Adapt Ubuntu to a high-DPI resolution screen
There are some steps to take:
1. System wide Menu and titlebar scaling
Starting with Ubuntu 14.04 we have an option that helps a bit:
Scaling Support
open the System Settings (here in english:)
LANG=c unity-control-center
Go to "Displays" and set the "Scale for menu and title bars":
Since Ubuntu 17.10 the scaling can be set in
LANG=c gnome-control-center
Go to Settings > Devices > Displays
there
see also: How to find and change the screen DPI?
2. Universal Access
Go to "Universal Access" (unity-control-center universal-access
) and select "Large Text".
Note: not all applications handle this correctly, some will not reserve the extra space, so some UI elements are not accessible with this option!
3.increase unity dock size
In unity-control-center
->Appearance
->Look
at the botom, you can adjust the size
4. adapt Firefox
see: Adjust Firefox and Thunderbird to a High DPI touchscreen display (retina)
(or use Chrome, which works fine since Version 41.0.2272.76 Ubuntu 14.10, though Chrome will need to be restarted to take effect)
5. increase font in Pidgin
There is a plugin you can install
sudo apt-get install pidgin-extprefs
Then you can increase the font in Plugins->Extended Prefs
6. create starter for applications that still don't scale
Some applications still don't obey the global scaling (mainly java) for those few applications you can create a starter to only Fix scaling of java-based applications for a high DPI screen
in older Ubuntu versions, with unity-tweak-util in the section "Fonts" you can set the "Text Scaling Factor" to 2.0. This will scale the fonts in most applications to double size.
Go to System Settings and then to displays. Look for "Scale for menu and title bars." then drag the slider to whatever size you want.
I have a MacBookPro Retina display. The accepted solution partially worked for me but I was unable to get Java apps to work properly, and I found the OS to become too laggy while using 2x scaling.
Changing resolutions while using Ubuntu's default Nouveau display driver would result in a black screen and force me to restart my computer.
I finally found a solution, and a simple one. But this does not use scaling and this will not take advantage of HiDPI, but at least Ubuntu will be usable.
- Open "System Settings" -> "Software & Updates" -> "Additional Drivers".
- I selected "Using NVIDIA binary driver - version 352.63 from nvidia-352 (proprietary, tested)".
- Restart computer.
- Launch NVIDIA X Server Settings.
- Select "X Server Display Configuration"
- Select the resolution of your choice and enjoy the target resolution full of Ubuntuness (and not a black screen!).