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# Content
1 NAME
2 RXVT REFERENCE - FAQ, command sequences and other background information
3
4 SYNOPSIS
5 # set a new font set
6 printf '\33]50;%s\007' 9x15,xft:Kochi" Mincho"
7
8 # change the locale and tell rxvt-unicode about it
9 export LC_CTYPE=ja_JP.EUC-JP; printf "\33]701;$LC_CTYPE\007"
10
11 # set window title
12 printf '\33]2;%s\007' "new window title"
13
14 DESCRIPTION
15 This document contains the FAQ, the RXVT TECHNICAL REFERENCE documenting
16 all escape sequences, and other background information.
17
18 The newest version of this document is also available on the World Wide
19 Web at
20 <http://cvs.schmorp.de/browse/*checkout*/rxvt-unicode/doc/rxvt.7.html>.
21
22 RXVT-UNICODE/URXVT FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
23 Meta, Features & Commandline Issues
24 My question isn't answered here, can I ask a human?
25 Before sending me mail, you could go to IRC: "irc.freenode.net", channel
26 "#rxvt-unicode" has some rxvt-unicode enthusiasts that might be
27 interested in learning about new and exciting problems (but not FAQs :).
28
29 Does it support tabs, can I have a tabbed rxvt-unicode?
30 Beginning with version 7.3, there is a perl extension that implements a
31 simple tabbed terminal. It is installed by default, so any of these
32 should give you tabs:
33
34 urxvt -pe tabbed
35
36 URxvt.perl-ext-common: default,tabbed
37
38 It will also work fine with tabbing functionality of many window
39 managers or similar tabbing programs, and its embedding-features allow
40 it to be embedded into other programs, as witnessed by doc/rxvt-tabbed
41 or the upcoming "Gtk2::URxvt" perl module, which features a tabbed urxvt
42 (murxvt) terminal as an example embedding application.
43
44 How do I know which rxvt-unicode version I'm using?
45 The version number is displayed with the usage (-h). Also the escape
46 sequence "ESC [ 8 n" sets the window title to the version number. When
47 using the urxvtc client, the version displayed is that of the daemon.
48
49 Rxvt-unicode uses gobs of memory, how can I reduce that?
50 Rxvt-unicode tries to obey the rule of not charging you for something
51 you don't use. One thing you should try is to configure out all settings
52 that you don't need, for example, Xft support is a resource hog by
53 design, when used. Compiling it out ensures that no Xft font will be
54 loaded accidentally when rxvt-unicode tries to find a font for your
55 characters.
56
57 Also, many people (me included) like large windows and even larger
58 scrollback buffers: Without "--enable-unicode3", rxvt-unicode will use 6
59 bytes per screen cell. For a 160x?? window this amounts to almost a
60 kilobyte per line. A scrollback buffer of 10000 lines will then (if
61 full) use 10 Megabytes of memory. With "--enable-unicode3" it gets
62 worse, as rxvt-unicode then uses 8 bytes per screen cell.
63
64 How can I start urxvtd in a race-free way?
65 Try "urxvtd -f -o", which tells urxvtd to open the display, create the
66 listening socket and then fork.
67
68 How do I distinguish wether I'm running rxvt-unicode or a regular xterm? I need this to decide about setting colors etc.
69 The original rxvt and rxvt-unicode always export the variable
70 "COLORTERM", so you can check and see if that is set. Note that several
71 programs, JED, slrn, Midnight Commander automatically check this
72 variable to decide whether or not to use color.
73
74 How do I set the correct, full IP address for the DISPLAY variable?
75 If you've compiled rxvt-unicode with DISPLAY_IS_IP and have enabled
76 insecure mode then it is possible to use the following shell script
77 snippets to correctly set the display. If your version of rxvt-unicode
78 wasn't also compiled with ESCZ_ANSWER (as assumed in these snippets)
79 then the COLORTERM variable can be used to distinguish rxvt-unicode from
80 a regular xterm.
81
82 Courtesy of Chuck Blake <cblake@BBN.COM> with the following shell script
83 snippets:
84
85 # Bourne/Korn/POSIX family of shells:
86 [ ${TERM:-foo} = foo ] && TERM=xterm # assume an xterm if we don't know
87 if [ ${TERM:-foo} = xterm ]; then
88 stty -icanon -echo min 0 time 15 # see if enhanced rxvt or not
89 echo -n '^[Z'
90 read term_id
91 stty icanon echo
92 if [ ""${term_id} = '^[[?1;2C' -a ${DISPLAY:-foo} = foo ]; then
93 echo -n '^[[7n' # query the rxvt we are in for the DISPLAY string
94 read DISPLAY # set it in our local shell
95 fi
96 fi
97
98 How do I compile the manual pages on my own?
99 You need to have a recent version of perl installed as /usr/bin/perl,
100 one that comes with pod2man, pod2text and pod2html. Then go to the doc
101 subdirectory and enter "make alldoc".
102
103 Isn't rxvt-unicode supposed to be small? Don't all those features bloat?
104 I often get asked about this, and I think, no, they didn't cause extra
105 bloat. If you compare a minimal rxvt and a minimal urxvt, you can see
106 that the urxvt binary is larger (due to some encoding tables always
107 being compiled in), but it actually uses less memory (RSS) after
108 startup. Even with "--disable-everything", this comparison is a bit
109 unfair, as many features unique to urxvt (locale, encoding conversion,
110 iso14755 etc.) are already in use in this mode.
111
112 text data bss drs rss filename
113 98398 1664 24 15695 1824 rxvt --disable-everything
114 188985 9048 66616 18222 1788 urxvt --disable-everything
115
116 When you "--enable-everything" (which *is* unfair, as this involves xft
117 and full locale/XIM support which are quite bloaty inside libX11 and my
118 libc), the two diverge, but not unreasnobaly so.
119
120 text data bss drs rss filename
121 163431 2152 24 20123 2060 rxvt --enable-everything
122 1035683 49680 66648 29096 3680 urxvt --enable-everything
123
124 The very large size of the text section is explained by the east-asian
125 encoding tables, which, if unused, take up disk space but nothing else
126 and can be compiled out unless you rely on X11 core fonts that use those
127 encodings. The BSS size comes from the 64k emergency buffer that my c++
128 compiler allocates (but of course doesn't use unless you are out of
129 memory). Also, using an xft font instead of a core font immediately adds
130 a few megabytes of RSS. Xft indeed is responsible for a lot of RSS even
131 when not used.
132
133 Of course, due to every character using two or four bytes instead of
134 one, a large scrollback buffer will ultimately make rxvt-unicode use
135 more memory.
136
137 Compared to e.g. Eterm (5112k), aterm (3132k) and xterm (4680k), this
138 still fares rather well. And compared to some monsters like
139 gnome-terminal (21152k + extra 4204k in separate processes) or konsole
140 (22200k + extra 43180k in daemons that stay around after exit, plus half
141 a minute of startup time, including the hundreds of warnings it spits
142 out), it fares extremely well *g*.
143
144 Why C++, isn't that unportable/bloated/uncool?
145 Is this a question? :) It comes up very often. The simple answer is: I
146 had to write it, and C++ allowed me to write and maintain it in a
147 fraction of the time and effort (which is a scarce resource for me). Put
148 even shorter: It simply wouldn't exist without C++.
149
150 My personal stance on this is that C++ is less portable than C, but in
151 the case of rxvt-unicode this hardly matters, as its portability limits
152 are defined by things like X11, pseudo terminals, locale support and
153 unix domain sockets, which are all less portable than C++ itself.
154
155 Regarding the bloat, see the above question: It's easy to write programs
156 in C that use gobs of memory, an certainly possible to write programs in
157 C++ that don't. C++ also often comes with large libraries, but this is
158 not necessarily the case with GCC. Here is what rxvt links against on my
159 system with a minimal config:
160
161 libX11.so.6 => /usr/X11R6/lib/libX11.so.6 (0x00002aaaaabc3000)
162 libc.so.6 => /lib/libc.so.6 (0x00002aaaaadde000)
163 libdl.so.2 => /lib/libdl.so.2 (0x00002aaaab01d000)
164 /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (0x00002aaaaaaab000)
165
166 And here is rxvt-unicode:
167
168 libX11.so.6 => /usr/X11R6/lib/libX11.so.6 (0x00002aaaaabc3000)
169 libgcc_s.so.1 => /lib/libgcc_s.so.1 (0x00002aaaaada2000)
170 libc.so.6 => /lib/libc.so.6 (0x00002aaaaaeb0000)
171 libdl.so.2 => /lib/libdl.so.2 (0x00002aaaab0ee000)
172 /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (0x00002aaaaaaab000)
173
174 No large bloated libraries (of course, none were linked in statically),
175 except maybe libX11 :)
176
177 Rendering, Font & Look and Feel Issues
178 I can't get transparency working, what am I doing wrong?
179 First of all, transparency isn't officially supported in rxvt-unicode,
180 so you are mostly on your own. Do not bug the author about it (but you
181 may bug everybody else). Also, if you can't get it working consider it a
182 rite of passage: ... and you failed.
183
184 Here are four ways to get transparency. Do read the manpage and option
185 descriptions for the programs mentioned and rxvt-unicode. Really, do it!
186
187 1. Use inheritPixmap:
188
189 Esetroot wallpaper.jpg
190 urxvt -ip -tint red -sh 40
191
192 That works. If you think it doesn't, you lack transparency and tinting
193 support, or you are unable to read.
194
195 2. Use a simple pixmap and emulate pseudo-transparency. This enables you
196 to use effects other than tinting and shading: Just shade/tint/whatever
197 your picture with gimp or any other tool:
198
199 convert wallpaper.jpg -blur 20x20 -modulate 30 background.xpm
200 urxvt -pixmap background.xpm -pe automove-background
201
202 That works. If you think it doesn't, you lack XPM and Perl support, or
203 you are unable to read.
204
205 3. Use an ARGB visual:
206
207 urxvt -depth 32 -fg grey90 -bg rgba:0000/0000/4444/cccc
208
209 This requires XFT support, and the support of your X-server. If that
210 doesn't work for you, blame Xorg and Keith Packard. ARGB visuals aren't
211 there yet, no matter what they claim. Rxvt-Unicode contains the
212 neccessary bugfixes and workarounds for Xft and Xlib to make it work,
213 but that doesn't mean that your WM has the required kludges in place.
214
215 4. Use xcompmgr and let it do the job:
216
217 xprop -frame -f _NET_WM_WINDOW_OPACITY 32c \
218 -set _NET_WM_WINDOW_OPACITY 0xc0000000
219
220 Then click on a window you want to make transparent. Replace 0xc0000000
221 by other values to change the degree of opacity. If it doesn't work and
222 your server crashes, you got to keep the pieces.
223
224 Why do some chinese characters look so different than others?
225 This is because there is a difference between script and language --
226 rxvt-unicode does not know which language the text that is output is, as
227 it only knows the unicode character codes. If rxvt-unicode first sees a
228 japanese/chinese character, it might choose a japanese font for display.
229 Subsequent japanese characters will use that font. Now, many chinese
230 characters aren't represented in japanese fonts, so when the first
231 non-japanese character comes up, rxvt-unicode will look for a chinese
232 font -- unfortunately at this point, it will still use the japanese font
233 for chinese characters that are also in the japanese font.
234
235 The workaround is easy: just tag a chinese font at the end of your font
236 list (see the previous question). The key is to view the font list as a
237 preference list: If you expect more japanese, list a japanese font
238 first. If you expect more chinese, put a chinese font first.
239
240 In the future it might be possible to switch language preferences at
241 runtime (the internal data structure has no problem with using different
242 fonts for the same character at the same time, but no interface for this
243 has been designed yet).
244
245 Until then, you might get away with switching fonts at runtime (see "Can
246 I switch the fonts at runtime?" later in this document).
247
248 Why does rxvt-unicode sometimes leave pixel droppings?
249 Most fonts were not designed for terminal use, which means that
250 character size varies a lot. A font that is otherwise fine for terminal
251 use might contain some characters that are simply too wide. Rxvt-unicode
252 will avoid these characters. For characters that are just "a bit" too
253 wide a special "careful" rendering mode is used that redraws adjacent
254 characters.
255
256 All of this requires that fonts do not lie about character sizes,
257 however: Xft fonts often draw glyphs larger than their acclaimed
258 bounding box, and rxvt-unicode has no way of detecting this (the correct
259 way is to ask for the character bounding box, which unfortunately is
260 wrong in these cases).
261
262 It's not clear (to me at least), wether this is a bug in Xft, freetype,
263 or the respective font. If you encounter this problem you might try
264 using the "-lsp" option to give the font more height. If that doesn't
265 work, you might be forced to use a different font.
266
267 All of this is not a problem when using X11 core fonts, as their
268 bounding box data is correct.
269
270 How can I keep rxvt-unicode from using reverse video so much?
271 First of all, make sure you are running with the right terminal settings
272 ("TERM=rxvt-unicode"), which will get rid of most of these effects. Then
273 make sure you have specified colours for italic and bold, as otherwise
274 rxvt-unicode might use reverse video to simulate the effect:
275
276 URxvt.colorBD: white
277 URxvt.colorIT: green
278
279 Some programs assume totally weird colours (red instead of blue), how can I fix that?
280 For some unexplainable reason, some rare programs assume a very weird
281 colour palette when confronted with a terminal with more than the
282 standard 8 colours (rxvt-unicode supports 88). The right fix is, of
283 course, to fix these programs not to assume non-ISO colours without very
284 good reasons.
285
286 In the meantime, you can either edit your "rxvt-unicode" terminfo
287 definition to only claim 8 colour support or use "TERM=rxvt", which will
288 fix colours but keep you from using other rxvt-unicode features.
289
290 Can I switch the fonts at runtime?
291 Yes, using an escape sequence. Try something like this, which has the
292 same effect as using the "-fn" switch, and takes effect immediately:
293
294 printf '\e]50;%s\007' "9x15bold,xft:Kochi Gothic"
295
296 This is useful if you e.g. work primarily with japanese (and prefer a
297 japanese font), but you have to switch to chinese temporarily, where
298 japanese fonts would only be in your way.
299
300 You can think of this as a kind of manual ISO-2022 switching.
301
302 Why do italic characters look as if clipped?
303 Many fonts have difficulties with italic characters and hinting. For
304 example, the otherwise very nicely hinted font "xft:Bitstream Vera Sans
305 Mono" completely fails in it's italic face. A workaround might be to
306 enable freetype autohinting, i.e. like this:
307
308 URxvt.italicFont: xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono:italic:autohint=true
309 URxvt.boldItalicFont: xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono:bold:italic:autohint=true
310
311 Can I speed up Xft rendering somehow?
312 Yes, the most obvious way to speed it up is to avoid Xft entirely, as it
313 is simply slow. If you still want Xft fonts you might try to disable
314 antialiasing (by appending ":antialias=false"), which saves lots of
315 memory and also speeds up rendering considerably.
316
317 Rxvt-unicode doesn't seem to anti-alias its fonts, what is wrong?
318 Rxvt-unicode will use whatever you specify as a font. If it needs to
319 fall back to it's default font search list it will prefer X11 core
320 fonts, because they are small and fast, and then use Xft fonts. It has
321 antialiasing disabled for most of them, because the author thinks they
322 look best that way.
323
324 If you want antialiasing, you have to specify the fonts manually.
325
326 What's with this bold/blink stuff?
327 If no bold colour is set via "colorBD:", bold will invert text using the
328 standard foreground colour.
329
330 For the standard background colour, blinking will actually make the text
331 blink when compiled with "--enable-blinking". with standard colours.
332 Without "--enable-blinking", the blink attribute will be ignored.
333
334 On ANSI colours, bold/blink attributes are used to set high-intensity
335 foreground/background colors.
336
337 color0-7 are the low-intensity colors.
338
339 color8-15 are the corresponding high-intensity colors.
340
341 I don't like the screen colors. How do I change them?
342 You can change the screen colors at run-time using ~/.Xdefaults
343 resources (or as long-options).
344
345 Here are values that are supposed to resemble a VGA screen, including
346 the murky brown that passes for low-intensity yellow:
347
348 URxvt.color0: #000000
349 URxvt.color1: #A80000
350 URxvt.color2: #00A800
351 URxvt.color3: #A8A800
352 URxvt.color4: #0000A8
353 URxvt.color5: #A800A8
354 URxvt.color6: #00A8A8
355 URxvt.color7: #A8A8A8
356
357 URxvt.color8: #000054
358 URxvt.color9: #FF0054
359 URxvt.color10: #00FF54
360 URxvt.color11: #FFFF54
361 URxvt.color12: #0000FF
362 URxvt.color13: #FF00FF
363 URxvt.color14: #00FFFF
364 URxvt.color15: #FFFFFF
365
366 And here is a more complete set of non-standard colors.
367
368 URxvt.cursorColor: #dc74d1
369 URxvt.pointerColor: #dc74d1
370 URxvt.background: #0e0e0e
371 URxvt.foreground: #4ad5e1
372 URxvt.color0: #000000
373 URxvt.color8: #8b8f93
374 URxvt.color1: #dc74d1
375 URxvt.color9: #dc74d1
376 URxvt.color2: #0eb8c7
377 URxvt.color10: #0eb8c7
378 URxvt.color3: #dfe37e
379 URxvt.color11: #dfe37e
380 URxvt.color5: #9e88f0
381 URxvt.color13: #9e88f0
382 URxvt.color6: #73f7ff
383 URxvt.color14: #73f7ff
384 URxvt.color7: #e1dddd
385 URxvt.color15: #e1dddd
386
387 (They were described (not by me) as "pretty girly").
388
389 Why do some characters look so much different than others?
390 See next entry.
391
392 How does rxvt-unicode choose fonts?
393 Most fonts do not contain the full range of Unicode, which is fine.
394 Chances are that the font you (or the admin/package maintainer of your
395 system/os) have specified does not cover all the characters you want to
396 display.
397
398 rxvt-unicode makes a best-effort try at finding a replacement font.
399 Often the result is fine, but sometimes the chosen font looks
400 bad/ugly/wrong. Some fonts have totally strange characters that don't
401 resemble the correct glyph at all, and rxvt-unicode lacks the artificial
402 intelligence to detect that a specific glyph is wrong: it has to believe
403 the font that the characters it claims to contain indeed look correct.
404
405 In that case, select a font of your taste and add it to the font list,
406 e.g.:
407
408 urxvt -fn basefont,font2,font3...
409
410 When rxvt-unicode sees a character, it will first look at the base font.
411 If the base font does not contain the character, it will go to the next
412 font, and so on. Specifying your own fonts will also speed up this
413 search and use less resources within rxvt-unicode and the X-server.
414
415 The only limitation is that none of the fonts may be larger than the
416 base font, as the base font defines the terminal character cell size,
417 which must be the same due to the way terminals work.
418
419 Keyboard, Mouse & User Interaction
420 The new selection selects pieces that are too big, how can I select single words?
421 If you want to select e.g. alphanumeric words, you can use the following
422 setting:
423
424 URxvt.selection.pattern-0: ([[:word:]]+)
425
426 If you click more than twice, the selection will be extended more and
427 more.
428
429 To get a selection that is very similar to the old code, try this
430 pattern:
431
432 URxvt.selection.pattern-0: ([^"&'()*,;<=>?@[\\\\]^`{|})]+)
433
434 Please also note that the *LeftClick Shift-LeftClik* combination also
435 selects words like the old code.
436
437 I don't like the new selection/popups/hotkeys/perl, how do I change/disable it?
438 You can disable the perl extension completely by setting the
439 perl-ext-common resource to the empty string, which also keeps
440 rxvt-unicode from initialising perl, saving memory.
441
442 If you only want to disable specific features, you first have to
443 identify which perl extension is responsible. For this, read the section
444 PREPACKAGED EXTENSIONS in the urxvtperl(3) manpage. For example, to
445 disable the selection-popup and option-popup, specify this
446 perl-ext-common resource:
447
448 URxvt.perl-ext-common: default,-selection-popup,-option-popup
449
450 This will keep the default extensions, but disable the two popup
451 extensions. Some extensions can also be configured, for example,
452 scrollback search mode is triggered by M-s. You can move it to any other
453 combination either by setting the searchable-scrollback resource:
454
455 URxvt.searchable-scrollback: CM-s
456
457 The cursor moves when selecting text in the current input line, how do I switch this off?
458 See next entry.
459
460 During rlogin/ssh/telnet/etc. sessions, clicking near the cursor outputs strange escape sequences, how do I fix this?
461 These are caused by the "readline" perl extension. Under normal
462 circumstances, it will move your cursor around when you click into the
463 line that contains it. It tries hard not to do this at the wrong moment,
464 but when running a program that doesn't parse cursor movements or in
465 some cases during rlogin sessions, it fails to detect this properly.
466
467 You can permamently switch this feature off by disabling the "readline"
468 extension:
469
470 URxvt.perl-ext-common: default,-readline
471
472 My numerical keypad acts weird and generates differing output?
473 Some Debian GNUL/Linux users seem to have this problem, although no
474 specific details were reported so far. It is possible that this is
475 caused by the wrong "TERM" setting, although the details of wether and
476 how this can happen are unknown, as "TERM=rxvt" should offer a
477 compatible keymap. See the answer to the previous question, and please
478 report if that helped.
479
480 My Compose (Multi_key) key is no longer working.
481 The most common causes for this are that either your locale is not set
482 correctly, or you specified a preeditStyle that is not supported by your
483 input method. For example, if you specified OverTheSpot and your input
484 method (e.g. the default input method handling Compose keys) does not
485 support this (for instance because it is not visual), then rxvt-unicode
486 will continue without an input method.
487
488 In this case either do not specify a preeditStyle or specify more than
489 one pre-edit style, such as OverTheSpot,Root,None.
490
491 I cannot type "Ctrl-Shift-2" to get an ASCII NUL character due to ISO 14755
492 Either try "Ctrl-2" alone (it often is mapped to ASCII NUL even on
493 international keyboards) or simply use ISO 14755 support to your
494 advantage, typing <Ctrl-Shift-0> to get a ASCII NUL. This works for
495 other codes, too, such as "Ctrl-Shift-1-d" to type the default telnet
496 escape character and so on.
497
498 Mouse cut/paste suddenly no longer works.
499 Make sure that mouse reporting is actually turned off since killing some
500 editors prematurely may leave the mouse in mouse report mode. I've heard
501 that tcsh may use mouse reporting unless it otherwise specified. A quick
502 check is to see if cut/paste works when the Alt or Shift keys are
503 depressed.
504
505 What's with the strange Backspace/Delete key behaviour?
506 Assuming that the physical Backspace key corresponds to the BackSpace
507 keysym (not likely for Linux ... see the following question) there are
508 two standard values that can be used for Backspace: "^H" and "^?".
509
510 Historically, either value is correct, but rxvt-unicode adopts the
511 debian policy of using "^?" when unsure, because it's the one only only
512 correct choice :).
513
514 Rxvt-unicode tries to inherit the current stty settings and uses the
515 value of `erase' to guess the value for backspace. If rxvt-unicode
516 wasn't started from a terminal (say, from a menu or by remote shell),
517 then the system value of `erase', which corresponds to CERASE in
518 <termios.h>, will be used (which may not be the same as your stty
519 setting).
520
521 For starting a new rxvt-unicode:
522
523 # use Backspace = ^H
524 $ stty erase ^H
525 $ urxvt
526
527 # use Backspace = ^?
528 $ stty erase ^?
529 $ urxvt
530
531 Toggle with "ESC [ 36 h" / "ESC [ 36 l".
532
533 For an existing rxvt-unicode:
534
535 # use Backspace = ^H
536 $ stty erase ^H
537 $ echo -n "^[[36h"
538
539 # use Backspace = ^?
540 $ stty erase ^?
541 $ echo -n "^[[36l"
542
543 This helps satisfy some of the Backspace discrepancies that occur, but
544 if you use Backspace = "^H", make sure that the termcap/terminfo value
545 properly reflects that.
546
547 The Delete key is a another casualty of the ill-defined Backspace
548 problem. To avoid confusion between the Backspace and Delete keys, the
549 Delete key has been assigned an escape sequence to match the vt100 for
550 Execute ("ESC [ 3 ~") and is in the supplied termcap/terminfo.
551
552 Some other Backspace problems:
553
554 some editors use termcap/terminfo, some editors (vim I'm told) expect
555 Backspace = ^H, GNU Emacs (and Emacs-like editors) use ^H for help.
556
557 Perhaps someday this will all be resolved in a consistent manner.
558
559 I don't like the key-bindings. How do I change them?
560 There are some compile-time selections available via configure. Unless
561 you have run "configure" with the "--disable-resources" option you can
562 use the `keysym' resource to alter the keystrings associated with
563 keysyms.
564
565 Here's an example for a URxvt session started using "urxvt -name URxvt"
566
567 URxvt.keysym.Home: \033[1~
568 URxvt.keysym.End: \033[4~
569 URxvt.keysym.C-apostrophe: \033<C-'>
570 URxvt.keysym.C-slash: \033<C-/>
571 URxvt.keysym.C-semicolon: \033<C-;>
572 URxvt.keysym.C-grave: \033<C-`>
573 URxvt.keysym.C-comma: \033<C-,>
574 URxvt.keysym.C-period: \033<C-.>
575 URxvt.keysym.C-0x60: \033<C-`>
576 URxvt.keysym.C-Tab: \033<C-Tab>
577 URxvt.keysym.C-Return: \033<C-Return>
578 URxvt.keysym.S-Return: \033<S-Return>
579 URxvt.keysym.S-space: \033<S-Space>
580 URxvt.keysym.M-Up: \033<M-Up>
581 URxvt.keysym.M-Down: \033<M-Down>
582 URxvt.keysym.M-Left: \033<M-Left>
583 URxvt.keysym.M-Right: \033<M-Right>
584 URxvt.keysym.M-C-0: list \033<M-C- 0123456789 >
585 URxvt.keysym.M-C-a: list \033<M-C- abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz >
586 URxvt.keysym.F12: command:\033]701;zh_CN.GBK\007
587
588 See some more examples in the documentation for the keysym resource.
589
590 I'm using keyboard model XXX that has extra Prior/Next/Insert keys. How do I make use of them? For example, the Sun Keyboard type 4 has the following map
591 KP_Insert == Insert
592 F22 == Print
593 F27 == Home
594 F29 == Prior
595 F33 == End
596 F35 == Next
597
598 Rather than have rxvt-unicode try to accommodate all the various
599 possible keyboard mappings, it is better to use `xmodmap' to remap the
600 keys as required for your particular machine.
601
602 Terminal Configuration
603 Why doesn't rxvt-unicode read my resources?
604 Well, why, indeed? It does, in a way very similar to other X
605 applications. Most importantly, this means that if you or your OS loads
606 resources into the X display (the right way to do it), rxvt-unicode will
607 ignore any resource files in your home directory. It will only read
608 $HOME/.Xdefaults when no resources are attached to the display.
609
610 If you have or use an $HOME/.Xresources file, chances are that resources
611 are loaded into your X-server. In this case, you have to re-login after
612 every change (or run xrdb -merge $HOME/.Xresources).
613
614 Also consider the form resources have to use:
615
616 URxvt.resource: value
617
618 If you want to use another form (there are lots of different ways of
619 specifying resources), make sure you understand wether and why it works.
620 If unsure, use the form above.
621
622 When I log-in to another system it tells me about missing terminfo data?
623 The terminal description used by rxvt-unicode is not as widely available
624 as that for xterm, or even rxvt (for which the same problem often
625 arises).
626
627 The correct solution for this problem is to install the terminfo, this
628 can be done like this (with ncurses' infocmp):
629
630 REMOTE=remotesystem.domain
631 infocmp rxvt-unicode | ssh $REMOTE "cat >/tmp/ti && tic /tmp/ti"
632
633 ... or by installing rxvt-unicode normally on the remote system,
634
635 If you cannot or do not want to do this, then you can simply set
636 "TERM=rxvt" or even "TERM=xterm", and live with the small number of
637 problems arising, which includes wrong keymapping, less and different
638 colours and some refresh errors in fullscreen applications. It's a nice
639 quick-and-dirty workaround for rare cases, though.
640
641 If you always want to do this (and are fine with the consequences) you
642 can either recompile rxvt-unicode with the desired TERM value or use a
643 resource to set it:
644
645 URxvt.termName: rxvt
646
647 If you don't plan to use rxvt (quite common...) you could also replace
648 the rxvt terminfo file with the rxvt-unicode one and use "TERM=rxvt".
649
650 "tic" outputs some error when compiling the terminfo entry.
651 Most likely it's the empty definition for "enacs=". Just replace it by
652 "enacs=\E[0@" and try again.
653
654 "bash"'s readline does not work correctly under urxvt.
655 See next entry.
656
657 I need a termcap file entry.
658 One reason you might want this is that some distributions or operating
659 systems still compile some programs using the long-obsoleted termcap
660 library (Fedora Core's bash is one example) and rely on a termcap entry
661 for "rxvt-unicode".
662
663 You could use rxvt's termcap entry with resonable results in many cases.
664 You can also create a termcap entry by using terminfo's infocmp program
665 like this:
666
667 infocmp -C rxvt-unicode
668
669 Or you could use this termcap entry, generated by the command above:
670
671 rxvt-unicode|rxvt-unicode terminal (X Window System):\
672 :am:bw:eo:km:mi:ms:xn:xo:\
673 :co#80:it#8:li#24:lm#0:\
674 :AL=\E[%dL:DC=\E[%dP:DL=\E[%dM:DO=\E[%dB:IC=\E[%d@:\
675 :K1=\EOw:K2=\EOu:K3=\EOy:K4=\EOq:K5=\EOs:LE=\E[%dD:\
676 :RI=\E[%dC:SF=\E[%dS:SR=\E[%dT:UP=\E[%dA:ae=\E(B:al=\E[L:\
677 :as=\E(0:bl=^G:cd=\E[J:ce=\E[K:cl=\E[H\E[2J:\
678 :cm=\E[%i%d;%dH:cr=^M:cs=\E[%i%d;%dr:ct=\E[3g:dc=\E[P:\
679 :dl=\E[M:do=^J:ec=\E[%dX:ei=\E[4l:ho=\E[H:\
680 :i1=\E[?47l\E=\E[?1l:ic=\E[@:im=\E[4h:\
681 :is=\E[r\E[m\E[2J\E[H\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l:\
682 :k1=\E[11~:k2=\E[12~:k3=\E[13~:k4=\E[14~:k5=\E[15~:\
683 :k6=\E[17~:k7=\E[18~:k8=\E[19~:k9=\E[20~:kD=\E[3~:\
684 :kI=\E[2~:kN=\E[6~:kP=\E[5~:kb=\177:kd=\EOB:ke=\E[?1l\E>:\
685 :kh=\E[7~:kl=\EOD:kr=\EOC:ks=\E[?1h\E=:ku=\EOA:le=^H:\
686 :mb=\E[5m:md=\E[1m:me=\E[m\017:mr=\E[7m:nd=\E[C:rc=\E8:\
687 :sc=\E7:se=\E[27m:sf=^J:so=\E[7m:sr=\EM:st=\EH:ta=^I:\
688 :te=\E[r\E[?1049l:ti=\E[?1049h:ue=\E[24m:up=\E[A:\
689 :us=\E[4m:vb=\E[?5h\E[?5l:ve=\E[?25h:vi=\E[?25l:\
690 :vs=\E[?25h:
691
692 Why does "ls" no longer have coloured output?
693 The "ls" in the GNU coreutils unfortunately doesn't use terminfo to
694 decide wether a terminal has colour, but uses it's own configuration
695 file. Needless to say, "rxvt-unicode" is not in it's default file (among
696 with most other terminals supporting colour). Either add:
697
698 TERM rxvt-unicode
699
700 to "/etc/DIR_COLORS" or simply add:
701
702 alias ls='ls --color=auto'
703
704 to your ".profile" or ".bashrc".
705
706 Why doesn't vim/emacs etc. use the 88 colour mode?
707 See next entry.
708
709 Why doesn't vim/emacs etc. make use of italic?
710 See next entry.
711
712 Why are the secondary screen-related options not working properly?
713 Make sure you are using "TERM=rxvt-unicode". Some pre-packaged
714 distributions (most notably Debian GNU/Linux) break rxvt-unicode by
715 setting "TERM" to "rxvt", which doesn't have these extra features.
716 Unfortunately, some of these (most notably, again, Debian GNU/Linux)
717 furthermore fail to even install the "rxvt-unicode" terminfo file, so
718 you will need to install it on your own (See the question When I log-in
719 to another system it tells me about missing terminfo data? on how to do
720 this).
721
722 Encoding / Locale / Input Method Issues
723 Rxvt-unicode does not seem to understand the selected encoding?
724 See next entry.
725
726 Unicode does not seem to work?
727 If you encounter strange problems like typing an accented character but
728 getting two unrelated other characters or similar, or if program output
729 is subtly garbled, then you should check your locale settings.
730
731 Rxvt-unicode must be started with the same "LC_CTYPE" setting as the
732 programs. Often rxvt-unicode is started in the "C" locale, while the
733 login script running within the rxvt-unicode window changes the locale
734 to something else, e.g. "en_GB.UTF-8". Needless to say, this is not
735 going to work.
736
737 The best thing is to fix your startup environment, as you will likely
738 run into other problems. If nothing works you can try this in your
739 .profile.
740
741 printf '\e]701;%s\007' "$LC_CTYPE"
742
743 If this doesn't work, then maybe you use a "LC_CTYPE" specification not
744 supported on your systems. Some systems have a "locale" command which
745 displays this (also, "perl -e0" can be used to check locale settings, as
746 it will complain loudly if it cannot set the locale). If it displays
747 something like:
748
749 locale: Cannot set LC_CTYPE to default locale: ...
750
751 Then the locale you specified is not supported on your system.
752
753 If nothing works and you are sure that everything is set correctly then
754 you will need to remember a little known fact: Some programs just don't
755 support locales :(
756
757 How does rxvt-unicode determine the encoding to use?
758 See next entry.
759
760 Is there an option to switch encodings?
761 Unlike some other terminals, rxvt-unicode has no encoding switch, and no
762 specific "utf-8" mode, such as xterm. In fact, it doesn't even know
763 about UTF-8 or any other encodings with respect to terminal I/O.
764
765 The reasons is that there exists a perfectly fine mechanism for
766 selecting the encoding, doing I/O and (most important) communicating
767 this to all applications so everybody agrees on character properties
768 such as width and code number. This mechanism is the *locale*.
769 Applications not using that info will have problems (for example,
770 "xterm" gets the width of characters wrong as it uses it's own,
771 locale-independent table under all locales).
772
773 Rxvt-unicode uses the "LC_CTYPE" locale category to select encoding. All
774 programs doing the same (that is, most) will automatically agree in the
775 interpretation of characters.
776
777 Unfortunately, there is no system-independent way to select locales, nor
778 is there a standard on how locale specifiers will look like.
779
780 On most systems, the content of the "LC_CTYPE" environment variable
781 contains an arbitrary string which corresponds to an already-installed
782 locale. Common names for locales are "en_US.UTF-8", "de_DE.ISO-8859-15",
783 "ja_JP.EUC-JP", i.e. "language_country.encoding", but other forms (i.e.
784 "de" or "german") are also common.
785
786 Rxvt-unicode ignores all other locale categories, and except for the
787 encoding, ignores country or language-specific settings, i.e.
788 "de_DE.UTF-8" and "ja_JP.UTF-8" are the normally same to rxvt-unicode.
789
790 If you want to use a specific encoding you have to make sure you start
791 rxvt-unicode with the correct "LC_CTYPE" category.
792
793 Can I switch locales at runtime?
794 Yes, using an escape sequence. Try something like this, which sets
795 rxvt-unicode's idea of "LC_CTYPE".
796
797 printf '\e]701;%s\007' ja_JP.SJIS
798
799 See also the previous answer.
800
801 Sometimes this capability is rather handy when you want to work in one
802 locale (e.g. "de_DE.UTF-8") but some programs don't support it (e.g.
803 UTF-8). For example, I use this script to start "xjdic", which first
804 switches to a locale supported by xjdic and back later:
805
806 printf '\e]701;%s\007' ja_JP.SJIS
807 xjdic -js
808 printf '\e]701;%s\007' de_DE.UTF-8
809
810 You can also use xterm's "luit" program, which usually works fine,
811 except for some locales where character width differs between program-
812 and rxvt-unicode-locales.
813
814 My input method wants <some encoding> but I want UTF-8, what can I do?
815 You can specify separate locales for the input method and the rest of
816 the terminal, using the resource "imlocale":
817
818 URxvt.imlocale: ja_JP.EUC-JP
819
820 Now you can start your terminal with "LC_CTYPE=ja_JP.UTF-8" and still
821 use your input method. Please note, however, that you will not be able
822 to input characters outside "EUC-JP" in a normal way then, as your input
823 method limits you.
824
825 Rxvt-unicode crashes when the X Input Method changes or exits.
826 Unfortunately, this is unavoidable, as the XIM protocol is racy by
827 design. Applications can avoid some crashes at the expense of memory
828 leaks, and Input Methods can avoid some crashes by careful ordering at
829 exit time. kinput2 (and derived input methods) generally succeeds, while
830 SCIM (or similar input methods) fails. In the end, however, crashes
831 cannot be completely avoided even if both sides cooperate.
832
833 So the only workaround is not to kill your Input Method Servers.
834
835 Operating Systems / Package Maintaining
836 I am using Debian GNU/Linux and have a problem...
837 The Debian GNU/Linux package of rxvt-unicode in sarge contains large
838 patches that considerably change the behaviour of rxvt-unicode (but
839 unfortunately this notice has been removed). Before reporting a bug to
840 the original rxvt-unicode author please download and install the genuine
841 version (<http://software.schmorp.de#rxvt-unicode>) and try to reproduce
842 the problem. If you cannot, chances are that the problems are specific
843 to Debian GNU/Linux, in which case it should be reported via the Debian
844 Bug Tracking System (use "reportbug" to report the bug).
845
846 For other problems that also affect the Debian package, you can and
847 probably should use the Debian BTS, too, because, after all, it's also a
848 bug in the Debian version and it serves as a reminder for other users
849 that might encounter the same issue.
850
851 I am maintaining rxvt-unicode for distribution/OS XXX, any recommendation?
852 You should build one binary with the default options. configure now
853 enables most useful options, and the trend goes to making them
854 runtime-switchable, too, so there is usually no drawback to enbaling
855 them, except higher disk and possibly memory usage. The perl interpreter
856 should be enabled, as important functionality (menus, selection, likely
857 more in the future) depends on it.
858
859 You should not overwrite the "perl-ext-common" snd "perl-ext" resources
860 system-wide (except maybe with "defaults"). This will result in useful
861 behaviour. If your distribution aims at low memory, add an empty
862 "perl-ext-common" resource to the app-defaults file. This will keep the
863 perl interpreter disabled until the user enables it.
864
865 If you can/want build more binaries, I recommend building a minimal one
866 with "--disable-everything" (very useful) and a maximal one with
867 "--enable-everything" (less useful, it will be very big due to a lot of
868 encodings built-in that increase download times and are rarely used).
869
870 I need to make it setuid/setgid to support utmp/ptys on my OS, is this safe?
871 It should be, starting with release 7.1. You are encouraged to properly
872 install urxvt with privileges necessary for your OS now.
873
874 When rxvt-unicode detects that it runs setuid or setgid, it will fork
875 into a helper process for privileged operations (pty handling on some
876 systems, utmp/wtmp/lastlog handling on others) and drop privileges
877 immediately. This is much safer than most other terminals that keep
878 privileges while running (but is more relevant to urxvt, as it contains
879 things as perl interpreters, which might be "helpful" to attackers).
880
881 This forking is done as the very first within main(), which is very
882 early and reduces possible bugs to initialisation code run before
883 main(), or things like the dynamic loader of your system, which should
884 result in very little risk.
885
886 On Solaris 9, many line-drawing characters are too wide.
887 Seems to be a known bug, read
888 <http://nixdoc.net/files/forum/about34198.html>. Some people use the
889 following ugly workaround to get non-double-wide-characters working:
890
891 #define wcwidth(x) wcwidth(x) > 1 ? 1 : wcwidth(x)
892
893 I am on FreeBSD and rxvt-unicode does not seem to work at all.
894 Rxvt-unicode requires the symbol "__STDC_ISO_10646__" to be defined in
895 your compile environment, or an implementation that implements it,
896 wether it defines the symbol or not. "__STDC_ISO_10646__" requires that
897 wchar_t is represented as unicode.
898
899 As you might have guessed, FreeBSD does neither define this symobl nor
900 does it support it. Instead, it uses it's own internal representation of
901 wchar_t. This is, of course, completely fine with respect to standards.
902
903 However, that means rxvt-unicode only works in "POSIX", "ISO-8859-1" and
904 "UTF-8" locales under FreeBSD (which all use Unicode as wchar_t.
905
906 "__STDC_ISO_10646__" is the only sane way to support multi-language apps
907 in an OS, as using a locale-dependent (and non-standardized)
908 representation of wchar_t makes it impossible to convert between wchar_t
909 (as used by X11 and your applications) and any other encoding without
910 implementing OS-specific-wrappers for each and every locale. There
911 simply are no APIs to convert wchar_t into anything except the current
912 locale encoding.
913
914 Some applications (such as the formidable mlterm) work around this by
915 carrying their own replacement functions for character set handling with
916 them, and either implementing OS-dependent hacks or doing multiple
917 conversions (which is slow and unreliable in case the OS implements
918 encodings slightly different than the terminal emulator).
919
920 The rxvt-unicode author insists that the right way to fix this is in the
921 system libraries once and for all, instead of forcing every app to carry
922 complete replacements for them :)
923
924 I use Solaris 9 and it doesn't compile/work/etc.
925 Try the diff in doc/solaris9.patch as a base. It fixes the worst
926 problems with "wcwidth" and a compile problem.
927
928 How can I use rxvt-unicode under cygwin?
929 rxvt-unicode should compile and run out of the box on cygwin, using the
930 X11 libraries that come with cygwin. libW11 emulation is no longer
931 supported (and makes no sense, either, as it only supported a single
932 font). I recommend starting the X-server in "-multiwindow" or
933 "-rootless" mode instead, which will result in similar look&feel as the
934 old libW11 emulation.
935
936 At the time of this writing, cygwin didn't seem to support any
937 multi-byte encodings (you might try "LC_CTYPE=C-UTF-8"), so you are
938 likely limited to 8-bit encodings.
939
940 RXVT-UNICODE TECHNICAL REFERENCE
941 DESCRIPTION
942 The rest of this document describes various technical aspects of
943 rxvt-unicode. First the description of supported command sequences,
944 followed by pixmap support and last by a description of all features
945 selectable at "configure" time.
946
947 Definitions
948 "c" The literal character c.
949
950 "C" A single (required) character.
951
952 "Ps"
953 A single (usually optional) numeric parameter, composed of one or
954 more digits.
955
956 "Pm"
957 A multiple numeric parameter composed of any number of single
958 numeric parameters, separated by ";" character(s).
959
960 "Pt"
961 A text parameter composed of printable characters.
962
963 Values
964 "ENQ"
965 Enquiry (Ctrl-E) = Send Device Attributes (DA) request attributes
966 from terminal. See "ESC [ Ps c".
967
968 "BEL"
969 Bell (Ctrl-G)
970
971 "BS"
972 Backspace (Ctrl-H)
973
974 "TAB"
975 Horizontal Tab (HT) (Ctrl-I)
976
977 "LF"
978 Line Feed or New Line (NL) (Ctrl-J)
979
980 "VT"
981 Vertical Tab (Ctrl-K) same as "LF"
982
983 "FF"
984 Form Feed or New Page (NP) (Ctrl-L) same as "LF"
985
986 "CR"
987 Carriage Return (Ctrl-M)
988
989 "SO"
990 Shift Out (Ctrl-N), invokes the G1 character set. Switch to
991 Alternate Character Set
992
993 "SI"
994 Shift In (Ctrl-O), invokes the G0 character set (the default).
995 Switch to Standard Character Set
996
997 "SPC"
998 Space Character
999
1000 Escape Sequences
1001 "ESC # 8"
1002 DEC Screen Alignment Test (DECALN)
1003
1004 "ESC 7"
1005 Save Cursor (SC)
1006
1007 "ESC 8"
1008 Restore Cursor
1009
1010 "ESC ="
1011 Application Keypad (SMKX). See also next sequence.
1012
1013 "ESC"
1014 Normal Keypad (RMKX)
1015
1016 Note: If the numeric keypad is activated, eg, Num_Lock has been
1017 pressed, numbers or control functions are generated by the numeric
1018 keypad (see Key Codes).
1019
1020 "ESC D"
1021 Index (IND)
1022
1023 "ESC E"
1024 Next Line (NEL)
1025
1026 "ESC H"
1027 Tab Set (HTS)
1028
1029 "ESC M"
1030 Reverse Index (RI)
1031
1032 "ESC N"
1033 Single Shift Select of G2 Character Set (SS2): affects next
1034 character only *unimplemented*
1035
1036 "ESC O"
1037 Single Shift Select of G3 Character Set (SS3): affects next
1038 character only *unimplemented*
1039
1040 "ESC Z"
1041 Obsolete form of returns: "ESC [ ? 1 ; 2 C" *rxvt-unicode
1042 compile-time option*
1043
1044 "ESC c"
1045 Full reset (RIS)
1046
1047 "ESC n"
1048 Invoke the G2 Character Set (LS2)
1049
1050 "ESC o"
1051 Invoke the G3 Character Set (LS3)
1052
1053 "ESC ( C"
1054 Designate G0 Character Set (ISO 2022), see below for values of "C".
1055
1056 "ESC ) C"
1057 Designate G1 Character Set (ISO 2022), see below for values of "C".
1058
1059 "ESC * C"
1060 Designate G2 Character Set (ISO 2022), see below for values of "C".
1061
1062 "ESC + C"
1063 Designate G3 Character Set (ISO 2022), see below for values of "C".
1064
1065 "ESC $ C"
1066 Designate Kanji Character Set
1067
1068 Where "C" is one of:
1069
1070 C = 0 DEC Special Character and Line Drawing Set
1071 C = A United Kingdom (UK)
1072 C = B United States (USASCII)
1073 C = < Multinational character set unimplemented
1074 C = 5 Finnish character set unimplemented
1075 C = C Finnish character set unimplemented
1076 C = K German character set unimplemented
1077
1078
1079
1080 CSI (Command Sequence Introducer) Sequences
1081 "ESC [ Ps @"
1082 Insert "Ps" (Blank) Character(s) [default: 1] (ICH)
1083
1084 "ESC [ Ps A"
1085 Cursor Up "Ps" Times [default: 1] (CUU)
1086
1087 "ESC [ Ps B"
1088 Cursor Down "Ps" Times [default: 1] (CUD)
1089
1090 "ESC [ Ps C"
1091 Cursor Forward "Ps" Times [default: 1] (CUF)
1092
1093 "ESC [ Ps D"
1094 Cursor Backward "Ps" Times [default: 1] (CUB)
1095
1096 "ESC [ Ps E"
1097 Cursor Down "Ps" Times [default: 1] and to first column
1098
1099 "ESC [ Ps F"
1100 Cursor Up "Ps" Times [default: 1] and to first column
1101
1102 "ESC [ Ps G"
1103 Cursor to Column "Ps" (HPA)
1104
1105 "ESC [ Ps;Ps H"
1106 Cursor Position [row;column] [default: 1;1] (CUP)
1107
1108 "ESC [ Ps I"
1109 Move forward "Ps" tab stops [default: 1]
1110
1111 "ESC [ Ps J"
1112 Erase in Display (ED)
1113
1114 Ps = 0 Clear Below (default)
1115 Ps = 1 Clear Above
1116 Ps = 2 Clear All
1117
1118 "ESC [ Ps K"
1119 Erase in Line (EL)
1120
1121 Ps = 0 Clear to Right (default)
1122 Ps = 1 Clear to Left
1123 Ps = 2 Clear All
1124
1125 "ESC [ Ps L"
1126 Insert "Ps" Line(s) [default: 1] (IL)
1127
1128 "ESC [ Ps M"
1129 Delete "Ps" Line(s) [default: 1] (DL)
1130
1131 "ESC [ Ps P"
1132 Delete "Ps" Character(s) [default: 1] (DCH)
1133
1134 "ESC [ Ps;Ps;Ps;Ps;Ps T"
1135 Initiate . *unimplemented* Parameters are
1136 [func;startx;starty;firstrow;lastrow].
1137
1138 "ESC [ Ps W"
1139 Tabulator functions
1140
1141 Ps = 0 Tab Set (HTS)
1142 Ps = 2 Tab Clear (TBC), Clear Current Column (default)
1143 Ps = 5 Tab Clear (TBC), Clear All
1144
1145 "ESC [ Ps X"
1146 Erase "Ps" Character(s) [default: 1] (ECH)
1147
1148 "ESC [ Ps Z"
1149 Move backward "Ps" [default: 1] tab stops
1150
1151 "ESC [ Ps '"
1152 See "ESC [ Ps G"
1153
1154 "ESC [ Ps a"
1155 See "ESC [ Ps C"
1156
1157 "ESC [ Ps c"
1158 Send Device Attributes (DA) "Ps = 0" (or omitted): request
1159 attributes from terminal returns: "ESC [ ? 1 ; 2 c" (``I am a VT100
1160 with Advanced Video Option'')
1161
1162 "ESC [ Ps d"
1163 Cursor to Line "Ps" (VPA)
1164
1165 "ESC [ Ps e"
1166 See "ESC [ Ps A"
1167
1168 "ESC [ Ps;Ps f"
1169 Horizontal and Vertical Position [row;column] (HVP) [default: 1;1]
1170
1171 "ESC [ Ps g"
1172 Tab Clear (TBC)
1173
1174 Ps = 0 Clear Current Column (default)
1175 Ps = 3 Clear All (TBC)
1176
1177 "ESC [ Pm h"
1178 Set Mode (SM). See "ESC [ Pm l" sequence for description of "Pm".
1179
1180 "ESC [ Ps i"
1181 Printing. See also the "print-pipe" resource.
1182
1183 Ps = 0 print screen (MC0)
1184 Ps = 4 disable transparent print mode (MC4)
1185 Ps = 5 enable transparent print mode (MC5)
1186
1187 "ESC [ Pm l"
1188 Reset Mode (RM)
1189
1190 "Ps = 4"
1191 h Insert Mode (SMIR)
1192 l Replace Mode (RMIR)
1193
1194 "Ps = 20" (partially implemented)
1195 h Automatic Newline (LNM)
1196 l Normal Linefeed (LNM)
1197
1198 "ESC [ Pm m"
1199 Character Attributes (SGR)
1200
1201 Ps = 0 Normal (default)
1202 Ps = 1 / 21 On / Off Bold (bright fg)
1203 Ps = 3 / 23 On / Off Italic
1204 Ps = 4 / 24 On / Off Underline
1205 Ps = 5 / 25 On / Off Slow Blink (bright bg)
1206 Ps = 6 / 26 On / Off Rapid Blink (bright bg)
1207 Ps = 7 / 27 On / Off Inverse
1208 Ps = 8 / 27 On / Off Invisible (NYI)
1209 Ps = 30 / 40 fg/bg Black
1210 Ps = 31 / 41 fg/bg Red
1211 Ps = 32 / 42 fg/bg Green
1212 Ps = 33 / 43 fg/bg Yellow
1213 Ps = 34 / 44 fg/bg Blue
1214 Ps = 35 / 45 fg/bg Magenta
1215 Ps = 36 / 46 fg/bg Cyan
1216 Ps = 38;5 / 48;5 set fg/bg to color #m (ISO 8613-6)
1217 Ps = 37 / 47 fg/bg White
1218 Ps = 39 / 49 fg/bg Default
1219 Ps = 90 / 100 fg/bg Bright Black
1220 Ps = 91 / 101 fg/bg Bright Red
1221 Ps = 92 / 102 fg/bg Bright Green
1222 Ps = 93 / 103 fg/bg Bright Yellow
1223 Ps = 94 / 104 fg/bg Bright Blue
1224 Ps = 95 / 105 fg/bg Bright Magenta
1225 Ps = 96 / 106 fg/bg Bright Cyan
1226 Ps = 97 / 107 fg/bg Bright White
1227 Ps = 99 / 109 fg/bg Bright Default
1228
1229 "ESC [ Ps n"
1230 Device Status Report (DSR)
1231
1232 Ps = 5 Status Report ESC [ 0 n (``OK'')
1233 Ps = 6 Report Cursor Position (CPR) [row;column] as ESC [ r ; c R
1234 Ps = 7 Request Display Name
1235 Ps = 8 Request Version Number (place in window title)
1236
1237 "ESC [ Ps;Ps r"
1238 Set Scrolling Region [top;bottom] [default: full size of window]
1239 (CSR)
1240
1241 "ESC [ s"
1242 Save Cursor (SC)
1243
1244 "ESC [ Ps;Pt t"
1245 Window Operations
1246
1247 Ps = 1 Deiconify (map) window
1248 Ps = 2 Iconify window
1249 Ps = 3 ESC [ 3 ; X ; Y t Move window to (X|Y)
1250 Ps = 4 ESC [ 4 ; H ; W t Resize to WxH pixels
1251 Ps = 5 Raise window
1252 Ps = 6 Lower window
1253 Ps = 7 Refresh screen once
1254 Ps = 8 ESC [ 8 ; R ; C t Resize to R rows and C columns
1255 Ps = 11 Report window state (responds with Ps = 1 or Ps = 2)
1256 Ps = 13 Report window position (responds with Ps = 3)
1257 Ps = 14 Report window pixel size (responds with Ps = 4)
1258 Ps = 18 Report window text size (responds with Ps = 7)
1259 Ps = 19 Currently the same as Ps = 18, but responds with Ps = 9
1260 Ps = 20 Reports icon label (ESC ] L NAME \234)
1261 Ps = 21 Reports window title (ESC ] l NAME \234)
1262 Ps = 24.. Set window height to Ps rows
1263
1264 "ESC [ u"
1265 Restore Cursor
1266
1267 "ESC [ Ps x"
1268 Request Terminal Parameters (DECREQTPARM)
1269
1270
1271
1272 DEC Private Modes
1273 "ESC [ ? Pm h"
1274 DEC Private Mode Set (DECSET)
1275
1276 "ESC [ ? Pm l"
1277 DEC Private Mode Reset (DECRST)
1278
1279 "ESC [ ? Pm r"
1280 Restore previously saved DEC Private Mode Values.
1281
1282 "ESC [ ? Pm s"
1283 Save DEC Private Mode Values.
1284
1285 "ESC [ ? Pm t"
1286 Toggle DEC Private Mode Values (rxvt extension). *where*
1287
1288 "Ps = 1" (DECCKM)
1289 h Application Cursor Keys
1290 l Normal Cursor Keys
1291
1292 "Ps = 2" (ANSI/VT52 mode)
1293 h Enter VT52 mode
1294 l Enter VT52 mode
1295
1296 "Ps = 3"
1297 h 132 Column Mode (DECCOLM)
1298 l 80 Column Mode (DECCOLM)
1299
1300 "Ps = 4"
1301 h Smooth (Slow) Scroll (DECSCLM)
1302 l Jump (Fast) Scroll (DECSCLM)
1303
1304 "Ps = 5"
1305 h Reverse Video (DECSCNM)
1306 l Normal Video (DECSCNM)
1307
1308 "Ps = 6"
1309 h Origin Mode (DECOM)
1310 l Normal Cursor Mode (DECOM)
1311
1312 "Ps = 7"
1313 h Wraparound Mode (DECAWM)
1314 l No Wraparound Mode (DECAWM)
1315
1316 "Ps = 8" *unimplemented*
1317 h Auto-repeat Keys (DECARM)
1318 l No Auto-repeat Keys (DECARM)
1319
1320 "Ps = 9" X10 XTerm
1321 h Send Mouse X & Y on button press.
1322 l No mouse reporting.
1323
1324 "Ps = 25"
1325 h Visible cursor {cnorm/cvvis}
1326 l Invisible cursor {civis}
1327
1328 "Ps = 30"
1329 h scrollBar visisble
1330 l scrollBar invisisble
1331
1332 "Ps = 35" (rxvt)
1333 h Allow XTerm Shift+key sequences
1334 l Disallow XTerm Shift+key sequences
1335
1336 "Ps = 38" *unimplemented*
1337 Enter Tektronix Mode (DECTEK)
1338
1339 "Ps = 40"
1340 h Allow 80/132 Mode
1341 l Disallow 80/132 Mode
1342
1343 "Ps = 44" *unimplemented*
1344 h Turn On Margin Bell
1345 l Turn Off Margin Bell
1346
1347 "Ps = 45" *unimplemented*
1348 h Reverse-wraparound Mode
1349 l No Reverse-wraparound Mode
1350
1351 "Ps = 46" *unimplemented*
1352 "Ps = 47"
1353 h Use Alternate Screen Buffer
1354 l Use Normal Screen Buffer
1355
1356
1357
1358 "Ps = 66"
1359 h Application Keypad (DECPAM) == ESC =
1360 l Normal Keypad (DECPNM) == ESC >
1361
1362 "Ps = 67"
1363 h Backspace key sends BS (DECBKM)
1364 l Backspace key sends DEL
1365
1366 "Ps = 1000" (X11 XTerm)
1367 h Send Mouse X & Y on button press and release.
1368 l No mouse reporting.
1369
1370 "Ps = 1001" (X11 XTerm) *unimplemented*
1371 h Use Hilite Mouse Tracking.
1372 l No mouse reporting.
1373
1374 "Ps = 1010" (rxvt)
1375 h Don't scroll to bottom on TTY output
1376 l Scroll to bottom on TTY output
1377
1378 "Ps = 1011" (rxvt)
1379 h Scroll to bottom when a key is pressed
1380 l Don't scroll to bottom when a key is pressed
1381
1382 "Ps = 1021" (rxvt)
1383 h Bold/italic implies high intensity (see option -is)
1384 l Font styles have no effect on intensity (Compile styles)
1385
1386 "Ps = 1047"
1387 h Use Alternate Screen Buffer
1388 l Use Normal Screen Buffer - clear Alternate Screen Buffer if returning from it
1389
1390 "Ps = 1048"
1391 h Save cursor position
1392 l Restore cursor position
1393
1394 "Ps = 1049"
1395 h Use Alternate Screen Buffer - clear Alternate Screen Buffer if switching to it
1396 l Use Normal Screen Buffer
1397
1398
1399
1400 XTerm Operating System Commands
1401 "ESC ] Ps;Pt ST"
1402 Set XTerm Parameters. 8-bit ST: 0x9c, 7-bit ST sequence: ESC \
1403 (0x1b, 0x5c), backwards compatible terminator BEL (0x07) is also
1404 accepted. any octet can be escaped by prefixing it with SYN (0x16,
1405 ^V).
1406
1407 Ps = 0 Change Icon Name and Window Title to Pt
1408 Ps = 1 Change Icon Name to Pt
1409 Ps = 2 Change Window Title to Pt
1410 Ps = 3 If Pt starts with a ?, query the (STRING) property of the window and return it. If Pt contains a =, set the named property to the given value, else delete the specified property.
1411 Ps = 4 Pt is a semi-colon separated sequence of one or more semi-colon separated number/name pairs, where number is an index to a colour and name is the name of a colour. Each pair causes the numbered colour to be changed to name. Numbers 0-7 corresponds to low-intensity (normal) colours and 8-15 corresponds to high-intensity colours. 0=black, 1=red, 2=green, 3=yellow, 4=blue, 5=magenta, 6=cyan, 7=white
1412 Ps = 10 Change colour of text foreground to Pt (NB: may change in future)
1413 Ps = 11 Change colour of text background to Pt (NB: may change in future)
1414 Ps = 12 Change colour of text cursor foreground to Pt
1415 Ps = 13 Change colour of mouse foreground to Pt
1416 Ps = 17 Change colour of highlight characters to Pt
1417 Ps = 18 Change colour of bold characters to Pt [deprecated, see 706]
1418 Ps = 19 Change colour of underlined characters to Pt [deprecated, see 707]
1419 Ps = 20 Change background pixmap parameters (see section XPM) (Compile XPM).
1420 Ps = 39 Change default foreground colour to Pt.
1421 Ps = 46 Change Log File to Pt unimplemented
1422 Ps = 49 Change default background colour to Pt.
1423 Ps = 50 Set fontset to Pt, with the following special values of Pt (rxvt) #+n change up n #-n change down n if n is missing of 0, a value of 1 is used empty change to font0 n change to font n
1424 Ps = 55 Log all scrollback buffer and all of screen to Pt
1425 Ps = 701 Change current locale to Pt, or, if Pt is ?, return the current locale (Compile frills).
1426 Ps = 702 Request version if Pt is ?, returning rxvt-unicode, the resource name, the major and minor version numbers, e.g. ESC ] 702 ; rxvt-unicode ; urxvt ; 7 ; 4 ST.
1427 Ps = 704 Change colour of italic characters to Pt
1428 Ps = 705 Change background pixmap tint colour to Pt (Compile transparency).
1429 Ps = 706 Change colour of bold characters to Pt
1430 Ps = 707 Change colour of underlined characters to Pt
1431 Ps = 710 Set normal fontset to Pt. Same as Ps = 50.
1432 Ps = 711 Set bold fontset to Pt. Similar to Ps = 50 (Compile styles).
1433 Ps = 712 Set italic fontset to Pt. Similar to Ps = 50 (Compile styles).
1434 Ps = 713 Set bold-italic fontset to Pt. Similar to Ps = 50 (Compile styles).
1435 Ps = 720 Move viewing window up by Pt lines, or clear scrollback buffer if Pt = 0 (Compile frills).
1436 Ps = 721 Move viewing window down by Pt lines, or clear scrollback buffer if Pt = 0 (Compile frills).
1437 Ps = 777 Call the perl extension with the given string, which should be of the form extension:parameters (Compile perl).
1438
1439
1440
1441 XPM
1442 For the XPM XTerm escape sequence "ESC ] 20 ; Pt ST" then value of "Pt"
1443 can be the name of the background pixmap followed by a sequence of
1444 scaling/positioning commands separated by semi-colons. The
1445 scaling/positioning commands are as follows:
1446
1447 query scale/position
1448 ?
1449
1450 change scale and position
1451 WxH+X+Y
1452
1453 WxH+X (== WxH+X+X)
1454
1455 WxH (same as WxH+50+50)
1456
1457 W+X+Y (same as WxW+X+Y)
1458
1459 W+X (same as WxW+X+X)
1460
1461 W (same as WxW+50+50)
1462
1463 change position (absolute)
1464 =+X+Y
1465
1466 =+X (same as =+X+Y)
1467
1468 change position (relative)
1469 +X+Y
1470
1471 +X (same as +X+Y)
1472
1473 rescale (relative)
1474 Wx0 -> W *= (W/100)
1475
1476 0xH -> H *= (H/100)
1477
1478 For example:
1479
1480 \E]20;funky\a
1481 load funky.xpm as a tiled image
1482
1483 \E]20;mona;100\a
1484 load mona.xpm with a scaling of 100%
1485
1486 \E]20;;200;?\a
1487 rescale the current pixmap to 200% and display the image geometry in
1488 the title
1489
1490 Mouse Reporting
1491 "ESC [ M <b> <x> <y>"
1492 report mouse position
1493
1494 The lower 2 bits of "<b>" indicate the button:
1495
1496 Button = "(<b> - SPACE) & 3"
1497 0 Button1 pressed
1498 1 Button2 pressed
1499 2 Button3 pressed
1500 3 button released (X11 mouse report)
1501
1502 The upper bits of "<b>" indicate the modifiers when the button was
1503 pressed and are added together (X11 mouse report only):
1504
1505 State = "(<b> - SPACE) & 60"
1506 4 Shift
1507 8 Meta
1508 16 Control
1509 32 Double Click (rxvt extension)
1510
1511 Col = "<x> - SPACE"
1512
1513 Row = "<y> - SPACE"
1514
1515 Key Codes
1516 Note: Shift + F1-F10 generates F11-F20
1517
1518 For the keypad, use Shift to temporarily override Application-Keypad
1519 setting use Num_Lock to toggle Application-Keypad setting if Num_Lock is
1520 off, toggle Application-Keypad setting. Also note that values of Home,
1521 End, Delete may have been compiled differently on your system.
1522
1523 Normal Shift Control Ctrl+Shift
1524 Tab ^I ESC [ Z ^I ESC [ Z
1525 BackSpace ^H ^? ^? ^?
1526 Find ESC [ 1 ~ ESC [ 1 $ ESC [ 1 ^ ESC [ 1 @
1527 Insert ESC [ 2 ~ paste ESC [ 2 ^ ESC [ 2 @
1528 Execute ESC [ 3 ~ ESC [ 3 $ ESC [ 3 ^ ESC [ 3 @
1529 Select ESC [ 4 ~ ESC [ 4 $ ESC [ 4 ^ ESC [ 4 @
1530 Prior ESC [ 5 ~ scroll-up ESC [ 5 ^ ESC [ 5 @
1531 Next ESC [ 6 ~ scroll-down ESC [ 6 ^ ESC [ 6 @
1532 Home ESC [ 7 ~ ESC [ 7 $ ESC [ 7 ^ ESC [ 7 @
1533 End ESC [ 8 ~ ESC [ 8 $ ESC [ 8 ^ ESC [ 8 @
1534 Delete ESC [ 3 ~ ESC [ 3 $ ESC [ 3 ^ ESC [ 3 @
1535 F1 ESC [ 11 ~ ESC [ 23 ~ ESC [ 11 ^ ESC [ 23 ^
1536 F2 ESC [ 12 ~ ESC [ 24 ~ ESC [ 12 ^ ESC [ 24 ^
1537 F3 ESC [ 13 ~ ESC [ 25 ~ ESC [ 13 ^ ESC [ 25 ^
1538 F4 ESC [ 14 ~ ESC [ 26 ~ ESC [ 14 ^ ESC [ 26 ^
1539 F5 ESC [ 15 ~ ESC [ 28 ~ ESC [ 15 ^ ESC [ 28 ^
1540 F6 ESC [ 17 ~ ESC [ 29 ~ ESC [ 17 ^ ESC [ 29 ^
1541 F7 ESC [ 18 ~ ESC [ 31 ~ ESC [ 18 ^ ESC [ 31 ^
1542 F8 ESC [ 19 ~ ESC [ 32 ~ ESC [ 19 ^ ESC [ 32 ^
1543 F9 ESC [ 20 ~ ESC [ 33 ~ ESC [ 20 ^ ESC [ 33 ^
1544 F10 ESC [ 21 ~ ESC [ 34 ~ ESC [ 21 ^ ESC [ 34 ^
1545 F11 ESC [ 23 ~ ESC [ 23 $ ESC [ 23 ^ ESC [ 23 @
1546 F12 ESC [ 24 ~ ESC [ 24 $ ESC [ 24 ^ ESC [ 24 @
1547 F13 ESC [ 25 ~ ESC [ 25 $ ESC [ 25 ^ ESC [ 25 @
1548 F14 ESC [ 26 ~ ESC [ 26 $ ESC [ 26 ^ ESC [ 26 @
1549 F15 (Help) ESC [ 28 ~ ESC [ 28 $ ESC [ 28 ^ ESC [ 28 @
1550 F16 (Menu) ESC [ 29 ~ ESC [ 29 $ ESC [ 29 ^ ESC [ 29 @
1551 F17 ESC [ 31 ~ ESC [ 31 $ ESC [ 31 ^ ESC [ 31 @
1552 F18 ESC [ 32 ~ ESC [ 32 $ ESC [ 32 ^ ESC [ 32 @
1553 F19 ESC [ 33 ~ ESC [ 33 $ ESC [ 33 ^ ESC [ 33 @
1554 F20 ESC [ 34 ~ ESC [ 34 $ ESC [ 34 ^ ESC [ 34 @
1555 Application
1556 Up ESC [ A ESC [ a ESC O a ESC O A
1557 Down ESC [ B ESC [ b ESC O b ESC O B
1558 Right ESC [ C ESC [ c ESC O c ESC O C
1559 Left ESC [ D ESC [ d ESC O d ESC O D
1560 KP_Enter ^M ESC O M
1561 KP_F1 ESC O P ESC O P
1562 KP_F2 ESC O Q ESC O Q
1563 KP_F3 ESC O R ESC O R
1564 KP_F4 ESC O S ESC O S
1565 XK_KP_Multiply * ESC O j
1566 XK_KP_Add + ESC O k
1567 XK_KP_Separator , ESC O l
1568 XK_KP_Subtract - ESC O m
1569 XK_KP_Decimal . ESC O n
1570 XK_KP_Divide / ESC O o
1571 XK_KP_0 0 ESC O p
1572 XK_KP_1 1 ESC O q
1573 XK_KP_2 2 ESC O r
1574 XK_KP_3 3 ESC O s
1575 XK_KP_4 4 ESC O t
1576 XK_KP_5 5 ESC O u
1577 XK_KP_6 6 ESC O v
1578 XK_KP_7 7 ESC O w
1579 XK_KP_8 8 ESC O x
1580 XK_KP_9 9 ESC O y
1581
1582 CONFIGURE OPTIONS
1583 General hint: if you get compile errors, then likely your configuration
1584 hasn't been tested well. Either try with "--enable-everything" or use
1585 the ./reconf script as a base for experiments. ./reconf is used by
1586 myself, so it should generally be a working config. Of course, you
1587 should always report when a combination doesn't work, so it can be
1588 fixed. Marc Lehmann <rxvt@schmorp.de>.
1589
1590 All
1591
1592 --enable-everything
1593 Add (or remove) support for all non-multichoice options listed in
1594 "./configure --help".
1595
1596 You can specify this and then disable options you do not like by
1597 *following* this with the appropriate "--disable-..." arguments, or
1598 you can start with a minimal configuration by specifying
1599 "--disable-everything" and than adding just the "--enable-..."
1600 arguments you want.
1601
1602 --enable-xft (default: enabled)
1603 Add support for Xft (anti-aliases, among others) fonts. Xft fonts
1604 are slower and require lots of memory, but as long as you don't use
1605 them, you don't pay for them.
1606
1607 --enable-font-styles (default: on)
1608 Add support for bold, *italic* and *bold italic* font styles. The
1609 fonts can be set manually or automatically.
1610
1611 --with-codesets=NAME,... (default: all)
1612 Compile in support for additional codeset (encoding) groups ("eu",
1613 "vn" are always compiled in, which includes most 8-bit character
1614 sets). These codeset tables are used for driving X11 core fonts,
1615 they are not required for Xft fonts, although having them compiled
1616 in lets rxvt-unicode choose replacement fonts more intelligently.
1617 Compiling them in will make your binary bigger (all of together cost
1618 about 700kB), but it doesn't increase memory usage unless you use a
1619 font requiring one of these encodings.
1620
1621 all all available codeset groups
1622 zh common chinese encodings
1623 zh_ext rarely used but very big chinese encodigs
1624 jp common japanese encodings
1625 jp_ext rarely used but big japanese encodings
1626 kr korean encodings
1627
1628 --enable-xim (default: on)
1629 Add support for XIM (X Input Method) protocol. This allows using
1630 alternative input methods (e.g. kinput2) and will also correctly set
1631 up the input for people using dead keys or compose keys.
1632
1633 --enable-unicode3 (default: off)
1634 Recommended to stay off unless you really need non-BMP characters.
1635
1636 Enable direct support for displaying unicode codepoints above 65535
1637 (the basic multilingual page). This increases storage requirements
1638 per character from 2 to 4 bytes. X11 fonts do not yet support these
1639 extra characters, but Xft does.
1640
1641 Please note that rxvt-unicode can store unicode code points >65535
1642 even without this flag, but the number of such characters is limited
1643 to a view thousand (shared with combining characters, see next
1644 switch), and right now rxvt-unicode cannot display them
1645 (input/output and cut&paste still work, though).
1646
1647 --enable-combining (default: on)
1648 Enable automatic composition of combining characters into composite
1649 characters. This is required for proper viewing of text where
1650 accents are encoded as seperate unicode characters. This is done by
1651 using precomposited characters when available or creating new
1652 pseudo-characters when no precomposed form exists.
1653
1654 Without --enable-unicode3, the number of additional precomposed
1655 characters is somewhat limited (the 6400 private use characters will
1656 be (ab-)used). With --enable-unicode3, no practical limit exists.
1657
1658 This option will also enable storage (but not display) of characters
1659 beyond plane 0 (>65535) when --enable-unicode3 was not specified.
1660
1661 The combining table also contains entries for arabic presentation
1662 forms, but these are not currently used. Bug me if you want these to
1663 be used (and tell me how these are to be used...).
1664
1665 --enable-fallback(=CLASS) (default: Rxvt)
1666 When reading resource settings, also read settings for class CLASS.
1667 To disable resource fallback use --disable-fallback.
1668
1669 --with-res-name=NAME (default: urxvt)
1670 Use the given name as default application name when reading
1671 resources. Specify --with-res-name=rxvt to replace rxvt.
1672
1673 --with-res-class=CLASS /default: URxvt)
1674 Use the given class as default application class when reading
1675 resources. Specify --with-res-class=Rxvt to replace rxvt.
1676
1677 --enable-utmp (default: on)
1678 Write user and tty to utmp file (used by programs like w) at start
1679 of rxvt execution and delete information when rxvt exits.
1680
1681 --enable-wtmp (default: on)
1682 Write user and tty to wtmp file (used by programs like last) at
1683 start of rxvt execution and write logout when rxvt exits. This
1684 option requires --enable-utmp to also be specified.
1685
1686 --enable-lastlog (default: on)
1687 Write user and tty to lastlog file (used by programs like lastlogin)
1688 at start of rxvt execution. This option requires --enable-utmp to
1689 also be specified.
1690
1691 --enable-xpm-background (default: on)
1692 Add support for XPM background pixmaps.
1693
1694 --enable-transparency (default: on)
1695 Add support for inheriting parent backgrounds thus giving a fake
1696 transparency to the term.
1697
1698 --enable-fading (default: on)
1699 Add support for fading the text when focus is lost (requires
1700 "--enable-transparency").
1701
1702 --enable-tinting (default: on)
1703 Add support for tinting of transparent backgrounds (requires
1704 "--enable-transparency").
1705
1706 --enable-rxvt-scroll (default: on)
1707 Add support for the original rxvt scrollbar.
1708
1709 --enable-next-scroll (default: on)
1710 Add support for a NeXT-like scrollbar.
1711
1712 --enable-xterm-scroll (default: on)
1713 Add support for an Xterm-like scrollbar.
1714
1715 --enable-plain-scroll (default: on)
1716 Add support for a very unobtrusive, plain-looking scrollbar that is
1717 the favourite of the rxvt-unicode author, having used it for many
1718 years.
1719
1720 --enable-ttygid (default: off)
1721 Change tty device setting to group "tty" - only use this if your
1722 system uses this type of security.
1723
1724 --disable-backspace-key
1725 Removes any handling of the backspace key by us - let the X server
1726 do it.
1727
1728 --disable-delete-key
1729 Removes any handling of the delete key by us - let the X server do
1730 it.
1731
1732 --disable-resources
1733 Removes any support for resource checking.
1734
1735 --disable-swapscreen
1736 Remove support for secondary/swap screen.
1737
1738 --enable-frills (default: on)
1739 Add support for many small features that are not essential but nice
1740 to have. Normally you want this, but for very small binaries you may
1741 want to disable this.
1742
1743 A non-exhaustive list of features enabled by "--enable-frills"
1744 (possibly in combination with other switches) is:
1745
1746 MWM-hints
1747 EWMH-hints (pid, utf8 names) and protocols (ping)
1748 seperate underline colour (-underlineColor)
1749 settable border widths and borderless switch (-w, -b, -bl)
1750 visual depth selection (-depth)
1751 settable extra linespacing /-lsp)
1752 iso-14755-2 and -3, and visual feedback
1753 tripleclickwords (-tcw)
1754 settable insecure mode (-insecure)
1755 keysym remapping support
1756 cursor blinking and underline cursor (-cb, -uc)
1757 XEmbed support (-embed)
1758 user-pty (-pty-fd)
1759 hold on exit (-hold)
1760 skip builtin block graphics (-sbg)
1761
1762 It also enabled some non-essential features otherwise disabled, such
1763 as:
1764
1765 some round-trip time optimisations
1766 nearest color allocation on pseudocolor screens
1767 UTF8_STRING supporr for selection
1768 sgr modes 90..97 and 100..107
1769 backindex and forwardindex escape sequences
1770 view change/zero scorllback esacpe sequences
1771 locale switching escape sequence
1772 window op and some xterm/OSC escape sequences
1773 rectangular selections
1774 trailing space removal for selections
1775 verbose X error handling
1776
1777 --enable-iso14755 (default: on)
1778 Enable extended ISO 14755 support (see rxvt(1), or doc/rxvt.1.txt).
1779 Basic support (section 5.1) is enabled by "--enable-frills", while
1780 support for 5.2, 5.3 and 5.4 is enabled with this switch.
1781
1782 --enable-keepscrolling (default: on)
1783 Add support for continual scrolling of the display when you hold the
1784 mouse button down on a scrollbar arrow.
1785
1786 --enable-mousewheel (default: on)
1787 Add support for scrolling via mouse wheel or buttons 4 & 5.
1788
1789 --enable-slipwheeling (default: on)
1790 Add support for continual scrolling (using the mouse wheel as an
1791 accelerator) while the control key is held down. This option
1792 requires --enable-mousewheel to also be specified.
1793
1794 --disable-new-selection
1795 Remove support for mouse selection style like that of xterm.
1796
1797 --enable-dmalloc (default: off)
1798 Use Gray Watson's malloc - which is good for debugging See
1799 http://www.letters.com/dmalloc/ for details If you use either this
1800 or the next option, you may need to edit src/Makefile after
1801 compiling to point DINCLUDE and DLIB to the right places.
1802
1803 You can only use either this option and the following (should you
1804 use either) .
1805
1806 --enable-dlmalloc (default: off)
1807 Use Doug Lea's malloc - which is good for a production version See
1808 <http://g.oswego.edu/dl/html/malloc.html> for details.
1809
1810 --enable-smart-resize (default: on)
1811 Add smart growth/shrink behaviour when changing font size via hot
1812 keys. This should keep the window corner which is closest to a
1813 corner of the screen in a fixed position.
1814
1815 --enable-pointer-blank (default: on)
1816 Add support to have the pointer disappear when typing or inactive.
1817
1818 --enable-perl (default: on)
1819 Enable an embedded perl interpreter. See the rxvtperl(3) manpage
1820 (doc/rxvtperl.txt) for more info on this feature, or the files in
1821 src/perl-ext/ for the extensions that are installed by default. The
1822 perl interpreter that is used can be specified via the "PERL"
1823 environment variable when running configure.
1824
1825 --with-name=NAME (default: urxvt)
1826 Set the basename for the installed binaries, resulting in "urxvt",
1827 "urxvtd" etc.). Specify "--with-name=rxvt" to replace with "rxvt".
1828
1829 --with-term=NAME (default: rxvt-unicode)
1830 Change the environmental variable for the terminal to NAME.
1831
1832 --with-terminfo=PATH
1833 Change the environmental variable for the path to the terminfo tree
1834 to PATH.
1835
1836 --with-x
1837 Use the X Window System (pretty much default, eh?).
1838
1839 --with-xpm-includes=DIR
1840 Look for the XPM includes in DIR.
1841
1842 --with-xpm-library=DIR
1843 Look for the XPM library in DIR.
1844
1845 --with-xpm
1846 Not needed - define via --enable-xpm-background.
1847
1848 AUTHORS
1849 Marc Lehmann <rxvt@schmorp.de> converted this document to pod and
1850 reworked it from the original Rxvt documentation, which was done by
1851 Geoff Wing <gcw@pobox.com>, who in turn used the XTerm documentation and
1852 other sources.
1853