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pyxtrlock

pyxtrlock is a rewrite of Ian Jackson's great xtrlock program using modern libraries, most importantly the obsolete direct passwd/shadow authentication has been replaced by today's PAM authentication mechanism, hence it also works on Fedora. Also, it's mostly written using XCB instead of Xlib, although some Xlib/XCB interaction is still necessary. As soon as XCB can provide the required services of Xlib, the remaining code will be ported to XCB.

Since pyxtrlock uses PAM authentication, it can be run as the normal user and doesn't need special privileges.

Description

pyxtrlock, like its predecessor, is a very minimal X display lock program. While pyxtrlock is running, it doesn't obscure the screen, only the mouse and keyboard are grabbed and the mouse cursor becomes a padlock. Output displayed by X programs, and windows put up by new X clients, continue to be visible, and any new output is displayed normally.

In good Unix tradition, pyxtrlock provides no visual feedback during password entry. You simply type your password at it, followed by Enter or Newline. Pressing Backspace or Delete erases one character of a password partially typed; pressing Escape or Clear clears anything that has been entered.

Like xtrlock, pyxtrlock will ignore further keystrokes until a timeout has expired after too many attempts have been made in too short time.

Installation and Usage

Install python3-simplepam for dependencies:

$ git clone git://github.com/leonnnn/python3-simplepam.git
$ cd python3-simplepam
$ sudo python3 setup.py install

Install pyxdg, which is available as python3-pyxdg or similar in most Linux distributions.

Clone and install pyxtrlock:

$ git clone git://github.com/leonnnn/pyxtrlock.git
$ cd pyxtrlock
$ sudo python3 setup.py install

Once this is done, you should be able to simply lock your display by running

$ pyxtrlock

If you would like to automatically lock your screen after some idle time, we recommend the xautolock tool. Just add something like

xautolock -locker pyxtrlock -time 5

to your X autostart file to lock the screen with pyxtrlock after 5 minutes idle time. xautolock has many other useful features, see its documentation. Most distributions provide an xautolock package with a man page.

An modern alternative to xautolock is xss-lock which integrates with systemd-logind and manages locking on idleness and lid close events. pyxtrlock supports the XSS_SLEEP_LOCK_FD protocol used by xss-lock -l to delay system standby until the screen is locked, the recommended way to start pyxtrlock with xss-lock is:

xss-lock -l -- pyxtrlock

to explicitly lock the screen use:

loginctl lock-session

Staying up-to-date

As pyxtrlock is a security tool, it is important to stay up-to-date with security updates. We take security seriously and try to handle any vulnerabilities quickly. However, our efforts are useless if the users aren’t notified that updates are available, so if you use pyxtrlock, we urge you to subscribe to the pyxtrlock mailing list. This list is likely very low traffic and will ensure you get notifications of security updates in time.

We also appreciate any feedback you have regarding pyxtrlock on this mailing list.

Bugs & Limitations

Pyxtrlock can only securely lock X11 sessions. Running pyxtrlock in other session types, such as Wayland, is insecure and not supported. Pyxtrlock tries to detect Wayland sessions and abort with an error message.

Pyxtrlock does not prevent a user from switching to a virtual terminal, so be advised to always log out from your terminals.

Additional input devices other than the keyboard and mouse are not disabled.

The length of the password is limited to 100 KiB to prevent memory exhaustion attacks. This limit can only be adapted in the source code.

The width and height of the cursor bitmaps is limited to 512 pixels (primarily to protect the user from faulty cursor files). This limit can be only adapted in the source code.

Please report any new bugs you may find to our Github issue tracker.

Configuration

The padlock icon can be changed. While the default lock is stored in the source code, an alternative lock can be stored in one of the the xdg data paths for pyxtrlock.

The user configured lock is stored as a json file containing the necessary information. bin/make_lock.py is a tool for generating cursors from image files. See doc/make_lock.txt for the full documentation of the tool.

Note, that even though loading json does not allow arbitrary code execution and the cursor data is checked for consistency, cursor files should be created on your machine and should not be installed from untrusted sources.

Requirements

  • python3-simplepam
  • pyxdg
  • Python ≥ 3.0
  • libxcb
  • libxcb-image
  • libX11 ≥ 1.4, or libX11 ≥ 1.2 compiled with XCB backend

These requirements are met at least on

  • Debian wheezy and sid, and probably on Debian squeeze (untested; please report your experience)
  • Ubuntu ≥ 11.10, and probably 10.04 (untested; please report your experience)
  • Fedora ≥ 16

Authors

pyxtrlock has been inspired by Ian Jacksons's brilliant xtrlock program and uses many ideas and techniques from the xtrlock source code. Also, the lock icon has been copied from xtrlock.

License

This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

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The X transparent screen lock rewritten in Python, using XCB and PAM.

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