Depending on the time of reading this, you may be wondering why lock screen settings are not working in XFCE Power Manager in Debian Trixie, or why lock screen settings have changed, or rejoicing that a long-standing bug in Power Manager has been fixed.
Let me explain. XFCE 4.20 in Debian Trixie has dropped light-locker:
There is no dedicated "security" tab anymore. Lock screen management was massively simplified and "Light Locker" was dropped. "lock-on-sleep" is now synchronized with xfce4-session and xfce4-screensaver. Screen locking settings are now only handled by xfce4-screensaver to avoid conflicts. A button to open xfce4-screensaver-preferences was added.
Unfortunately, xfce4-screensaver has not been made a dependency of Power Manager, meaning the user will not be able to change lock screen settings. See this topic on the Debian User Forum. There is a bug report for this issue. The good news is that removing light-locker and installing xfce4-screensaver gets everything working nicely.
More good news is that this change side-steps an eleven year old bug which meant that suspend would not work with the screen locked using light-locker. See my blog post on the issue, the Debian Wiki on the issue, and the bug report.
So, if you are using Debian Trixie XFCE at the time of writing, you may have come to this post seeking an answer as to why you can't change lock screen settings any more. If you are reading at some point in the future where xfce4-screensaver has been added as a dependency, you may have noticed a change in XFCE Power manager, the absence of the Security tab, or the presence of a new Screensaver Management button.
Whatever the case, Power Manager in XFCE 4.20 in Debian Trixie using xfce4-screensaver is now a joined-up and rational, rather than the dog's breakfast it was in the past (see my post from 2013), and finally bug-free after over a decade. Happy days!
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