![]() ![]() Lubuntu’s provided theme is packaged in sddm-theme-lubuntu which expands to the directory /usr/share/sddm/themes/lubuntu on install so I’ll just move the details to that directory, ie. I selected all & extracted in my case this was a fresh QA-install so I didn’t create a directory using only ~/Downloads/ which created a directory inside it titled “Twilight_Dark” (ie. I usually save these types of files & open, but in this case I just had it directly open in LXQt File Archiver This was in firefox which offered to SAVE the file or open in LXQt File Archiver. I went to KDE Store & found a theme, Twilight-dark Sddm Theme - KDE Store (Note: I didn’t finish writing this part as I had to install extra package(s) to get it working which I don’t think is worth it I also used a meta package and didn’t want to delve down to find which actual package(s) are actually required) If you want to skip my abandoned howto response jump to the “ Stopping my howto response at this point” bold section & read from there ( or the links I gave just before that on new themes we’ll get to when we can) If you do what I had to do, it’s not the easiest way anyway… Yeah it did work but I stopped short of describing that and changed my answer recommending you don’t follow what I was doing, but instead just change the wallpaper. This is a really long HOWTO or that was my intention before I abandoned it. Download/install and follow what is found in the manual yelling out here if you have issues.įor complex editing/configuration of the sddm conf files I’d likely use the arch wiki but the upstream github wiki can be found here. Work is progressing on an easier config tool (see GitHub - lxqt/sddm-config-editor: SDDM Configuration Editor) but it’s status currently is still early alpha.Īnd other places. Thus editing files is the light way ( currently). Themes can be changed very easily KDE has a tool that allows for this easily but it’s rather heavy (uses KF5) requiring a lot of KDE to be added onto your system for it to function on LXQt so adding it isn’t ideal if you aim to keep your system light. ![]() The manual page on the topic is found here which does make mention of installing and other themes. The display manager (DM/greeter) used by Lubuntu is sddm which is also used by Kubuntu or KDE. ![]()
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