1.8 KiB
Issue Guidelines
First of all, please remember to:
- Check that your issue is not a duplicate
- Read the FAQ
- Read the Configuring Page
Reporting suggestions
Suggestions are welcome.
Many features can be implemented using bash scripts and Hyprland sockets, read up on those Here. Please do not suggest features that can be implemented as such.
Reporting bugs
All bug reports should have the following:
- Steps to reproduce
- Expected outcome
- Noted outcome
If your bug is one that doesn't crash Hyprland, but feels like invalid behavior, that's all you need to say.
If your bug crashes Hyprland, append additionally:
- The Hyprland log
- Coredump / Coredump analysis (with a stacktrace)
- Your config
Important: Please do NOT use any package for reporting bugs! Clone and compile from source.
Obtaining the Hyprland log
If you are in a TTY, and the hyprland session that crashed was the last one you launched, the log will be printed with
cat /tmp/hypr/$(ls -t /tmp/hypr/ | head -n 1)/hyprland.log
feel free to send it to a file, save, copy, etc.
if you are in a Hyprland session, and you want the log of the last session, use
cat /tmp/hypr/$(ls -t /tmp/hypr/ | head -n 2 | tail -n 1)/hyprland.log
basically, directories in /tmp/hypr are your sessions.
Obtaining the Hyprland coredump
If you are on systemd, you can simply use
coredumpctl
then go to the end (press END on your keyboard) and remember the PID of the last Hyprland
occurrence. It's the first number after the time, for example 2891
.
exit coredumpctl (ctrl+c) and use
coredumpctl info [PID]
where [PID]
is the PID you remembered.