't change the style of code you're not already editing for some other
reason. Style changes create noise in the Git history and make the git blame
output
misleading. When reviewing a PR, the maintainers want to focus on the logical changes
introduced by your code, and extraneous style changes make that harder.
When working on fluxgui
, you can use
cd <path to your fluxgui.git clone>
# You only need to download xflux once.
./download-xflux.py
glib-compile-schemas .
GSETTINGS_SCHEMA_DIR=`pwd` PATH=`pwd`:$PATH PYTHONPATH=`pwd`/src:$PYTHONPATH ./fluxgui
to test your local copy of fluxgui
without installing anything.
Note changes in ./debian/changelog
.
Use version <ver>pre
until ready to release a version. When
releasing a version remove the pre
suffix from the version strings
and commit, copying the changelog changes for the current release into
the commit message. Then git tag -a v<ver>
, using the commit msg for
the tag annotation, and push the version tag with git push origin v<ver>
. Finally, create another commit with the new <next version>pre
version strings and changelog entry.
When releasing the version string needs to be changed in
debian/changelog
and setup.py
, and the release dates needs to be
added in debian/changelog
.