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Revision: 1.239
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# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 rxvt-unicode (ouR XVT, unicode) - (a VT102 emulator for the X window system)
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> [options] [-e command [ args ]]
8
9 =head1 DESCRIPTION
10
11 B<rxvt-unicode>, version B<@@RXVT_VERSION@@>, is a colour vt102 terminal
12 emulator intended as an I<xterm>(1) replacement for users who do not
13 require features such as Tektronix 4014 emulation and toolkit-style
14 configurability. As a result, B<rxvt-unicode> uses much less swap space --
15 a significant advantage on a machine serving many X sessions.
16
17 This document is also available on the World-Wide-Web at
18 L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/rxvt-unicode/doc/rxvt.1.pod>.
19
20 =head1 FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
21
22 See @@RXVT_NAME@@(7) (try C<man 7 @@RXVT_NAME@@>) for a list of
23 frequently asked questions and answer to them and some common
24 problems. That document is also accessible on the World-Wide-Web at
25 L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/rxvt-unicode/doc/rxvt.7.pod>.
26
27 =head1 RXVT-UNICODE VS. RXVT
28
29 Unlike the original rxvt, B<rxvt-unicode> stores all text in Unicode
30 internally. That means it can store and display most scripts in the
31 world. Being a terminal emulator, however, some things are very difficult,
32 especially cursive scripts such as arabic, vertically written scripts
33 like mongolian or scripts requiring extremely complex combining rules,
34 like tibetan or devanagari. Don't expect pretty output when using these
35 scripts. Most other scripts, latin, cyrillic, kanji, thai etc. should work
36 fine, though. A somewhat difficult case are right-to-left scripts, such
37 as hebrew: B<rxvt-unicode> adopts the view that bidirectional algorithms
38 belong in the application, not the terminal emulator (too many things --
39 such as cursor-movement while editing -- break otherwise), but that might
40 change.
41
42 If you are looking for a terminal that supports more exotic scripts, let
43 me recommend C<mlterm>, which is a very user friendly, lean and clean
44 terminal emulator. In fact, the reason rxvt-unicode was born was solely
45 because the author couldn't get C<mlterm> to use one font for latin1 and
46 another for japanese.
47
48 Therefore another design rationale was the use of multiple fonts to
49 display characters: The idea of a single unicode font which many other
50 programs force onto its users never made sense to me: You should be able
51 to choose any font for any script freely.
52
53 Apart from that, rxvt-unicode is also much better internationalised than
54 its predecessor, supports things such as XFT and ISO 14755 that are handy
55 in i18n-environments, is faster, and has a lot bugs less than the original
56 rxvt. This all in addition to dozens of other small improvements.
57
58 It is still faithfully following the original rxvt idea of being lean
59 and nice on resources: for example, you can still configure rxvt-unicode
60 without most of its features to get a lean binary. It also comes with
61 a client/daemon pair that lets you open any number of terminal windows
62 from within a single process, which makes startup time very fast and
63 drastically reduces memory usage. See @@RXVT_NAME@@d(1) (daemon) and
64 @@RXVT_NAME@@c(1) (client).
65
66 It also makes technical information about escape sequences (which have
67 been extended) more accessible: see @@RXVT_NAME@@(7) for technical
68 reference documentation (escape sequences etc.).
69
70 =head1 OPTIONS
71
72 The B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> options (mostly a subset of I<xterm>'s) are listed
73 below. In keeping with the smaller-is-better philosophy, options may be
74 eliminated or default values chosen at compile-time, so options and
75 defaults listed may not accurately reflect the version installed on
76 your system. `@@RXVT_NAME@@ -h' gives a list of major compile-time options on
77 the I<Options> line. Option descriptions may be prefixed with which
78 compile option each is dependent upon. e.g. `Compile I<XIM>:' requires
79 I<XIM> on the I<Options> line. Note: `@@RXVT_NAME@@ -help' gives a list of all
80 command-line options compiled into your version.
81
82 Note that B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> permits the resource name to be used as a
83 long-option (--/++ option) so the potential command-line options are
84 far greater than those listed. For example: `@@RXVT_NAME@@ --loginShell --color1
85 Orange'.
86
87 The following options are available:
88
89 =over 4
90
91 =item B<-help>, B<--help>
92
93 Print out a message describing available options.
94
95 =item B<-display> I<displayname>
96
97 Attempt to open a window on the named X display (the older form B<-d>
98 is still respected. but deprecated). In the absence of this option, the
99 display specified by the B<DISPLAY> environment variable is used.
100
101 =item B<-depth> I<bitdepth>
102
103 Compile I<frills>: Attempt to find a visual with the given bit depth;
104 resource B<depth>.
105
106 [Please note that many X servers (and libXft) are buggy with
107 respect to C<-depth 32> and/or alpha channels, and will cause all sorts
108 of graphical corruption. This is harmless, but we can't do anything about
109 this, so watch out]
110
111 =item B<-visual> I<visualID>
112
113 Compile I<frills>: Use the given visual (see e.g. C<xdpyinfo> for possible
114 visual ids).
115
116 =item B<-geometry> I<geom>
117
118 Window geometry (B<-g> still respected); resource B<geometry>.
119
120 =item B<-rv>|B<+rv>
121
122 Turn on/off simulated reverse video; resource B<reverseVideo>.
123
124 =item B<-j>|B<+j>
125
126 Turn on/off jump scrolling (allow multiple lines per refresh); resource B<jumpScroll>.
127
128 =item B<-ss>|B<+ss>
129
130 Turn on/off skip scrolling (allow multiple screens per refresh); resource B<skipScroll>.
131
132 =item B<-fade> I<number>
133
134 Fade the text by the given percentage when focus is lost. Small values
135 fade a little only, 100 completely replaces all colours by the fade
136 colour; resource B<fading>.
137
138 =item B<-fadecolor> I<colour>
139
140 Fade to this colour when fading is used (see B<-fade>). The default colour
141 is opaque black. resource B<fadeColor>.
142
143 =item B<-icon> I<file>
144
145 Compile I<pixbuf>: Use the specified image as application icon. This
146 is used by many window managers, taskbars and pagers to represent the
147 application window; resource I<iconFile>.
148
149 =item B<-bg> I<colour>
150
151 Window background colour; resource B<background>.
152
153 =item B<-fg> I<colour>
154
155 Window foreground colour; resource B<foreground>.
156
157 =item B<-cr> I<colour>
158
159 The cursor colour; resource B<cursorColor>.
160
161 =item B<-pr> I<colour>
162
163 The mouse pointer foreground colour; resource B<pointerColor>.
164
165 =item B<-pr2> I<colour>
166
167 The mouse pointer background colour; resource B<pointerColor2>.
168
169 =item B<-bd> I<colour>
170
171 The colour of the border around the text area and between the scrollbar and the text;
172 resource B<borderColor>.
173
174 =item B<-fn> I<fontlist>
175
176 Select the fonts to be used. This is a comma separated list of font names
177 that are checked in order when trying to find glyphs for characters. The
178 first font defines the cell size for characters; other fonts might be
179 smaller, but not (in general) larger. A (hopefully) reasonable default
180 font list is always appended to it. See resource B<font> for more details.
181
182 In short, to specify an X11 core font, just specify its name or prefix it
183 with C<x:>. To specify an XFT-font, you need to prefix it with C<xft:>,
184 e.g.:
185
186 @@RXVT_NAME@@ -fn "xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono:pixelsize=15"
187 @@RXVT_NAME@@ -fn "9x15bold,xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono"
188
189 See also the question "How does rxvt-unicode choose fonts?" in the FAQ
190 section of @@RXVT_NAME@@(7).
191
192 =item B<-fb> I<fontlist>
193
194 Compile I<font-styles>: The bold font list to use when B<bold> characters
195 are to be printed. See resource B<boldFont> for details.
196
197 =item B<-fi> I<fontlist>
198
199 Compile I<font-styles>: The italic font list to use when I<italic>
200 characters are to be printed. See resource B<italicFont> for details.
201
202 =item B<-fbi> I<fontlist>
203
204 Compile I<font-styles>: The bold italic font list to use when B<< I<bold
205 italic> >> characters are to be printed. See resource B<boldItalicFont>
206 for details.
207
208 =item B<-is>|B<+is>
209
210 Compile I<font-styles>: Bold/Blink font styles imply high intensity
211 foreground/background (default). See resource B<intensityStyles> for
212 details.
213
214 =item B<-name> I<name>
215
216 Specify the application name under which resources are to be obtained,
217 rather than the default executable file name. Name should not contain
218 `.' or `*' characters. Also sets the icon and title name.
219
220 =item B<-ls>|B<+ls>
221
222 Start as a login-shell/sub-shell; resource B<loginShell>.
223
224 =item B<-mc> I<milliseconds>
225
226 Specify the maximum time between multi-click selections.
227
228 =item B<-ut>|B<+ut>
229
230 Compile I<utmp>: Inhibit/enable writing a utmp entry; resource
231 B<utmpInhibit>.
232
233 =item B<-vb>|B<+vb>
234
235 Turn on/off visual bell on receipt of a bell character; resource
236 B<visualBell>.
237
238 =item B<-sb>|B<+sb>
239
240 Turn on/off scrollbar; resource B<scrollBar>.
241
242 =item B<-sr>|B<+sr>
243
244 Put scrollbar on right/left; resource B<scrollBar_right>.
245
246 =item B<-st>|B<+st>
247
248 Display rxvt (non XTerm/NeXT) scrollbar without/with a trough;
249 resource B<scrollBar_floating>.
250
251 =item B<-si>|B<+si>
252
253 Turn on/off scroll-to-bottom on TTY output inhibit; resource
254 B<scrollTtyOutput> has opposite effect.
255
256 =item B<-sk>|B<+sk>
257
258 Turn on/off scroll-to-bottom on keypress; resource
259 B<scrollTtyKeypress>.
260
261 =item B<-sw>|B<+sw>
262
263 Turn on/off scrolling with the scrollback buffer as new lines appear.
264 This only takes effect if B<-si> is also given; resource
265 B<scrollWithBuffer>.
266
267 =item B<-ptab>|B<+ptab>
268
269 If enabled (default), "Horizontal Tab" characters are being stored as
270 actual wide characters in the screen buffer, which makes it possible to
271 select and paste them. Since a horizontal tab is a cursor movement and
272 not an actual glyph, this can sometimes be visually annoying as the cursor
273 on a tab character is displayed as a wide cursor; resource B<pastableTabs>.
274
275 =item B<-bc>|B<+bc>
276
277 Blink the cursor; resource B<cursorBlink>.
278
279 =item B<-uc>|B<+uc>
280
281 Make the cursor underlined; resource B<cursorUnderline>.
282
283 =item B<-iconic>
284
285 Start iconified, if the window manager supports that option.
286 Alternative form is B<-ic>.
287
288 =item B<-sl> I<number>
289
290 Save I<number> lines in the scrollback buffer. See resource entry for
291 limits; resource B<saveLines>.
292
293 =item B<-b> I<number>
294
295 Compile I<frills>: Internal border of I<number> pixels. See resource
296 entry for limits; resource B<internalBorder>.
297
298 =item B<-w> I<number>
299
300 Compile I<frills>: External border of I<number> pixels. Also, B<-bw>
301 and B<-borderwidth>. See resource entry for limits; resource
302 B<externalBorder>.
303
304 =item B<-bl>
305
306 Compile I<frills>: Set MWM hints to request a borderless window, i.e.
307 if honoured by the WM, the rxvt-unicode window will not have window
308 decorations; resource B<borderLess>. If the window manager does not
309 support MWM hints (e.g. kwin), enables override-redirect mode.
310
311 =item B<-override-redirect>
312
313 Compile I<frills>: Sets override-redirect on the window; resource
314 B<override-redirect>.
315
316 =item B<-dockapp>
317
318 Sets the initial state of the window to WithdrawnState, which makes
319 window managers that support this extension treat it as a dockapp.
320
321 =item B<-sbg>
322
323 Compile I<frills>: Disable the usage of the built-in block graphics/line
324 drawing characters and just rely on what the specified fonts provide. Use
325 this if you have a good font and want to use its block graphic glyphs;
326 resource B<skipBuiltinGlyphs>.
327
328 =item B<-lsp> I<number>
329
330 Compile I<frills>: Lines (pixel height) to insert between each row of
331 the display. Useful to work around font rendering problems; resource
332 B<lineSpace>.
333
334 =item B<-letsp> I<number>
335
336 Compile I<frills>: Amount to adjust the computed character width by
337 to control overall letter spacing. Negative values will tighten up the
338 letter spacing, positive values will space letters out more. Useful to
339 work around odd font metrics; resource B<letterSpace>.
340
341 =item B<-tn> I<termname>
342
343 This option specifies the name of the terminal type to be set in the
344 B<TERM> environment variable. This terminal type must exist in the
345 I<termcap(5)> database and should have I<li#> and I<co#> entries;
346 resource B<termName>.
347
348 =item B<-e> I<command [arguments]>
349
350 Run the command with its command-line arguments in the B<@@RXVT_NAME@@>
351 window; also sets the window title and icon name to be the basename of
352 the program being executed if neither I<-title> (I<-T>) nor I<-n> are
353 given on the command line. If this option is used, it must be the last
354 on the command-line. If there is no B<-e> option then the default is to
355 run the program specified by the B<SHELL> environment variable or,
356 failing that, I<sh(1)>.
357
358 Please note that you must specify a program with arguments. If you want to
359 run shell commands, you have to specify the shell, like this:
360
361 @@RXVT_NAME@@ -e sh -c "shell commands"
362
363 =item B<-title> I<text>
364
365 Window title (B<-T> still respected); the default title is the basename
366 of the program specified after the B<-e> option, if any, otherwise the
367 application name; resource B<title>.
368
369 =item B<-n> I<text>
370
371 Icon name; the default name is the basename of the program specified
372 after the B<-e> option, if any, otherwise the application name;
373 resource B<iconName>.
374
375 =item B<-C>
376
377 Capture system console messages.
378
379 =item B<-pt> I<style>
380
381 Compile I<XIM>: input style for input method; B<OverTheSpot>,
382 B<OffTheSpot>, B<Root>; resource B<preeditType>.
383
384 =item B<-im> I<text>
385
386 Compile I<XIM>: input method name. resource B<inputMethod>.
387
388 =item B<-imlocale> I<string>
389
390 The locale to use for opening the IM. You can use an C<LC_CTYPE> of e.g.
391 C<de_DE.UTF-8> for normal text processing but C<ja_JP.EUC-JP> for the
392 input extension to be able to input japanese characters while staying in
393 another locale. resource B<imLocale>.
394
395 =item B<-imfont> I<fontset>
396
397 Set the font set to use for the X Input Method, see resource B<imFont>
398 for more info.
399
400 =item B<-tcw>
401
402 Change the meaning of triple-click selection with the left mouse
403 button. Only effective when the original (non-perl) selection code is
404 in-use. Instead of selecting a full line it will extend the selection to
405 the end of the logical line only. resource B<tripleclickwords>.
406
407 =item B<-insecure>
408
409 Enable "insecure" mode, which currently enables most of the escape
410 sequences that echo strings. See the resource B<insecure> for more
411 info.
412
413 =item B<-mod> I<modifier>
414
415 Override detection of Meta modifier with specified key: B<alt>,
416 B<meta>, B<hyper>, B<super>, B<mod1>, B<mod2>, B<mod3>, B<mod4>,
417 B<mod5>; resource I<modifier>.
418
419 =item B<-ssc>|B<+ssc>
420
421 Turn on/off secondary screen (default enabled); resource
422 B<secondaryScreen>.
423
424 =item B<-ssr>|B<+ssr>
425
426 Turn on/off secondary screen scroll (default enabled); resource
427 B<secondaryScroll>.
428
429 =item B<-hold>|B<+hold>
430
431 Turn on/off hold window after exit support. If enabled, @@RXVT_NAME@@
432 will not immediately destroy its window when the program executed within
433 it exits. Instead, it will wait till it is being killed or closed by the
434 user; resource B<hold>.
435
436 =item B<-cd> I<path>
437
438 Sets the working directory for the shell (or the command specified via
439 B<-e>). The I<path> must be an absolute path and it must exist for
440 @@RXVT_NAME@@ to start; resource B<chdir>.
441
442 =item B<-xrm> I<string>
443
444 Works like the X Toolkit option of the same name, by adding the I<string>
445 as if it were specified in a resource file. Resource values specified this
446 way take precedence over all other resource specifications.
447
448 Note that you need to use the I<same> syntax as in the .Xdefaults file,
449 e.g. C<*.background: black>. Also note that all @@RXVT_NAME@@-specific
450 options can be specified as long-options on the commandline, so use
451 of B<-xrm> is mostly limited to cases where you want to specify other
452 resources (e.g. for input methods) or for compatibility with other
453 programs.
454
455 =item B<-keysym.>I<sym> I<string>
456
457 Remap a key symbol. See resource B<keysym>.
458
459 =item B<-embed> I<windowid>
460
461 Tells @@RXVT_NAME@@ to embed its windows into an already-existing window,
462 which enables applications to easily embed a terminal.
463
464 Right now, @@RXVT_NAME@@ will first unmap/map the specified window, so it
465 shouldn't be a top-level window. @@RXVT_NAME@@ will also reconfigure it
466 quite a bit, so don't expect it to keep some specific state. It's best to
467 create an extra subwindow for @@RXVT_NAME@@ and leave it alone.
468
469 The window will not be destroyed when @@RXVT_NAME@@ exits.
470
471 It might be useful to know that @@RXVT_NAME@@ will not close file
472 descriptors passed to it (except for stdin/out/err, of course), so you
473 can use file descriptors to communicate with the programs within the
474 terminal. This works regardless of whether the C<-embed> option was used or
475 not.
476
477 Here is a short Gtk2-perl snippet that illustrates how this option can be
478 used (a longer example is in F<doc/embed>):
479
480 my $rxvt = new Gtk2::Socket;
481 $rxvt->signal_connect_after (realize => sub {
482 my $xid = $_[0]->window->get_xid;
483 system "@@RXVT_NAME@@ -embed $xid &";
484 });
485
486 =item B<-pty-fd> I<file descriptor>
487
488 Tells @@RXVT_NAME@@ NOT to execute any commands or create a new pty/tty
489 pair but instead use the given file descriptor as the tty master. This is
490 useful if you want to drive @@RXVT_NAME@@ as a generic terminal emulator
491 without having to run a program within it.
492
493 If this switch is given, @@RXVT_NAME@@ will not create any utmp/wtmp
494 entries and will not tinker with pty/tty permissions - you have to do that
495 yourself if you want that.
496
497 As an extremely special case, specifying C<-1> will completely suppress
498 pty/tty operations, which is probably only useful in conjunction with some
499 perl extension that manages the terminal.
500
501 Here is a example in perl that illustrates how this option can be used (a
502 longer example is in F<doc/pty-fd>):
503
504 use IO::Pty;
505 use Fcntl;
506
507 my $pty = new IO::Pty;
508 fcntl $pty, F_SETFD, 0; # clear close-on-exec
509 system "@@RXVT_NAME@@ -pty-fd " . (fileno $pty) . "&";
510 close $pty;
511
512 # now communicate with rxvt
513 my $slave = $pty->slave;
514 while (<$slave>) { print $slave "got <$_>\n" }
515
516 =item B<-pe> I<string>
517
518 Comma-separated list of perl extension scripts to use (or not to use) in
519 this terminal instance. See resource B<perl-ext> for details.
520
521 =back
522
523 =head1 RESOURCES
524
525 Note: `@@RXVT_NAME@@ --help' gives a list of all resources (long
526 options) compiled into your version. All resources are also available as
527 long-options.
528
529 You can set and change the resources using X11 tools like B<xrdb>. Many
530 distribution do also load settings from the B<~/.Xresources> file when X
531 starts. @@RXVT_NAME@@ will consult the following files/resources in order,
532 with later settings overwriting earlier ones:
533
534 1. app-defaults file in $XAPPLRESDIR
535 2. $HOME/.Xdefaults
536 3. RESOURCE_MANAGER property on root-window of screen 0
537 4. SCREEN_RESOURCES property on root-window of the current screen
538 5. $XENVIRONMENT file OR $HOME/.Xdefaults-<nodename>
539 6. resources specified via -xrm on the commandline
540
541 Note that when reading X resources, B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> recognizes two class
542 names: B<Rxvt> and B<URxvt>. The class name B<Rxvt> allows resources
543 common to both B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> and the original I<rxvt> to be easily
544 configured, while the class name B<URxvt> allows resources unique to
545 B<@@RXVT_NAME@@>, to be shared between different B<@@RXVT_NAME@@>
546 configurations. If no resources are specified, suitable defaults will
547 be used. Command-line arguments can be used to override resource
548 settings. The following resources are supported (you might want to
549 check the @@RXVT_NAME@@perl(3) manpage for additional settings by perl
550 extensions not documented here):
551
552 =over 4
553
554 =item B<depth:> I<bitdepth>
555
556 Compile I<xft>: Attempt to find a visual with the given bit depth;
557 option B<-depth>.
558
559 =item B<buffered:> I<boolean>
560
561 Compile I<xft>: Turn on/off double-buffering for xft (default enabled).
562 On some card/driver combination enabling it slightly decreases
563 performance, on most it greatly helps it. The slowdown is small, so it
564 should normally be enabled.
565
566 =item B<geometry:> I<geom>
567
568 Create the window with the specified X window geometry [default 80x24];
569 option B<-geometry>.
570
571 =item B<background:> I<colour>
572
573 Use the specified colour as the window's background colour [default
574 White]; option B<-bg>.
575
576 =item B<foreground:> I<colour>
577
578 Use the specified colour as the window's foreground colour [default
579 Black]; option B<-fg>.
580
581 =item B<color>I<n>B<:> I<colour>
582
583 Use the specified colour for the colour value I<n>, where 0-7
584 corresponds to low-intensity (normal) colours and 8-15 corresponds to
585 high-intensity (bold = bright foreground, blink = bright background)
586 colours. The canonical names are as follows: 0=black, 1=red, 2=green,
587 3=yellow, 4=blue, 5=magenta, 6=cyan, 7=white, but the actual colour
588 names used are listed in the B<COLOURS AND GRAPHICS> section.
589
590 Colours higher than 15 cannot be set using resources (yet), but can be
591 changed using an escape command (see @@RXVT_NAME@@(7)).
592
593 Colours 16-79 form a standard 4x4x4 colour cube (the same as xterm with
594 88 colour support). Colours 80-87 are evenly spaces grey steps.
595
596 =item B<colorBD:> I<colour>
597
598 =item B<colorIT:> I<colour>
599
600 Use the specified colour to display bold or italic characters when the
601 foreground colour is the default. If font styles are not available
602 (Compile I<styles>) and this option is unset, reverse video is used instead.
603
604 =item B<colorUL:> I<colour>
605
606 Use the specified colour to display underlined characters when the
607 foreground colour is the default.
608
609 =item B<underlineColor:> I<colour>
610
611 If set, use the specified colour as the colour for the underline
612 itself. If unset, use the foreground colour.
613
614 =item B<highlightColor:> I<colour>
615
616 If set, use the specified colour as the background for highlighted
617 characters. If unset, use reverse video.
618
619 =item B<highlightTextColor:> I<colour>
620
621 If set and highlightColor is set, use the specified colour as the
622 foreground for highlighted characters.
623
624 =item B<cursorColor:> I<colour>
625
626 Use the specified colour for the cursor. The default is to use the
627 foreground colour; option B<-cr>.
628
629 =item B<cursorColor2:> I<colour>
630
631 Use the specified colour for the colour of the cursor text. For this to
632 take effect, B<cursorColor> must also be specified. The default is to
633 use the background colour.
634
635 =item B<reverseVideo:> I<boolean>
636
637 B<True>: simulate reverse video by foreground and background colours;
638 option B<-rv>. B<False>: regular screen colours [default]; option
639 B<+rv>. See note in B<COLOURS AND GRAPHICS> section.
640
641 =item B<jumpScroll:> I<boolean>
642
643 B<True>: specify that jump scrolling should be used. When receiving lots
644 of lines, @@RXVT_NAME@@ will only scroll once a whole screen height of lines
645 has been read, resulting in fewer updates while still displaying every
646 received line; option B<-j>.
647
648 B<False>: specify that smooth scrolling should be used. @@RXVT_NAME@@ will
649 force a screen refresh on each new line it received; option B<+j>.
650
651 =item B<skipScroll:> I<boolean>
652
653 B<True>: (the default) specify that skip scrolling should be used. When
654 receiving lots of lines, @@RXVT_NAME@@ will only scroll once in a while
655 (around 60 times per second), resulting in far fewer updates. This can
656 result in @@RXVT_NAME@@ not ever displaying some of the lines it receives;
657 option B<-ss>.
658
659 B<False>: specify that everything is to be displayed, even
660 if the refresh is too fast for the human eye to read anything (or the
661 monitor to display anything); option B<+ss>.
662
663 =item B<fading:> I<number>
664
665 Fade the text by the given percentage when focus is lost; option B<-fade>.
666
667 =item B<fadeColor:> I<colour>
668
669 Fade to this colour, when fading is used (see B<fading:>). The default
670 colour is black; option B<-fadecolor>.
671
672 =item B<iconFile:> I<file>
673
674 Set the application icon pixmap; option B<-icon>.
675
676 =item B<scrollColor:> I<colour>
677
678 Use the specified colour for the scrollbar [default #B2B2B2].
679
680 =item B<troughColor:> I<colour>
681
682 Use the specified colour for the scrollbar's trough area [default
683 #969696]. Only relevant for rxvt (non XTerm/NeXT) scrollbar.
684
685 =item B<borderColor:> I<colour>
686
687 The colour of the border around the text area and between the scrollbar
688 and the text.
689
690 =item B<font:> I<fontlist>
691
692 Select the fonts to be used. This is a comma separated list of font names
693 that are checked in order when trying to find glyphs for characters. The
694 first font defines the cell size for characters; other fonts might be
695 smaller, but not (in general) larger. A (hopefully) reasonable default
696 font list is always appended to it; option B<-fn>.
697
698 Each font can either be a standard X11 core font (XLFD) name, with
699 optional prefix C<x:> or a Xft font (Compile I<xft>), prefixed with C<xft:>.
700
701 In addition, each font can be prefixed with additional hints and
702 specifications enclosed in square brackets (C<[]>). The only available
703 hint currently is C<codeset=codeset-name>, and this is only used for Xft
704 fonts.
705
706 For example, this font resource
707
708 URxvt.font: 9x15bold,\
709 -misc-fixed-bold-r-normal--15-140-75-75-c-90-iso10646-1,\
710 -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--15-140-75-75-c-90-iso10646-1, \
711 [codeset=JISX0208]xft:Kochi Gothic:antialias=false, \
712 xft:Code2000:antialias=false
713
714 specifies five fonts to be used. The first one is C<9x15bold> (actually
715 the iso8859-1 version of the second font), which is the base font (because
716 it is named first) and thus defines the character cell grid to be 9 pixels
717 wide and 15 pixels high.
718
719 The second font is just used to add additional unicode characters not in
720 the base font, likewise the third, which is unfortunately non-bold, but
721 the bold version of the font does contain fewer characters, so this is a
722 useful supplement.
723
724 The third font is an Xft font with aliasing turned off, and the characters
725 are limited to the B<JIS 0208> codeset (i.e. japanese kanji). The font
726 contains other characters, but we are not interested in them.
727
728 The last font is a useful catch-all font that supplies most of the
729 remaining unicode characters.
730
731 =item B<boldFont:> I<fontlist>
732
733 =item B<italicFont:> I<fontlist>
734
735 =item B<boldItalicFont:> I<fontlist>
736
737 The font list to use for displaying B<bold>, I<italic> or B<< I<bold
738 italic> >> characters, respectively.
739
740 If specified and non-empty, then the syntax is the same as for the
741 B<font>-resource, and the given font list will be used as is, which makes
742 it possible to substitute completely different font styles for bold and
743 italic.
744
745 If unset (the default), a suitable font list will be synthesized by
746 "morphing" the normal text font list into the desired shape. If that is
747 not possible, replacement fonts of the desired shape will be tried.
748
749 If set, but empty, then this specific style is disabled and the normal
750 text font will being used for the given style.
751
752 =item B<intensityStyles:> I<boolean>
753
754 When font styles are not enabled, or this option is enabled (B<True>,
755 option B<-is>, the default), bold/blink font styles imply high
756 intensity foreground/background colours. Disabling this option (B<False>,
757 option B<+is>) disables this behaviour, the high intensity colours are not
758 reachable.
759
760 =item B<title:> I<string>
761
762 Set window title string, the default title is the command-line
763 specified after the B<-e> option, if any, otherwise the application
764 name; option B<-title>.
765
766 =item B<iconName:> I<string>
767
768 Set the name used to label the window's icon or displayed in an icon
769 manager window, it also sets the window's title unless it is explicitly
770 set; option B<-n>.
771
772 =item B<mapAlert:> I<boolean>
773
774 B<True>: de-iconify (map) on receipt of a bell character. B<False>: no
775 de-iconify (map) on receipt of a bell character [default].
776
777 =item B<urgentOnBell:> I<boolean>
778
779 B<True>: set the urgency hint for the wm on receipt of a bell character.
780 B<False>: do not set the urgency hint [default].
781
782 @@RXVT_NAME@@ resets the urgency hint on every focus change.
783
784 =item B<visualBell:> I<boolean>
785
786 B<True>: use visual bell on receipt of a bell character; option B<-vb>.
787 B<False>: no visual bell [default]; option B<+vb>.
788
789 =item B<loginShell:> I<boolean>
790
791 B<True>: start as a login shell by prepending a `-' to B<argv[0]> of
792 the shell; option B<-ls>. B<False>: start as a normal sub-shell
793 [default]; option B<+ls>.
794
795 =item B<multiClickTime:> I<number>
796
797 Specify the maximum time in milliseconds between multi-click select
798 events. The default is 500 milliseconds; option B<-mc>.
799
800 =item B<utmpInhibit:> I<boolean>
801
802 B<True>: inhibit writing record into the system log file B<utmp>;
803 option B<-ut>. B<False>: write record into the system log file B<utmp>
804 [default]; option B<+ut>.
805
806 =item B<print-pipe:> I<string>
807
808 Specify a command pipe for vt100 printer [default I<lpr(1)>]. Use
809 B<Print> to initiate a screen dump to the printer and B<Ctrl-Print> or
810 B<Shift-Print> to include the scrollback as well.
811
812 The string will be interpreted as if typed into the shell as-is.
813
814 Example:
815
816 URxvt.print-pipe: cat > $(TMPDIR=$HOME mktemp urxvt.XXXXXX)
817
818 This creates a new file in your home directory with the screen contents
819 every time you hit C<Print>.
820
821 =item B<scrollstyle:> I<mode>
822
823 Set scrollbar style to B<rxvt>, B<plain>, B<next> or B<xterm>. B<plain> is
824 the author's favourite.
825
826 =item B<thickness:> I<number>
827
828 Set the scrollbar width in pixels.
829
830 =item B<scrollBar:> I<boolean>
831
832 B<True>: enable the scrollbar [default]; option B<-sb>. B<False>:
833 disable the scrollbar; option B<+sb>.
834
835 =item B<scrollBar_right:> I<boolean>
836
837 B<True>: place the scrollbar on the right of the window; option B<-sr>.
838 B<False>: place the scrollbar on the left of the window; option B<+sr>.
839
840 =item B<scrollBar_floating:> I<boolean>
841
842 B<True>: display an rxvt scrollbar without a trough; option B<-st>.
843 B<False>: display an rxvt scrollbar with a trough; option B<+st>.
844
845 =item B<scrollBar_align:> I<mode>
846
847 Align the B<top>, B<bottom> or B<centre> [default] of the scrollbar
848 thumb with the pointer on middle button press/drag.
849
850 =item B<scrollTtyOutput:> I<boolean>
851
852 B<True>: scroll to bottom when tty receives output; option B<-si>.
853 B<False>: do not scroll to bottom when tty receives output; option
854 B<+si>.
855
856 =item B<scrollWithBuffer:> I<boolean>
857
858 B<True>: scroll with scrollback buffer when tty receives new lines (i.e.
859 try to show the same lines) and B<scrollTtyOutput> is False; option
860 B<-sw>. B<False>: do not scroll with scrollback buffer when tty receives
861 new lines; option B<+sw>.
862
863 =item B<scrollTtyKeypress:> I<boolean>
864
865 B<True>: scroll to bottom when a non-special key is pressed. Special keys
866 are those which are intercepted by rxvt-unicode for special handling and
867 are not passed onto the shell; option B<-sk>. B<False>: do not scroll to
868 bottom when a non-special key is pressed; option B<+sk>.
869
870 =item B<saveLines:> I<number>
871
872 Save I<number> lines in the scrollback buffer [default 64]. This
873 resource is limited on most machines to 65535; option B<-sl>.
874
875 =item B<internalBorder:> I<number>
876
877 Internal border of I<number> pixels. This resource is limited to 100;
878 option B<-b>.
879
880 =item B<externalBorder:> I<number>
881
882 External border of I<number> pixels. This resource is limited to 100;
883 option B<-w>, B<-bw>, B<-borderwidth>.
884
885 =item B<borderLess:> I<boolean>
886
887 Set MWM hints to request a borderless window, i.e. if honoured by the
888 WM, the rxvt-unicode window will not have window decorations; option B<-bl>.
889
890 =item B<skipBuiltinGlyphs:> I<boolean>
891
892 Compile I<frills>: Disable the usage of the built-in block graphics/line
893 drawing characters and just rely on what the specified fonts provide. Use
894 this if you have a good font and want to use its block graphic glyphs;
895 option B<-sbg>.
896
897 =item B<termName:> I<termname>
898
899 Specifies the terminal type name to be set in the B<TERM> environment
900 variable; option B<-tn>.
901
902 =item B<lineSpace:> I<number>
903
904 Specifies number of lines (pixel height) to insert between each row of
905 the display [default 0]; option B<-lsp>.
906
907 =item B<meta8:> I<boolean>
908
909 B<True>: handle Meta (Alt) + keypress to set the 8th bit. B<False>:
910 handle Meta (Alt) + keypress as an escape prefix [default].
911
912 =item B<mouseWheelScrollPage:> I<boolean>
913
914 B<True>: the mouse wheel scrolls a page full. B<False>: the mouse wheel
915 scrolls five lines [default].
916
917 =item B<pastableTabs:> I<boolean>
918
919 B<True>: store tabs as wide characters. B<False>: interpret tabs as cursor
920 movement only; option C<-ptab>.
921
922 =item B<cursorBlink:> I<boolean>
923
924 B<True>: blink the cursor. B<False>: do not blink the cursor [default];
925 option B<-bc>.
926
927 =item B<cursorUnderline:> I<boolean>
928
929 B<True>: Make the cursor underlined. B<False>: Make the cursor a box [default];
930 option B<-uc>.
931
932 =item B<pointerBlank:> I<boolean>
933
934 B<True>: blank the pointer when a key is pressed or after a set number
935 of seconds of inactivity. B<False>: the pointer is always visible
936 [default].
937
938 =item B<pointerColor:> I<colour>
939
940 Mouse pointer foreground colour.
941
942 =item B<pointerColor2:> I<colour>
943
944 Mouse pointer background colour.
945
946 =item B<pointerBlankDelay:> I<number>
947
948 Specifies number of seconds before blanking the pointer [default 2]. Use a
949 large number (e.g. C<987654321>) to effectively disable the timeout.
950
951 =item B<backspacekey:> I<string>
952
953 The string to send when the backspace key is pressed. If set to B<DEC>
954 or unset it will send B<Delete> (code 127) or, with control, B<Backspace>
955 (code 8) - which can be reversed with the appropriate DEC private mode
956 escape sequence.
957
958 =item B<deletekey:> I<string>
959
960 The string to send when the delete key (not the keypad delete key) is
961 pressed. If unset it will send the sequence traditionally associated
962 with the B<Execute> key.
963
964 =item B<cutchars:> I<string>
965
966 The characters used as delimiters for double-click word selection
967 (whitespace delimiting is added automatically if resource is given).
968
969 When the perl selection extension is in use (the default if compiled
970 in, see the @@RXVT_NAME@@perl(3) manpage), a suitable regex using these
971 characters will be created (if the resource exists, otherwise, no regex
972 will be created). In this mode, characters outside ISO-8859-1 can be used.
973
974 When the selection extension is not used, only ISO-8859-1 characters can
975 be used. If not specified, the built-in default is used:
976
977 B<< BACKSLASH `"'&()*,;<=>?@[]^{|} >>
978
979 =item B<preeditType:> I<style>
980
981 B<OverTheSpot>, B<OffTheSpot>, B<Root>; option B<-pt>.
982
983 =item B<inputMethod:> I<name>
984
985 I<name> of inputMethod to use; option B<-im>.
986
987 =item B<imLocale:> I<name>
988
989 The locale to use for opening the IM. You can use an C<LC_CTYPE> of e.g.
990 C<de_DE.UTF-8> for normal text processing but C<ja_JP.EUC-JP> for the
991 input extension to be able to input japanese characters while staying in
992 another locale; option B<-imlocale>.
993
994 =item B<imFont:> I<fontset>
995
996 Specify the font-set used for XIM styles C<OverTheSpot> or
997 C<OffTheSpot>. It must be a standard X font set (XLFD patterns separated
998 by commas), i.e. it's not in the same format as the other font lists used
999 in @@RXVT_NAME@@. The default will be set-up to chose *any* suitable found
1000 found, preferably one or two pixels differing in size to the base font.
1001 option B<-imfont>.
1002
1003 =item B<tripleclickwords:> I<boolean>
1004
1005 Change the meaning of triple-click selection with the left mouse
1006 button. Instead of selecting a full line it will extend the selection to
1007 the end of the logical line only; option B<-tcw>.
1008
1009 =item B<insecure:> I<boolean>
1010
1011 Enables "insecure" mode. Rxvt-unicode offers some escape sequences that
1012 echo arbitrary strings like the icon name or the locale. This could be
1013 abused if somebody gets 8-bit-clean access to your display, whether
1014 through a mail client displaying mail bodies unfiltered or through
1015 write(1) or any other means. Therefore, these sequences are disabled by
1016 default. (Note that many other terminals, including xterm, have these
1017 sequences enabled by default, which doesn't make it safer, though).
1018
1019 You can enable them by setting this boolean resource or specifying
1020 B<-insecure> as an option. At the moment, this enables display-answer,
1021 locale, findfont, icon label and window title requests.
1022
1023 =item B<modifier:> I<modifier>
1024
1025 Set the key to be interpreted as the Meta key to: B<alt>, B<meta>,
1026 B<hyper>, B<super>, B<mod1>, B<mod2>, B<mod3>, B<mod4>, B<mod5>; option
1027 B<-mod>.
1028
1029 =item B<answerbackString:> I<string>
1030
1031 Specify the reply rxvt-unicode sends to the shell when an ENQ (control-E)
1032 character is passed through. It may contain escape values as described
1033 in the entry on B<keysym> following.
1034
1035 =item B<secondaryScreen:> I<boolean>
1036
1037 Turn on/off secondary screen (default enabled).
1038
1039 =item B<secondaryScroll:> I<boolean>
1040
1041 Turn on/off secondary screen scroll (default enabled). If this
1042 option is enabled, scrolls on the secondary screen will change the
1043 scrollback buffer and, when secondaryScreen is off, switching
1044 to/from the secondary screen will instead scroll the screen up.
1045
1046 =item B<hold>: I<boolean>
1047
1048 Turn on/off hold window after exit support. If enabled, @@RXVT_NAME@@
1049 will not immediately destroy its window when the program executed within
1050 it exits. Instead, it will wait till it is being killed or closed by the
1051 user.
1052
1053 =item B<chdir>: I<path>
1054
1055 Sets the working directory for the shell (or the command specified via
1056 B<-e>). The I<path> must be an absolute path and it must exist for
1057 @@RXVT_NAME@@ to start. If it isn't specified then the current working
1058 directory will be used; option B<-cd>.
1059
1060 =item B<keysym.>I<sym>: I<action>
1061
1062 Compile I<frills>: Associate I<action> with keysym I<sym>. The intervening
1063 resource name B<keysym.> cannot be omitted.
1064
1065 Using this resource, you can map key combinations such as
1066 C<Ctrl-Shift-BackSpace> to various actions, such as outputting a different
1067 string than would normally result from that combination, making the
1068 terminal scroll up or down the way you want it, or any other thing an
1069 extension might provide.
1070
1071 The key combination that triggers the action, I<sym>, has the following format:
1072
1073 (modifiers-)key
1074
1075 Where I<modifiers> can be any combination of B<ISOLevel3>, B<AppKeypad>,
1076 B<Control>, B<NumLock>, B<Shift>, B<Meta>, B<Lock>, B<Mod1>, B<Mod2>,
1077 B<Mod3>, B<Mod4>, B<Mod5>, and the abbreviated B<I>, B<K>, B<C>, B<N>,
1078 B<S>, B<M>, B<A>, B<L>, B<1>, B<2>, B<3>, B<4>, B<5>.
1079
1080 The B<NumLock>, B<Meta> and B<ISOLevel3> modifiers are usually aliased to
1081 whatever modifier the NumLock key, Meta/Alt keys or ISO Level3 Shift/AltGr
1082 keys are being mapped. B<AppKeypad> is a synthetic modifier mapped to the
1083 current application keymap mode state.
1084
1085 Due the the large number of modifier combinations, a key mapping will
1086 match if I<at least> the specified identifiers are being set, and no other
1087 key mappings with those and more bits are being defined. That means that
1088 defining a mapping for C<a> will automatically provide definitions for
1089 C<Meta-a>, C<Shift-a> and so on, unless some of those are defined mappings
1090 themselves. See the C<builtin:> action, below, for a way to work around
1091 this when this is a problem.
1092
1093 The spelling of I<key> depends on your implementation of X. An easy way to
1094 find a key name is to use the B<xev>(1) command. You can find a list by
1095 looking for the C<XK_> macros in the B<X11/keysymdef.h> include file (omit
1096 the C<XK_> prefix). Alternatively you can specify I<key> by its hex keysym
1097 value (B<0x0000 - 0xFFFF>).
1098
1099 As with any resource value, the I<action> string may contain backslash
1100 escape sequences (C<\n>: newline, C<\\>: backslash, C<\000>: octal
1101 number), see RESOURCES in C<man 7 X> for further details.
1102
1103 An action starts with an action prefix that selects a certain type
1104 of action, followed by a colon. An action string without colons is
1105 interpreted as a literal string to pass to the tty (as if it was
1106 prefixed with C<string:>).
1107
1108 The following action prefixes are known - extensions can provide
1109 additional prefixes:
1110
1111 =over 4
1112
1113 =item string:STRING
1114
1115 If the I<action> starts with C<string:> (or otherwise contains no colons),
1116 then the remaining C<STRING> will be passed to the program running in the
1117 terminal. For example, you could replace whatever Shift-Tab outputs by the
1118 string C<echo rm -rf /> followed by a newline:
1119
1120 URxvt.keysym.Shift-Tab: string:echo rm -rf /\n
1121
1122 This could in theory be used to completely redefine your keymap.
1123
1124 =item command:STRING
1125
1126 If I<action> takes the form of C<command:STRING>, the specified B<STRING>
1127 is interpreted and executed as @@RXVT_NAME@@'s control sequence (basically
1128 the opposite of C<string:> - instead of sending it to the program running
1129 in the terminal, it will be treated as if it were program output). This is
1130 most useful to feed command sequences into @@RXVT_NAME@@.
1131
1132 For example the following means "change the current locale to C<zh_CN.GBK>
1133 when Control-Meta-c is being pressed":
1134
1135 URxvt.keysym.M-C-c: command:\033]701;zh_CN.GBK\007
1136
1137 The following example will map Control-Meta-1 and Control-Meta-2 to
1138 the fonts C<suxuseuro> and C<9x15bold>, so you can have some limited
1139 font-switching at runtime:
1140
1141 URxvt.keysym.M-C-1: command:\033]50;suxuseuro\007
1142 URxvt.keysym.M-C-2: command:\033]50;9x15bold\007
1143
1144 Other things are possible, e.g. resizing (see @@RXVT_NAME@@(7) for more
1145 info):
1146
1147 URxvt.keysym.M-C-3: command:\033[8;25;80t
1148 URxvt.keysym.M-C-4: command:\033[8;48;110t
1149
1150 =item builtin:
1151
1152 The builtin action is the action that @@RXVT_NAME@@ would execute if no
1153 key binding existed for the key combination. The obvious use is to undo
1154 the effect of existing bindings. The not so obvious use is to reinstate
1155 bindings when another binding overrides too many modifiers.
1156
1157 For example if you overwrite the C<Insert> key you will disable
1158 @@RXVT_NAME@@'s C<Shift-Insert> mapping. To re-enable that, you can poke
1159 "holes" into the user-defined keymap using the C<builtin:> replacement:
1160
1161 URxvt.keysym.Insert: <my insert key sequence>
1162 URxvt.keysym.S-Insert: builtin:
1163
1164 The first line defines a mapping for C<Insert> and I<any> combination
1165 of modifiers. The second line re-establishes the default mapping for
1166 C<Shift-Insert>.
1167
1168 =item builtin-string:
1169
1170 This action is mainly useful to restore string mappings for keys that
1171 have predefined actions in @@RXVT_NAME@@. The exact semantics are a bit
1172 difficult to explain - basically, this action will send the string to the
1173 application that would be sent if @@RXVT_NAME@@ wouldn't have a built-in
1174 action for it.
1175
1176 An example might make it clearer: @@RXVT_NAME@@ normally pastes the
1177 selection when you press C<Shift-Insert>. With the following bindings, it
1178 would instead emit the (undocumented, but what applications running in the
1179 terminal might expect) sequence C<ESC [ 2 $> instead:
1180
1181 URxvt.keysym.S-Insert: builtin-string:
1182 URxvt.keysym.C-S-Insert: builtin:
1183
1184 The first line disables the paste functionality for that key
1185 combination, and the second reinstates the default behaviour for
1186 C<Control-Shift-Insert>, which would otherwise be overridden.
1187
1188 Similarly, to let applications gain access to the C<C-M-c> (copy to
1189 clipboard) and C<C-M-v> (paste clipboard) key combination, you can do
1190 this:
1191
1192 URxvt.keysym.C-M-c: builtin-string:
1193 URxvt.keysym.C-M-v: builtin-string:
1194
1195 =item EXTENSION:STRING
1196
1197 An action of this form invokes the action B<STRING>, if any, provided
1198 by the @@RXVT_NAME@@perl(3) extension B<EXTENSION>. The extension will
1199 be loaded automatically if necessary.
1200
1201 Not all extensions define actions, but popular extensions that do
1202 include the I<selection> and I<matcher> extensions (documented in their
1203 own manpages, @@RXVT_NAME@@-selection(1) and @@RXVT_NAME@@-matcher(1),
1204 respectively).
1205
1206 From the silly examples department, this will rot13-"encrypt"
1207 @@RXVT_NAME@@'s selection when Alt-Control-c is pressed on typical PC
1208 keyboards:
1209
1210 URxvt.keysym.M-C-c: selection:rot13
1211
1212 =item perl:STRING *DEPRECATED*
1213
1214 This is a deprecated way of invoking commands provided by perl
1215 extensions. It is still supported, but should not be used anymore.
1216
1217 =back
1218
1219 =item B<perl-ext-common>: I<string>
1220
1221 =item B<perl-ext>: I<string>
1222
1223 Comma-separated list(s) of perl extension scripts (default: C<default>) to
1224 use in this terminal instance; option B<-pe>.
1225
1226 Extension names can be prefixed with a C<-> sign to prohibit using
1227 them. This can be useful to selectively disable some extensions loaded
1228 by default, or specified via the C<perl-ext-common> resource. For
1229 example, C<default,-selection> will use all the default extensions except
1230 C<selection>.
1231
1232 The default set includes the C<selection>, C<option-popup>,
1233 C<selection-popup> and C<readline> extensions, any extensions that
1234 define keybindings via C<BINDING> meta comments, and extensions which
1235 are mentioned in B<keysym> resources.
1236
1237 Any extension such that a corresponding resource is given on the
1238 command line is automatically appended to B<perl-ext>.
1239
1240 Each extension is looked up in the library directories, loaded if
1241 necessary, and bound to the current terminal instance. When the library
1242 search path contains multiple extension files of the same name, then the
1243 first one found will be used.
1244
1245 If both of these resources are the empty string, then the perl interpreter
1246 will not be initialized. The rationale for having two options is that
1247 B<perl-ext-common> will be used for extensions that should be available to
1248 all instances, while B<perl-ext> is used for specific instances.
1249
1250 =item B<perl-eval>: I<string>
1251
1252 Perl code to be evaluated when all extensions have been registered. See
1253 the @@RXVT_NAME@@perl(3) manpage.
1254
1255 =item B<perl-lib>: I<path>
1256
1257 Colon-separated list of additional directories that hold extension
1258 scripts. When looking for perl extensions, @@RXVT_NAME@@ will first look
1259 in these directories, then in C<$URXVT_PERL_LIB>, F<$HOME/.urxvt/ext> and
1260 lastly in F<@@RXVT_LIBDIR@@/urxvt/perl/>.
1261
1262 See the @@RXVT_NAME@@perl(3) manpage.
1263
1264 =item B<< selection.pattern-I<idx> >>: I<perl-regex>
1265
1266 Additional selection patterns, see the @@RXVT_NAME@@perl(3) manpage for
1267 details.
1268
1269 =item B<< selection-autotransform.I<idx> >>: I<perl-transform>
1270
1271 Selection auto-transform patterns, see the @@RXVT_NAME@@perl(3) manpage
1272 for details.
1273
1274 =item B<searchable-scrollback:> I<keysym> *DEPRECATED*
1275
1276 This resource is deprecated and will be removed. Use a B<keysym> resource
1277 instead, e.g.:
1278
1279 URxvt.keysym.M-s: searchable-scrollback:start
1280
1281 =item B<url-launcher>: I<string>
1282
1283 Specifies the program to be started with a URL argument. Used by the
1284 C<selection-popup> and C<matcher> perl extensions.
1285
1286 =item B<transient-for>: I<windowid>
1287
1288 Compile I<frills>: Sets the WM_TRANSIENT_FOR property to the given window id.
1289
1290 =item B<override-redirect>: I<boolean>
1291
1292 Compile I<frills>: Sets override-redirect for the terminal window, making
1293 it almost invisible to window managers; option B<-override-redirect>.
1294
1295 =item B<iso14755:> I<boolean>
1296
1297 Turn on/off ISO 14755 (default enabled).
1298
1299 =item B<iso14755_52:> I<boolean>
1300
1301 Turn on/off ISO 14755 5.2 mode (default enabled).
1302
1303 =back
1304
1305 =head1 BACKGROUND IMAGE OPTIONS AND RESOURCES
1306
1307 =over 4
1308
1309 =item B<-pixmap> I<file[;oplist]>
1310
1311 =item B<backgroundPixmap:> I<file[;oplist]>
1312
1313 Compile I<pixbuf>: Use the specified image file as the window's
1314 background and also optionally specify a colon separated list of
1315 operations to modify it. Note that you may need to quote the C<;>
1316 character when using the command line option, as C<;> is usually a
1317 metacharacter in shells. Supported operations are:
1318
1319 =over 4
1320
1321 =item B<WxH+X+Y>
1322
1323 sets scale and position. B<"W" / "H"> specify the horizontal/vertical
1324 scale (percent), and B<"X" / "Y"> locate the image centre (percent). A
1325 scale of 0 disables scaling.
1326
1327 =item B<op=tile>
1328
1329 enables tiling
1330
1331 =item B<op=keep-aspect>
1332
1333 maintain the image aspect ratio when scaling
1334
1335 =item B<op=root-align>
1336
1337 use the position of the terminal window relative to the root window as
1338 the image offset, simulating a root window background
1339
1340 =back
1341
1342 The default scale and position setting is C<100x100+50+50>.
1343 Alternatively, a predefined set of templates can be used to achieve
1344 the most common setups:
1345
1346 =over 4
1347
1348 =item B<style=tiled>
1349
1350 the image is tiled with no scaling. Equivalent to 0x0+0+0:op=tile
1351
1352 =item B<style=aspect-stretched>
1353
1354 the image is scaled to fill the whole window maintaining the aspect
1355 ratio and centered. Equivalent to 100x100+50+50:op=keep-aspect
1356
1357 =item B<style=stretched>
1358
1359 the image is scaled to fill the whole window. Equivalent to 100x100
1360
1361 =item B<style=centered>
1362
1363 the image is centered with no scaling. Equivalent to 0x0+50+50
1364
1365 =item B<style=root-tiled>
1366
1367 the image is tiled with no scaling and using 'root' positioning.
1368 Equivalent to 0x0:op=tile:op=root-align
1369
1370 =back
1371
1372 If multiple templates are specified the last one wins. Note that a
1373 template overrides all the scale, position and operations settings.
1374
1375 If used in conjunction with pseudo-transparency, the specified pixmap
1376 will be blended over the transparent background using alpha-blending.
1377
1378 =item B<-tr>|B<+tr>
1379
1380 =item B<transparent:> I<boolean>
1381
1382 Turn on/off pseudo-transparency by using the root pixmap as background.
1383
1384 B<-ip> (B<inheritPixmap>) is still accepted as an obsolete alias but
1385 will be removed in future versions.
1386
1387 =item B<-tint> I<colour>
1388
1389 =item B<tintColor:> I<colour>
1390
1391 Tint the transparent background with the given colour. Note that a
1392 black tint yields a completely black image while a white tint yields
1393 the image unchanged.
1394
1395 =item B<-sh> I<number>
1396
1397 =item B<shading:> I<number>
1398
1399 Darken (0 .. 99) or lighten (101 .. 200) the transparent background.
1400 A value of 100 means no shading.
1401
1402 =item B<-blr> I<HxV>
1403
1404 =item B<blurRadius:> I<HxV>
1405
1406 Apply gaussian blur with the specified radius to the transparent
1407 background. If a single number is specified, the vertical and
1408 horizontal radii are considered to be the same. Setting one of the
1409 radii to 1 and the other to a large number creates interesting effects
1410 on some backgrounds. The maximum radius value is 128. An horizontal or
1411 vertical radius of 0 disables blurring.
1412
1413 =item B<path:> I<path>
1414
1415 Specify the colon-delimited search path for finding background image files.
1416
1417 =back
1418
1419 =head1 THE SCROLLBAR
1420
1421 Lines of text that scroll off the top of the B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> window
1422 (resource: B<saveLines>) and can be scrolled back using the scrollbar
1423 or by keystrokes. The normal B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> scrollbar has arrows and
1424 its behaviour is fairly intuitive. The B<xterm-scrollbar> is without
1425 arrows and its behaviour mimics that of I<xterm>
1426
1427 Scroll down with B<Button1> (B<xterm-scrollbar>) or B<Shift-Next>.
1428 Scroll up with B<Button3> (B<xterm-scrollbar>) or B<Shift-Prior>.
1429 Continuous scroll with B<Button2>.
1430
1431 =head1 MOUSE REPORTING
1432
1433 To temporarily override mouse reporting, for either the scrollbar or
1434 the normal text selection/insertion, hold either the Shift or the Meta
1435 (Alt) key while performing the desired mouse action.
1436
1437 If mouse reporting mode is active, the normal scrollbar actions are
1438 disabled -- on the assumption that we are using a fullscreen
1439 application. Instead, pressing Button1 and Button3 sends B<ESC [ 6 ~>
1440 (Next) and B<ESC [ 5 ~> (Prior), respectively. Similarly, clicking on the
1441 up and down arrows sends B<ESC [ A> (Up) and B<ESC [ B> (Down),
1442 respectively.
1443
1444 =head1 THE SELECTION: SELECTING AND PASTING TEXT
1445
1446 The behaviour of text selection and insertion/pasting mechanism is similar
1447 to I<xterm>(1).
1448
1449 =over 4
1450
1451 =item B<Selecting>:
1452
1453 Left click at the beginning of the region, drag to the end of the region
1454 and release; Right click to extend the marked region; Left double-click
1455 to select a word; Left triple-click to select the entire logical line
1456 (which can span multiple screen lines), unless modified by resource
1457 B<tripleclickwords>.
1458
1459 Starting a selection while pressing the B<Meta> key (or B<Meta+Ctrl> keys)
1460 (Compile: I<frills>) will create a rectangular selection instead of a
1461 normal one. In this mode, every selected row becomes its own line in the
1462 selection, and trailing whitespace is visually underlined and removed from
1463 the selection.
1464
1465 =item B<Pasting>:
1466
1467 Pressing and releasing the Middle mouse button in an B<@@RXVT_NAME@@>
1468 window causes the value of the PRIMARY selection (or CLIPBOARD with the
1469 B<Meta> modifier) to be inserted as if it had been typed on the keyboard.
1470
1471 Pressing B<Shift-Insert> causes the value of the PRIMARY selection to be
1472 inserted too.
1473
1474 rxvt-unicode also provides the bindings B<Ctrl-Meta-c> and
1475 <Ctrl-Meta-v> to interact with the CLIPBOARD selection. The first
1476 binding causes the value of the internal selection to be copied to the
1477 CLIPBOARD selection, while the second binding causes the value of the
1478 CLIPBOARD selection to be inserted.
1479
1480 =back
1481
1482 =head1 CHANGING FONTS
1483
1484 Changing fonts (or font sizes, respectively) via the keypad is not yet
1485 supported in rxvt-unicode. Bug me if you need this.
1486
1487 You can, however, switch fonts at runtime using escape sequences, e.g.:
1488
1489 printf '\e]710;%s\007' "9x15bold,xft:Kochi Gothic"
1490
1491 You can use keyboard shortcuts, too:
1492
1493 URxvt.keysym.M-C-1: command:\033]710;suxuseuro\007\033]711;suxuseuro\007
1494 URxvt.keysym.M-C-2: command:\033]710;9x15bold\007\033]711;9x15bold\007
1495
1496 rxvt-unicode will automatically re-apply these fonts to the output so far.
1497
1498 =head1 ISO 14755 SUPPORT
1499
1500 ISO 14755 is a standard for entering and viewing unicode characters
1501 and character codes using the keyboard. It consists of 4 parts. The
1502 first part is available if rxvt-unicode has been compiled with
1503 C<--enable-frills>, the rest is available when rxvt-unicode was compiled
1504 with C<--enable-iso14755>.
1505
1506 =over 4
1507
1508 =item * 5.1: Basic method
1509
1510 This allows you to enter unicode characters using their hexcode.
1511
1512 Start by pressing and holding both C<Control> and C<Shift>, then enter
1513 hex-digits (between one and six). Releasing C<Control> and C<Shift> will
1514 commit the character as if it were typed directly. While holding down
1515 C<Control> and C<Shift> you can also enter multiple characters by pressing
1516 C<Space>, which will commit the current character and lets you start a new
1517 one.
1518
1519 As an example of use, imagine a business card with a japanese e-mail
1520 address, which you cannot type. Fortunately, the card has the e-mail
1521 address printed as hexcodes, e.g. C<671d 65e5>. You can enter this easily
1522 by pressing C<Control> and C<Shift>, followed by C<6-7-1-D-SPACE-6-5-E-5>,
1523 followed by releasing the modifier keys.
1524
1525 =item * 5.2: Keyboard symbols entry method
1526
1527 This mode lets you input characters representing the keycap symbols of
1528 your keyboard, if representable in the current locale encoding.
1529
1530 Start by pressing C<Control> and C<Shift> together, then releasing
1531 them. The next special key (cursor keys, home etc.) you enter will not
1532 invoke its usual function but instead will insert the corresponding
1533 keycap symbol. The symbol will only be entered when the key has been
1534 released, otherwise pressing e.g. C<Shift> would enter the symbol for
1535 C<ISO Level 2 Switch>, although your intention might have been to enter a
1536 reverse tab (Shift-Tab).
1537
1538 =item * 5.3: Screen-selection entry method
1539
1540 While this is implemented already (it's basically the selection
1541 mechanism), it could be extended by displaying a unicode character map.
1542
1543 =item * 5.4: Feedback method for identifying displayed characters for later input
1544
1545 This method lets you display the unicode character code associated with
1546 characters already displayed.
1547
1548 You enter this mode by holding down C<Control> and C<Shift> together, then
1549 pressing and holding the left mouse button and moving around. The unicode
1550 hex code(s) (it might be a combining character) of the character under the
1551 pointer is displayed until you release C<Control> and C<Shift>.
1552
1553 In addition to the hex codes it will display the font used to draw this
1554 character - due to implementation reasons, characters combined with
1555 combining characters, line drawing characters and unknown characters will
1556 always be drawn using the built-in support font.
1557
1558 =back
1559
1560 With respect to conformance, rxvt-unicode is supposed to be compliant to
1561 both scenario A and B of ISO 14755, including part 5.2.
1562
1563 =head1 LOGIN STAMP
1564
1565 B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> tries to write an entry into the I<utmp>(5) file so that
1566 it can be seen via the I<who(1)> command, and can accept messages. To
1567 allow this feature, B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> may need to be installed setuid root
1568 on some systems or setgid to root or to some other group on others.
1569
1570 =head1 COLOURS AND GRAPHICS
1571
1572 In addition to the default foreground and background colours,
1573 B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> can display up to 88/256 colours: 8 ANSI colours plus
1574 high-intensity (potentially bold/blink) versions of the same, and 72 (or
1575 240 in 256 colour mode) colours arranged in an 4x4x4 (or 6x6x6) colour RGB
1576 cube plus a 8 (24) colour greyscale ramp.
1577
1578 Here is a list of the ANSI colours with their names.
1579
1580 =begin table
1581
1582 B<color0> (black) = Black
1583 B<color1> (red) = Red3
1584 B<color2> (green) = Green3
1585 B<color3> (yellow) = Yellow3
1586 B<color4> (blue) = Blue3
1587 B<color5> (magenta) = Magenta3
1588 B<color6> (cyan) = Cyan3
1589 B<color7> (white) = AntiqueWhite
1590 B<color8> (bright black) = Grey25
1591 B<color9> (bright red) = Red
1592 B<color10> (bright green) = Green
1593 B<color11> (bright yellow) = Yellow
1594 B<color12> (bright blue) = Blue
1595 B<color13> (bright magenta) = Magenta
1596 B<color14> (bright cyan) = Cyan
1597 B<color15> (bright white) = White
1598 B<foreground> = Black
1599 B<background> = White
1600
1601 =end table
1602
1603 It is also possible to specify the colour values of B<foreground>,
1604 B<background>, B<cursorColor>, B<cursorColor2>, B<colorBD>, B<colorUL> as
1605 a number 0-15, as a convenient shorthand to reference the colour name of
1606 color0-color15.
1607
1608 The following text gives values for the standard 88 colour mode (and
1609 values for the 256 colour mode in parentheses).
1610
1611 The RGB cube uses indices 16..79 (16..231) using the following formulas:
1612
1613 index_88 = (r * 4 + g) * 4 + b + 16 # r, g, b = 0..3
1614 index_256 = (r * 6 + g) * 6 + b + 16 # r, g, b = 0..5
1615
1616 The grayscale ramp uses indices 80..87 (232..239), from 10% to 90% in 10%
1617 steps (1/26 to 25/26 in 1/26 steps) - black and white are already part of
1618 the RGB cube.
1619
1620 Together, all those colours implement the 88 (256) colour xterm
1621 colours. Only the first 16 can be changed using resources currently, the
1622 rest can only be changed via command sequences ("escape codes").
1623
1624 Applications are advised to use terminfo or command sequences to discover
1625 number and RGB values of all colours (yes, you can query this...).
1626
1627 Note that B<-rv> (B<"reverseVideo: True">) simulates reverse video by
1628 always swapping the foreground/background colours. This is in contrast to
1629 I<xterm>(1) where the colours are only swapped if they have not otherwise
1630 been specified. For example,
1631
1632 @@RXVT_NAME@@ -fg Black -bg White -rv
1633
1634 would yield White on Black, while on I<xterm>(1) it would yield Black on
1635 White.
1636
1637 =head2 ALPHA CHANNEL SUPPORT
1638
1639 If Xft support has been compiled in and as long as Xft/Xrender/X don't get
1640 their act together, rxvt-unicode will do its own alpha channel management:
1641
1642 You can prefix any colour with an opaqueness percentage enclosed in
1643 brackets, i.e. C<[percent]>, where C<percent> is a decimal percentage
1644 (0-100) that specifies the opacity of the colour, where C<0> is completely
1645 transparent and C<100> is completely opaque. For example, C<[50]red> is a
1646 half-transparent red, while C<[95]#00ff00> is an almost opaque green. This
1647 is the recommended format to specify transparency values, and works with
1648 all ways to specify a colour.
1649
1650 For complete control, rxvt-unicode also supports
1651 C<rgba:rrrr/gggg/bbbb/aaaa> (exactly four hex digits/component) colour
1652 specifications, where the additional C<aaaa> component specifies opacity
1653 (alpha) values. The minimum value of C<0000> is completely transparent,
1654 while C<ffff> is completely opaque). The two example colours from
1655 earlier could also be specified as C<rgba:ff00/0000/0000/8000> and
1656 C<rgba:0000/ff00/0000/f332>.
1657
1658 You probably need to specify B<"-depth 32">, too, to force a visual with
1659 alpha channels, and have the luck that your X-server uses ARGB pixel
1660 layout, as X is far from just supporting ARGB visuals out of the box, and
1661 rxvt-unicode just fudges around.
1662
1663 For example, the following selects an almost completely transparent black
1664 background, and an almost opaque pink foreground:
1665
1666 @@RXVT_NAME@@ -depth 32 -bg rgba:0000/0000/0000/4444 -fg "[80]pink"
1667
1668 When not using a background image, then the interpretation of the
1669 alpha channel is up to your compositing manager (most interpret it as
1670 transparency of course).
1671
1672 When using a background pixmap or pseudo-transparency, then the background
1673 colour will always behave as if it were completely transparent (so the
1674 background image shows instead), regardless of how it was specified, while
1675 other colours will either be transparent as specified (the background
1676 image will show through) on servers supporting the RENDER extension, or
1677 fully opaque on servers not supporting the RENDER EXTENSION.
1678
1679 Please note that due to bugs in Xft, specifying alpha values might result
1680 in garbage being displayed when the X-server does not support the RENDER
1681 extension.
1682
1683 =head1 ENVIRONMENT
1684
1685 B<@@RXVT_NAME@@> sets and/or uses the following environment variables:
1686
1687 =over 4
1688
1689 =item B<TERM>
1690
1691 Normally set to C<rxvt-unicode>, unless overwritten at configure time, via
1692 resources or on the command line.
1693
1694 =item B<COLORTERM>
1695
1696 Either C<rxvt>, C<rxvt-xpm>, depending on whether @@RXVT_NAME@@ was
1697 compiled with background image support, and optionally with the added
1698 extension C<-mono> to indicate that rxvt-unicode runs on a monochrome
1699 screen.
1700
1701 =item B<COLORFGBG>
1702
1703 Set to a string of the form C<fg;bg> or C<fg;xpm;bg>, where C<fg> is
1704 the colour code used as default foreground/text colour (or the string
1705 C<default> to indicate that the default-colour escape sequence is to be
1706 used), C<bg> is the colour code used as default background colour (or the
1707 string C<default>), and C<xpm> is the string C<default> if @@RXVT_NAME@@
1708 was compiled with background image support. Libraries like C<ncurses>
1709 and C<slang> can (and do) use this information to optimize screen output.
1710
1711 =item B<WINDOWID>
1712
1713 Set to the (decimal) X Window ID of the @@RXVT_NAME@@ window (the toplevel
1714 window, which usually has subwindows for the scrollbar, the terminal
1715 window and so on).
1716
1717 =item B<TERMINFO>
1718
1719 Set to the terminfo directory iff @@RXVT_NAME@@ was configured with
1720 C<--with-terminfo=PATH>.
1721
1722 =item B<DISPLAY>
1723
1724 Used by @@RXVT_NAME@@ to connect to the display and set to the correct
1725 display in its child processes if C<-display> isn't used to override. It
1726 defaults to C<:0> if it doesn't exist.
1727
1728 =item B<SHELL>
1729
1730 The shell to be used for command execution, defaults to C</bin/sh>.
1731
1732 =item B<RXVT_SOCKET> [I<sic>]
1733
1734 The unix domain socket path used by @@RXVT_NAME@@c(1) and
1735 @@RXVT_NAME@@d(1).
1736
1737 Default F<<< $HOME/.urxvt/urxvtd-I<< <nodename> >> >>>.
1738
1739 =item B<URXVT_PERL_LIB>
1740
1741 Additional F<:>-separated library search path for perl extensions. Will be
1742 searched after B<-perl-lib> but before F<~/.urxvt/ext> and the system library
1743 directory.
1744
1745 =item B<URXVT_PERL_VERBOSITY>
1746
1747 See L<@@RXVT_NAME@@perl>(3).
1748
1749 =item B<HOME>
1750
1751 Used to locate the default directory for the unix domain socket for
1752 daemon communications and to locate various resource files (such as
1753 C<.Xdefaults>)
1754
1755 =item B<XAPPLRESDIR>
1756
1757 Directory where application-specific X resource files are located.
1758
1759 =item B<XENVIRONMENT>
1760
1761 If set and accessible, gives the name of a X resource file to be loaded by
1762 @@RXVT_NAME@@.
1763
1764 =back
1765
1766 =head1 FILES
1767
1768 =over 4
1769
1770 =item B</usr/lib/X11/rgb.txt>
1771
1772 Colour names.
1773
1774 =back
1775
1776 =head1 SEE ALSO
1777
1778 @@RXVT_NAME@@(7), @@RXVT_NAME@@c(1), @@RXVT_NAME@@d(1), @@RXVT_NAME@@-extensions(1),
1779 @@RXVT_NAME@@perl(3), xterm(1), sh(1), resize(1), X(1), pty(4), tty(4), utmp(5)
1780
1781 =head1 CURRENT PROJECT COORDINATOR
1782
1783 =over 4
1784
1785 =item Project Coordinator
1786
1787 Marc A. Lehmann <rxvt-unicode@schmorp.de>.
1788
1789 L<http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/rxvt-unicode.html>
1790
1791 =back
1792
1793 =head1 AUTHORS
1794
1795 =over 4
1796
1797 =item John Bovey
1798
1799 University of Kent, 1992, wrote the original Xvt.
1800
1801 =item Rob Nation <nation@rocket.sanders.lockheed.com>
1802
1803 very heavily modified Xvt and came up with Rxvt
1804
1805 =item Angelo Haritsis <ah@doc.ic.ac.uk>
1806
1807 wrote the Greek Keyboard Input (no longer in code)
1808
1809 =item mj olesen <olesen@me.QueensU.CA>
1810
1811 Wrote the menu system.
1812
1813 Project Coordinator (changes.txt 2.11 to 2.21)
1814
1815 =item Oezguer Kesim <kesim@math.fu-berlin.de>
1816
1817 Project Coordinator (changes.txt 2.21a to 2.4.5)
1818
1819 =item Geoff Wing <gcw@pobox.com>
1820
1821 Rewrote screen display and text selection routines.
1822
1823 Project Coordinator (changes.txt 2.4.6 - rxvt-unicode)
1824
1825 =item Marc Alexander Lehmann <rxvt-unicode@schmorp.de>
1826
1827 Forked rxvt-unicode, unicode support, rewrote almost all the code, perl
1828 extension, random hacks, numerous bugfixes and extensions.
1829
1830 Project Coordinator (Changes 1.0 -)
1831
1832 =item Emanuele Giaquinta <emanuele.giaquinta@gmail.com>
1833
1834 pty/utmp code rewrite, image code improvements, many random hacks and bugfixes.
1835
1836 =back
1837