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X(7)									  X(7)

NAME
       X - a portable, network-transparent window system

OVERVIEW
       The  X  Window System is	a network transparent window system which runs
       on a wide range of computing and	graphics machines.  It should be rela-
       tively straightforward to build the X.Org Foundation software distribu-
       tion on most ANSI C and POSIX compliant systems.	 Commercial  implemen-
       tations are also	available for a	wide range of platforms.

       The  X.Org  Foundation  requests	 that the following names be used when
       referring to this software:

					  X
				   X Window System
				    X Version 11
			     X Window System, Version 11
					 X11

       X Window	System is a trademark of The Open Group.

DESCRIPTION
       X Window	System servers run on computers	 with  bitmap  displays.   The
       server distributes user input to	and accepts output requests from vari-
       ous client programs through a variety of	different interprocess	commu-
       nication	 channels.   Although  the  most common	case is	for the	client
       programs	to be running on the same machine as the server,  clients  can
       be  run transparently from other	machines (including machines with dif-
       ferent architectures and	operating systems) as well.

       X supports overlapping hierarchical subwindows and  text	 and  graphics
       operations, on both monochrome and color	displays.  For a full explana-
       tion of the functions that are available, see the Xlib -	C  Language  X
       Interface  manual,  the	X  Window System Protocol specification, the X
       Toolkit Intrinsics - C Language Interface manual, and  various  toolkit
       documents.

       The number of programs that use X is quite large.  Programs provided in
       the core	X.Org Foundation distribution include:	a  terminal  emulator,
       xterm;  a  window manager, twm; a display manager, xdm; a console redi-
       rect program, xconsole; a mail interface, xmh; a	bitmap editor, bitmap;
       resource	 listing/manipulation  tools,  appres, editres;	access control
       programs, xauth,	xhost, and iceauth; user preference setting  programs,
       xrdb, xcmsdb, xset, xsetroot, xstdcmap, and xmodmap; clocks, xclock and
       oclock; a font displayer, xfd; utilities	for listing information	 about
       fonts, windows, and displays, xlsfonts, xwininfo, xlsclients, xdpyinfo,
       xlsatoms, and xprop; screen image manipulation  utilities,  xwd,	 xwud,
       and  xmag; a performance	measurement utility, x11perf; a	font compiler,
       bdftopcf; a font	server and related utilities, xfs, fsinfo,  fslsfonts,
       fstobdf;	 a display server and related utilities, Xserver, rgb, mkfont-
       dir; a clipboard	manager, xclipboard; keyboard description compiler and
       related	utilities,  xkbcomp, setxkbmap xkbprint, xkbbell, xkbevd, xkb-
       vleds, and xkbwatch; a utility to terminate clients, xkill; a  firewall
       security	 proxy,	 xfwp;	a  proxy manager to control them, proxymngr; a
       utility to find proxies,	xfindproxy; web	 browser  plug-ins,  libxrx.so
       and  libxrxnest.so;  an RX MIME-type helper program, xrx; and a utility
       to cause	part or	all of the screen to be	redrawn, xrefresh.

       Many other  utilities,  window  managers,  games,  toolkits,  etc.  are
       included	as user-contributed software in	the X.Org Foundation distribu-
       tion, or	are available on the Internet.	See  your  site	 administrator
       for details.

STARTING UP
       There  are  two main ways of getting the	X server and an	initial	set of
       client applications started.  The particular  method  used  depends  on
       what  operating system you are running and whether or not you use other
       window systems in addition to X.

       Display Manager
	       If you want to always have X running on your display, your site
	       administrator  can set your machine up to use a Display Manager
	       such as xdm, gdm, or kdm.  This program is typically started by
	       the  system  at	boot time and takes care of keeping the	server
	       running and getting users logged	in.  If	you are	running	one of
	       these  display  managers, you will normally see a window	on the
	       screen welcoming	you to the system and asking  for  your	 login
	       information.  Simply type them in as you	would at a normal ter-
	       minal.  If you make a mistake, the display manager will display
	       an error	message	and ask	you to try again.  After you have suc-
	       cessfully logged	in, the	display	manager	will start up  your  X
	       environment.  The documentation for the display manager you use
	       can provide more	details.

       xinit (run manually from	the shell)
	       Sites that support more than one	window system might choose  to
	       use the xinit program for starting X manually.  If this is true
	       for your	machine, your site administrator  will	probably  have
	       provided	a program named	"x11", "startx", or "xstart" that will
	       do site-specific	initialization	(such  as  loading  convenient
	       default	resources,  running  a	window	manager,  displaying a
	       clock, and starting several terminal emulators) in a nice  way.
	       If  not,	 you  can build	such a script using the	xinit program.
	       This utility simply runs	one user-specified  program  to	 start
	       the  server,  runs another to start up any desired clients, and
	       then waits for either to	finish.	 Since either or both  of  the
	       user-specified  programs	may be a shell script, this gives sub-
	       stantial	flexibility at the expense of a	nice  interface.   For
	       this reason, xinit is not intended for end users.

DISPLAY	NAMES
       From  the  user's perspective, every X server has a display name	of the
       form:

	      hostname:displaynumber.screennumber

       This information	is used	by the application to determine	how it	should
       connect	to  the	 server	 and which screen it should use	by default (on
       displays	with multiple monitors):

       hostname
	       The hostname specifies the name of the  machine	to  which  the
	       display is physically connected.	 If the	hostname is not	given,
	       the most	efficient way of communicating to a server on the same
	       machine will be used.

       displaynumber
	       The  phrase  "display" is usually used to refer to a collection
	       of monitors that	share a	common set of input devices (keyboard,
	       mouse,  tablet, etc.).  Most workstations tend to only have one
	       display.	 Larger, multi-user systems, however, frequently  have
	       several	displays  so  that  more  than one person can be doing
	       graphics	work at	once.  To avoid	confusion, each	display	 on  a
	       machine	is assigned a display number (beginning	at 0) when the
	       X server	for that display is started.  The display number  must
	       always be given in a display name.

       screennumber
	       Some displays share their input devices among two or more moni-
	       tors.  These may	be configured  as  a  single  logical  screen,
	       which  allows  windows to move across screens, or as individual
	       screens,	each with their	own set	 of  windows.	If  configured
	       such  that each monitor has its own set of windows, each	screen
	       is assigned a screen number (beginning at 0) when the X	server
	       for  that  display  is  started.	  If  the screen number	is not
	       given, screen 0 will be used.

       On POSIX	systems, the default display name is stored  in	 your  DISPLAY
       environment  variable.  This variable is	set automatically by the xterm
       terminal	emulator.  However, when you log into  another	machine	 on  a
       network,	 you may need to set DISPLAY by	hand to	point to your display.
       For example,

	   % setenv DISPLAY myws:0
	   $ DISPLAY=myws:0; export DISPLAY

       The ssh program can be used to start an X program on a remote  machine;
       it automatically	sets the DISPLAY variable correctly.

       Finally,	 most X	programs accept	a command line option of -display dis-
       playname	to temporarily override	the contents of	DISPLAY.  This is most
       commonly	used to	pop windows on another person's	screen or as part of a
       "remote shell" command to start an xterm	pointing back to your display.
       For example,

	   % xeyes -display joesws:0 -geometry 1000x1000+0+0
	   % rsh big xterm -display myws:0 -ls </dev/null &

       X  servers  listen for connections on a variety of different communica-
       tions channels (network byte  streams,  shared  memory,	etc.).	 Since
       there  can be more than one way of contacting a given server, The host-
       name part of the	display	name is	used to	determine the type of  channel
       (also  called  a	transport layer) to be used.  X	servers	generally sup-
       port the	following types	of connections:

       local
	       The hostname part of the	 display  name	should	be  the	 empty
	       string.	 For  example:	 :0, :1, and :0.1.  The	most efficient
	       local transport will be chosen.

       TCPIP
	       The hostname part of the	display	 name  should  be  the	server
	       machine's  hostname or IP address.  Full	Internet names,	abbre-
	       viated names,  IPv4  addresses,	and  IPv6  addresses  are  all
	       allowed.	    For	   example:    x.org:0,	   expo:0,    [::1]:0,
	       198.112.45.11:0,	bigmachine:1, and hydra:0.1.

ACCESS CONTROL
       An X server can use several types of access control.   Mechanisms  pro-
       vided in	Release	7 are:

       Host Access	     Simple host-based access control.
       MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1    Shared plain-text "cookies".
       XDM-AUTHORIZATION-1   Secure DES	based private-keys.
       SUN-DES-1	     Based on Sun's secure rpc system.
       Server Interpreted    Server-dependent methods of access	control

       Xdm  initializes	 access	 control for the server	and also places	autho-
       rization	information in a file accessible to the	user.

       Normally, the list of hosts from	which connections are always  accepted
       should  be  empty,  so that only	clients	with are explicitly authorized
       can connect to the display.  When you add  entries  to  the  host  list
       (with  xhost),  the server no longer performs any authorization on con-
       nections	from those machines.  Be careful with this.

       The file	from which Xlib	extracts authorization data can	 be  specified
       with  the  environment  variable	 XAUTHORITY,  and defaults to the file
       .Xauthority in the home directory.  Xdm uses $HOME/.Xauthority and will
       create it or merge in authorization records if it already exists	when a
       user logs in.

       If you use several machines and share a common  home  directory	across
       all of the machines by means of a network file system, you never	really
       have to worry about authorization files,	the system  should  work  cor-
       rectly  by default.  Otherwise, as the authorization files are machine-
       independent, you	can simply copy	the files to share  them.   To	manage
       authorization  files,  use  xauth.   This program allows	you to extract
       records and insert them into other files.  Using	 this,	you  can  send
       authorization  to remote	machines when you login, if the	remote machine
       does not	share a	common home directory with your	local  machine.	  Note
       that  authorization  information	transmitted ``in the clear'' through a
       network file system or using ftp	or rcp can be ``stolen'' by a  network
       eavesdropper,  and  as  such  may  enable unauthorized access.  In many
       environments, this level	of security is not a concern, but  if  it  is,
       you  need  to  know the exact semantics of the particular authorization
       data to know if this is actually	a problem.

       For more	information on access control,	see  the  Xsecurity(7)	manual
       page.

GEOMETRY SPECIFICATIONS
       One of the advantages of	using window systems instead of	hardwired ter-
       minals is that applications don't have to be restricted to a particular
       size  or	 location  on the screen.  Although the	layout of windows on a
       display is controlled by	the window manager that	the  user  is  running
       (described  below),  most  X programs accept a command line argument of
       the form	-geometry WIDTHxHEIGHT+XOFF+YOFF (where	WIDTH,	HEIGHT,	 XOFF,
       and  YOFF are numbers) for specifying a preferred size and location for
       this application's main window.

       The WIDTH and HEIGHT parts of the geometry  specification  are  usually
       measured	 in either pixels or characters, depending on the application.
       The XOFF	and YOFF parts are measured in pixels and are used to  specify
       the  distance  of  the window from the left or right and	top and	bottom
       edges of	the screen, respectively.  Both	types of offsets are  measured
       from  the indicated edge	of the screen to the corresponding edge	of the
       window.	The X offset may be specified in the following ways:

       +XOFF   The left	edge of	the window is to be placed XOFF	pixels in from
	       the left	edge of	the screen (i.e., the X	coordinate of the win-
	       dow's origin will be XOFF).  XOFF may  be  negative,  in	 which
	       case the	window's left edge will	be off the screen.

       -XOFF   The  right  edge	 of  the window	is to be placed	XOFF pixels in
	       from the	right edge of the screen.  XOFF	may  be	 negative,  in
	       which case the window's right edge will be off the screen.

       The Y offset has	similar	meanings:

       +YOFF   The  top	 edge of the window is to be YOFF pixels below the top
	       edge of the screen (i.e., the Y coordinate of the window's ori-
	       gin  will  be  YOFF).   YOFF may	be negative, in	which case the
	       window's	top edge will be off the screen.

       -YOFF   The bottom edge of the window is	to be YOFF  pixels  above  the
	       bottom edge of the screen.  YOFF	may be negative, in which case
	       the window's bottom edge	will be	off the	screen.

       Offsets must be given as	pairs; in other	words,	in  order  to  specify
       either XOFF or YOFF both	must be	present.  Windows can be placed	in the
       four corners of the screen using	the following specifications:

       +0+0    upper left hand corner.

       -0+0    upper right hand	corner.

       -0-0    lower right hand	corner.

       +0-0    lower left hand corner.

       In the following	examples, a terminal emulator is placed	in roughly the
       center of the screen and	a load average monitor,	mailbox, and clock are
       placed in the upper right hand corner:

	   xterm -fn 6x10 -geometry 80x24+30+200 &
	   xclock -geometry 48x48-0+0 &
	   xload -geometry 48x48-96+0 &
	   xbiff -geometry 48x48-48+0 &

WINDOW MANAGERS
       The layout of windows on	the screen is controlled by  special  programs
       called window managers.	Although many window managers will honor geom-
       etry specifications as given, others may	choose to ignore them (requir-
       ing  the	user to	explicitly draw	the window's region on the screen with
       the pointer, for	example).

       Since window managers are regular (albeit complex) client  programs,  a
       variety	of  different user interfaces can be built.  The X.Org Founda-
       tion distribution comes with a window manager named twm which  supports
       overlapping  windows,  popup  menus,  point-and-click  or click-to-type
       input models, title bars, nice icons (and an icon manager for those who
       don't like separate icon	windows).

       See  the	user-contributed software in the X.Org Foundation distribution
       for other popular window	managers.

FONT NAMES
       Collections of characters for displaying	text  and  symbols  in	X  are
       known  as  fonts.  A font typically contains images that	share a	common
       appearance and look nice	together (for example, a  single  size,	 bold-
       ness,  slant, and character set).  Similarly, collections of fonts that
       are based on a common type face	(the  variations  are  usually	called
       roman, bold, italic, bold italic, oblique, and bold oblique) are	called
       families.

       Fonts come in various sizes.  The X  server  supports  scalable	fonts,
       meaning it is possible to create	a font of arbitrary size from a	single
       source for the font.  The server	supports scaling  from	outline	 fonts
       and bitmap fonts.  Scaling from outline fonts usually produces signifi-
       cantly better results than scaling from bitmap fonts.

       An X server can obtain fonts from individual files stored  in  directo-
       ries  in	 the  file system, or from one or more font servers, or	from a
       mixtures	of directories and font	 servers.   The	 list  of  places  the
       server looks when trying	to find	a font is controlled by	its font path.
       Although	most installations will	choose to have	the  server  start  up
       with  all  of  the commonly used	font directories in the	font path, the
       font path can be	changed	at any time with the xset  program.   However,
       it  is  important  to  remember	that  the  directory  names are	on the
       server's	machine, not on	the application's.

       Bitmap font files are usually  created  by  compiling  a	 textual  font
       description  into binary	form, using bdftopcf.  Font databases are cre-
       ated by running the mkfontdir program in	the directory  containing  the
       source  or compiled versions of the fonts.  Whenever fonts are added to
       a directory, mkfontdir should be	rerun so that the server can find  the
       new fonts.  To make the server reread the font database,	reset the font
       path with the xset program.  For	example, to add	a font	to  a  private
       directory, the following	commands could be used:

	   % cp	newfont.pcf ~/myfonts
	   % mkfontdir ~/myfonts
	   % xset fp rehash

       The  xfontsel  and  xlsfonts programs can be used to browse through the
       fonts available on a server.  Font names	tend to	be fairly long as they
       contain	all  of	the information	needed to uniquely identify individual
       fonts.  However,	the X server supports wildcarding of  font  names,  so
       the full	specification

	   -adobe-courier-medium-r-normal--10-100-75-75-m-60-iso8859-1

       might be	abbreviated as:

	   -*-courier-medium-r-normal--*-100-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1

       Because	the  shell  also  has special meanings for * and ?, wildcarded
       font names should be quoted:

	   % xlsfonts -fn '-*-courier-medium-r-normal--*-100-*-*-*-*-*-*'

       The xlsfonts program can	be used	to list	all of the fonts that match  a
       given  pattern.	With no	arguments, it lists all	available fonts.  This
       will usually list the same font at many different sizes.	 To  see  just
       the base	scalable font names, try using one of the following patterns:

	   -*-*-*-*-*-*-0-0-0-0-*-0-*-*
	   -*-*-*-*-*-*-0-0-75-75-*-0-*-*
	   -*-*-*-*-*-*-0-0-100-100-*-0-*-*

       To  convert  one	of the resulting names into a font at a	specific size,
       replace one of the first	two zeros with a  nonzero  value.   The	 field
       containing the first zero is for	the pixel size;	replace	it with	a spe-
       cific height in pixels to name a	font at	that size.  Alternatively, the
       field containing	the second zero	is for the point size; replace it with
       a specific size in decipoints (there are	722.7 decipoints to the	 inch)
       to  name	a font at that size.  The last zero is an average width	field,
       measured	in tenths of pixels; some servers will anamorphically scale if
       this value is specified.

FONT SERVER NAMES
       One  of	the  following	forms  can  be used to name a font server that
       accepts TCP connections:

	   tcp/hostname:port
	   tcp/hostname:port/cataloguelist

       The hostname specifies the name (or decimal  numeric  address)  of  the
       machine	on  which the font server is running.  The port	is the decimal
       TCP port	on which the font server is listening  for  connections.   The
       cataloguelist  specifies	a list of catalogue names, with	'+' as a sepa-
       rator.

       Examples: tcp/x.org:7100, tcp/198.112.45.11:7100/all.

COLOR NAMES
       Most applications provide ways of tailoring (usually through  resources
       or  command  line arguments) the	colors of various elements in the text
       and graphics they display.  A color  can	 be  specified	either	by  an
       abstract	color name, or by a numerical color specification.  The	numer-
       ical specification can identify	a  color  in  either  device-dependent
       (RGB) or	device-independent terms.  Color strings are case-insensitive.

       X supports the use of abstract color names, for example,	"red", "blue".
       A  value	 for  this  abstract name is obtained by searching one or more
       color name databases.  Xlib first searches  zero	 or  more  client-side
       databases;  the	number,	 location,  and	 content of these databases is
       implementation dependent.  If the name  is  not	found,	the  color  is
       looked  up  in the X server's database.	The text form of this database
       is commonly stored in the file usr/local/share/X11/rgb.txt.

       A numerical color specification consists	of a color space  name	and  a
       set of values in	the following syntax:

	   _color_space_name_:_value_/.../_value_

       An  RGB Device specification is identified by the prefix	"rgb:" and has
       the following syntax:

	   rgb:_red_/_green_/_blue_

	       _red_, _green_, _blue_ := h | hh	| hhh |	hhhh
	       h := single hexadecimal digits

       Note that h indicates the value scaled in 4 bits, hh the	 value	scaled
       in  8  bits, hhh	the value scaled in 12 bits, and hhhh the value	scaled
       in 16 bits, respectively.  These	values are passed directly  to	the  X
       server, and are assumed to be gamma corrected.

       The eight primary colors	can be represented as:

			    black     rgb:0/0/0
			    red	      rgb:ffff/0/0
			    green     rgb:0/ffff/0
			    blue      rgb:0/0/ffff
			    yellow    rgb:ffff/ffff/0
			    magenta   rgb:ffff/0/ffff
			    cyan      rgb:0/ffff/ffff
			    white     rgb:ffff/ffff/ffff

       For  backward  compatibility,  an  older	 syntax	for RGB	Device is sup-
       ported, but its continued use is	not encouraged.	 The syntax is an ini-
       tial  sharp  sign character followed by a numeric specification,	in one
       of the following	formats:

			   #RGB		   (4 bits each)
			   #RRGGBB	   (8 bits each)
			   #RRRGGGBBB	   (12 bits each)
			   #RRRRGGGGBBBB   (16 bits each)

       The R, G, and B represent single	hexadecimal digits.  When  fewer  than
       16 bits each are	specified, they	represent the most-significant bits of
       the value (unlike the "rgb:" syntax, in which values are	scaled).   For
       example,	#3a7 is	the same as #3000a0007000.

       An  RGB intensity specification is identified by	the prefix "rgbi:" and
       has the following syntax:

	   rgbi:_red_/_green_/_blue_

       The red,	green, and blue	are floating point values between 0.0 and 1.0,
       inclusive.  They	represent linear intensity values, with	1.0 indicating
       full intensity, 0.5 half	intensity, and so on.  These  values  will  be
       gamma  corrected	 by Xlib before	being sent to the X server.  The input
       format for these	values is an optional sign, a string of	numbers	possi-
       bly containing a	decimal	point, and an optional exponent	field contain-
       ing an E	or e followed by a possibly signed integer string.

       The standard device-independent string specifications have the  follow-
       ing syntax:

		       CIEXYZ:_X_/_Y_/_Z_   (none, 1, none)
		       CIEuvY:_u_/_v_/_Y_   (~.6, ~.6, 1)
		       CIExyY:_x_/_y_/_Y_   (~.75, ~.85, 1)
		       CIELab:_L_/_a_/_b_   (100, none,	none)
		       CIELuv:_L_/_u_/_v_   (100, none,	none)
		       TekHVC:_H_/_V_/_C_   (360, 100, 100)

       All  of	the  values  (C, H, V, X, Y, Z,	a, b, u, v, y, x) are floating
       point values.  Some of the values are constrained to  be	 between  zero
       and  some upper bound; the upper	bounds are given in parentheses	above.
       The syntax for these values is an optional '+' or '-' sign, a string of
       digits  possibly	 containing  a decimal point, and an optional exponent
       field consisting	of an 'E' or 'e' followed by an	optional  '+'  or  '-'
       followed	by a string of digits.

       For  more  information on device	independent color, see the Xlib	refer-
       ence manual.

KEYBOARDS
       The X keyboard model is broken into two layers:	server-specific	 codes
       (called	keycodes)  which represent the physical	keys, and server-inde-
       pendent symbols (called keysyms)	which represent	the letters  or	 words
       that  appear  on	 the keys.  Two	tables are kept	in the server for con-
       verting keycodes	to keysyms:

       modifier	list
	       Some keys (such as Shift, Control, and Caps Lock) are known  as
	       modifier	 and  are  used	 to  select different symbols that are
	       attached	to a single key	(such as Shift-a generates  a  capital
	       A, and Control-l	generates a control character ^L).  The	server
	       keeps a list of keycodes	corresponding to the various  modifier
	       keys.  Whenever a key is	pressed	or released, the server	gener-
	       ates an event that contains the keycode of the indicated	key as
	       well  as	 a  mask that specifies	which of the modifier keys are
	       currently pressed.  Most	servers	set up this list to  initially
	       contain	the various shift, control, and	shift lock keys	on the
	       keyboard.

       keymap table
	       Applications translate event keycodes and modifier  masks  into
	       keysyms	using  a  keysym table which contains one row for each
	       keycode and one column for various modifier states.  This table
	       is initialized by the server to correspond to normal typewriter
	       conventions.  The exact semantics of how	the  table  is	inter-
	       preted  to  produce  keysyms depends on the particular program,
	       libraries, and language input method used,  but	the  following
	       conventions  for	 the first four	keysyms	in each	row are	gener-
	       ally adhered to:

       The first four elements of the  list  are  split	 into  two  groups  of
       keysyms.	  Group	 1 contains the	first and second keysyms; Group	2 con-
       tains the third and fourth keysyms.  Within each	group,	if  the	 first
       element	is alphabetic and the the second element is the	special	keysym
       NoSymbol, then the group	is treated as equivalent to a group  in	 which
       the first element is the	lowercase letter and the second	element	is the
       uppercase letter.

       Switching between groups	is controlled by the keysym named MODE SWITCH,
       by  attaching that keysym to some key and attaching that	key to any one
       of the modifiers	Mod1  through  Mod5.   This  modifier  is  called  the
       ``group	modifier.''   Group  1 is used when the	group modifier is off,
       and Group 2 is used when	the group modifier is on.

       Within a	group, the modifier state determines which keysym to use.  The
       first  keysym  is  used when the	Shift and Lock modifiers are off.  The
       second keysym is	used when the Shift modifier is	on, when the Lock mod-
       ifier  is on and	the second keysym is uppercase alphabetic, or when the
       Lock modifier is	on and is interpreted as ShiftLock.   Otherwise,  when
       the  Lock  modifier  is on and is interpreted as	CapsLock, the state of
       the Shift modifier is applied first to select a	keysym;	 but  if  that
       keysym is lowercase alphabetic, then the	corresponding uppercase	keysym
       is used instead.

OPTIONS
       Most X programs attempt to use the same names for command line  options
       and  arguments.	All applications written with the X Toolkit Intrinsics
       automatically accept the	following options:

       -display	display
	       This option specifies the name of the X server to use.

       -geometry geometry
	       This option specifies the initial size and location of the win-
	       dow.

       -bg color, -background color
	       Either  option  specifies the color to use for the window back-
	       ground.

       -bd color, -bordercolor color
	       Either option specifies the color to use	for the	window border.

       -bw number, -borderwidth	number
	       Either  option specifies	the width in pixels of the window bor-
	       der.

       -fg color, -foreground color
	       Either option specifies the color to use	for text or  graphics.

       -fn font, -font font
	       Either option specifies the font	to use for displaying text.

       -iconic
	       This  option  indicates	that  the  user	 would prefer that the
	       application's windows initially not be visible as if  the  win-
	       dows had	be immediately iconified by the	user.  Window managers
	       may choose not to honor the application's request.

       -name
	       This option specifies the name under which  resources  for  the
	       application  should  be	found.	This option is useful in shell
	       aliases to distinguish between invocations of  an  application,
	       without	resorting  to  creating	 links to alter	the executable
	       file name.

       -rv, -reverse
	       Either  option  indicates  that	the  program  should  simulate
	       reverse video if	possible, often	by swapping the	foreground and
	       background colors.  Not all programs honor this or implement it
	       correctly.  It is usually only used on monochrome displays.

       +rv
	       This  option  indicates	that  the  program should not simulate
	       reverse video.  This is used to	override  any  defaults	 since
	       reverse video doesn't always work properly.

       -selectionTimeout
	       This  option specifies the timeout in milliseconds within which
	       two communicating applications must respond to one another  for
	       a selection request.

       -synchronous
	       This  option  indicates that requests to	the X server should be
	       sent synchronously, instead of asynchronously.  Since Xlib nor-
	       mally buffers requests to the server, errors do not necessarily
	       get reported immediately	after they occur.  This	 option	 turns
	       off  the	buffering so that the application can be debugged.  It
	       should never be used with a working program.

       -title string
	       This option specifies the title to be  used  for	 this  window.
	       This  information is sometimes used by a	window manager to pro-
	       vide some sort of header	identifying the	window.

       -xnllanguage language[_territory][.codeset]
	       This option specifies the language, territory, and codeset  for
	       use in resolving	resource and other filenames.

       -xrm resourcestring
	       This option specifies a resource	name and value to override any
	       defaults.  It is	also very useful for  setting  resources  that
	       don't have explicit command line	arguments.

RESOURCES
       To make the tailoring of	applications to	personal preferences easier, X
       provides	a mechanism for	storing	default	values for  program  resources
       (e.g.  background  color,  window title,	etc.) that is used by programs
       that use	toolkits based on the  X  Toolkit  Intrinsics  library	libXt.
       (Programs using the common Gtk+ and Qt toolkits use other configuration
       mechanisms.)  Resources are specified as	strings	that are read in  from
       various	places	when  an  application  is run.	Program	components are
       named in	a hierarchical fashion,	with each node in the hierarchy	 iden-
       tified  by a class and an instance name.	 At the	top level is the class
       and instance name of the	application itself.  By	convention, the	 class
       name  of	the application	is the same as the program name, but with  the
       first letter capitalized	(e.g. Bitmap or	Emacs) although	some  programs
       that  begin with	the letter ``x'' also capitalize the second letter for
       historical reasons.

       The precise syntax for resources	is:

       ResourceLine    =       Comment | IncludeFile | ResourceSpec | <empty line>
       Comment	       =       "!" {<any character except null or newline>}
       IncludeFile     =       "#" WhiteSpace "include"	WhiteSpace FileName WhiteSpace
       FileName	       =       <valid filename for operating system>
       ResourceSpec    =       WhiteSpace ResourceName WhiteSpace ":" WhiteSpace Value
       ResourceName    =       [Binding] {Component Binding} ComponentName
       Binding	       =       "." | "*"
       WhiteSpace      =       {<space>	| <horizontal tab>}
       Component       =       "?" | ComponentName
       ComponentName   =       NameChar	{NameChar}
       NameChar	       =       "a"-"z" | "A"-"Z" | "0"-"9" | "_" | "-"
       Value	       =       {<any character except null or unescaped	newline>}

       Elements	separated by vertical bar (|) are alternatives.	 Curly	braces
       ({...})	indicate  zero	or  more repetitions of	the enclosed elements.
       Square brackets ([...]) indicate	that the enclosed element is optional.
       Quotes ("...") are used around literal characters.

       IncludeFile  lines  are interpreted by replacing	the line with the con-
       tents of	the specified file.  The word "include"	must be	in  lowercase.
       The  filename  is  interpreted relative to the directory	of the file in
       which the line occurs (for example, if the filename contains no	direc-
       tory or contains	a relative directory specification).

       If a ResourceName contains a contiguous sequence	of two or more Binding
       characters, the sequence	will be	replaced with single "." character  if
       the  sequence contains only "." characters, otherwise the sequence will
       be replaced with	a single "*" character.

       A resource database never contains more than  one  entry	 for  a	 given
       ResourceName.  If a resource file contains multiple lines with the same
       ResourceName, the last line in the file is used.

       Any whitespace character	before	or  after  the	name  or  colon	 in  a
       ResourceSpec  are  ignored.  To allow a Value to	begin with whitespace,
       the two-character sequence ``\space'' (backslash	followed by space)  is
       recognized  and	replaced  by  a	space character, and the two-character
       sequence	``\tab'' (backslash followed by	horizontal tab)	is  recognized
       and  replaced  by a horizontal tab character.  To allow a Value to con-
       tain embedded newline characters, the two-character sequence ``\n''  is
       recognized and replaced by a newline character.	To allow a Value to be
       broken across multiple lines in a text file, the	two-character sequence
       ``\newline''  (backslash	followed by newline) is	recognized and removed
       from the	value.	To allow a Value to contain arbitrary character	codes,
       the four-character sequence ``\nnn'', where each	n is a digit character
       in the range of ``0''-``7'', is recognized and replaced with  a	single
       byte that contains the octal value specified by the sequence.  Finally,
       the two-character sequence ``\\'' is recognized	and  replaced  with  a
       single backslash.

       When  an	 application looks for the value of a resource,	it specifies a
       complete	path in	the hierarchy, with both  class	 and  instance	names.
       However,	 resource  values are usually given with only partially	speci-
       fied names and classes, using pattern matching constructs.  An asterisk
       (*) is a	loose binding and is used to represent any number of interven-
       ing components, including none.	A period (.) is	a tight	binding	and is
       used  to	separate immediately adjacent components.  A question mark (?)
       is used to match	any single component name or class.  A database	 entry
       cannot  end  in	a  loose binding; the final component (which cannot be
       "?") must be specified.	The lookup  algorithm  searches	 the  resource
       database	for the	entry that most	closely	matches	(is most specific for)
       the full	name and class being queried.  When  more  than	 one  database
       entry  matches  the  full  name and class, precedence rules are used to
       select just one.

       The full	name and class are scanned from	left to	 right	(from  highest
       level  in  the  hierarchy to lowest), one component at a	time.  At each
       level, the corresponding	component  and/or  binding  of	each  matching
       entry  is  determined,  and  these matching components and bindings are
       compared	according to precedence	rules.	Each of	the rules  is  applied
       at  each	level, before moving to	the next level,	until a	rule selects a
       single entry over all others.  The rules	(in order of precedence) are:

       1.   An entry that contains a matching component	(whether name,	class,
	    or	"?")  takes precedence over entries that elide the level (that
	    is,	entries	that match the level in	a loose	binding).

       2.   An entry with a matching name takes	precedence over	 both  entries
	    with  a matching class and entries that match using	"?".  An entry
	    with a matching class takes	precedence  over  entries  that	 match
	    using "?".

       3.   An entry preceded by a tight binding takes precedence over entries
	    preceded by	a loose	binding.

       Programs	based on the X Toolkit Intrinsics obtain  resources  from  the
       following  sources (other programs usually support some subset of these
       sources):

       RESOURCE_MANAGER	root window property
	       Any global resources that should	be available to	clients	on all
	       machines	 should	 be stored in the RESOURCE_MANAGER property on
	       the root	window of the first screen  using  the	xrdb  program.
	       This  is	 frequently  taken  care  of when the user starts up X
	       through the display manager or xinit.

       SCREEN_RESOURCES	root window property
	       Any resources specific to a given  screen  (e.g.	 colors)  that
	       should be available to clients on all machines should be	stored
	       in the SCREEN_RESOURCES property	on the	root  window  of  that
	       screen.	The xrdb program will sort resources automatically and
	       place them in RESOURCE_MANAGER or SCREEN_RESOURCES,  as	appro-
	       priate.

       application-specific files
	       Directories  named by the environment variable XUSERFILESEARCH-
	       PATH or the environment variable	 XAPPLRESDIR  (which  names  a
	       single  directory  and should end with a	'/' on POSIX systems),
	       plus  directories  in   a   standard   place   (usually	 under
	       /usr/local/share/X11/,  but  this  can  be  overridden with the
	       XFILESEARCHPATH environment  variable)  are  searched  for  for
	       application-specific   resources.    For	 example,  application
	       default resources are usually kept in /usr/local/share/X11/app-
	       defaults/.  See the X Toolkit Intrinsics	- C Language Interface
	       manual for details.

       XENVIRONMENT
	       Any user- and machine-specific resources	may  be	 specified  by
	       setting	the XENVIRONMENT environment variable to the name of a
	       resource	file to	be loaded by all applications.	If this	 vari-
	       able  is	not defined, a file named $HOME/.Xdefaults-hostname is
	       looked for instead, where hostname is  the  name	 of  the  host
	       where the application is	executing.

       -xrm resourcestring
	       Resources  can  also  be	 specified from	the command line.  The
	       resourcestring is a single resource name	 and  value  as	 shown
	       above.  Note that if the	string contains	characters interpreted
	       by the shell (e.g., asterisk), they must	be quoted.  Any	number
	       of -xrm arguments may be	given on the command line.

       Program	resources  are	organized  into	groups called classes, so that
       collections  of	individual  resources  (each  of  which	  are	called
       instances) can be set all at once.  By convention, the instance name of
       a resource begins with a	lowercase letter and class name	with an	 upper
       case  letter.   Multiple	word resources are concatenated	with the first
       letter of the succeeding	words capitalized.  Applications written  with
       the X Toolkit Intrinsics	will have at least the following resources:

       background (class Background)
	       This  resource  specifies the color to use for the window back-
	       ground.

       borderWidth (class BorderWidth)
	       This resource specifies the width in pixels of the window  bor-
	       der.

       borderColor (class BorderColor)
	       This resource specifies the color to use	for the	window border.

       Most applications using the X Toolkit Intrinsics	also have the resource
       foreground (class Foreground), specifying the color to use for text and
       graphics	within the window.

       By combining class and instance specifications, application preferences
       can be set quickly and easily.  Users of	color displays will frequently
       want to set Background and Foreground classes to	 particular  defaults.
       Specific	 color	instances  such	as text	cursors	can then be overridden
       without having to define	all of the related resources.  For example,

	   bitmap*Dashed:  off
	   XTerm*cursorColor:  gold
	   XTerm*multiScroll:  on
	   XTerm*jumpScroll:  on
	   XTerm*reverseWrap:  on
	   XTerm*curses:  on
	   XTerm*Font:	6x10
	   XTerm*scrollBar: on
	   XTerm*scrollbar*thickness: 5
	   XTerm*multiClickTime: 500
	   XTerm*charClass:  33:48,37:48,45-47:48,64:48
	   XTerm*cutNewline: off
	   XTerm*cutToBeginningOfLine: off
	   XTerm*titeInhibit:  on
	   XTerm*ttyModes:  intr ^c erase ^? kill ^u
	   XLoad*Background: gold
	   XLoad*Foreground: red
	   XLoad*highlight: black
	   XLoad*borderWidth: 0
	   emacs*Geometry:  80x65-0-0
	   emacs*Background:  rgb:5b/76/86
	   emacs*Foreground:  white
	   emacs*Cursor:  white
	   emacs*BorderColor:  white
	   emacs*Font:	6x10
	   xmag*geometry: -0-0
	   xmag*borderColor:  white

       If these	resources were stored in a file	 called	 .Xresources  in  your
       home  directory,	 they  could be	added to any existing resources	in the
       server with the following command:

	   % xrdb -merge $HOME/.Xresources

       This is frequently how user-friendly startup  scripts  merge  user-spe-
       cific  defaults	into any site-wide defaults.  All sites	are encouraged
       to set up convenient ways of automatically loading resources.  See  the
       Xlib manual section Resource Manager Functions for more information.

ENVIRONMENT
       DISPLAY
	      This  is	the only mandatory environment variable. It must point
	      to an X server. See section "Display Names" above.

       XAUTHORITY
	      This must	point to a file	that contains authorization data.  The
	      default	is   $HOME/.Xauthority.	 See  Xsecurity(7),  xauth(1),
	      xdm(1), Xau(3).

       ICEAUTHORITY
	      This must	point to a file	that contains authorization data.  The
	      default is $HOME/.ICEauthority.

       LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, LANG
	      The  first non-empty value among these three determines the cur-
	      rent locale's facet for character	handling,  and	in  particular
	      the   default   text   encoding.	See  locale(7),	 setlocale(3),
	      locale(1).

       XMODIFIERS
	      This variable can	 be  set  to  contain  additional  information
	      important	 for  the  current  locale  setting.  Typically	set to
	      @im=_input-method_ to enable  a  particular  input  method.  See
	      XSetLocaleModifiers(3).

       XLOCALEDIR
	      This  must point to a directory containing the locale.alias file
	      and Compose and XLC_LOCALE file hierarchies for all locales. The
	      default value is /usr/local/share/X11/locale.

       XENVIRONMENT
	      This must	point to a file	containing X resources.	The default is
	      $HOME/.Xdefaults-_hostname_.  Unlike  $HOME/.Xresources,	it  is
	      consulted	each time an X application starts.

       XFILESEARCHPATH
	      This  must  contain  a  colon  separated list of path templates,
	      where libXt will search for resource files.  The	default	 value
	      consists of

		  /usr/local/etc/X11/%L/%T/%N%C%S:\
		  /usr/local/etc/X11/%l/%T/%N%C%S:\
		  /usr/local/etc/X11/%T/%N%C%S:\
		  /usr/local/etc/X11/%L/%T/%N%S:\
		  /usr/local/etc/X11/%l/%T/%N%S:\
		  /usr/local/etc/X11/%T/%N%S:\
		  /usr/local/share/X11/%L/%T/%N%C%S:\
		  /usr/local/share/X11/%l/%T/%N%C%S:\
		  /usr/local/share/X11/%T/%N%C%S:\
		  /usr/local/share/X11/%L/%T/%N%S:\
		  /usr/local/share/X11/%l/%T/%N%S:\
		  /usr/local/share/X11/%T/%N%S:\
		  /usr/local/lib/X11/%L/%T/%N%C%S:\
		  /usr/local/lib/X11/%l/%T/%N%C%S:\
		  /usr/local/lib/X11/%T/%N%C%S:\
		  /usr/local/lib/X11/%L/%T/%N%S:\
		  /usr/local/lib/X11/%l/%T/%N%S:\
		  /usr/local/lib/X11/%T/%N%S

	      A	path template is transformed to	a pathname by substituting:

		  %D =>	the implementation-specific default path
		  %N =>	name (basename)	being searched for
		  %T =>	type (dirname) being searched for
		  %S =>	suffix being searched for
		  %C =>	value of the resource "customization"
			(class "Customization")
		  %L =>	the locale name
		  %l =>	the locale's language (part before '_')
		  %t =>	the locale's territory (part after '_` but before '.')
		  %c =>	the locale's encoding (part after '.')

       XUSERFILESEARCHPATH
	      This  must  contain  a  colon  separated list of path templates,
	      where libXt will search for user dependent resource  files.  The
	      default value is:

		  $XAPPLRESDIR/%L/%N%C:\
		  $XAPPLRESDIR/%l/%N%C:\
		  $XAPPLRESDIR/%N%C:\
		  $HOME/%N%C:\
		  $XAPPLRESDIR/%L/%N:\
		  $XAPPLRESDIR/%l/%N:\
		  $XAPPLRESDIR/%N:\
		  $HOME/%N

	      $XAPPLRESDIR defaults to $HOME, see below.

	      A	path template is transformed to	a pathname by substituting:

		  %D =>	the implementation-specific default path
		  %N =>	name (basename)	being searched for
		  %T =>	type (dirname) being searched for
		  %S =>	suffix being searched for
		  %C =>	value of the resource "customization"
			(class "Customization")
		  %L =>	the locale name
		  %l =>	the locale's language (part before '_')
		  %t =>	the locale's territory (part after '_` but before '.')
		  %c =>	the locale's encoding (part after '.')

       XAPPLRESDIR
	      This  must  point	 to a base directory where the user stores the
	      application dependent  resource  files.  The  default  value  is
	      $HOME. Only used if XUSERFILESEARCHPATH is not set.

       XKEYSYMDB
	      This  must point to a file containing nonstandard	keysym defini-
	      tions.  The default value	is /usr/local/share/X11/XKeysymDB.

       XCMSDB This must	point to a color name database file. The default value
	      is
	       /usr/local/lib/X11/Xcms.txt.

       RESOURCE_NAME
	      This  serves  as	main identifier	for resources belonging	to the
	      program being executed. It defaults to the basename of  pathname
	      of the program.

       SESSION_MANAGER
	      Denotes the session manager to which the application should con-
	      nect. See	xsm(1),	rstart(1).

       XF86BIGFONT_DISABLE
	      Setting  this  variable  to  a  non-empty	 value	disables   the
	      XFree86-Bigfont  extension.  This	 extension  is	a mechanism to
	      reduce the memory	consumption of big fonts by use	of shared mem-
	      ory.

       XKB_FORCE
       XKB_DISABLE
       XKB_DEBUG
       _XKB_CHARSET
       _XKB_LOCALE_CHARSETS
       _XKB_OPTIONS_ENABLE
       _XKB_LATIN1_LOOKUP
       _XKB_CONSUME_LOOKUP_MODS
       _XKB_CONSUME_SHIFT_AND_LOCK
       _XKB_IGNORE_NEW_KEYBOARDS
       _XKB_CONTROL_FALLBACK
       _XKB_COMP_LED _XKB_COMP_FAIL_BEEP

       These variables influence the X Keyboard	Extension.

EXAMPLES
       The  following  is a collection of sample command lines for some	of the
       more frequently used commands.  For more	information  on	 a  particular
       command,	please refer to	that command's manual page.

	   %  xrdb $HOME/.Xresources
	   %  xmodmap -e "keysym BackSpace = Delete"
	   %  mkfontdir	/usr/local/lib/X11/otherfonts
	   %  xset fp+ /usr/local/lib/X11/otherfonts
	   %  xmodmap $HOME/.keymap.km
	   %  xsetroot -solid 'rgbi:.8/.8/.8'
	   %  xset b 100 400 c 50 s 1800 r on
	   %  xset q
	   %  twm
	   %  xmag
	   %  xclock -geometry 48x48-0+0 -bg blue -fg white
	   %  xeyes -geometry 48x48-48+0
	   %  xbiff -update 20
	   %  xlsfonts '*helvetica*'
	   %  xwininfo -root
	   %  xdpyinfo -display	joesworkstation:0
	   %  xhost -joesworkstation
	   %  xrefresh
	   %  xwd | xwud
	   %  bitmap companylogo.bm 32x32
	   %  xcalc -bg	blue -fg magenta
	   %  xterm -geometry 80x66-0-0	-name myxterm $*

DIAGNOSTICS
       A  wide	variety	of error messages are generated	from various programs.
       The default error handler in Xlib (also used  by	 many  toolkits)  uses
       standard	 resources to construct	diagnostic messages when errors	occur.
       The   defaults	for   these   messages	 are   usually	  stored    in
       usr/local/share/X11/XErrorDB.   If this file is not present, error mes-
       sages will be rather terse and cryptic.

       When the	X Toolkit  Intrinsics  encounter  errors  converting  resource
       strings	to the appropriate internal format, no error messages are usu-
       ally printed.  This is convenient when it is desirable to have one  set
       of  resources  across a variety of displays (e.g. color vs. monochrome,
       lots of fonts vs. very few, etc.), although it can  pose	 problems  for
       trying to determine why an application might be failing.	 This behavior
       can be overridden by the	setting	the StringConversionWarnings resource.

       To  force  the  X  Toolkit Intrinsics to	always print string conversion
       error messages, the following resource should be	 placed	 in  the  file
       that gets loaded	onto the RESOURCE_MANAGER property using the xrdb pro-
       gram (frequently	called .Xresources or .Xres in the user's home	direc-
       tory):

	   *StringConversionWarnings: on

       To  have	conversion messages printed for	just a particular application,
       the appropriate instance	name can be placed before the asterisk:

	   xterm*StringConversionWarnings: on

SEE ALSO
       XOrgFoundation(7), XStandards(7), Xsecurity(7), appres(1), bdftopcf(1),
       bitmap(1), editres(1), fsinfo(1), fslsfonts(1), fstobdf(1), iceauth(1),
       imake(1), makedepend(1),	mkfontdir(1), oclock(1), proxymngr(1), rgb(1),
       resize(1),  rstart(1),  smproxy(1), twm(1), x11perf(1), x11perfcomp(1),
       xauth(1), xclipboard(1),	 xclock(1),  xcmsdb(1),	 xconsole(1),  xdm(1),
       xdpyinfo(1),   xfd(1),	xfindproxy(1),	 xfs(1),   xfwp(1),  xhost(1),
       xinit(1), xkbbell(1), xkbcomp(1), xkbevd(1), xkbprint(1),  xkbvleds(1),
       xkbwatch(1),   xkill(1),	 xlogo(1),  xlsatoms(1),  xlsclients(1),  xls-
       fonts(1), xmag(1), xmh(1), xmodmap(1), xprop(1),	xrdb(1),  xrefresh(1),
       xrx(1),	xset(1),  xsetroot(1),	xsm(1),	xstdcmap(1), xterm(1), xwd(1),
       xwininfo(1),  xwud(1).	Xserver(1),   Xorg(1),	 Xdmx(1),   Xephyr(1),
       Xnest(1),  Xquartz(1),  Xvfb(1),	Xvnc(1), XWin(1).  Xlib	- C Language X
       Interface, and X	Toolkit	Intrinsics - C Language	Interface

TRADEMARKS
       X Window	System is a trademark of The Open Group.

AUTHORS
       A cast of thousands, literally.	Releases 6.7 and later are brought  to
       you  by	the  X.Org  Foundation.	 The names of all people who made it a
       reality will be found in	the individual documents and source files.

       Releases	6.6 and	6.5 were done by The X.Org  Group.   Release  6.4  was
       done  by	The X Project Team.  The Release 6.3 distribution was from The
       X Consortium, Inc.  The staff members at	the X  Consortium  responsible
       for that	release	were: Donna Converse (emeritus), Stephen Gildea	(emer-
       itus), Kaleb Keithley, Matt Landau (emeritus),  Ralph  Mor  (emeritus),
       Janet  O'Halloran, Bob Scheifler, Ralph Swick, Dave Wiggins (emeritus),
       and Reed	Augliere.

       The X Window System standard was	originally developed at	the Laboratory
       for  Computer Science at	the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and
       all rights thereto were assigned	to the	X  Consortium  on  January  1,
       1994.   X  Consortium, Inc. closed its doors on December	31, 1996.  All
       rights to the X Window System have been assigned	to The Open Group.

X Version 11			xorg-docs 1.7.1				  X(7)

NAME | OVERVIEW | DESCRIPTION | STARTING UP | DISPLAY NAMES | ACCESS CONTROL | GEOMETRY SPECIFICATIONS | WINDOW MANAGERS | FONT NAMES | FONT SERVER NAMES | COLOR NAMES | KEYBOARDS | OPTIONS | RESOURCES | ENVIRONMENT | EXAMPLES | DIAGNOSTICS | SEE ALSO | TRADEMARKS | AUTHORS

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