vincentbernat.i3wm-configur.../bin/xsettingsd-setup

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#!/bin/sh
# Don't try to guess DPI. For a laptop, we don't want the same DPI as
# for an external screen. Just hardcode stuff...
case $(hostname),$(xrandr --current | \
sed -n 's/\([^ ]*\) connected .*[0-9][0-9]*x[0-9][0-9]*+[0-9][0-9]*+[0-9][0-9]* .*/\1/p' | \
sort | tr '\n' ':') in
zoro,eDP1:) dpi=144 ;;
zoro,eDP-1:) dpi=144 ;;
zoro,eDP-1:HDMI-2:) dpi=144 ;;
zoro,eDP-1:DP-1:) dpi=144 ;;
neo,HDMI-1:HDMI-2:) dpi=96 ;;
neo,*) dpi=192 ;;
*) dpi=96 ;;
esac
# Get xsettingsd PID
pid=$(xprop -name xsettingsd _NET_WM_PID 2> /dev/null | awk '{print $NF}')
change() {
# Build xsettingsd.local
{
cat ~/.config/awesome/xsettingsd
echo Xft/DPI $(( $1*1024 ))
echo Gdk/WindowScalingFactor $(( $1/96 ))
echo Gdk/UnscaledDPI $(( $1*1024/($1/96) ))
} > ~/.xsettingsd
# Signal xsettingsd
if [ x"$pid" = x ]; then
xsettingsd -c ~/.xsettingsd &
else
kill -HUP $pid
fi
}
if [ x"$pid" != x ]; then
# Change a first time to a DPI that will trigger a scale factor
# change (notably, Firefox needs that).
change $(( $dpi * 2 ))
sleep 1
fi
change $dpi
# Also use xrdb for very old stuff (you know, LibreOffice)
echo Xft.dpi: $dpi | xrdb -merge