Awesome
brightnessctl
This program allows you read and control device brightness on Linux. Devices, by default, include backlight and LEDs (searched for in corresponding classes). If omitted, the first found device is selected.
It can also preserve current brightness before applying the operation (allowing for usecases like disabling backlight on lid close).
Installation
The program is available in:
- Alpine Linux
- Arch Linux
- Void Linux
- Debian - starting with Buster (and derivatives)
- Ubuntu - starting with 18.04 (and derivatives)
- openSUSE - available in Tumbleweed, use OBS
utilities/brightnessctl
devel project for Leap < 15.1 - Fedora - available in Fedora 31+
- NixOS/nix - starting with 17.09, please see the NixOS Wiki page for the "best-practice" configuration file based installation
One can build and install the program using ./configure && make install
. Consult ./configure --help
for relevant build-time options.
Permissions
Modifying brightness requires write permissions for device files or systemd support. brightnessctl
accomplishes this (without using sudo
/su
/etc.) by either of the following means:
-
installing relevant udev rules to add permissions to backlight class devices for users in
video
and leds for users ininput
. (done by default) -
installing
brightnessctl
as a suid binary. -
using the
systemd-logind
API.
FAQ
I'd like to configure the brightness of an external monitor
Use the ddcci-driver-linux kernel module to expose external monitor brightness controls to brightnessctl
. Available in repositories of AUR, Debian, Nix, Ubuntu, Void.
Usage
Usage: brightnessctl [options] [operation] [value]
Options:
-l, --list list devices with available brightness controls.
-q, --quiet suppress output.
-p, --pretend do not perform write operations.
-m, --machine-readable produce machine-readable output.
-n, --min-value set minimum brightness, defaults to 1.
-e, --exponent[=K] changes percentage curve to exponential.
-s, --save save previous state in a temporary file.
-r, --restore restore previous saved state.
-h, --help print this help.
-d, --device=DEVICE specify device name (can be a wildcard).
-c, --class=CLASS specify device class.
-V, --version print version and exit.
Operations:
i, info get device info.
g, get get current brightness of the device.
m, max get maximum brightness of the device.
s, set VALUE set brightness of the device.
Valid values:
specific value Example: 500
percentage value Example: 50%
specific delta Example: 50- or +10
percentage delta Example: 50%- or +10%