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    A New Chapter for MagicMirror: The Community Takes the Lead
    Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.

    Can´t rotate my display

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Solved Troubleshooting
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    • S Do not disturb
      sdetweil @Klinge
      last edited by

      @Klinge which version of the OS did you install??

      with the Wayland compositor
      or the latest with the LabWC compositor

      they are different on how to rotate than the old X11

      Sam

      How to add modules

      learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

      K 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • K Offline
        Klinge @sdetweil
        last edited by

        @sdetweil I use

        Raspberry Pi OS with desktop
        Release date: November 19th 2024
        System: 64-bit
        Kernel version: 6.6
        Debian version: 12 (bookworm)

        and a Raspberry 3 Model b+

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        • S Do not disturb
          sdetweil @Klinge
          last edited by

          @Klinge ok, do

          ps -ef | grep labwc
          

          i think it will return the labwc compositor process info

          Sam

          How to add modules

          learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

          K 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • K Offline
            Klinge @sdetweil
            last edited by

            @sdetweil I got the following infos

            pi@raspi-mm-bad:~ $ ps -ef | grep labwc
            pi           645     619 42 16:50 ?        00:35:55 /usr/bin/labwc -m
            pi           714     645  0 16:50 ?        00:00:00 /usr/bin/ssh-agent /usr/bin/labwc-pi
            pi         33729   32904 25 18:15 pts/0    00:00:00 grep --color=auto labwc
            
            
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            • S Do not disturb
              sdetweil @Klinge
              last edited by

              @Klinge if you use the os desktop menu top left, preferences, last entry i think is display configuration, you can rotate there

              Sam

              How to add modules

              learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

              K R 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • K Offline
                Klinge @sdetweil
                last edited by

                @sdetweil Oh! So simple? It is like at Windows. Only with mouse configuration. I found it under Screen configuration - > orientation
                Thank you again for your help. You are my little hero 😉

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                • K Klinge has marked this topic as solved on
                • R Offline
                  robertybob @sdetweil
                  last edited by

                  @sdetweil Is it still possible to rotate the screen via the command line? Or must it be done using the desktop? (having the same issue, with the same labwc output, so thought best not to start a new topic)

                  S R 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • S Do not disturb
                    sdetweil @robertybob
                    last edited by

                    @robertybob i do not know

                    Sam

                    How to add modules

                    learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

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                    • S Do not disturb
                      sdetweil @robertybob
                      last edited by sdetweil

                      @robertybob google search found this

                      
                      To rotate the display using the command line on a Raspberry Pi with the LabWC compositor, you can use the wlr-randr command, specifying the output and desired rotation (e.g., wlr-randr --output HDMI-A-1 --rotate right). 
                      Here's a more detailed breakdown:
                      1. Identify your output:
                      Determine the name of your display output. You can find this using wlr-randr without any arguments, which will list the available outputs.
                      Example: wlr-randr
                      Look for an output like HDMI-A-1 or DSI-0. 
                      2. Rotate the display:
                      Use the wlr-randr command with the --output and --rotate options.
                      Example (rotate 90 degrees clockwise): wlr-randr --output HDMI-A-1 --rotate right
                      Example (rotate 90 degrees counter-clockwise): wlr-randr --output HDMI-A-1 --rotate left
                      Example (rotate 180 degrees): wlr-randr --output HDMI-A-1 --rotate 180
                      Example (rotate to normal orientation): wlr-randr --output HDMI-A-1 --rotate normal 
                      3. Make the rotation permanent (optional):
                      You can add the wlr-randr command to an autostart file to make the rotation persistent after a reboot.
                      Find the autostart file: ~/.config/labwc/autostart
                      Add your command: Open the file in a text editor (e.g., nano ~/.config/labwc/autostart) and add the wlr-randr command at the end of the file.
                      Example: @wlr-randr --output HDMI-A-1 --rotate right
                      Note: The @ symbol is important for autostart scripts. 
                      4. Troubleshooting:
                      

                      Sam

                      How to add modules

                      learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                      R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • R Offline
                        rkorell @robertybob
                        last edited by rkorell

                        @robertybob yes, screen rotation is still possible via CLI/terminal…

                        edit “/usr/share/dispsetup.sh”
                        eg:

                        sudo nano /usr/share/dispsetup.sh
                        

                        there you will find an if clause at the beginning:

                        if ! raspi-config nonint is_pi || raspi-config nonint is_kms ; then
                        if xrandr --output HDMI-1 --primary --mode 2560x1440 --rate 59.951 --pos 0x0 --rotate left --dryrun>
                        xrandr --output HDMI-1 --primary --mode 2560x1440 --rate 59.951 --pos 0x0 --rotate left
                        

                        the word after “rotate” defines the rotation :-)

                        NO rotation = “normal”, rest is obvious.
                        You must change this in both occurances.

                        In same statement you define the resolution for the screen, as well - after “mode”(given example 2560x1440)

                        HTH

                        Regards,
                        Ralf

                        R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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