Collection of runit service scripts missing from
the Arch Artix Linux repos.
Preserve the current display backlight level between reboots.
colord is a system service that makes it easy to manage, install and generate color profiles to accurately color manage input and output devices.
Profile Sync Daemon: symlinks and syncs browser profile dirs to RAM thus reducing HDD/SDD calls and speeding-up browsers.
Works only with PSD v5.x, since v6+ they went systemd-only way.
thinkfan: the minimalist fan control program.
The services in this section depend on user session (X11 or otherwise) to be
initialized to be run. Moreover, some services can form dependency chains
(e.g. pipewire). For dependency checking, scripts assume certain installation
path, namely ~/.runit/sv
. For more info see the section
How to Use User Session Services.
Music Player Daemon: a daemon for playing music of various formats.
Note that the script mpd/run
depends on pipewire-pulse
service (see below).
If you don't use PipeWire, you need to delete or comment out the line
sv check ...
in mpd/run
file.
Redshift adjusts the color temperature of your screen according to your surroundings. This may help your eyes hurt less if you are working in front of the screen at night.
Safe Eyes is a Free and Open Source tool for Linux users to reduce and prevent repetitive strain injury (RSI).
Syncthing is a continuous file synchronization program.
picom is a compositor for X, and a fork of Compton.
btpd is a BitTorrent client for linux.
PipeWire is a project that aims to greatly improve
handling of audio and video under Linux. WirePlumber is a modular session / policy manager for PipeWire. pipewire-pulse
is a drop-in replacement for the PulseAudio daemon.
Note that the PipeWire services are supposed to be run with a user session.
Moreover, they form a startup dependency chain (pipewire
->
wireplumber
-> pipewire-pulse
). So if you want to use
pipewire-pulse
, make sure that the other two are also installed and enabled.
The pipewire-pulse/run
and wireplumber/run
scripts assume certain directory
structure for checking their dependency. If you store your local services under
a different directory, you need to modify the sv check
line in
wireplumber/run
and pipewire-pulse/run
accordingly.
See the next section for the details on how to install and activate the pipewire services.
mkdir -p ~/.runit/{sv,runsvdir}
cp -r /path/to/cloned/services/{wireplumber,pipewire{,-pulse}} ~/.runit/sv
# Enable the services
ln -s ~/.runit/sv/pipewire ~/.runit/runsvdir/pipewire
ln -s ~/.runit/sv/wireplumber ~/.runit/runsvdir/wireplumber
ln -s ~/.runit/sv/pipewire-pulse ~/.runit/runsvdir/pipewire-pulse
Finally, use runsvdir
to start the services:
runsvdir ~/.runit/runsvdir
In order to start the services automatically upon login, you may want to add
the previous command to your ~/.xinitrc
or create a corresponding .desktop
file in ~/.config/autostart/
.
When you edit the logger script (e.g. colord/log/run
) or otherwise change
the logger configuration (e.g. change the value of the variable LOGGING_ENABLE
in colord/conf
), you need to properly restart both the service and its
logger sub-service. This is because Runit uses a pipe between the main service
process and the logger, so merely doing sv restart colord/log
wont do the
trick.
Runit's exit
command kills both the service and its logger. Here is how to do
it with a system service:
sv exit colord
# The following is redundant, if you use runsvdir(1) to manage the service tree.
sv up colord
The same with a user session service:
sv exit ~/.runit/sv/mpd
# The following is redundant, if you use runsvdir(1) to manage the service tree.
sv up ~/.runit/sv/mpd
CC0 / Public Domain