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# Content
1 NAME
2 rxvt-unicode (ouR XVT, unicode) - (a VT102 emulator for the X window
3 system)
4
5 SYNOPSIS
6 rxvt [options] [-e command [ args ]]
7
8 DESCRIPTION
9 rxvt-unicode, version 8.1, is a colour vt102 terminal emulator intended
10 as an *xterm*(1) replacement for users who do not require features such
11 as Tektronix 4014 emulation and toolkit-style configurability. As a
12 result, rxvt-unicode uses much less swap space -- a significant
13 advantage on a machine serving many X sessions.
14
15 FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
16 See rxvt(7) (try "man 7 rxvt") for a list of frequently asked questions
17 and answer to them and some common problems. That document is also
18 accessible on the World-Wide-Web at
19 <http://cvs.schmorp.de/browse/rxvt-unicode/doc/rxvt.7.html>.
20
21 RXVT-UNICODE VS. RXVT
22 Unlike the original rxvt, rxvt-unicode stores all text in Unicode
23 internally. That means it can store and display most scripts in the
24 world. Being a terminal emulator, however, some things are very
25 difficult, especially cursive scripts such as arabic, vertically written
26 scripts like mongolian or scripts requiring extremely complex combining
27 rules, like tibetan or devenagari. Don't expect pretty output when using
28 these scripts. Most other scripts, latin, cyrillic, kanji, thai etc.
29 should work fine, though. A somewhat difficult case are right-to-left
30 scripts, such as hebrew: rxvt-unicode adopts the view that bidirectional
31 algorithms belong into the application, not the terminal emulator (too
32 many things -- such as cursor-movement while editing -- break
33 otherwise), but that might change.
34
35 If you are looking for a terminal that supports more exotic scripts, let
36 me recommend "mlterm", which is a very user friendly, lean and clean
37 terminal emulator. In fact, the reason rxvt-unicode was born was solely
38 because the author couldn't get "mlterm" to use one font for latin1 and
39 another for japanese.
40
41 Therefore another design rationale was the use of multiple fonts to
42 display characters: The idea of a single unicode font which many other
43 programs force onto its users never made sense to me: You should be able
44 to choose any font for any script freely.
45
46 Apart from that, rxvt-unicode is also much better internationalised than
47 its predecessor, supports things such as XFT and ISO 14755 that are
48 handy in i18n-environments, is faster, and has a lot bugs less than the
49 original rxvt. This all in addition to dozens of other small
50 improvements.
51
52 It is still faithfully following the original rxvt idea of being lean
53 and nice on resources: for example, you can still configure rxvt-unicode
54 without most of its features to get a lean binary. It also comes with a
55 client/daemon pair that lets you open any number of terminal windows
56 from within a single process, which makes startup time very fast and
57 drastically reduces memory usage. See rxvtd(1) (daemon) and rxvtc(1)
58 (client).
59
60 It also makes technical information about escape sequences (which have
61 been extended) more accessible: see rxvt(7) for technical reference
62 documentation (escape sequences etc.).
63
64 OPTIONS
65 The rxvt options (mostly a subset of *xterm*'s) are listed below. In
66 keeping with the smaller-is-better philosophy, options may be eliminated
67 or default values chosen at compile-time, so options and defaults listed
68 may not accurately reflect the version installed on your system. `rxvt
69 -h' gives a list of major compile-time options on the *Options* line.
70 Option descriptions may be prefixed with which compile option each is
71 dependent upon. e.g. `Compile *XIM*:' requires *XIM* on the *Options*
72 line. Note: `rxvt -help' gives a list of all command-line options
73 compiled into your version.
74
75 Note that rxvt permits the resource name to be used as a long-option
76 (--/++ option) so the potential command-line options are far greater
77 than those listed. For example: `rxvt --loginShell --color1 Orange'.
78
79 The following options are available:
80
81 -help, --help
82 Print out a message describing available options.
83
84 -display *displayname*
85 Attempt to open a window on the named X display (-d still
86 respected). In the absence of this option, the display specified by
87 the DISPLAY environment variable is used.
88
89 -depth *bitdepth*
90 Compile *xft*: Attempt to find a visual with the given bit depth;
91 resource depth.
92
93 -geometry *geom*
94 Window geometry (-g still respected); resource geometry.
95
96 -rv|+rv
97 Turn on/off simulated reverse video; resource reverseVideo.
98
99 -j|+j
100 Turn on/off jump scrolling; resource jumpScroll.
101
102 -ip|+ip | -tr|+tr
103 Turn on/off inheriting parent window's pixmap. Alternative form is
104 -tr; resource inheritPixmap.
105
106 *Please note that transparency of any kind if completely unsupported
107 by the author. Don't bug him with installation questions! Read the
108 FAQ (man 7 rxvt)!*
109
110 -fade *number*
111 Fade the text by the given percentage when focus is lost. Small
112 values fade a little only, 100 completely replaces all colours by
113 the fade colour; resource fading.
114
115 -fadecolor *colour*
116 Fade to this colour when fading is used (see -fade). The default
117 colour is opaque black. resource fadeColor.
118
119 -tint *colour*
120 Tint the transparent background pixmap with the given colour when
121 transparency is enabled with -tr or -ip. This only works for
122 non-tiled backgrounds, currently. See also the -sh option that can
123 be used to brighten or darken the image in addition to tinting it;
124 resource *tintColor*. Example:
125
126 rxvt -tr -tint blue -sh 40
127
128 -sh *number* Darken (0 .. 100) or lighten (-1 .. -100) the transparent
129 background image in addition to tinting it (i.e. -tint must be
130 specified, too, e.g. "-tint white").
131
132 -bg *colour*
133 Window background colour; resource background.
134
135 -fg *colour*
136 Window foreground colour; resource foreground.
137
138 -pixmap *file[;geom]*
139 Compile *XPM*: Specify XPM file for the background and also
140 optionally specify its scaling with a geometry string. Note you may
141 need to add quotes to avoid special shell interpretation of the ";"
142 in the command-line; resource backgroundPixmap.
143
144 -cr *colour*
145 The cursor colour; resource cursorColor.
146
147 -pr *colour*
148 The mouse pointer foreground colour; resource pointerColor.
149
150 -pr2 *colour*
151 The mouse pointer background colour; resource pointerColor2.
152
153 -bd *colour*
154 The colour of the border around the text area and between the
155 scrollbar and the text; resource borderColor.
156
157 -fn *fontlist*
158 Select the fonts to be used. This is a comma separated list of font
159 names that are checked in order when trying to find glyphs for
160 characters. The first font defines the cell size for characters;
161 other fonts might be smaller, but not (in general) larger. A
162 (hopefully) reasonable default font list is always appended to it.
163 See resource font for more details.
164
165 In short, to specify an X11 core font, just specify its name or
166 prefix it with "x:". To specify an XFT-font, you need to prefix it
167 with "xft:", e.g.:
168
169 rxvt -fn "xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono:pixelsize=15"
170 rxvt -fn "9x15bold,xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono"
171
172 See also the question "How does rxvt-unicode choose fonts?" in the
173 FAQ section of rxvt(7).
174
175 -fb *fontlist*
176 Compile *font-styles*: The bold font list to use when bold
177 characters are to be printed. See resource boldFont for details.
178
179 -fi *fontlist*
180 Compile *font-styles*: The italic font list to use when *italic*
181 characters are to be printed. See resource italicFont for details.
182
183 -fbi *fontlist*
184 Compile *font-styles*: The bold italic font list to use when *bold
185 italic* characters are to be printed. See resource boldItalicFont
186 for details.
187
188 -is|+is
189 Compile *font-styles*: Bold/Italic font styles imply high intensity
190 foreground/background (default). See resource intensityStyles for
191 details.
192
193 -name *name*
194 Specify the application name under which resources are to be
195 obtained, rather than the default executable file name. Name should
196 not contain `.' or `*' characters. Also sets the icon and title
197 name.
198
199 -ls|+ls
200 Start as a login-shell/sub-shell; resource loginShell.
201
202 -ut|+ut
203 Compile *utmp*: Inhibit/enable writing a utmp entry; resource
204 utmpInhibit.
205
206 -vb|+vb
207 Turn on/off visual bell on receipt of a bell character; resource
208 visualBell.
209
210 -sb|+sb
211 Turn on/off scrollbar; resource scrollBar.
212
213 -si|+si
214 Turn on/off scroll-to-bottom on TTY output inhibit; resource
215 scrollTtyOutput has opposite effect.
216
217 -sk|+sk
218 Turn on/off scroll-to-bottom on keypress; resource
219 scrollTtyKeypress.
220
221 -sw|+sw
222 Turn on/off scrolling with the scrollback buffer as new lines
223 appear. This only takes effect if -si is also given; resource
224 scrollWithBuffer.
225
226 -sr|+sr
227 Put scrollbar on right/left; resource scrollBar_right.
228
229 -st|+st
230 Display rxvt (non XTerm/NeXT) scrollbar without/with a trough;
231 resource scrollBar_floating.
232
233 -ptab|+ptab
234 If enabled (default), "Horizontal Tab" characters are being stored
235 as actual wide characters in the screen buffer, which makes it
236 possible to select and paste them. Since a horizontal tab is a
237 cursor movement and not an actual glyph, this can sometimes be
238 visually annoying as the cursor on a tab character is displayed as a
239 wide cursor; resource pastableTabs.
240
241 -bc|+bc
242 Blink the cursor; resource cursorBlink.
243
244 -iconic
245 Start iconified, if the window manager supports that option.
246 Alternative form is -ic.
247
248 -sl *number*
249 Save *number* lines in the scrollback buffer. See resource entry for
250 limits; resource saveLines.
251
252 -b *number*
253 Compile *frills*: Internal border of *number* pixels. See resource
254 entry for limits; resource internalBorder.
255
256 -w *number*
257 Compile *frills*: External border of *number* pixels. Also, -bw and
258 -borderwidth. See resource entry for limits; resource
259 externalBorder.
260
261 -bl Compile *frills*: Set MWM hints to request a borderless window, i.e.
262 if honoured by the WM, the rxvt-unicode window will not have window
263 decorations; resource borderLess.
264
265 -override-redirect
266 Compile *frills*: Sets override-redirect on the window; resource
267 override-redirect.
268
269 -sbg
270 Compile *frills*: Disable the usage of the built-in block
271 graphics/line drawing characters and just rely on what the specified
272 fonts provide. Use this if you have a good font and want to use its
273 block graphic glyphs; resource skipBuiltinGlyphs.
274
275 -lsp *number*
276 Compile *frills*: Lines (pixel height) to insert between each row of
277 the display. Useful to work around font rendering problems; resource
278 linespace.
279
280 -tn *termname*
281 This option specifies the name of the terminal type to be set in the
282 TERM environment variable. This terminal type must exist in the
283 *termcap(5)* database and should have *li#* and *co#* entries;
284 resource termName.
285
286 -e *command [arguments]*
287 Run the command with its command-line arguments in the rxvt window;
288 also sets the window title and icon name to be the basename of the
289 program being executed if neither *-title* (*-T*) nor *-n* are given
290 on the command line. If this option is used, it must be the last on
291 the command-line. If there is no -e option then the default is to
292 run the program specified by the SHELL environment variable or,
293 failing that, *sh(1)*.
294
295 Please note that you must specify a program with arguments. If you
296 want to run shell commands, you have to specify the shell, like
297 this:
298
299 rxvt -e sh -c "shell commands"
300
301 -title *text*
302 Window title (-T still respected); the default title is the basename
303 of the program specified after the -e option, if any, otherwise the
304 application name; resource title.
305
306 -n *text*
307 Icon name; the default name is the basename of the program specified
308 after the -e option, if any, otherwise the application name;
309 resource iconName.
310
311 -C Capture system console messages.
312
313 -pt *style*
314 Compile *XIM*: input style for input method; OverTheSpot,
315 OffTheSpot, Root; resource preeditType.
316
317 -im *text*
318 Compile *XIM*: input method name. resource inputMethod.
319
320 -imlocale *string*
321 The locale to use for opening the IM. You can use an "LC_CTYPE" of
322 e.g. "de_DE.UTF-8" for normal text processing but "ja_JP.EUC-JP" for
323 the input extension to be able to input japanese characters while
324 staying in another locale. resource imLocale.
325
326 -imfont *fontset*
327 Set the font set to use for the X Input Method, see resource imFont
328 for more info.
329
330 -tcw
331 Change the meaning of triple-click selection with the left mouse
332 button. Instead of selecting a full line it will extend the
333 selection the end of the logical line only. resource
334 tripleclickwords.
335
336 -insecure
337 Enable "insecure" mode, which currently enables most of the escape
338 sequences that echo strings. See the resource insecure for more
339 info.
340
341 -mod *modifier*
342 Override detection of Meta modifier with specified key: alt, meta,
343 hyper, super, mod1, mod2, mod3, mod4, mod5; resource *modifier*.
344
345 -ssc|+ssc
346 Turn on/off secondary screen (default enabled); resource
347 secondaryScreen.
348
349 -ssr|+ssr
350 Turn on/off secondary screen scroll (default enabled); resource
351 secondaryScroll.
352
353 -hold|+hold
354 Turn on/off hold window after exit support. If enabled, rxvt will
355 not immediately destroy its window when the program executed within
356 it exits. Instead, it will wait till it is being killed or closed by
357 the user; resource hold.
358
359 -keysym.*sym* *string*
360 Remap a key symbol. See resource keysym.
361
362 -embed *windowid*
363 Tells rxvt to embed its windows into an already-existing window,
364 which enables applications to easily embed a terminal.
365
366 Right now, rxvt will first unmap/map the specified window, so it
367 shouldn't be a top-level window. rxvt will also reconfigure it quite
368 a bit, so don't expect it to keep some specific state. It's best to
369 create an extra subwindow for rxvt and leave it alone.
370
371 The window will not be destroyed when rxvt exits.
372
373 It might be useful to know that rxvt will not close file descriptors
374 passed to it (except for stdin/out/err, of course), so you can use
375 file descriptors to communicate with the programs within the
376 terminal. This works regardless of whether the "-embed" option was
377 used or not.
378
379 Here is a short Gtk2-perl snippet that illustrates how this option
380 can be used (a longer example is in doc/embed):
381
382 my $rxvt = new Gtk2::Socket;
383 $rxvt->signal_connect_after (realize => sub {
384 my $xid = $_[0]->window->get_xid;
385 system "rxvt -embed $xid &";
386 });
387
388 -pty-fd *file descriptor*
389 Tells rxvt NOT to execute any commands or create a new pty/tty pair
390 but instead use the given file descriptor as the tty master. This is
391 useful if you want to drive rxvt as a generic terminal emulator
392 without having to run a program within it.
393
394 If this switch is given, rxvt will not create any utmp/wtmp entries
395 and will not tinker with pty/tty permissions - you have to do that
396 yourself if you want that.
397
398 As an extremely special case, specifying -1 will completely suppress
399 pty/tty operations.
400
401 Here is a example in perl that illustrates how this option can be
402 used (a longer example is in doc/pty-fd):
403
404 use IO::Pty;
405 use Fcntl;
406
407 my $pty = new IO::Pty;
408 fcntl $pty, F_SETFD, 0; # clear close-on-exec
409 system "rxvt -pty-fd " . (fileno $pty) . "&";
410 close $pty;
411
412 # now communicate with rxvt
413 my $slave = $pty->slave;
414 while (<$slave>) { print $slave "got <$_>\n" }
415
416 -pe *string*
417 Comma-separated list of perl extension scripts to use (or not to
418 use) in this terminal instance. See resource perl-ext for details.
419
420 RESOURCES (available also as long-options)
421 Note: `rxvt --help' gives a list of all resources (long options)
422 compiled into your version.
423
424 You can set and change the resources using X11 tools like xrdb. Many
425 distribution do also load settings from the ~/.Xresources file when X
426 starts. rxvt will consult the following files/resources in order, with
427 later settings overwriting earlier ones:
428
429 1. system-wide app-defaults file, either locale-dependent OR global
430 2. app-defaults file in $XAPPLRESDIR
431 3. RESOURCE_MANAGER property on root-window OR $HOME/.Xdefaults
432 4. SCREEN_RESOURCES for the current screen
433 5. $XENVIRONMENT file OR $HOME/.Xdefaults-<nodename>
434
435 Note that when reading X resources, rxvt recognizes two class names:
436 Rxvt and URxvt. The class name Rxvt allows resources common to both rxvt
437 and the original *rxvt* to be easily configured, while the class name
438 URxvt allows resources unique to rxvt, to be shared between different
439 rxvt configurations. If no resources are specified, suitable defaults
440 will be used. Command-line arguments can be used to override resource
441 settings. The following resources are supported (you might want to check
442 the rxvtperl(3) manpage for additional settings by perl extensions not
443 documented here):
444
445 depth: *bitdepth*
446 Compile *xft*: Attempt to find a visual with the given bit depth;
447 option -depth.
448
449 geometry: *geom*
450 Create the window with the specified X window geometry [default
451 80x24]; option -geometry.
452
453 background: *colour*
454 Use the specified colour as the window's background colour [default
455 White]; option -bg.
456
457 foreground: *colour*
458 Use the specified colour as the window's foreground colour [default
459 Black]; option -fg.
460
461 color*n*: *colour*
462 Use the specified colour for the colour value *n*, where 0-7
463 corresponds to low-intensity (normal) colours and 8-15 corresponds
464 to high-intensity (bold = bright foreground, blink = bright
465 background) colours. The canonical names are as follows: 0=black,
466 1=red, 2=green, 3=yellow, 4=blue, 5=magenta, 6=cyan, 7=white, but
467 the actual colour names used are listed in the COLORS AND GRAPHICS
468 section.
469
470 Colours higher than 15 cannot be set using resources (yet), but can
471 be changed using an escape command (see rxvt(7)).
472
473 Colours 16-79 form a standard 4x4x4 colour cube (the same as xterm
474 with 88 colour support). Colours 80-87 are evenly spaces grey steps.
475
476 colorBD: *colour*
477 colorIT: *colour*
478 Use the specified colour to display bold or italic characters when
479 the foreground colour is the default. If font styles are not
480 available (Compile *styles*) and this option is unset, reverse video
481 is used instead.
482
483 colorUL: *colour*
484 Use the specified colour to display underlined characters when the
485 foreground colour is the default.
486
487 colorRV: *colour*
488 Use the specified colour as the background for reverse video
489 characters.
490
491 underlineColor: *colour*
492 If set, use the specified colour as the colour for the underline
493 itself. If unset, use the foreground colour.
494
495 cursorColor: *colour*
496 Use the specified colour for the cursor. The default is to use the
497 foreground colour; option -cr.
498
499 cursorColor2: *colour*
500 Use the specified colour for the colour of the cursor text. For this
501 to take effect, cursorColor must also be specified. The default is
502 to use the background colour.
503
504 reverseVideo: *boolean*
505 True: simulate reverse video by foreground and background colours;
506 option -rv. False: regular screen colours [default]; option +rv. See
507 note in COLORS AND GRAPHICS section.
508
509 jumpScroll: *boolean*
510 True: specify that jump scrolling should be used. When scrolling
511 quickly, fewer screen updates are performed [default]; option -j.
512 False: specify that smooth scrolling should be used; option +j.
513
514 inheritPixmap: *boolean*
515 True: make the background inherit the parent windows' pixmap, giving
516 artificial transparency. False: do not inherit the parent windows'
517 pixmap.
518
519 *Please note that transparency of any kind if completely unsupported
520 by the author. Don't bug him with installation questions!*
521
522 fading: *number*
523 Fade the text by the given percentage when focus is lost; option
524 -fade.
525
526 fadeColor: *colour*
527 Fade to this colour, when fading is used (see fading:). The default
528 colour is black; option -fadecolor.
529
530 tintColor: *colour*
531 Tint the transparent background pixmap with the given colour; option
532 -tint.
533
534 shading: *number*
535 Darken (0 .. 100) or lighten (-1 .. -100) the transparent background
536 image in addition to tinting it.
537
538 scrollColor: *colour*
539 Use the specified colour for the scrollbar [default #B2B2B2].
540
541 troughColor: *colour*
542 Use the specified colour for the scrollbar's trough area [default
543 #969696]. Only relevant for rxvt (non XTerm/NeXT) scrollbar.
544
545 borderColor: *colour*
546 The colour of the border around the text area and between the
547 scrollbar and the text.
548
549 backgroundPixmap: *file[;geom]*
550 Use the specified XPM file (note the `.xpm' extension is optional)
551 for the background and also optionally specify its scaling with a
552 geometry string WxH+X+Y, in which "W" / "H" specify the
553 horizontal/vertical scale (percent) and "X" / "Y" locate the image
554 centre (percent). A scale of 0 displays the image with tiling. A
555 scale of 1 displays the image without any scaling. A scale of 2 to 9
556 specifies an integer number of images in that direction. No image
557 will be magnified beyond 10 times its original size. The maximum
558 permitted scale is 1000. [default 0x0+50+50]
559
560 path: *path*
561 Specify the colon-delimited search path for finding XPM files.
562
563 font: *fontlist*
564 Select the fonts to be used. This is a comma separated list of font
565 names that are checked in order when trying to find glyphs for
566 characters. The first font defines the cell size for characters;
567 other fonts might be smaller, but not (in general) larger. A
568 (hopefully) reasonable default font list is always appended to it;
569 option -fn.
570
571 Each font can either be a standard X11 core font (XLFD) name, with
572 optional prefix "x:" or a Xft font (Compile *xft*), prefixed with
573 "xft:".
574
575 In addition, each font can be prefixed with additional hints and
576 specifications enclosed in square brackets ("[]"). The only
577 available hint currently is "codeset=codeset-name", and this is only
578 used for Xft fonts.
579
580 For example, this font resource
581
582 URxvt.font: 9x15bold,\
583 -misc-fixed-bold-r-normal--15-140-75-75-c-90-iso10646-1,\
584 -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--15-140-75-75-c-90-iso10646-1, \
585 [codeset=JISX0208]xft:Kochi Gothic:antialias=false, \
586 xft:Code2000:antialias=false
587
588 specifies five fonts to be used. The first one is "9x15bold"
589 (actually the iso8859-1 version of the second font), which is the
590 base font (because it is named first) and thus defines the character
591 cell grid to be 9 pixels wide and 15 pixels high.
592
593 The second font is just used to add additional unicode characters
594 not in the base font, likewise the third, which is unfortunately
595 non-bold, but the bold version of the font does contain less
596 characters, so this is a useful supplement.
597
598 The third font is an Xft font with aliasing turned off, and the
599 characters are limited to the JIS 0208 codeset (i.e. japanese
600 kanji). The font contains other characters, but we are not
601 interested in them.
602
603 The last font is a useful catch-all font that supplies most of the
604 remaining unicode characters.
605
606 boldFont: *fontlist*
607 italicFont: *fontlist*
608 boldItalicFont: *fontlist*
609 The font list to use for displaying bold, *italic* or *bold italic*
610 characters, respectively.
611
612 If specified and non-empty, then the syntax is the same as for the
613 font-resource, and the given font list will be used as is, which
614 makes it possible to substitute completely different font styles for
615 bold and italic.
616
617 If unset (the default), a suitable font list will be synthesized by
618 "morphing" the normal text font list into the desired shape. If that
619 is not possible, replacement fonts of the desired shape will be
620 tried.
621
622 If set, but empty, then this specific style is disabled and the
623 normal text font will being used for the given style.
624
625 intensityStyles: *boolean*
626 When font styles are not enabled, or this option is enabled (True,
627 option -is, the default), bold and italic font styles imply high
628 intensity foreground/background colours. Disabling this option
629 (False, option +is) disables this behaviour, the high intensity
630 colours are not reachable.
631
632 selectstyle: *mode*
633 Set mouse selection style to old which is 2.20, oldword which is
634 xterm style with 2.20 old word selection, or anything else which
635 gives xterm style selection.
636
637 scrollstyle: *mode*
638 Set scrollbar style to rxvt, plain, next or xterm. plain is the
639 author's favourite.
640
641 title: *string*
642 Set window title string, the default title is the command-line
643 specified after the -e option, if any, otherwise the application
644 name; option -title.
645
646 iconName: *string*
647 Set the name used to label the window's icon or displayed in an icon
648 manager window, it also sets the window's title unless it is
649 explicitly set; option -n.
650
651 mapAlert: *boolean*
652 True: de-iconify (map) on receipt of a bell character. False: no
653 de-iconify (map) on receipt of a bell character [default].
654
655 visualBell: *boolean*
656 True: use visual bell on receipt of a bell character; option -vb.
657 False: no visual bell [default]; option +vb.
658
659 loginShell: *boolean*
660 True: start as a login shell by prepending a `-' to argv[0] of the
661 shell; option -ls. False: start as a normal sub-shell [default];
662 option +ls.
663
664 utmpInhibit: *boolean*
665 True: inhibit writing record into the system log file utmp; option
666 -ut. False: write record into the system log file utmp [default];
667 option +ut.
668
669 print-pipe: *string*
670 Specify a command pipe for vt100 printer [default *lpr(1)*]. Use
671 Print to initiate a screen dump to the printer and Ctrl-Print or
672 Shift-Print to include the scrollback as well.
673
674 The string will be interpreted as if typed into the shell as-is.
675
676 Example:
677
678 URxvt.print-pipe: cat > $(TMPDIR=$HOME mktemp urxvt.XXXXXX)
679
680 This creates a new file in your home directory with the screen
681 contents every time you hit "Print".
682
683 scrollBar: *boolean*
684 True: enable the scrollbar [default]; option -sb. False: disable the
685 scrollbar; option +sb.
686
687 scrollBar_right: *boolean*
688 True: place the scrollbar on the right of the window; option -sr.
689 False: place the scrollbar on the left of the window; option +sr.
690
691 scrollBar_floating: *boolean*
692 True: display an rxvt scrollbar without a trough; option -st. False:
693 display an rxvt scrollbar with a trough; option +st.
694
695 scrollBar_align: *mode*
696 Align the top, bottom or centre [default] of the scrollbar thumb
697 with the pointer on middle button press/drag.
698
699 scrollTtyOutput: *boolean*
700 True: scroll to bottom when tty receives output; option -si. False:
701 do not scroll to bottom when tty receives output; option +si.
702
703 scrollWithBuffer: *boolean*
704 True: scroll with scrollback buffer when tty receives new lines (and
705 scrollTtyOutput is False); option -sw. False: do not scroll with
706 scrollback buffer when tty receives new lines; option +sw.
707
708 scrollTtyKeypress: *boolean*
709 True: scroll to bottom when a non-special key is pressed. Special
710 keys are those which are intercepted by rxvt-unicode for special
711 handling and are not passed onto the shell; option -sk. False: do
712 not scroll to bottom when a non-special key is pressed; option +sk.
713
714 saveLines: *number*
715 Save *number* lines in the scrollback buffer [default 64]. This
716 resource is limited on most machines to 65535; option -sl.
717
718 internalBorder: *number*
719 Internal border of *number* pixels. This resource is limited to 100;
720 option -b.
721
722 externalBorder: *number*
723 External border of *number* pixels. This resource is limited to 100;
724 option -w, -bw, -borderwidth.
725
726 borderLess: *boolean*
727 Set MWM hints to request a borderless window, i.e. if honoured by
728 the WM, the rxvt-unicode window will not have window decorations;
729 option -bl.
730
731 skipBuiltinGlyphs: *boolean*
732 Compile *frills*: Disable the usage of the built-in block
733 graphics/line drawing characters and just rely on what the specified
734 fonts provide. Use this if you have a good font and want to use its
735 block graphic glyphs; option -sbg.
736
737 termName: *termname*
738 Specifies the terminal type name to be set in the TERM environment
739 variable; option -tn.
740
741 linespace: *number*
742 Specifies number of lines (pixel height) to insert between each row
743 of the display [default 0]; option -lsp.
744
745 meta8: *boolean*
746 True: handle Meta (Alt) + keypress to set the 8th bit. False: handle
747 Meta (Alt) + keypress as an escape prefix [default].
748
749 mouseWheelScrollPage: *boolean*
750 True: the mouse wheel scrolls a page full. False: the mouse wheel
751 scrolls five lines [default].
752
753 pastableTabs: *boolean*
754 True: store tabs as wide characters. False: interpret tabs as cursor
755 movement only; option "-ptab".
756
757 cursorBlink: *boolean*
758 True: blink the cursor. False: do not blink the cursor [default];
759 option -bc.
760
761 pointerBlank: *boolean*
762 True: blank the pointer when a key is pressed or after a set number
763 of seconds of inactivity. False: the pointer is always visible
764 [default].
765
766 pointerColor: *colour*
767 Mouse pointer foreground colour.
768
769 pointerColor2: *colour*
770 Mouse pointer background colour.
771
772 pointerBlankDelay: *number*
773 Specifies number of seconds before blanking the pointer [default 2].
774 Use a large number (e.g. 987654321) to effectively disable the
775 timeout.
776
777 backspacekey: *string*
778 The string to send when the backspace key is pressed. If set to DEC
779 or unset it will send Delete (code 127) or, if shifted, Backspace
780 (code 8) - which can be reversed with the appropriate DEC private
781 mode escape sequence.
782
783 deletekey: *string*
784 The string to send when the delete key (not the keypad delete key)
785 is pressed. If unset it will send the sequence traditionally
786 associated with the Execute key.
787
788 cutchars: *string*
789 The characters used as delimiters for double-click word selection
790 (whitespace delimiting is added automatically if resource is given).
791
792 When the selection extension is in use (the default if compiled in,
793 see the rxvtperl(3) manpage), a suitable regex using these
794 characters will be created (if the resource exists, otherwise, no
795 regex will be created). In this mode, characters outside ISO-8859-1
796 can be used.
797
798 When the selection extension is not used, only ISO-8859-1 characters
799 can be used. If not specified, the built-in default is used:
800
801 BACKSLASH `"'&()*,;<=>?@[]{|}
802
803 preeditType: *style*
804 OverTheSpot, OffTheSpot, Root; option -pt.
805
806 inputMethod: *name*
807 *name* of inputMethod to use; option -im.
808
809 imLocale: *name*
810 The locale to use for opening the IM. You can use an "LC_CTYPE" of
811 e.g. "de_DE.UTF-8" for normal text processing but "ja_JP.EUC-JP" for
812 the input extension to be able to input japanese characters while
813 staying in another locale; option -imlocale.
814
815 imFont: *fontset*
816 Specify the font-set used for XIM styles "OverTheSpot" or
817 "OffTheSpot". It must be a standard X font set (XLFD patterns
818 separated by commas), i.e. it's not in the same format as the other
819 font lists used in rxvt. The default will be set-up to chose *any*
820 suitable found found, preferably one or two pixels differing in size
821 to the base font. option -imfont.
822
823 tripleclickwords: *boolean*
824 Change the meaning of triple-click selection with the left mouse
825 button. Instead of selecting a full line it will extend the
826 selection to the end of the logical line only; option -tcw.
827
828 insecure: *boolean*
829 Enables "insecure" mode. Rxvt-unicode offers some escape sequences
830 that echo arbitrary strings like the icon name or the locale. This
831 could be abused if somebody gets 8-bit-clean access to your display,
832 whether through a mail client displaying mail bodies unfiltered or
833 through write(1) or any other means. Therefore, these sequences are
834 disabled by default. (Note that many other terminals, including
835 xterm, have these sequences enabled by default, which doesn't make
836 it safer, though).
837
838 You can enable them by setting this boolean resource or specifying
839 -insecure as an option. At the moment, this enables display-answer,
840 locale, findfont, icon label and window title requests.
841
842 modifier: *modifier*
843 Set the key to be interpreted as the Meta key to: alt, meta, hyper,
844 super, mod1, mod2, mod3, mod4, mod5; option -mod.
845
846 answerbackString: *string*
847 Specify the reply rxvt-unicode sends to the shell when an ENQ
848 (control-E) character is passed through. It may contain escape
849 values as described in the entry on keysym following.
850
851 secondaryScreen: *boolean*
852 Turn on/off secondary screen (default enabled).
853
854 secondaryScroll: *boolean*
855 Turn on/off secondary screen scroll (default enabled). If the this
856 option is enabled, scrolls on the secondary screen will change the
857 scrollback buffer and switching to/from the secondary screen will
858 instead scroll the screen up.
859
860 hold: *boolean*
861 Turn on/off hold window after exit support. If enabled, rxvt will
862 not immediately destroy its window when the program executed within
863 it exits. Instead, it will wait till it is being killed or closed by
864 the user.
865
866 keysym.*sym*: *string*
867 Compile *frills*: Associate *string* with keysym *sym*. The
868 intervening resource name keysym. cannot be omitted.
869
870 The format of *sym* is "*(modifiers-)key*", where *modifiers* can be
871 any combination of ISOLevel3, AppKeypad, Control, NumLock, Shift,
872 Meta, Lock, Mod1, Mod2, Mod3, Mod4, Mod5, and the abbreviated I, K,
873 C, N, S, M, A, L, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
874
875 The NumLock, Meta and ISOLevel3 modifiers are usually aliased to
876 whatever modifier the NumLock key, Meta/Alt keys or ISO Level3
877 Shift/AltGr keys are being mapped. AppKeypad is a synthetic modifier
878 mapped to the current application keymap mode state.
879
880 The spellings of *key* can be obtained by using xev(1) command or
881 searching keysym macros from /usr/X11R6/include/X11/keysymdef.h and
882 omitting the prefix XK_. Alternatively you can specify *key* by its
883 hex keysym value (0x0000 - 0xFFFF). Note that the lookup of *sym*s
884 is not performed in an exact manner; however, the closest match is
885 assured.
886
887 *string* may contain escape values ("\a": bell, "\b": backspace,
888 "\e", "\E": escape, "\n": newline, "\r": carriage return, "\t": tab,
889 "\000": octal number) or verbatim control characters ("^?": delete,
890 "^@": null, "^A" ...) and may be enclosed with double quotes so that
891 it can start or end with whitespace. This feature is deprecated and
892 will be removed.
893
894 Please note that you need to double the "\" in resource files, as
895 Xlib itself does its own de-escaping (you can use "\033" instead of
896 "\e" (and so on), which will work with both Xt and rxvt's own
897 processing).
898
899 You can define a range of keysyms in one shot by providing a
900 *string* with pattern list/PREFIX/MIDDLE/SUFFIX, where the delimiter
901 `/' should be a character not used by the strings.
902
903 Its usage can be demonstrated by an example:
904
905 URxvt.keysym.M-C-0x61: list|\033<M-C-|abc|>
906
907 The above line is equivalent to the following three lines:
908
909 URxvt.keysym.Meta-Control-0x61: \033<M-C-a>
910 URxvt.keysym.Meta-Control-0x62: \033<M-C-b>
911 URxvt.keysym.Meta-Control-0x63: \033<M-C-c>
912
913 If *string* takes the form of "command:STRING", the specified STRING
914 is interpreted and executed as rxvt's control sequence. For example
915 the following means "change the current locale to "zh_CN.GBK" when
916 Control-Meta-c is being pressed":
917
918 URxvt.keysym.M-C-c: command:\033]701;zh_CN.GBK\007
919
920 If *string* takes the form "perl:STRING", then the specified STRING
921 is passed to the "on_keyboard_command" perl handler. See the
922 rxvtperl(3) manpage. For example, the selection extension (activated
923 via "rxvt -pe selection") listens for "selection:rot13" events:
924
925 URxvt.keysym.M-C-c: perl:selection:rot13
926
927 Due the the large number of modifier combinations, a defined key
928 mapping will match if at *at least* the specified identifiers are
929 being set, and no other key mappings with those and more bits are
930 being defined. That means that defining a key map for "a" will
931 automatically provide definitions for "Meta-a", "Shift-a" and so on,
932 unless some of those are defined mappings themselves.
933
934 Unfortunately, this will override built-in key mappings. For example
935 if you overwrite the "Insert" key you will disable rxvt's
936 "Shift-Insert" mapping. To re-enable that, you can poke "holes" into
937 the user-defined keymap using the "builtin:" replacement:
938
939 URxvt.keysym.Insert: <my insert key sequence>
940 URxvt.keysym.S-Insert: builtin:
941
942 The first line defines a mapping for "Insert" and *any* combination
943 of modifiers. The second line re-establishes the default mapping for
944 "Shift-Insert".
945
946 The following example will map Control-Meta-1 and Control-Meta-2 to
947 the fonts "suxuseuro" and "9x15bold", so you can have some limited
948 font-switching at runtime:
949
950 URxvt.keysym.M-C-1: command:\033]50;suxuseuro\007
951 URxvt.keysym.M-C-2: command:\033]50;9x15bold\007
952
953 Other things are possible, e.g. resizing (see rxvt(7) for more
954 info):
955
956 URxvt.keysym.M-C-3: command:\033[8;25;80t
957 URxvt.keysym.M-C-4: command:\033[8;48;110t
958
959 perl-ext-common: *string*
960 perl-ext: *string*
961 Comma-separated list(s) of perl extension scripts (default:
962 "default") to use in this terminal instance; option -pe.
963
964 Extension names can be prefixed with a "-" sign to prohibit using
965 them. This can be useful to selectively disable some extensions
966 loaded by default, or specified via the "perl-ext-common" resource.
967 For example, "default,-selection" will use all the default extension
968 except "selection".
969
970 Extension names can also be followed by an argument in angle
971 brackets (e.g. "searchable-scrollback<M-s>", which binds the hotkey
972 for searchable scrollback to Alt/Meta-s). Mentioning the same
973 extension multiple times with different arguments will pass multiple
974 arguments to the extension.
975
976 Each extension is looked up in the library directories, loaded if
977 necessary, and bound to the current terminal instance.
978
979 If both of these resources are the empty string, then the perl
980 interpreter will not be initialized. The idea behind two options is
981 that perl-ext-common will be used for extensions that should be
982 available to all instances, while perl-ext is used for specific
983 instances.
984
985 perl-eval: *string*
986 Perl code to be evaluated when all extensions have been registered.
987 See the rxvtperl(3) manpage. Due to security reasons, this resource
988 will be ignored when running setuid/setgid.
989
990 perl-lib: *path*
991 Colon-separated list of additional directories that hold extension
992 scripts. When looking for extensions specified by the "perl"
993 resource, rxvt will first look in these directories and then in
994 /opt/rxvt/lib/urxvt/perl/. Due to security reasons, this resource
995 will be ignored when running setuid/setgid.
996
997 See the rxvtperl(3) manpage.
998
999 selection.pattern-*idx*: *perl-regex*
1000 Additional selection patterns, see the rxvtperl(3) manpage for
1001 details.
1002
1003 selection-autotransform.*idx*: *perl-transform*
1004 Selection auto-transform patterns, see the rxvtperl(3) manpage for
1005 details.
1006
1007 searchable-scrollback: *keysym*
1008 Sets the hotkey that starts the incremental scrollback buffer search
1009 (default: "M-s").
1010
1011 urlLauncher: *string*
1012 Specifies the program to be started with a URL argument. Used by the
1013 "selection-popup" and "matcher" perl extensions.
1014
1015 transient-for: *windowid*
1016 Compile *frills*: Sets the WM_TRANSIENT_FOR property to the given
1017 window id.
1018
1019 override-redirect: *boolean*
1020 Compile *frills*: Sets override-redirect for the terminal window,
1021 making it almost invisible to window managers; option
1022 -override-redirect.
1023
1024 THE SCROLLBAR
1025 Lines of text that scroll off the top of the rxvt window (resource:
1026 saveLines) and can be scrolled back using the scrollbar or by
1027 keystrokes. The normal rxvt scrollbar has arrows and its behaviour is
1028 fairly intuitive. The xterm-scrollbar is without arrows and its
1029 behaviour mimics that of *xterm*
1030
1031 Scroll down with Button1 (xterm-scrollbar) or Shift-Next. Scroll up with
1032 Button3 (xterm-scrollbar) or Shift-Prior. Continuous scroll with
1033 Button2.
1034
1035 MOUSE REPORTING
1036 To temporarily override mouse reporting, for either the scrollbar or the
1037 normal text selection/insertion, hold either the Shift or the Meta (Alt)
1038 key while performing the desired mouse action.
1039
1040 If mouse reporting mode is active, the normal scrollbar actions are
1041 disabled -- on the assumption that we are using a fullscreen
1042 application. Instead, pressing Button1 and Button3 sends ESC [ 6 ~
1043 (Next) and ESC [ 5 ~ (Prior), respectively. Similarly, clicking on the
1044 up and down arrows sends ESC [ A (Up) and ESC [ B (Down), respectively.
1045
1046 TEXT SELECTION AND INSERTION
1047 The behaviour of text selection and insertion mechanism is similar to
1048 *xterm*(1).
1049
1050 Selection:
1051 Left click at the beginning of the region, drag to the end of the
1052 region and release; Right click to extend the marked region; Left
1053 double-click to select a word; Left triple-click to select the
1054 entire logical line (which can span multiple screen lines), unless
1055 modified by resource tripleclickwords.
1056
1057 Starting a selection while pressing the Meta key (or Meta+Ctrl keys)
1058 (Compile: *frills*) will create a rectangular selection instead of a
1059 normal one. In this mode, every selected row becomes its own line in
1060 the selection, and trailing whitespace is visually underlined and
1061 removed from the selection.
1062
1063 Insertion:
1064 Pressing and releasing the Middle mouse button in an rxvt window
1065 causes the value of the PRIMARY selection (or CLIPBOARD with the
1066 Meta modifier) to be inserted as if it had been typed on the
1067 keyboard.
1068
1069 Pressing Shift-Insert causes the value of the PRIMARY selection to
1070 be inserted too.
1071
1072 CHANGING FONTS
1073 Changing fonts (or font sizes, respectively) via the keypad is not yet
1074 supported in rxvt-unicode. Bug me if you need this.
1075
1076 You can, however, switch fonts at runtime using escape sequences, e.g.:
1077
1078 printf '\e]710;%s\007' "9x15bold,xft:Kochi Gothic"
1079
1080 You can use keyboard shortcuts, too:
1081
1082 URxvt.keysym.M-C-1: command:\033]710;suxuseuro\007\033]711;suxuseuro\007
1083 URxvt.keysym.M-C-2: command:\033]710;9x15bold\007\033]711;9x15bold\007
1084
1085 rxvt-unicode will automatically re-apply these fonts to the output so
1086 far.
1087
1088 ISO 14755 SUPPORT
1089 ISO 14755 is a standard for entering and viewing unicode characters and
1090 character codes using the keyboard. It consists of 4 parts. The first
1091 part is available rxvt-unicode has been compiled with "--enable-frills",
1092 the rest is available when rxvt-unicode was compiled with
1093 "--enable-iso14755".
1094
1095 * 5.1: Basic method
1096 This allows you to enter unicode characters using their hexcode.
1097
1098 Start by pressing and holding both "Control" and "Shift", then enter
1099 hex-digits (between one and six). Releasing "Control" and "Shift"
1100 will commit the character as if it were typed directly. While
1101 holding down "Control" and "Shift" you can also enter multiple
1102 characters by pressing "Space", which will commit the current
1103 character and lets you start a new one.
1104
1105 As an example of use, imagine a business card with a japanese e-mail
1106 address, which you cannot type. Fortunately, the card has the e-mail
1107 address printed as hexcodes, e.g. "671d 65e5". You can enter this
1108 easily by pressing "Control" and "Shift", followed by
1109 "6-7-1-D-SPACE-6-5-E-5", followed by releasing the modifier keys.
1110
1111 * 5.2: Keyboard symbols entry method
1112 This mode lets you input characters representing the keycap symbols
1113 of your keyboard, if representable in the current locale encoding.
1114
1115 Start by pressing "Control" and "Shift" together, then releasing
1116 them. The next special key (cursor keys, home etc.) you enter will
1117 not invoke its usual function but instead will insert the
1118 corresponding keycap symbol. The symbol will only be entered when
1119 the key has been released, otherwise pressing e.g. "Shift" would
1120 enter the symbol for "ISO Level 2 Switch", although your intention
1121 might have been to enter a reverse tab (Shift-Tab).
1122
1123 * 5.3: Screen-selection entry method
1124 While this is implemented already (it's basically the selection
1125 mechanism), it could be extended by displaying a unicode character
1126 map.
1127
1128 * 5.4: Feedback method for identifying displayed characters for later
1129 input
1130 This method lets you display the unicode character code associated
1131 with characters already displayed.
1132
1133 You enter this mode by holding down "Control" and "Shift" together,
1134 then pressing and holding the left mouse button and moving around.
1135 The unicode hex code(s) (it might be a combining character) of the
1136 character under the pointer is displayed until you release "Control"
1137 and "Shift".
1138
1139 In addition to the hex codes it will display the font used to draw
1140 this character - due to implementation reasons, characters combined
1141 with combining characters, line drawing characters and unknown
1142 characters will always be drawn using the built-in support font.
1143
1144 With respect to conformance, rxvt-unicode is supposed to be compliant to
1145 both scenario A and B of ISO 14755, including part 5.2.
1146
1147 LOGIN STAMP
1148 rxvt tries to write an entry into the *utmp*(5) file so that it can be
1149 seen via the *who(1)* command, and can accept messages. To allow this
1150 feature, rxvt may need to be installed setuid root on some systems or
1151 setgid to root or to some other group on others.
1152
1153 COLORS AND GRAPHICS
1154 In addition to the default foreground and background colours, rxvt can
1155 display up to 16 colours (8 ANSI colours plus high-intensity bold/blink
1156 versions of the same). Here is a list of the colours with their names.
1157
1158 color0 (black) = Black
1159 color1 (red) = Red3
1160 color2 (green) = Green3
1161 color3 (yellow) = Yellow3
1162 color4 (blue) = Blue3
1163 color5 (magenta) = Magenta3
1164 color6 (cyan) = Cyan3
1165 color7 (white) = AntiqueWhite
1166 color8 (bright black) = Grey25
1167 color9 (bright red) = Red
1168 color10 (bright green) = Green
1169 color11 (bright yellow) = Yellow
1170 color12 (bright blue) = Blue
1171 color13 (bright magenta) = Magenta
1172 color14 (bright cyan) = Cyan
1173 color15 (bright white) = White
1174 foreground = Black
1175 background = White
1176
1177 It is also possible to specify the colour values of foreground,
1178 background, cursorColor, cursorColor2, colorBD, colorUL as a number
1179 0-15, as a convenient shorthand to reference the colour name of
1180 color0-color15.
1181
1182 In addition to the colours defined above, rxvt offers an additional 72
1183 colours. The first 64 of those (with indices 16 to 79) consist of a
1184 4*4*4 RGB colour cube (i.e. *index = r * 16 + g * 4 + b + 16*), followed
1185 by 8 additional shades of gray (with indices 80 to 87).
1186
1187 Together, all those colours implement the 88 colour xterm colours. Only
1188 the first 16 can be changed using resources currently, the rest can only
1189 be changed via command sequences ("escape codes").
1190
1191 Note that -rv ("reverseVideo: True") simulates reverse video by always
1192 swapping the foreground/background colours. This is in contrast to
1193 *xterm*(1) where the colours are only swapped if they have not otherwise
1194 been specified. For example,
1195
1196 rxvt -fg Black -bg White -rv
1197 would yield White on Black, while on *xterm*(1) it would yield Black
1198 on White.
1199
1200 ALPHA CHANNEL SUPPORT
1201 If Xft support has been compiled in and as long as Xft/Xrender/X don't
1202 get their act together, rxvt-unicode will support
1203 "rgba:rrrr/gggg/bbbb/aaaa" (recommended, but MUST have 4
1204 digits/component) colour specifications, in addition to the ones
1205 provided by X, where the additional A component specifies opacity
1206 (alpha) values. The minimum value of 0 is completely transparent). You
1207 can also prefix any color with "[percent]", where "percent" is a decimal
1208 percentage (0-100) that specifies the opacity of the color, where 0 is
1209 completely transparent and 100 is completelxy opaque.
1210
1211 You probably need to specify "-depth 32", too, and have the luck that
1212 your X-server uses ARGB pixel layout, as X is far from just supporting
1213 ARGB visuals out of the box, and rxvt-unicode just fudges around.
1214
1215 For example, the following selects an almost completely transparent red
1216 background, and an almost opaque pink foreground:
1217
1218 rxvt -depth 32 -bg rgba:0000/0000/0000/aaaa -fg "[80]pink"
1219
1220 *Please note that transparency of any kind if completely unsupported by
1221 the author. Don't bug him with installation questions!*
1222
1223 ENVIRONMENT
1224 rxvt sets and/or uses the following environment variables:
1225
1226 TERM
1227 Normally set to "rxvt-unicode", unless overwritten at configure
1228 time, via resources or on the command line.
1229
1230 COLORTERM
1231 Either "rxvt", "rxvt-xpm", depending on whether rxvt was compiled
1232 with XPM support, and optionally with the added extension "-mono" to
1233 indicate that rxvt-unicode runs on a monochrome screen.
1234
1235 COLORFGBG
1236 Set to a string of the form "fg;bg" or "fg;xpm;bg", where "fg" is
1237 the colour code used as default foreground/text colour (or the
1238 string "default" to indicate that the default-colour escape sequence
1239 is to be used), "bg" is the colour code used as default background
1240 colour (or the string "default"), and "xpm" is the string "default"
1241 if rxvt was compiled with XPM support. Libraries like "ncurses" and
1242 "slang" can (and do) use this information to optimize screen output.
1243
1244 WINDOWID
1245 Set to the (decimal) X Window ID of the rxvt window (the toplevel
1246 window, which usually has subwindows for the scrollbar, the terminal
1247 window and so on).
1248
1249 TERMINFO
1250 Set to the terminfo directory iff rxvt was configured with
1251 "--with-terminfo=PATH".
1252
1253 DISPLAY
1254 Used by rxvt to connect to the display and set to the correct
1255 display in its child processes.
1256
1257 SHELL
1258 The shell to be used for command execution, defaults to "/bin/sh".
1259
1260 RXVT_SOCKET
1261 The unix domain socket path used by rxvtc(1) and rxvtd(1).
1262
1263 Default $HOME/.rxvt-unicode-*<nodename*.
1264
1265 HOME
1266 Used to locate the default directory for the unix domain socket for
1267 daemon communications and to locate various resource files (such as
1268 ".Xdefaults")
1269
1270 XAPPLRESDIR
1271 Directory where various X resource files are being located.
1272
1273 XENVIRONMENT
1274 If set and accessible, gives the name of a X resource file to be
1275 loaded by rxvt.
1276
1277 FILES
1278 /usr/lib/X11/rgb.txt
1279 Color names.
1280
1281 SEE ALSO
1282 rxvt(7), rxvtc(1), rxvtd(1), xterm(1), sh(1), resize(1), X(1), pty(4),
1283 tty(4), utmp(5)
1284
1285 CURRENT PROJECT COORDINATOR
1286 Project Coordinator
1287 Marc A. Lehmann <rxvt-unicode@schmorp.de>
1288
1289 <http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/rxvt-unicode.html>
1290
1291 AUTHORS
1292 John Bovey
1293 University of Kent, 1992, wrote the original Xvt.
1294
1295 Rob Nation <nation@rocket.sanders.lockheed.com>
1296 very heavily modified Xvt and came up with Rxvt
1297
1298 Angelo Haritsis <ah@doc.ic.ac.uk>
1299 wrote the Greek Keyboard Input (no longer in code)
1300
1301 mj olesen <olesen@me.QueensU.CA>
1302 Wrote the menu system.
1303
1304 Project Coordinator (changes.txt 2.11 to 2.21)
1305
1306 Oezguer Kesim <kesim@math.fu-berlin.de>
1307 Project Coordinator (changes.txt 2.21a to 2.4.5)
1308
1309 Geoff Wing <gcw@pobox.com>
1310 Rewrote screen display and text selection routines.
1311
1312 Project Coordinator (changes.txt 2.4.6 - rxvt-unicode)
1313
1314 Marc Alexander Lehmann <rxvt-unicode@schmorp.de>
1315 Forked rxvt-unicode, unicode support, rewrote almost all the code,
1316 perl extension, random hacks, numerous bugfixes and extensions.
1317
1318 Project Coordinator (Changes 1.0 -)
1319
1320 Emanuele Giaquinta <e.giaquinta@glauco.it>
1321 Pty/tty/utmp/wtmp rewrite, lots of random hacking and bugfixing.
1322