.RB [\|\-v\|]
.RB [\|\-n\|]
.RB [\|\-b\|]
-.RB [\|\-d\|]
.RB [\|\-i
.IR image.png \|]
.RB [\|\-c
.IR pointer\|]
.RB [\|\-u\|]
.RB [\|\-e\|]
-.RB [\|\-I\|]
+.RB [\|\-I
+.IR timeout\|]
.RB [\|\-f\|]
.SH DESCRIPTION
like when opening your laptop in a boring lecture.
.TP
-.B \-d, \-\-dpms
-Enable turning off your screen using DPMS. Note that, when you do not specify this
-option, DPMS will turn off your screen after 15 minutes of inactivity anyways (if
-you did not disable this in your X server).
-
-.TP
-.B \-I, \-\-inactivity-timeout
+.BI \-I\ seconds \fR,\ \fB\-\-inactivity-timeout= seconds
Specifies the number of seconds i3lock will wait for another password before
turning off the monitors, in case you entered a wrong password or canceled by
pressing Escape. Only makes sense together with \-d. If omitted, the default is
.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 SIGHUP SIGINT SIGTERM
+\& xset +dpms dpms 5 5 5
+\& i3lock -n
+\& revert
+.Ve
.SH SEE ALSO
.IR xautolock(1)