Longtime Fedora Silverblue user here, who recently jumped over to Kinoite (Atomic KDE). I typically enable autologin on my display managers because I use whole disk encryption and already need to enter my passphrase to decrypt and start the OS.

I discovered pretty quickly that SDDM’s autologin feature isn’t working under Fedora 40. LightDM also failed to start under Wayland on F40, regardless of which greeter I tried.

Long story short, I opted to use GDM since I knew its automatic login feature worked fine under Wayland. It’s worth noting that KDE has it’s own lockscreen mechanism, so you won’t even see GDM unless you manually logout of your session. To try this yourself:

  1. Install GDM: rpm-ostree install --apply-live gdm

  2. Disable SDDM: sudo systemctl disable sddm

  3. Enable GDM: sudo systemctl enable gdm

  4. Reboot and select the Plasma session before logging in; this is required only once in order to establish to the default, otherwise GDM will load a broken GNOME session when autologin is enabled

  5. Edit /etc/gdm/custom.conf and add the following under [daemon] (replacing username with your own):

     AutomaticLoginEnable = true
     AutomaticLogin = username
    

Voila! You will no longer need to enter your user credentials before loading the desktop.

  • thayer@lemmy.caOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    8 months ago

    Mind sharing what your distro and version are? The problem seems to be present on Fedora and OpenSUSE mostly, from what I can see of the issues posted online.

    As far as I can tell, sddm.conf is the legacy conf location and the more recent SDDM/KDE versions are now placing the settings in /etc/sddm.conf.d/kde_settings.conf…not that that itself should matter much here.

    • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      8 months ago

      Arch. That leads me to believe it’s possibly a configuration issue. Mine is pretty barebones, it’s literally just that one file.

      AFAIK the ones in sddm.conf.d are for useful because the GUI can focus on just one file without nuking other user’s configurations. But they all get loaded so it shouldn’t matter.

      The linked bug report seems to blame PAM modules, kwallet in particular which I don’t think I’ve got configured for unlock at login since there’s no password to that account in the first place.