+displays a hardcoded Windows-Pointer (thus enabling you to mess with your
+friends by using a screenshot of a Windows desktop as a locking-screen).
+
+.TP
+.B \-e, \-\-ignore-empty-password
+When an empty password is provided by the user, do not validate
+it. Without this option, the empty password will be provided to PAM
+and, if invalid, the user will have to wait a few seconds before
+another try. This can be useful if the XF86ScreenSaver key is used to
+put a laptop to sleep and bounce on resume or if you happen to wake up
+your computer with the enter key.
+
+.TP
+.B \-f, \-\-show-failed-attempts
+Show the number of failed attempts, if any.
+
+.TP
+.B \-\-debug
+Enables debug logging.
+Note, that this will log the password used for authentication to stdout.
+
+.SH DPMS
+
+The \-d (\-\-dpms) option was removed from i3lock in version 2.8. There were
+plenty of use-cases that were not properly addressed, and plenty of bugs
+surrounding that feature. While features are not normally removed from i3 and
+its tools, we felt the need to make an exception in this case.
+
+Users who wish to explicitly enable DPMS only when their screen is locked can
+use a wrapper script around i3lock like the following:
+
+.Vb 6
+\& #!/bin/sh
+\& revert() {
+\& xset dpms 0 0 0
+\& }
+\& trap revert HUP INT TERM
+\& xset +dpms dpms 5 5 5
+\& i3lock -n
+\& revert
+.Ve
+
+The \-I (-\-inactivity-timeout=seconds) was removed because it only makes sense with DPMS.
+
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.IR xautolock(1)
+\- use i3lock as your screen saver