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Xorg(1)								       Xorg(1)

NAME
       Xorg - X11R7 X server

SYNOPSIS
       Xorg [:display] [option ...]

DESCRIPTION
       Xorg  is	a full featured	X server that was originally designed for UNIX
       and UNIX-like operating systems running on Intel	x86 hardware.  It  now
       runs on a wider range of	hardware and OS	platforms.

       This  work  was	derived	 by  the  X.Org	 Foundation  from  the XFree86
       Project's XFree86 4.4rc2	release.  The XFree86 release  was  originally
       derived from X386 1.2 by	Thomas Roell which was contributed to X11R5 by
       Snitily Graphics	Consulting Service.

PLATFORMS
       Xorg operates under a wide range	 of  operating	systems	 and  hardware
       platforms.   The	 Intel x86 (IA32) architecture is the most widely sup-
       ported hardware platform.   Other  hardware  platforms  include	Compaq
       Alpha, Intel IA64, AMD64, SPARC and PowerPC.  The most widely supported
       operating systems are the free/OpenSource  UNIX-like  systems  such  as
       Linux,  FreeBSD,	NetBSD,	OpenBSD, and Solaris.  Commercial UNIX operat-
       ing systems such	as UnixWare are	also supported.	 Other supported oper-
       ating  systems  include	GNU  Hurd.   Mac  OS  X	 is supported with the
       Xquartz(1) X server.  Win32/Cygwin is  supported	 with  the  XWin(1)  X
       server.

NETWORK	CONNECTIONS
       Xorg  supports  connections  made  using	 the  following	reliable byte-
       streams:

       Local
	   On most platforms, the "Local" connection  type  is	a  UNIX-domain
	   socket.   On	 some System V platforms, the "local" connection types
	   also	include	STREAMS	pipes, named pipes, and	some other mechanisms.

       TCP/IP
	   Xorg	 listens  on port 6000+n, where	n is the display number.  This
	   connection type can be disabled with	the -nolisten option (see  the
	   Xserver(1) man page for details).

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       For  operating  systems	that support local connections other than Unix
       Domain sockets (SVR3 and	SVR4), there is	a compiled-in list  specifying
       the  order  in  which local connections should be attempted.  This list
       can be overridden by the	XLOCAL environment variable  described	below.
       If  the	display	name indicates a best-choice connection	should be made
       (e.g.  :0.0), each connection mechanism is  tried  until	 a  connection
       succeeds	or no more mechanisms are available.  Note: for	these OSs, the
       Unix Domain socket connection is	treated	 differently  from  the	 other
       local  connection  types.   To  use  it	the connection must be made to
       unix:0.0.

       The XLOCAL environment variable should contain a	list of	one more  more
       of the following:

	       NAMED
	       PTS
	       SCO
	       ISC

       which  represent	 SVR4  Named Streams pipe, Old-style USL Streams pipe,
       SCO XSight Streams pipe,	and ISC	Streams	pipe, respectively.   You  can
       select  a  single  mechanism  (e.g.   XLOCAL=NAMED), or an ordered list
       (e.g. XLOCAL="NAMED:PTS:SCO").  his variable overrides the  compiled-in
       defaults.   For	SVR4 it	is recommended that NAMED be the first prefer-
       ence connection.	 The default setting is	PTS:NAMED:ISC:SCO.

       To globally override the	compiled-in defaults, you should  define  (and
       export  if  using  sh or	ksh) XLOCAL globally.  If you use startx(1) or
       xinit(1), the definition	should be at the top of	 your  .xinitrc	 file.
       If  you	use  xdm(1),  the  definitions	should	be  early  on  in  the
       /usr/local/lib/X11/xdm/Xsession script.

OPTIONS
       Xorg supports several mechanisms	for supplying/obtaining	 configuration
       and  run-time  parameters: command line options,	environment variables,
       the xorg.conf(5)	 configuration	files,	auto-detection,	 and  fallback
       defaults.   When	the same information is	supplied in more than one way,
       the highest precedence mechanism	is used.  The list  of	mechanisms  is
       ordered	from  highest precedence to lowest.  Note that not all parame-
       ters can	be supplied via	 all  methods.	 The  available	 command  line
       options	and  environment  variables  (and some defaults) are described
       here and	in the Xserver(1) manual page.	Most configuration file	param-
       eters,  with  their  defaults, are described in the xorg.conf(5)	manual
       page.   Driver  and  module  specific  configuration   parameters   are
       described in the	relevant driver	or module manual page.

       In  addition  to	 the normal server options described in	the Xserver(1)
       manual page, Xorg accepts the following command line switches:

       vtXX    XX specifies the	Virtual	Terminal device	number which Xorg will
	       use.   Without  this option, Xorg will pick the first available
	       Virtual Terminal	that it	can locate.  This option applies  only
	       to platforms that have virtual terminal support,	such as	Linux,
	       BSD, OpenSolaris, SVR3, and SVR4.

       -allowMouseOpenFail
	       Allow the server	to start up even if the	mouse device can't  be
	       opened  or  initialised.	  This	is  equivalent	to  the	Allow-
	       MouseOpenFail xorg.conf(5) file option.

       -allowNonLocalXvidtune
	       Make the	VidMode	extension available to remote  clients.	  This
	       allows  the xvidtune client to connect from another host.  This
	       is equivalent to	the  AllowNonLocalXvidtune  xorg.conf(5)  file
	       option.	By default non-local connections are not allowed.

       -bgamma value
	       Set  the	 blue gamma correction.	 value must be between 0.1 and
	       10.  The	default	is 1.0.	 Not all drivers  support  this.   See
	       also the	-gamma,	-rgamma, and -ggamma options.

       -bpp n  No  longer  supported.	Use -depth to set the color depth, and
	       use -fbbpp if you really	need to	 force	a  non-default	frame-
	       buffer (hardware) pixel format.

       -config file
	       Read the	server configuration from file.	 This option will work
	       for any file when the server is run as root (i.e, with real-uid
	       0),  or	for files relative to a	directory in the config	search
	       path for	all other users.

       -configdir directory
	       Read the	 server	 configuration	files  from  directory.	  This
	       option  will  work  for any directory when the server is	run as
	       root (i.e, with real-uid	0), or for directories relative	 to  a
	       directory  in  the  config  directory search path for all other
	       users.

       -configure
	       When this option	is specified, the Xorg server loads all	 video
	       driver  modules,	 probes	for available hardware,	and writes out
	       an initial xorg.conf(5) file based on what was detected.	  This
	       option  currently  has  some problems on	some platforms,	but in
	       most cases it is	a good	way  to	 bootstrap  the	 configuration
	       process.	  This option is only available	when the server	is run
	       as root (i.e, with real-uid 0).

       -crt /dev/ttyXX
	       SCO only.  This is the same as the vt option, and  is  provided
	       for compatibility with the native SCO X server.

       -depth n
	       Sets  the  default  color depth.	 Legal values are 1, 4,	8, 15,
	       16, and 24.  Not	all drivers support all	values.

       -disableVidMode
	       Disable the parts of the	VidMode	extension (used	by  the	 xvid-
	       tune  client) that can be used to change	the video modes.  This
	       is equivalent to	the DisableVidModeExtension xorg.conf(5)  file
	       option.

       -fbbpp n
	       Sets the	number of framebuffer bits per pixel.  You should only
	       set this	if you're sure it's necessary; normally	the server can
	       deduce the correct value	from -depth above.  Useful if you want
	       to run a	depth 24  configuration	 with  a  24  bpp  framebuffer
	       rather  than the	(possibly default) 32 bpp framebuffer (or vice
	       versa).	Legal values are 1, 8, 16, 24, 32.   Not  all  drivers
	       support all values.

       -flipPixels
	       Swap the	default	values for the black and white pixels.

       -gamma value
	       Set  the	 gamma	correction.  value must	be between 0.1 and 10.
	       The default is 1.0.  This value is applied equally to the R,  G
	       and  B  values.	Those values can be set	independently with the
	       -rgamma,	-bgamma, and -ggamma options.  Not all drivers support
	       this.

       -ggamma value
	       Set  the	green gamma correction.	 value must be between 0.1 and
	       10.  The	default	is 1.0.	 Not all drivers  support  this.   See
	       also the	-gamma,	-rgamma, and -bgamma options.

       -ignoreABI
	       The  Xorg  server checks	the ABI	revision levels	of each	module
	       that it loads.  It will normally	refuse to  load	 modules  with
	       ABI  revisions  that  are  newer	 than  the  server's.  This is
	       because such modules might use interfaces that the server  does
	       not  have.  When	this option is specified, mismatches like this
	       are downgraded from fatal  errors  to  warnings.	  This	option
	       should be used with care.

       -isolateDevice bus-id
	       Restrict	 device	 resets	 to  the device	at bus-id.  The	bus-id
	       string  has   the   form	  bustype:bus:device:function	(e.g.,
	       `PCI:1:0:0').   At  present,  only  isolation of	PCI devices is
	       supported; i.e.,	this option is ignored if bustype is  anything
	       other than `PCI'.

       -keeptty
	       Prevent	the server from	detaching its initial controlling ter-
	       minal.  This option is only useful when debugging  the  server.
	       Not all platforms support (or can use) this option.

       -keyboard keyboard-name
	       Use  the	xorg.conf(5) file InputDevice section called keyboard-
	       name as the core	keyboard.  This	option	is  ignored  when  the
	       Layout  section	specifies  a core keyboard.  In	the absence of
	       both a Layout section  and  this	 option,  the  first  relevant
	       InputDevice section is used for the core	keyboard.

       -layout layout-name
	       Use  the	 xorg.conf(5)  file Layout section called layout-name.
	       By default the first Layout section is used.

       -logfile	filename
	       Use the file called filename as the Xorg	server log file.   The
	       default	log  file  when	running	as root	is /var/log/Xorg.n.log
	       and for non root	it is $XDG_DATA_HOME/xorg/Xorg.n.log  where  n
	       is  the	display	number of the Xorg server.  The	default	may be
	       in a different directory	on some	 platforms.   This  option  is
	       only  available when the	server is run as root (i.e, with real-
	       uid 0).

       -logverbose [n]
	       Sets the	verbosity level	for information	printed	 to  the  Xorg
	       server  log  file.   If the n value isn't supplied, each	occur-
	       rence of	this option increments the log file  verbosity	level.
	       When  the  n value is supplied, the log file verbosity level is
	       set to that value.  The default log file	verbosity level	is  3.

       -modulepath searchpath
	       Set  the	 module	 search	 path  to searchpath.  searchpath is a
	       comma separated list of directories to search for  Xorg	server
	       modules.	  This option is only available	when the server	is run
	       as root (i.e, with real-uid 0).

       -nosilk Disable Silken Mouse support.

       -novtswitch
	       Disable the automatic switching on X server reset and  shutdown
	       to the VT that was active when the server started, if supported
	       by the OS.

       -pixmap24
	       Set the internal	pixmap format for depth	24 pixmaps to 24  bits
	       per pixel.  The default is usually 32 bits per pixel.  There is
	       normally	little reason to use this option.  Some	client	appli-
	       cations don't like this pixmap format, even though it is	a per-
	       fectly  legal  format.	This  is  equivalent  to  the	Pixmap
	       xorg.conf(5) file option.

       -pixmap32
	       Set  the	internal pixmap	format for depth 24 pixmaps to 32 bits
	       per pixel.  This	is usually the default.	 This is equivalent to
	       the Pixmap xorg.conf(5) file option.

       -pointer	pointer-name
	       Use  the	 xorg.conf(5) file InputDevice section called pointer-
	       name as the core	pointer.  This option is ignored when the Lay-
	       out section specifies a core pointer.  In the absence of	both a
	       Layout section and this option, the first relevant  InputDevice
	       section is used for the core pointer.

       -quiet  Suppress	most informational messages at startup.	 The verbosity
	       level is	set to zero.

       -rgamma value
	       Set the red gamma correction.  value must be  between  0.1  and
	       10.   The  default  is 1.0.  Not	all drivers support this.  See
	       also the	-gamma,	-bgamma, and -ggamma options.

       -sharevts
	       Share virtual terminals with another X server, if supported  by
	       the OS.

       -screen screen-name
	       Use  the	 xorg.conf(5)  file Screen section called screen-name.
	       By default the screens referenced by the	default	Layout section
	       are  used, or the first Screen section when there are no	Layout
	       sections.

       -showconfig
	       This is the same	as the -version	option,	and  is	 included  for
	       compatibility  reasons.	It may be removed in a future release,
	       so the -version option should be	used instead.

       -showDefaultModulePath
	       Print out the default module path the server was	compiled with.

       -showDefaultLibPath
	       Print out the path libraries should be installed	to.

       -showopts
	       For each	driver module installed, print out the list of options
	       and their argument types.

       -weight nnn
	       Set RGB weighting at 16 bpp.  The default is 565.  This applies
	       only to those drivers which support 16 bpp.

       -verbose	[n]
	       Sets the	verbosity level	for information	printed	on stderr.  If
	       the n value isn't supplied,  each  occurrence  of  this	option
	       increments  the verbosity level.	 When the n value is supplied,
	       the verbosity level is set to that  value.   The	 default  ver-
	       bosity level is 0.

       -version
	       Print  out  the	server	version, patchlevel, release date, the
	       operating system/platform it  was  built	 on,  and  whether  it
	       includes	module loader support.

KEYBOARD
       The  Xorg  server  is  normally configured to recognize various special
       combinations of key presses that	instruct the server  to	 perform  some
       action, rather than just	sending	the key	press event to a client	appli-
       cation. These actions depend on the XKB keymap loaded by	 a  particular
       keyboard	 device	 and may or may	not be available on a given configura-
       tion.

       The following key combinations are commonly part	of the	default	 XKEY-
       BOARD keymap.

       Ctrl+Alt+Backspace
	       Immediately  kills  the server -- no questions asked. It	can be
	       disabled	by setting the DontZap xorg.conf(5) file option	 to  a
	       TRUE value.

	       It  should  be  noted  that  zapping is triggered by the	Termi-
	       nate_Server action in the keyboard map. This action is not part
	       of  the	default	keymaps	but can	be enabled with	the XKB	option
	       "terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp".

       Ctrl+Alt+Keypad-Plus
	       Change video mode to next one specified	in  the	 configuration
	       file.  This can be disabled with	the DontZoom xorg.conf(5) file
	       option.

       Ctrl+Alt+Keypad-Minus
	       Change video mode to previous one specified in  the  configura-
	       tion file.  This	can be disabled	with the DontZoom xorg.conf(5)
	       file option.

       Ctrl+Alt+F1...F12
	       For systems with	virtual	terminal support, these	keystroke com-
	       binations are used to switch to virtual terminals 1 through 12,
	       respectively.  This  can	 be  disabled  with  the  DontVTSwitch
	       xorg.conf(5) file option.

CONFIGURATION
       Xorg  typically uses a configuration file called	xorg.conf and configu-
       ration files with the suffix .conf in a	directory  called  xorg.conf.d
       for  its	 initial  setup.   Refer  to  the xorg.conf(5) manual page for
       information about the format of this file.

       Xorg has	a mechanism for	automatically generating a built-in configura-
       tion  at	 run-time  when	 no  xorg.conf	file  or xorg.conf.d files are
       present.	 The current version of	this automatic configuration mechanism
       works in	two ways.

       The  first  is  via  enhancements that have made	many components	of the
       xorg.conf file optional.	 This  means  that  information	 that  can  be
       probed  or  reasonably deduced doesn't need to be specified explicitly,
       greatly reducing	the amount of built-in configuration information  that
       needs to	be generated at	run-time.

       The  second is to have "safe" fallbacks for most	configuration informa-
       tion.  This maximises the likelihood that the Xorg server will start up
       in  some	 usable	configuration even when	information about the specific
       hardware	is not available.

       The automatic configuration support for Xorg is work in	progress.   It
       is  currently aimed at the most popular hardware	and software platforms
       supported by Xorg.  Enhancements	are planned for	future releases.

FILES
       The Xorg	server config files can	be found  in  a	 range	of  locations.
       These  are  documented fully in the xorg.conf(5)	manual page.  The most
       commonly	used locations are shown here.

       /etc/X11/xorg.conf	     Server configuration file.

       /etc/X11/xorg.conf-4	     Server configuration file.

       /etc/xorg.conf		     Server configuration file.

       /usr/local/etc/xorg.conf	     Server configuration file.

       /usr/local/lib/X11/xorg.conf  Server configuration file.

       /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d	     Server configuration directory.

       /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d-4	     Server configuration directory.

       /etc/xorg.conf.d		     Server configuration directory.

       /usr/local/etc/xorg.conf.d    Server configuration directory.

       /usr/local/lib/X11/xorg.conf.d
				     Server configuration directory.

       /var/log/Xorg.n.log	     Server log	file for display n.

       /usr/local/bin/*		     Client binaries.

       /usr/local/include/*	     Header files.

       /usr/local/lib/*		     Libraries.

       /usr/local/share/fonts/X11/*  Fonts.

       /usr/local/share/X11/XErrorDB Client error message database.

       /usr/local/lib/X11/app-defaults/*
				     Client resource specifications.

       /usr/local/man/man?/*	     Manual pages.

       /etc/Xn.hosts		     Initial access control list  for  display
				     n.

SEE ALSO
       X(7),  Xserver(1),  xdm(1),  xinit(1), xorg.conf(5), xvidtune(1), xkey-
       board-config  (7),  apm(4),  ati(4),  chips(4),	cirrus(4),   cyrix(4),
       fbdev(4),  glide(4),  glint(4),	i128(4),  i740(4), imstt(4), intel(4),
       mga(4), neomagic(4), nsc(4), nv(4),  openchrome	(4),  r128(4),	rendi-
       tion(4),	 s3virge(4),  siliconmotion(4),	sis(4),	sunbw2(4), suncg14(4),
       suncg3(4), suncg6(4), sunffb(4),	sunleo(4), suntcx(4), tdfx(4), tga(4),
       trident(4), tseng(4), v4l(4), vesa(4), vmware(4),
       Web site	_http://www.x.org_.

AUTHORS
       Xorg  has  many contributors world wide.	 The names of most of them can
       be found	in the documentation, ChangeLog	files in the source tree,  and
       in the actual source code.

       Xorg was	originally based on XFree86 4.4rc2.  That was originally based
       on X386 1.2 by Thomas Roell, which was contributed to the then  X  Con-
       sortium's X11R5 distribution by SGCS.

       Xorg is released	by the X.Org Foundation.

       The project that	became XFree86 was originally founded in 1992 by David
       Dawes, Glenn Lai, Jim Tsillas and David Wexelblat.

       XFree86 was later integrated in the then	X Consortium's	X11R6  release
       by a group of dedicated XFree86 developers, including the following:

	   Stuart Anderson    anderson@metrolink.com
	   Doug	Anson	      danson@lgc.com
	   Gertjan Akkerman   akkerman@dutiba.twi.tudelft.nl
	   Mike	Bernson	      mike@mbsun.mlb.org
	   Robin Cutshaw      robin@XFree86.org
	   David Dawes	      dawes@XFree86.org
	   Marc	Evans	      marc@XFree86.org
	   Pascal Haible      haible@izfm.uni-stuttgart.de
	   Matthieu Herrb     Matthieu.Herrb@laas.fr
	   Dirk	Hohndel	      hohndel@XFree86.org
	   David Holland      davidh@use.com
	   Alan	Hourihane     alanh@fairlite.demon.co.uk
	   Jeffrey Hsu	      hsu@soda.berkeley.edu
	   Glenn Lai	      glenn@cs.utexas.edu
	   Ted Lemon	      mellon@ncd.com
	   Rich	Murphey	      rich@XFree86.org
	   Hans	Nasten	      nasten@everyware.se
	   Mark	Snitily	      mark@sgcs.com
	   Randy Terbush      randyt@cse.unl.edu
	   Jon Tombs	      tombs@XFree86.org
	   Kees	Verstoep      versto@cs.vu.nl
	   Paul	Vixie	      paul@vix.com
	   Mark	Weaver	      Mark_Weaver@brown.edu
	   David Wexelblat    dwex@XFree86.org
	   Philip Wheatley    Philip.Wheatley@ColumbiaSC.NCR.COM
	   Thomas Wolfram     wolf@prz.tu-berlin.de
	   Orest Zborowski    orestz@eskimo.com

       Xorg  source  is	 available from	the FTP	server _ftp://ftp.x.org/_, and
       from the	X.Org server _http://gitweb.freedesktop.org/_.	 Documentation
       and   other   information   can	be  found  from	 the  X.Org  web  site
       _http://www.x.org/_.

LEGAL
       Xorg is copyright software, provided under licenses that	permit modifi-
       cation  and redistribution in source and	binary form without fee.  Xorg
       is copyright by numerous	 authors  and  contributors  from  around  the
       world.	Licensing  information	can  be	 found	at _http://www.x.org_.
       Refer to	the source code	for specific copyright notices.

       XFree86(TM) is a	trademark of The XFree86 Project, Inc.

       X11(TM) and X Window System(TM) are trademarks of The Open Group.

X Version 11		      xorg-server 1.17.4		       Xorg(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | PLATFORMS | NETWORK CONNECTIONS | ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES | OPTIONS | KEYBOARD | CONFIGURATION | FILES | SEE ALSO | AUTHORS | LEGAL

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