Every time I wake up PC from sleep I have to go to bluetooth settings -> select device -> enable connection to get sound on bluetooth speakers (Anker Soundcore). Bluetooth came with MBO and drivers were working out of the box after PopOS install.
I hope there is a command I can use instead of clicking in the GUI. Anyone know a command I could use?
[SOLUTION]
Using this command (with bluetooth speaker MAC address):
bluetoothctl connect A4:77:58:0A:DF:F1
[SOLUTION]
Bonus question: I was thinking I could map that command to a keyboard shortcut (like CTRL+ALT+B). What is the best way (or app) to accomplish this? I believe I could google this part quickly, but happy to hear suggestions anyway
[SOLUTION]
It’s possible with PopOS: Settings -> Keyboard -> Keaboard Shortcuts -> Custom Shortcuts
[SOLUTION]
<3
I just recently did something like that
Checkout my github repo under "desktop entries
It should be
systemctl start bluetooth
Thx! I could enable/disable bluetooth with your commands and that didn’t solve my problem, but helped me google the right command. It is actually much simpler that I thought, I just had to find speakers MAC and I can use:
bluetoothctl connect A1:11:22:3A:CD:F1
Now working on mapping that to a key, cheers!
You could also run the command automatically every time your screen is unlocked depending on your DE. For instance, if you use GNOME, this will likely work
EDIT: see comment below for better solution
Thank you! I use GNOME, but this is kinda confusing tbh. I was also looking at this forum post where I should put a script in
/lib/systemd/system-sleep/
. I should play around with that, but can’t afford breaking system right now xD. Will try it soon, I might install separate OS just for testingEDIT: Previous answer was distro dependent and had a syntax error. I have replaced it with the following instructions.
Create 2 files
bluetooth-reconnect.sh
andbluetooth-reconnect.service
. Using your favorite text editor, edit these files so they will contain the following:bluetooth-reconnect.sh
#!/bin/bash gdbus monitor -y -d org.freedesktop.login1 | (while read x; do if echo "$x" | grep -q "{'LockedHint': <false>}"; then bluetoothctl connect A1:11:22:3A:CD:F1 fi done)
bluetooth-reconnect.service
[Unit] Description=Reconnect Bluetooth after waking from sleep After=default.target [Service] Type=simple ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/bluetooth-reconnect.sh [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target
Open a terminal in whatever location you created them (you can right click in your file manager and open in terminal, or use
cd
to navigate). Now move them to the correct locations (you will need sudo privilege for this):sudo mv bluetooth-reconnect.sh /usr/local/bin/bluetooth-reconnect.sh sudo mv bluetooth-reconnect.service /etc/systemd/system/bluetooth-reconnect.service
Make the script executable:
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/bluetooth-reconnect.sh
Enable and start the service:
sudo systemctl enable bluetooth-reconnect.service sudo systemctl start bluetooth-reconnect.service
Check to make sure the service started correctly (the “Active:” field should say “active (running)” in green.
sudo systemctl status bluetooth-reconnect.service
This should now do everything automatically. This has been tested and is working on my Fedora Workstation system (uses GNOME). This should be distro independent, unlike my previous answer (and also without the syntax error I had in my initial submission).
To uninstall:
sudo systemctl stop bluetooth-reconnect.service sudo systemctl disable bluetooth-reconnect.service sudo rm /etc/systemd/system/bluetooth-reconnect.service sudo rm /usr/local/bin/bluetooth-reconnect.sh
Thank you a lot mate for explaining in detail. I will deffo go that route
While trying to test this on my system, I came across a few issues. I found a more modern and standardized way to check for login after sleep, and have updated my previous comment with a new script. I have new instructions though that are more comprehensive that you can follow.
Create 2 files
bluetooth-reconnect.sh
andbluetooth-reconnect.service
. Using your favorite text editor, edit these files so they will contain the following:bluetooth-reconnect.sh
#!/bin/bash gdbus monitor -y -d org.freedesktop.login1 | (while read x; do if echo "$x" | grep -q "{'LockedHint': <false>}"; then bluetoothctl connect A1:11:22:3A:CD:F1 fi done)
bluetooth-reconnect.service
[Unit] Description=Reconnect Bluetooth after waking from sleep After=default.target [Service] Type=simple ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/bluetooth-reconnect.sh [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target
Open a terminal in whatever location you created them (you can right click in your file manager and open in terminal, or use
cd
to navigate). Now move them to the correct locations (you will need sudo privilege for this):sudo mv bluetooth-reconnect.sh /usr/local/bin/bluetooth-reconnect.sh sudo mv bluetooth-reconnect.service /etc/systemd/system/bluetooth-reconnect.service
Make the script executable:
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/bluetooth-reconnect.sh
Enable and start the service:
sudo systemctl enable bluetooth-reconnect.service sudo systemctl start bluetooth-reconnect.service
Check to make sure the service started correctly (the “Active:” field should say “active (running)” in green).
sudo systemctl status bluetooth-reconnect.service
This should now do everything automatically. This has been tested and is working on my Fedora Workstation system (uses GNOME). This should be distro independent, unlike my previous answer (and also without the syntax error I had in my initial submission).
To uninstall:
sudo systemctl stop bluetooth-reconnect.service sudo systemctl disable bluetooth-reconnect.service sudo rm /etc/systemd/system/bluetooth-reconnect.service sudo rm /usr/local/bin/bluetooth-reconnect.sh
Dude this is amazing. Working like a charm and I love linux even more because of you <3 Such a straightforward guide. Have a wonderful day my friend!
One of the wonderful things about Linux is that if something isn’t working, you can just make it work! Also, if you ever need to make a simple service to run a script on boot, you know how now; it can be very useful. Always happy to help though, enjoy your journey through Linux!