Wednesday, March 19, 2008
What is Effective Communication??
Jack and Max are walking from religious service. Jack wonders whether it would
be all right to smoke while praying.
Max replies, "Why don't you ask the Priest?"
So Jack goes up to the Priest and asks, "Priest,may I smoke while I pray?"
But the Priest says,
"No, my son, you may not. That's utter disrespect to our religion."
Jack goes back to his friend and tells him what the good Priest told him.
Max says, "I'm not surprised. You asked the wrong question. Let me try."
And so Max goes up to the Priest and asks, "Priest, may I pray while I smoke?"
To which the Priest eagerly replies, "By all means, my son. By all means."
Moral : The reply you get depends on the question you ask.
For Example : Can I work on this project while I'm on vacation ?!?
Linux CLI commands
Command | Description | |
• | apropos whatis | Show commands pertinent to string. See also threadsafe |
• | man -t man | ps2pdf - > man.pdf | make a pdf of a manual page |
which command | Show full path name of command | |
time command | See how long a command takes | |
• | time cat | Start stopwatch. Ctrl-d to stop. See also sw |
• | nice info | Run a low priority command (The "info" reader in this case) |
• | renice 19 -p $$ | Make shell (script) low priority. Use for non interactive tasks |
dir navigation | ||
• | cd - | Go to previous directory |
• | cd | Go to $HOME directory |
(cd dir && command) | Go to dir, execute command and return to current dir | |
• | pushd . | Put current dir on stack so you can popd back to it |
file searching | ||
• | alias l='ls -l --color=auto' | quick dir listing |
• | ls -lrt | List files by date. See also newest and find_mm_yyyy |
• | ls /usr/bin | pr -T9 -W$COLUMNS | Print in 9 columns to width of terminal |
find -name '*.[ch]' | xargs grep -E 'expr' | Search 'expr' in this dir and below. See also findrepo | |
find -type f -print0 | xargs -r0 grep -F 'example' | Search all regular files for 'example' in this dir and below | |
find -maxdepth 1 -type f | xargs grep -F 'example' | Search all regular files for 'example' in this dir | |
find -maxdepth 1 -type d | while read dir; do echo $dir; echo cmd2; done | Process each item with multiple commands (in while loop) | |
• | find -type f ! -perm -444 | Find files not readable by all (useful for web site) |
• | find -type d ! -perm -111 | Find dirs not accessible by all (useful for web site) |
• | locate -r 'file[^/]*\.txt' | Search cached index for names. This re is like glob *file*.txt |
• | look reference | Quickly search (sorted) dictionary for prefix |
• | grep --color reference /usr/share/dict/words | Highlight occurances of regular expression in dictionary |
archives and compression | ||
gpg -c file | Encrypt file | |
gpg file.gpg | Decrypt file | |
tar -c dir/ | bzip2 > dir.tar.bz2 | Make compressed archive of dir/ | |
bzip2 -dc dir.tar.bz2 | tar -x | Extract archive (use gzip instead of bzip2 for tar.gz files) | |
tar -c dir/ | gzip | gpg -c | ssh user@remote 'dd of=dir.tar.gz.gpg' | Make encrypted archive of dir/ on remote machine | |
find dir/ -name '*.txt' | tar -c --files-from=- | bzip2 > dir_txt.tar.bz2 | Make archive of subset of dir/ and below | |
find dir/ -name '*.txt' | xargs cp -a --target-directory=dir_txt/ --parents | Make copy of subset of dir/ and below | |
( tar -c /dir/to/copy ) | ( cd /where/to/ && tar -x -p ) | Copy (with permissions) copy/ dir to /where/to/ dir | |
( cd /dir/to/copy && tar -c . ) | ( cd /where/to/ && tar -x -p ) | Copy (with permissions) contents of copy/ dir to /where/to/ | |
( tar -c /dir/to/copy ) | ssh -C user@remote 'cd /where/to/ && tar -x -p' | Copy (with permissions) copy/ dir to remote:/where/to/ dir | |
dd bs=1M if=/dev/sda | gzip | ssh user@remote 'dd of=sda.gz' | Backup harddisk to remote machine | |
rsync (Use the --dry-run option for testing) | ||
rsync -P rsync://rsync.server.com/path/to/file file | Only get diffs. Do multiple times for troublesome downloads | |
rsync --bwlimit=1000 fromfile tofile | Locally copy with rate limit. It's like nice for I/O | |
rsync -az -e ssh --delete ~/public_html/ remote.com:'~/public_html' | Mirror web site (using compression and encryption) | |
rsync -auz -e ssh remote:/dir/ . && rsync -auz -e ssh . remote:/dir/ | Synchronize current directory with remote one | |
ssh (Secure SHell) | ||
ssh $USER@$HOST command | Run command on $HOST as $USER (default command=shell) | |
• | ssh -f -Y $USER@$HOSTNAME xeyes | Run GUI command on $HOSTNAME as $USER |
scp -p -r $USER@$HOST: file dir/ | Copy with permissions to $USER's home directory on $HOST | |
ssh -g -L 8080:localhost:80 root@$HOST | Forward connections to $HOSTNAME:8080 out to $HOST:80 | |
ssh -R 1434:imap:143 root@$HOST | Forward connections from $HOST:1434 in to imap:143 | |
wget (multi purpose download tool) | ||
• | (cd cli && wget -nd -pHEKk http://www.pixelbeat.org/cmdline.html) | Store local browsable version of a page to the current dir |
wget -c http://www.example.com/large.file | Continue downloading a partially downloaded file | |
wget -r -nd -np -l1 -A '*.jpg' http://www.example.com/dir/ | Download a set of files to the current directory | |
wget ftp://remote/file[1-9].iso/ | FTP supports globbing directly | |
• | wget -q -O- http://www.pixelbeat.org/timeline.html | grep 'a href' | head | Process output directly |
echo 'wget url' | at 01:00 | Download url at 1AM to current dir | |
wget --limit-rate=20k url | Do a low priority download (limit to 20KB/s in this case) | |
wget -nv --spider --force-html -i bookmarks.html | Check links in a file | |
wget --mirror http://www.example.com/ | Efficiently update a local copy of a site (handy from cron) | |
networking (Note ifconfig, route, mii-tool, nslookup commands are obsolete) | ||
ethtool eth0 | Show status of ethernet interface eth0 | |
ethtool --change eth0 autoneg off speed 100 duplex full | Manually set ethernet interface speed | |
iwconfig eth1 | Show status of wireless interface eth1 | |
iwconfig eth1 rate 1Mb/s fixed | Manually set wireless interface speed | |
• | iwlist scan | List wireless networks in range |
• | ip link show | List network interfaces |
ip link set dev eth0 name wan | Rename interface eth0 to wan | |
ip link set dev eth0 up | Bring interface eth0 up (or down) | |
• | ip addr show | List addresses for interfaces |
ip addr add 1.2.3.4/24 brd + dev eth0 | Add (or del) ip and mask (255.255.255.0) | |
• | ip route show | List routing table |
ip route add default via 1.2.3.254 | Set default gateway to 1.2.3.254 | |
• | tc qdisc add dev lo root handle 1:0 netem delay 20msec | Add 20ms latency to loopback device (for testing) |
• | tc qdisc del dev lo root | Remove latency added above |
• | host pixelbeat.org | Lookup DNS ip address for name or vice versa |
• | hostname -i | Lookup local ip address (equivalent to host `hostname`) |
• | whois pixelbeat.org | Lookup whois info for hostname or ip address |
• | netstat -tupl | List internet services on a system |
• | netstat -tup | List active connections to/from system |
windows networking (Note samba is the package that provides all this windows specific networking support) | ||
• | smbtree | Find windows machines. See also findsmb |
nmblookup -A 1.2.3.4 | Find the windows (netbios) name associated with ip address | |
smbclient -L windows_box | List shares on windows machine or samba server | |
mount -t smbfs -o fmask=666,guest //windows_box/share /mnt/share | Mount a windows share | |
echo 'message' | smbclient -M windows_box | Send popup to windows machine (off by default in XP sp2) | |
text manipulation (Note sed uses stdin and stdout, so if you want to edit files, append | ||
sed 's/string1/string2/g' | Replace string1 with string2 | |
sed 's/\(.*\)1/\12/g' | Modify anystring1 to anystring2 | |
sed '/ *#/d; /^ *$/d' | Remove comments and blank lines | |
sed ':a; /\\$/N; s/\\\n//; ta' | Concatenate lines with trailing \ | |
sed 's/[ \t]*$//' | Remove trailing spaces from lines | |
sed 's/\([\\`\\"$\\\\]\)/\\\1/g' | Escape shell metacharacters active within double quotes | |
• | seq 10 | sed "s/^/ /; s/ *\(.\{7,\}\)/\1/" | Right align numbers |
sed -n '1000p;1000q' | Print 1000th line | |
sed -n '10,20p;20q' | Print lines 10 to 20 | |
sed -n 's/.* | Extract title from HTML web page | |
sort -t. -k1,1n -k2,2n -k3,3n -k4,4n | Sort IPV4 ip addresses | |
• | echo 'Test' | tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]' | Case conversion |
• | tr -dc '[:print:]' < /dev/urandom | Filter non printable characters |
• | history | wc -l | Count lines |
set operations (Note you can export LANG=C for speed. Also these assume no duplicate lines within a file) | ||
sort file1 file2 | uniq | Union of unsorted files | |
sort file1 file2 | uniq -d | Intersection of unsorted files | |
sort file1 file1 file2 | uniq -u | Difference of unsorted files | |
sort file1 file2 | uniq -u | Symmetric Difference of unsorted files | |
join -a1 -a2 file1 file2 | Union of sorted files | |
join file1 file2 | Intersection of sorted files | |
join -v2 file1 file2 | Difference of sorted files | |
join -v1 -v2 file1 file2 | Symmetric Difference of sorted files | |
math | ||
• | echo '(1 + sqrt(5))/2' | bc -l | Quick math (Calculate φ). See also bc |
• | echo 'pad=20; min=64; (100*10^6)/((pad+min)*8)' | bc | More complex (int) e.g. This shows max FastE packet rate |
• | echo 'pad=20; min=64; print (100E6)/((pad+min)*8)' | python | Python handles scientific notation |
• | echo 'pad=20; plot [64:1518] (100*10**6)/((pad+x)*8)' | gnuplot -persist | Plot FastE packet rate vs packet size |
• | echo 'obase=16; ibase=10; 64206' | bc | Base conversion (decimal to hexadecimal) |
• | echo $((0x2dec)) | Base conversion (hex to dec) ((shell arithmetic expansion)) |
• | units -t '100m/9.74s' 'miles/hour' | Unit conversion (metric to imperial) |
• | units -t '500GB' 'GiB' | Unit conversion (SI to IEC prefixes) |
• | units -t '1 googol' | Definition lookup |
• | seq 100 | (tr '\n' +; echo 0) | bc | Add a column of numbers. See also add and funcpy |
calendar | ||
• | cal -3 | Display a calendar |
• | cal 9 1752 | Display a calendar for a particular month year |
• | date -d fri | What date is it this friday. See also day |
• | date --date='25 Dec' +%A | What day does xmas fall on, this year |
• | date --date '1970-01-01 UTC 2147483647 seconds' | Convert number of seconds since the epoch to a date |
• | TZ=':America/Los_Angeles' date | What time is it on West coast of US (use tzselect to find TZ) |
echo "mail -s 'get the train' P@draigBrady.com < /dev/null" | at 17:45 | Email reminder | |
• | echo "DISPLAY=$DISPLAY xmessage cooker" | at "NOW + 30 minutes" | Popup reminder |
locales | ||
• | printf "%'d\n" 1234 | Print number with thousands grouping appropriate to locale |
• | BLOCK_SIZE=\'1 ls -l | get ls to do thousands grouping appropriate to locale |
• | echo "I live in `locale territory`" | Extract info from locale database |
• | LANG=en_IE.utf8 locale int_prefix | Lookup locale info for specific country. See also ccodes |
• | locale | cut -d= -f1 | xargs locale -kc | less | List fields available in locale database |
recode (Obsoletes iconv, dos2unix, unix2dos) | ||
• | recode -l | less | Show available conversions (aliases on each line) |
recode windows-1252.. file_to_change.txt | Windows "ansi" to local charset (auto does CRLF conversion) | |
recode utf-8/CRLF.. file_to_change.txt | Windows utf8 to local charset | |
recode iso-8859-15..utf8 file_to_change.txt | Latin9 (western europe) to utf8 | |
recode ../b64 <> file.b64 | Base64 encode | |
recode /qp.. <> file.qp | Quoted printable decode | |
recode ..HTML <> file.html | Text to HTML | |
• | recode -lf windows-1252 | grep euro | Lookup table of characters |
• | echo -n 0x80 | recode latin-9/x1..dump | Show what a code represents in latin-9 charmap |
• | echo -n 0x20AC | recode ucs-2/x2..latin-9/x | Show latin-9 encoding |
• | echo -n 0x20AC | recode ucs-2/x2..utf-8/x | Show utf-8 encoding |
CDs | ||
gzip < /dev/cdrom > cdrom.iso.gz | Save copy of data cdrom | |
mkisofs -V LABEL -r dir | gzip > cdrom.iso.gz | Create cdrom image from contents of dir | |
mount -o loop cdrom.iso /mnt/dir | Mount the cdrom image at /mnt/dir (read only) | |
cdrecord -v dev=/dev/cdrom blank=fast | Clear a CDRW | |
gzip -dc cdrom.iso.gz | cdrecord -v dev=/dev/cdrom - | Burn cdrom image (use dev=ATAPI -scanbus to confirm dev) | |
cdparanoia -B | Rip audio tracks from CD to wav files in current dir | |
cdrecord -v dev=/dev/cdrom -audio *.wav | Make audio CD from all wavs in current dir (see also cdrdao) | |
oggenc --tracknum='track' track.cdda.wav -o 'track.ogg' | Make ogg file from wav file | |
disk space (See also FSlint) | ||
• | ls -lSr | Show files by size, biggest last |
• | du -s * | sort -k1,1rn | head | Show top disk users in current dir. See also dutop |
• | df -h | Show free space on mounted filesystems |
• | df -i | Show free inodes on mounted filesystems |
• | fdisk -l | Show disks partitions sizes and types (run as root) |
• | rpm -q -a --qf '%10{SIZE}\t%{NAME}\n' | sort -k1,1n | List all packages by installed size (Bytes) on rpm distros |
• | dpkg-query -W -f='${Installed-Size;10}\t${Package}\n' | sort -k1,1n | List all packages by installed size (KBytes) on deb distros |
• | dd bs=1 seek=2TB if=/dev/null of=ext3.test | Create a large test file (taking no space). See also truncate |
monitoring/debugging | ||
• | tail -f /var/log/messages | Monitor messages in a log file |
• | strace -c ls >/dev/null | Summarise/profile system calls made by command |
• | strace -f -e open ls >/dev/null | List system calls made by command |
• | ltrace -f -e getenv ls >/dev/null | List library calls made by command |
• | lsof -p $$ | List paths that process id has open |
• | lsof ~ | List processes that have specified path open |
• | tcpdump not port 22 | Show network traffic except ssh. See also tcpdump_not_me |
• | ps -e -o pid,args --forest | List processes in a hierarchy |
• | ps -e -o pcpu,cpu,nice,state,cputime,args --sort pcpu | sed '/^ 0.0 /d' | List processes by % cpu usage |
• | ps -e -orss=,args= | sort -b -k1,1n | pr -TW$COLUMNS | List processes by mem usage. See also ps_mem.py |
• | ps -C firefox-bin -L -o pid,tid,pcpu,state | List all threads for a particular process |
• | ps -p 1,2 | List info for particular process IDs |
• | last reboot | Show system reboot history |
• | free -m | Show amount of (remaining) RAM (-m displays in MB) |
• | watch -n1 'cat /proc/interrupts' | Watch changeable data continuously |
system information (see also sysinfo) ('#' means root access is required) | ||
• | uname -a | Show kernel version and system architecture |
• | head -n1 /etc/issue | Show name and version of distribution |
• | cat /proc/partitions | Show all partitions registered on the system |
• | grep MemTotal /proc/meminfo | Show RAM total seen by the system |
• | grep "model name" /proc/cpuinfo | Show CPU(s) info |
• | lspci -tv | Show PCI info |
• | lsusb -tv | Show USB info |
• | mount | column -t | List mounted filesystems on the system (and align output) |
# | dmidecode -q | less | Display SMBIOS/DMI information |
# | smartctl -A /dev/sda | grep Power_On_Hours | How long has this disk (system) been powered on in total |
# | hdparm -i /dev/sda | Show info about disk sda |
# | hdparm -tT /dev/sda | Do a read speed test on disk sda |
# | badblocks -s /dev/sda | Test for unreadable blocks on disk sda |
interactive (see also linux keyboard shortcuts) | ||
• | readline | Line editor used by bash, python, bc, gnuplot, ... |
• | screen | Virtual terminals with detach capability, ... |
• | mc | Powerful file manager that can browse rpm, tar, ftp, ssh, ... |
• | gnuplot | Interactive/scriptable graphing |
• | links | Web browser |
miscellaneous | ||
• | alias hd='od -Ax -tx1z -v' | Handy hexdump. (usage e.g.: • hd /proc/self/cmdline | less) |
• | alias realpath='readlink -f' | Canonicalize path. (usage e.g.: • realpath ~/../$USER) |
• | set | grep $USER | Search current environment |
touch -c -t 0304050607 file | Set file timestamp (YYMMDDhhmm) |
waitpid()
waitpid - wait for process termination
Headers:
#include
#include
DESCRIPTION
The waitpid function suspends execution of the current
process until a child as specified by the pid argument has
exited, or until a signal is delivered whose action is to
terminate the current process or to call a signal handling
function. If a child as requested by pid has already
exited by the time of the call (a so-called "zombie" pro-
cess), the function returns immediately. Any system
resources used by the child are freed.
The value of pid can be one of:
< -1 which means to wait for any child process whose
process group ID is equal to the absolute value of
-1 which means to wait for any child process; this is
the same behaviour which wait exhibits.
0 which means to wait for any child process whose
process group ID is equal to that of the calling
process.
> 0 which means to wait for the child whose process ID
is equal to the value of pid.
The value of options is an exclusive OR of zero or more of
the following constants:
WNOHANG which means to return immediately if no child has
exited.
WUNTRACED
which means to also return for children which are
If status is not NULL, wait or waitpid store status infor-
mation in the location pointed to by statloc.
This status can be evaluated with the following macros
(these macros take the stat buffer as an argument -- not a
pointer to the buffer!):
WIFEXITED(status)
is non -zero if the child exited normally.
WEXITSTATUS(status)
evaluates to the least significant eight bits of
the return code of the child which terminated,
which may have been set as the argument to a call
to exit() or as the argument for a return state-
ment in the main program. This macro can only be
evaluated if WIFEXITED returned non-zero.
WIFSIGNALED(status)
returns true if the child process exited because
of a signal which was not caught.
WTERMSIG(status)
returns the number of the signal that caused the
child process to terminate. This macro can only be
evaluated if WIFSIGNALED returned non-zero.
WIFSTOPPED(status)
returns true if the child process which caused the
return is currently stopped; this is only possible
if the call was done using WUNTRACED.
WSTOPSIG(status)
returns the number of the signal which caused the
child to stop. This macro can only be evaluated
if WIFSTOPPED returned non-zero.
stopped, and whose status has not been reported.
signal management 1 in linux/+
#include <signal.h>
int sighold(int sig);
int sigignore(int sig);
int sigpause(int sig);
int sigrelse(int sig);
void (*sigset(int sig, void (*disp)(int)))(int);
Description :
The sighold(), sigignore(), sigpause(), sigrelse(), and sigset() functions provide simplified signal management.
The sigset() function shall modify signal dispositions. The sig argument specifies the signal, which may be any signal except SIGKILL and SIGSTOP. The disp argument specifies the signal's disposition, which may be SIG_DFL, SIG_IGN, or the address of a signal handler. If sigset() is used, and disp is the address of a signal handler, the system shall add sig to the calling process' signal mask before executing the signal handler; when the signal handler returns, the system shall restore the calling process' signal mask to its state prior to the delivery of the signal. In addition, if sigset() is used, and disp is equal to SIG_HOLD, sig shall be added to the calling process' signal mask and sig's disposition shall remain unchanged. If sigset() is used, and disp is not equal to SIG_HOLD, sig shall be removed from the calling process' signal mask.
The sighold() function shall add sig to the calling process' signal mask.
The sigrelse() function shall remove sig from the calling process' signal mask.
The sigignore() function shall set the disposition of sig to SIG_IGN.
The sigpause() function shall remove sig from the calling process' signal mask and suspend the calling process until a signal is received. The sigpause() function shall restore the process' signal mask to its original state before returning.
If the action for the SIGCHLD signal is set to SIG_IGN, child processes of the calling processes shall not be transformed into zombie processes when they terminate. If the calling process subsequently waits for its children, and the process has no unwaited-for children that were transformed into zombie processes, it shall block until all of its children terminate, and wait(), waitid(), and waitpid() shall fail and set errno to [ECHILD].
RETURN VALUE
pon successful completion, sigset() shall return SIG_HOLD if the signal had been blocked and the signal's previous disposition if it had not been blocked. Otherwise, SIG_ERR shall be returned and errno set to indicate the error.The sigpause() function shall suspend execution of the thread until a signal is received, whereupon it shall return -1 and set errno to [EINTR].
For all other functions, upon successful completion, 0 shall be returned. Otherwise, -1 shall be returned and errno set to indicate the error.
FAILING CONDITIONS :
These functions shall fail if:
- The sig argument is an illegal signal number.
- An attempt is made to catch a signal that cannot be caught, or to ignore a signal that cannot be ignored.
Xtem Syntax
Terminal emulator for X-windows Terminal
xterm [-toolkitoption ...] [-option]
-help | This causes xterm to print out a verbose message describing its options. |
-132 | Normally, the VT102 DECCOLM escape sequence that switches between 80 and 132 column mode is ignored. This option causes the DECCOLM escape sequence to be recognized, and the xterm window will resize appropriately. |
-ah | This option indicates that xterm should always highlight the text cursor. By default, xterm will display a hollow text cursor whenever the focus is lost or the pointer leaves the window. |
+ah | This option indicates that xterm should do text cursor highlighting based on focus. |
-b number | This option specifies the size of the inner border (the distance between the outer edge of the characters and the window border) in pixels. The default is 2. |
-cb | Set the vt100 resource cutToBeginningOfLine to FALSE. |
+cb | Set the vt100 resource cutToBeginningOfLine to TRUE. |
-cc | This sets classes indicated by the given ranges for using in selecting by words. See the section specifying character classes. |
-cn | This option indicates that newlines should not be cut in line-mode selections. |
+cn | This option indicates that newlines should be cut in line-mode selections. |
-cr color | This option specifies the color to use for text cursor. The default is to use the same foreground color that is used for text. |
-cu | This option indicates that xterm should work around a bug in the more program that causes it to incorrectly display lines that are exactly the width of the window and are followed by a line beginning with a tab (the leading tabs are not displayed). This option is so named because it was originally thought to be a bug in the curses(3x) cursor motion package. |
+cu | This option indicates that xterm should not work around the more(3x) bug mentioned above. |
-e program [arguments] | This option specifies the program (and its command line arguments) to be run in the xterm window. It also sets the window title and icon name to be the basename of the program being executed if neither -T nor -n are given on the command line. This must be the last option on the command line. |
-fb font | This option specifies a font to be used when displaying bold text. This font must be the same height and width as the normal font. If only one of the normal or bold fonts is specified, it will be used as the normal font and the bold font will be produced by overstriking this font. The default is to do overstriking of the normal font. |
-im | Turn on the useInsertMode resource. |
+im | Turn off the useInsertMode resource. |
-j | This option indicates that xterm should do jump scrolling. Normally, text is scrolled one line at a time; this option allows xterm to move multiple lines at a time so that it doesn't fall as far behind. Its use is strongly recommended since it make xterm much faster when scanning through large amounts of text. The VT100 escape sequences for enabling and disabling smooth scroll as well as the ``VT Options'' menu can be used to turn this feature on or off. |
+j | This option indicates that xterm should not do jump scrolling. |
-ls | This option indicates that the shell that is started in the xterm window will be a login shell (i.e., the first character of argv[0] will be a dash, indicating to the shell that it should read the user's .login or .profile). |
+ls | This option indicates that the shell that is started should not be a login shell (i.e. it will be a normal ``subshell''). |
-mb | This option indicates that xterm should ring a margin bell when the user types near the right end of a line. This option can be turned on and off from the ``VT Options'' menu. |
+mb | This option indicates that margin bell should not be rung. |
-mc milliseconds | This option specifies the maximum time between multi-click selections. |
-ms color | This option specifies the color to be used for the pointer cursor. The default is to use the foreground color. |
-nb number | This option specifies the number of characters from the right end of a line at which the margin bell, if enabled, will ring. The default is 10. |
-rw | This option indicates that reverse-wraparound should be allowed. This allows the cursor to backup from the leftmost column of one line to the rightmost column of the previous line. This is very useful for editing long shell command lines and is encouraged. This option can be turned on and off from the ``VT Options'' menu. |
+rw | This option indicates that reverse-wraparound should not be allowed. |
-aw | This option indicates that auto-wraparound should be allowed. This allows the cursor to automatically wrap to the beginning of the next line when when it is at the rightmost position of a line and text is output. |
+aw | This option indicates that auto-wraparound should not be allowed. |
-s | This option indicates that xterm may scroll asynchronously, meaning that the screen does not have to be kept completely up to date while scrolling. This allows xterm to run faster when network latencies are very high and is typically useful when running across a very large Internet or many gateways. |
+s | This option indicates that xterm should scroll synchronously. |
-sb | This option indicates that some number of lines that are scrolled off the top of the window should be saved and that a scrollbar should be displayed so that those lines can be viewed. This option may be turned on and off from the ``VT Options'' menu. |
+sb | This option indicates that a scrollbar should not be displayed. |
-sf | This option indicates that Sun Function Key escape codes should be generated for function keys. |
+sf | This option indicates that the standard escape codes should be generated for function keys. |
-si | This option indicates that output to a window should not automatically reposition the screen to the bottom of the scrolling region. This option can be turned on and off from the ``VT Options'' menu. |
+si | This option indicates that output to a window should cause it to scroll to the bottom. |
-sk | This option indicates that pressing a key while using the scrollbar to review previous lines of text should cause the window to be repositioned automatically in the normal position at the bottom of the scroll region. |
+sk | This option indicates that pressing a key while using the scrollbar should not cause the window to be repositioned. |
-sl number | This option specifies the number of lines to save that have been scrolled off the top of the screen. The default is 64. |
-t | This option indicates that xterm should start in Tektronix mode, rather than in VT102 mode. Switching between the two windows is done using the ``Options'' menus. |
+t | This option indicates that xterm should start in VT102 mode. |
-tm string | This option specifies a series of terminal setting keywords followed by the characters that should be bound to those functions, similar to the stty program. Allowable keywords include: intr, quit, erase, kill, eof, eol, swtch, start, stop, brk, susp, dsusp, rprnt, flush, weras, and lnext. Cotrol characters may be specified as ^char (e.g. ^c or ^u) and ^? may be used to indicate delete. |
-tn name | This option specifies the name of the terminal type to be set in the TERM environment variable. This terminal type must exist in the termcap database and should have li# and co# entries. |
-ut | This option indicates that xterm shouldn't write a record into the the system log file /etc/utmp. |
+ut | This option indicates that xterm should write a record into the system log file /etc/utmp. |
-vb | This option indicates that a visual bell is preferred over an audible one. Instead of ringing the terminal bell whenever a Control-G is received, the window will be flashed. |
+vb | This option indicates that a visual bell should not be used. |
-wf | This option indicates that xterm should wait for the window to be mapped the first time before starting the subprocess so that the initial terminal size settings and environment variables are correct. It is the application's responsibility to catch subsequent terminal size changes. |
+wf | This option indicates that xterm show not wait before starting the subprocess. |
-C | This option indicates that this window should receive console output. This is not supported on all systems. To obtain console output, you must be the owner of the console device, and you must have read and write permission for it. If you are running X under xdm on the console screen you may need to have the session startup and reset programs explicitly change the ownership of the console device in order to get this option to work. |
Sccn | This option specifies the last two letters of the name of a pseudoterminal to use in slave mode, plus the number of the inherited file descriptor. The option is parsed ``%c%c%d''. This allows xterm to be used as an input and output channel for an existing program and is sometimes used in specialized applications. |
%geom | This option specifies the preferred size and position of the Tektronix window. It is shorthand for specifying the ``*tekGeometry'' resource. |
#geom | This option specifies the preferred position of the icon window. It is shorthand for specifying the ``*iconGeometry'' resource. |
-T string | This option specifies the title for xterm's windows. It is equivalent to -title. |
-n string | This option specifies the icon name for xterm's windows. It is shorthand for specifying the ``*icon- Name'' resource. Note that this is not the same as the toolkit option -name (see below). The default icon name is the application name. |
-r | This option indicates that reverse video should be simulated by swapping the foreground and background colors. It is equivalent to -rv. |
-w number | This option specifies the width in pixels of the border surrounding the window. It is equivalent to -borderwidth or -bw. |
-bg color | This option specifies the color to use for the background of the window. The default is ``white.'' |
-bd color | This option specifies the color to use for the border of the window. The default is ``black.'' |
-bw color | This option specifies the width in pixels of the border surrounding the window. |
-fg color | This option specifies the color to use for displaying text. The default is ``black.'' |
-fn color | This option specifies the font to be used for displaying normal text. The default is fixed. |
-fn font | This option specifies the font to be used for displaying normal text. The default is fixed. |
-name name | This option specifies the application name under which resources are to be obtained, rather than the default executable file name. Name should not contain ``.'' or ``*'' characters. |
-title string | This option specifies the window title string, which may be displayed by window managers if the user so chooses. The default title is the command line specified after the -e option, if any, otherwise the application name. |
-rv | This option indicates that reverse video should be simulated by swapping the foreground and background colors. |
-geometry geometry | This option specifies the preferred size and position of the VT102 window; see X(1). |
-display display | This option specifies the X server to contact; see X. |
-xrm resourcestring | This option specifies a resource string to be used. This is especially useful for setting resources that do not have separate command line options. |
-iconic | This option indicates that xterm should ask the window manager to start it as an icon rather than as the normal window. |
-dc | This option disables the escape sequence to change the vt100 foreground and background colors, the text cursor color, the mouse cursor foreground and background colors and the Tektronix emulator foreground and background colors. |
+dc | This option enables the escape sequence to change the vt100 foreground and background colors, the text cursor color, the mouse cursor foreground and background colors and the Tektronix emulator foreground and background |
xterm - runs the X terminal (if supported).