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Redshift

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Redshift is an open-source software application designed to adjust color temperature of screens based on the time of day.

It does this by gradually shifting the color temperature of the display to reduce the amount of blue light towards the night, and increasing the amount of blue light in the morning.

Users may choose to have screen temperature automatically match their lighting based on geographic location, or based on manually set time-frames. Users may also customize day and night color temperatures, adjust the speed of transitions, and more.

Redshift is best used on X11 systems as it is unmaintained and does not support Wayland.

For Wayland support you may consider Gammastep, a modern fork of Redshift. Alternatively there is also wlsunset, which is a lightweight modern alternative.

Installation

Using Global Configuration

❄︎ /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
environment.systemPackages = [
  pkgs.redshift
];

Using Home Configuration

❄︎ /etc/nixos/home.nix
home.packages = [ 
  pkgs.redshift 
];

Configuration

Global Configuration:

Options may be found under services.redshift. For more options for configuring Geoclue, check the Geoclue page.

❄︎ /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
services.redshift = {
  enable = true;
  temperature = {
    day = 5500;
    night = 3700;
  };
};

services.geoclue2.enable = true;
location.provider = "geoclue2";

Home Manager

Example Usage

You can find more options in Home Manager: services.redshift. This configuration defines the temperature the display will use at night and day, the schedule and length of the transition, brightness for the display to use, and whether it will use a tray icon. extraOptions defines additional command-line arguments to pass to redshift.

❄︎ /etc/nixos/home.nix
services.redshift = {
  enable = true;
  
  # Display temperature settings (in Kelvin)
  temperature = {
    day = 5500;
    night = 3500;
  };
  
  # Schedule settings
  dawnTime = "6:00-7:45";
  duskTime = "18:35-20:15";
  
  # Brightness
  brightness = {
    day = "1";
    night = "0.8";
  };
  
  extraOptions = [
    "-v"
    "-m randr"
  ];
  
  # Tray Icon
  tray = false;

};
Location Based Transitions

You can choose to use Redshift with location based screen temperature to match when the sun actually sets and rises in your area. Below are examples of those options using Geoclue and manually set coordinates.

Geoclue

Geoclue provides location using GPS, 3G modems, GeoIP, and WiFi Geolocation. Some integrations may require additional setup.

❄︎ /etc/nixos/home.nix
services.redshift = {
  enable = true;
  provider = "geoclue2";
};

You will also need to enable Geoclue in your global configuration (See options on the Geoclue page).

❄︎ /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
services.geoclue2.enable = true;
location.provider = "geoclue2";
Coordinates
❄︎ /etc/nixos/home.nix
services.redshift = {
  enable = true;

  # Coordinates based location
  provider = "manual";

  latitude = "27.9880614";
  longitude = "86.92521";

};

Instead of declaring your coordinates in Redshift, you can also declare them globally for your device in your global configuration:

❄︎ /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
location = {
  provider = "manual";
  latitude = "27.9880614";
  longitude = "86.92521";
};

Troubleshooting

Provider is unable to determine location

It may happen that Redshift gets stuck at "Waiting for initial location to become available..." when using the geoclue2 location provider. This may happen when Geoclue is unable to determine your location due to missing information. In that case, you may resort to setting the location manually or using an alternate location service such as beaconDB, which can take advantage of WiFi scanning.

An example of using beaconDB as an alternative:

❄︎ /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
location.provider = "geoclue2";
services.geoclue2 = {
    enable = true;
    geoProviderUrl = "https://api.beacondb.net/v1/geolocate";
  };

References