For security reasons I like when my computer screen get locked when I'm away and forgot to lock it manually or when I suspend the computer. Those operations are usually native in desktop managers such as Xfce, MATE or Gnome but not when you use a simple window manager.
Yesterday, I was looking at the xlock man page and found recommendations to use it with xidle, a program that triggers a command when we don't use a computer. That was the match I required to do something.
xidle is simple, you tell it about conditions and it will run a command. Basically, it has three triggers:
The first trigger is useful for automatic run, usually when you leave the computer and you forget to lock. The second one is a simple way to trigger your command manually by moving the cursor at the right place, and finally the last one is the way to script the trigger.
xidle man page, EXAMPLES section showing how to use it with xlock
Reusing the example given in xidle it was easy to build the command line. You would have to use this in your ~/.xsession file that contain instructions to run your graphical session. The following command will lock the screen if you let your mouse cursor in the upper left corner of the screen for 5 seconds or if you are inactive for 1800 seconds (30 minutes), once the screen is locked by xlock, it will turn off the display after 5 seconds. It is critical to run this command in background using "&" so the xsession script can continue.
xidle -delay 5 -nw -program "/usr/X11R6/bin/xlock -dpmsstandby 5" -timeout 1800 &
So, we currently made your computer auto locking after some time when you are not using it, but what if you put your computer on suspend and leave, this mean anyone can open it and it won't be locked. We should trigger the command just before suspending the device, so it will be locked upon resume.
This operation is possible by giving a SIGUSR1 to xidle at the right time, and apmd (the power management daemon on OpenBSD) is able to execute scripts when suspending (and not only).
apmd man page, FILES section about the supported operations running scripts
Create the directory /etc/apm/ and write /etc/apm/suspend with this content:
#!/bin/sh pkill -USR1 xidle
Make the script executable with chmod +x /etc/apm/suspend and restart apmd. Now, you should have the screen getting locked when you suspend your computer, automatically.
Locking access to a computer is very important because most of the time we have programs opened, security keys unlocked (ssh, gpg, password managers etc...) and if someone put their hands on it they can access all files. Locking the screen is a simple but very effective way to prevent this disaster to happen.