rxvt-unicode - (ouR XVT, unicode), a VT102 emulator for the X window system
urxvt [options] [-e command [ args ]]
rxvt-unicode, version
9.30, is a colour vt102 terminal emulator
intended as an
xterm(1) replacement for users who do not require
features such as Tektronix 4014 emulation and toolkit-style configurability.
As a result,
rxvt-unicode uses much less swap space -- a significant
advantage on a machine serving many X sessions.
This document is also available on the World-Wide-Web at
<
http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/rxvt-unicode/doc/rxvt.1.pod>.
See
urxvt(7) (try "man 7 urxvt") for a list of frequently asked
questions and answer to them and some common problems. That document is also
accessible on the World-Wide-Web at
<
http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/rxvt-unicode/doc/rxvt.7.pod>.
Unlike the original rxvt,
rxvt-unicode stores all text in Unicode
internally. That means it can store and display most scripts in the world.
Being a terminal emulator, however, some things are very difficult, especially
cursive scripts such as arabic, vertically written scripts like mongolian or
scripts requiring extremely complex combining rules, like tibetan or
devanagari. Don't expect pretty output when using these scripts. Most other
scripts, latin, cyrillic, kanji, thai etc. should work fine, though. A
somewhat difficult case are right-to-left scripts, such as hebrew:
rxvt-unicode adopts the view that bidirectional algorithms belong in
the application, not the terminal emulator (too many things -- such as
cursor-movement while editing -- break otherwise), but that might change.
If you are looking for a terminal that supports more exotic scripts, let me
recommend "mlterm", which is a very user friendly, lean and clean
terminal emulator. In fact, the reason rxvt-unicode was born was solely
because the author couldn't get "mlterm" to use one font for latin1
and another for japanese.
Therefore another design rationale was the use of multiple fonts to display
characters: The idea of a single unicode font which many other programs force
onto its users never made sense to me: You should be able to choose any font
for any script freely.
Apart from that, rxvt-unicode is also much better internationalised than its
predecessor, supports things such as XFT and ISO 14755 that are handy in
i18n-environments, is faster, and has a lot bugs less than the original rxvt.
This all in addition to dozens of other small improvements.
It is still faithfully following the original rxvt idea of being lean and nice
on resources: for example, you can still configure rxvt-unicode without most
of its features to get a lean binary. It also comes with a client/daemon pair
that lets you open any number of terminal windows from within a single
process, which makes startup time very fast and drastically reduces memory
usage. See
urxvtd(1) (daemon) and
urxvtc(1) (client).
It also makes technical information about escape sequences (which have been
extended) more accessible: see
urxvt(7) for technical reference documentation
(escape sequences etc.).
The
urxvt options (mostly a subset of
xterm's) are listed below.
In keeping with the smaller-is-better philosophy, options may be eliminated or
default values chosen at compile-time, so options and defaults listed may not
accurately reflect the version installed on your system. `urxvt -h' gives a
list of major compile-time options on the
Options line. Option
descriptions may be prefixed with which compile option each is dependent upon.
e.g. `Compile
XIM:' requires
XIM on the
Options line.
Note: `urxvt -help' gives a list of all command-line options compiled into
your version.
Note that
urxvt permits the resource name to be used as a long-option
(--/++ option) so the potential command-line options are far greater than
those listed. For example: `urxvt --loginShell --color1 Orange'.
The following options are available:
-
-help, --help
- Print out a message describing available options.
-
-display displayname
- Attempt to open a window on the named X display (the older
form -d is still respected. but deprecated). In the absence of this
option, the display specified by the DISPLAY environment variable
is used.
-
-depth bitdepth
- Compile frills: Attempt to find a visual with the
given bit depth; resource depth.
[Please note that many X servers (and libXft) are buggy with respect to
"-depth 32" and/or alpha channels, and will cause all sorts of
graphical corruption. This is harmless, but we can't do anything about
this, so watch out]
-
-visual visualID
- Compile frills: Use the given visual (see e.g.
"xdpyinfo" for possible visual ids) instead of the default, and
also allocate a private colormap. All visual types except for DirectColor
are supported.
-
-geometry geom
- Window geometry (-g still respected); resource
geometry.
-
-rv|+rv
- Turn on/off simulated reverse video; resource
reverseVideo.
-
-j|+j
- Turn on/off jump scrolling (allow multiple lines per
refresh); resource jumpScroll.
-
-ss|+ss
- Turn on/off skip scrolling (allow multiple screens per
refresh); resource skipScroll.
-
-fade number
- Fade the text by the given percentage when focus is lost.
Small values fade a little only, 100 completely replaces all colours by
the fade colour; resource fading.
-
-fadecolor colour
- Fade to this colour when fading is used (see -fade).
The default colour is opaque black. resource fadeColor.
-
-icon file
- Compile pixbuf: Use the specified image as
application icon. This is used by many window managers, taskbars and
pagers to represent the application window; resource iconFile.
-
-bg colour
- Window background colour; resource background.
-
-fg colour
- Window foreground colour; resource foreground.
-
-cr colour
- The cursor colour; resource cursorColor.
-
-pr colour
- The mouse pointer foreground colour; resource
pointerColor.
-
-pr2 colour
- The mouse pointer background colour; resource
pointerColor2.
-
-bd colour
- The colour of the border around the text area and between
the scrollbar and the text; resource borderColor.
-
-fn fontlist
- Select the fonts to be used. This is a comma separated list
of font names that are checked in order when trying to find glyphs for
characters. The first font defines the cell size for characters; other
fonts might be smaller, but not (in general) larger. A (hopefully)
reasonable default font list is always appended to it. See resource
font for more details.
In short, to specify an X11 core font, just specify its name or prefix it
with "x:". To specify an XFT-font, you need to prefix it with
"xft:", e.g.:
urxvt -fn "xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono:pixelsize=15"
urxvt -fn "9x15bold,xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono"
See also the question "How does rxvt-unicode choose fonts?" in the
FAQ section of urxvt(7).
-
-fb fontlist
- Compile font-styles: The bold font list to use when
bold characters are to be printed. See resource boldFont for
details.
-
-fi fontlist
- Compile font-styles: The italic font list to use
when italic characters are to be printed. See resource
italicFont for details.
-
-fbi fontlist
- Compile font-styles: The bold italic font list to
use when bold italic characters
are to be printed. See resource boldItalicFont for details.
-
-is|+is
- Compile font-styles: Bold/Blink font styles imply
high intensity foreground/background (default). See resource
intensityStyles for details.
-
-name name
- Specify the application name under which resources are to
be obtained, rather than the default executable file name. Name should not
contain `.' or `*' characters. Also sets the icon and title name.
-
-ls|+ls
- Start as a login-shell/sub-shell; resource
loginShell.
-
-mc milliseconds
- Specify the maximum time between multi-click
selections.
-
-ut|+ut
- Compile utmp: Inhibit/enable writing a utmp entry;
resource utmpInhibit.
-
-vb|+vb
- Turn on/off visual bell on receipt of a bell character;
resource visualBell.
-
-sb|+sb
- Turn on/off scrollbar; resource scrollBar.
-
-sr|+sr
- Put scrollbar on right/left; resource
scrollBar_right.
-
-st|+st
- Display rxvt (non XTerm/NeXT) scrollbar without/with a
trough; resource scrollBar_floating.
-
-si|+si
- Turn on/off scroll-to-bottom on TTY output inhibit;
resource scrollTtyOutput has opposite effect.
-
-sk|+sk
- Turn on/off scroll-to-bottom on keypress; resource
scrollTtyKeypress.
-
-sw|+sw
- Turn on/off scrolling with the scrollback buffer as new
lines appear. This only takes effect if -si is also given; resource
scrollWithBuffer.
-
-ptab|+ptab
- If enabled (default), "Horizontal Tab" characters
are being stored as actual wide characters in the screen buffer, which
makes it possible to select and paste them. Since a horizontal tab is a
cursor movement and not an actual glyph, this can sometimes be visually
annoying as the cursor on a tab character is displayed as a wide cursor;
resource pastableTabs.
-
-bc|+bc
- Blink the cursor; resource cursorBlink.
-
-uc|+uc
- Make the cursor underlined; resource
cursorUnderline.
- -iconic
- Start iconified, if the window manager supports that
option. Alternative form is -ic.
-
-sl number
- Save number lines in the scrollback buffer. See
resource entry for limits; resource saveLines.
-
-b number
- Compile frills: Internal border of number
pixels. See resource entry for limits; resource
internalBorder.
-
-w number
- Compile frills: External border of number
pixels. Also, -bw and -borderwidth. See resource entry for
limits; resource externalBorder.
- -bl
- Compile frills: Set MWM hints to request a
borderless window, i.e. if honoured by the WM, the rxvt-unicode window
will not have window decorations; resource borderLess. If the
window manager does not support MWM hints (e.g. kwin), enables
override-redirect mode.
- -override-redirect
- Compile frills: Sets override-redirect on the
window; resource override-redirect.
- -dockapp
- Sets the initial state of the window to WithdrawnState,
which makes window managers that support this extension treat it as a
dockapp.
- -sbg
- Compile frills: Disable the usage of the built-in
block graphics/line drawing characters and just rely on what the specified
fonts provide. Use this if you have a good font and want to use its block
graphic glyphs; resource skipBuiltinGlyphs.
-
-lsp number
- Compile frills: Lines (pixel height) to insert
between each row of the display. Useful to work around font rendering
problems; resource lineSpace.
-
-letsp number
- Compile frills: Amount to adjust the computed
character width by to control overall letter spacing. Negative values will
tighten up the letter spacing, positive values will space letters out
more. Useful to work around odd font metrics; resource
letterSpace.
-
-tn termname
- 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(5) database and should have
li# and co# entries; resource termName.
-
-e command [arguments]
- Run the command with its command-line arguments in the
urxvt window; also sets the window title and icon name to be the
basename of the program being executed if neither -title
(-T) nor -n are given on the command line. If this option is
used, it must be the last on the command-line. If there is no -e
option then the default is to run the program specified by the
SHELL environment variable or, failing that,
sh (1).
Please note that you must specify a program with arguments. If you want to
run shell commands, you have to specify the shell, like this:
urxvt -e sh -c "shell commands"
-
-title text
- Window title (-T still respected); the default title
is the basename of the program specified after the -e option, if
any, otherwise the application name; resource title.
-
-n text
- Icon name; the default name is the basename of the program
specified after the -e option, if any, otherwise the application
name; resource iconName.
- -C
- Capture system console messages.
-
-pt style
- Compile XIM: input style for input method;
OverTheSpot, OffTheSpot, Root; resource
preeditType.
If the perl extension "xim-onthespot" is used (which is the
default), then additionally the "OnTheSpot" preedit type is
available.
-
-im text
- Compile XIM: input method name. resource
inputMethod.
-
-imlocale string
- The locale to use for opening the IM. You can use an
"LC_CTYPE" of e.g. "de_DE.UTF-8" for normal text
processing but "ja_JP.EUC-JP" for the input extension to be able
to input japanese characters while staying in another locale. resource
imLocale.
-
-imfont fontset
- Set the font set to use for the X Input Method, see
resource imFont for more info.
- -tcw
- Change the meaning of triple-click selection with the left
mouse button. Only effective when the original (non-perl) selection code
is in-use. Instead of selecting a full line it will extend the selection
to the end of the logical line only. resource
tripleclickwords.
-
-dpb|+dpb
- Compile frills: Disable (or enable) emitting bracketed
paste mode sequences (default enabled). Bracketed paste mode allows
programs to detect when something is pasted. Since more and more programs
abuse this, these sequences can be disabled. The command sequences to
enable and query paste mode will still work, but the actual bracket
sequences will no longer be emitted. You can also toggle this from the
ctrl-middle-mouse-button menu; resource disablePasteBrackets.
- -insecure
- Enable "insecure" mode, which currently enables
most of the escape sequences that echo strings. See the resource
insecure for more info.
-
-mod modifier
- Override detection of Meta modifier with specified key:
alt, meta, hyper, super, mod1,
mod2, mod3, mod4, mod5; resource
modifier.
-
-ssc|+ssc
- Turn on/off secondary screen (default enabled); resource
secondaryScreen.
-
-ssr|+ssr
- Turn on/off secondary screen scroll (default enabled);
resource secondaryScroll.
-
-rm mode
- Compile frills: Sets long line rewrapping behaviour
on window resizes to one of auto (the default), always or
never. The latter two modes do the obvious, auto rewraps
(acts like always) if scrollback is non-empty, and wings lines
(acts like never) otherwise; resource rewrapMode.
-
-hold|+hold
- Turn on/off hold window after exit support. If enabled,
urxvt will not immediately destroy its window when the program executed
within it exits. Instead, it will wait till it is being killed or closed
by the user; resource hold.
-
-cd path
- Sets the working directory for the shell (or the command
specified via -e). The path must be an absolute path and it
must exist for urxvt to start; resource chdir.
-
-xrm string
- Works like the X Toolkit option of the same name, by adding
the string as if it were specified in a resource file. Resource
values specified this way take precedence over all other resource
specifications.
Note that you need to use the same syntax as in the .Xdefaults file,
e.g. "*.background: black". Also note that all urxvt-specific
options can be specified as long-options on the commandline, so use of
-xrm is mostly limited to cases where you want to specify other
resources (e.g. for input methods) or for compatibility with other
programs.
-
-keysym.sym string
- Remap a key symbol. See resource keysym.
-
-embed windowid
- Tells urxvt to embed its windows into an already-existing
window, which enables applications to easily embed a terminal.
Right now, urxvt will first unmap/map the specified window, so it shouldn't
be a top-level window. urxvt will also reconfigure it quite a bit, so
don't expect it to keep some specific state. It's best to create an extra
subwindow for urxvt and leave it alone.
The window will not be destroyed when urxvt exits.
It might be useful to know that urxvt will not close file descriptors passed
to it (except for stdin/out/err, of course), so you can use file
descriptors to communicate with the programs within the terminal. This
works regardless of whether the "-embed" option was used or not.
Here is a short Gtk2-perl snippet that illustrates how this option can be
used (a longer example is in doc/embed):
my $rxvt = new Gtk2::Socket;
$rxvt->signal_connect_after (realize => sub {
my $xid = $_[0]->window->get_xid;
system "urxvt -embed $xid &";
});
-
-pty-fd file descriptor
- Tells urxvt NOT to execute any commands or create a new
pty/tty pair but instead use the given file descriptor as the tty master.
This is useful if you want to drive urxvt as a generic terminal emulator
without having to run a program within it.
If this switch is given, urxvt will not create any utmp/wtmp entries and
will not tinker with pty/tty permissions - you have to do that yourself if
you want that.
As an extremely special case, specifying "-1" will completely
suppress pty/tty operations, which is probably only useful in conjunction
with some perl extension that manages the terminal.
Here is a example in perl that illustrates how this option can be used (a
longer example is in doc/pty-fd):
use IO::Pty;
use Fcntl;
my $pty = new IO::Pty;
fcntl $pty, F_SETFD, 0; # clear close-on-exec
system "urxvt -pty-fd " . (fileno $pty) . "&";
close $pty;
# now communicate with rxvt
my $slave = $pty->slave;
while (<$slave>) { print $slave "got <$_>\n" }
Note that, despite what the name might imply, the file descriptor does not
need to be a pty, it can be a bi-directional pipe as well (e.g. a unix
domain or tcp socket). While tty operations cannot be done in this case,
urxvt can still be remote controlled with it:
use Socket;
use Fcntl;
socketpair my $URXVT, my $slave, Socket::AF_UNIX, Socket::SOCK_STREAM, Socket::PF_UNSPEC;
fcntl $slave, Fcntl::F_SETFD, 0;
system "exec urxvt -pty-fd " . (fileno $slave) . " &";
close $slave;
syswrite $URXVT, "Type a secret password: ";
my $secret = do { local $/ = "\r"; <$URXVT> };
print "Not so secret anymore: $secret\n";
-
-pe string
- Comma-separated list of perl extension scripts to use (or
not to use) in this terminal instance. See resource perl-ext for
details.
Note: `urxvt --help' gives a list of all resources (long options) compiled into
your version. All resources are also available as long-options.
You can set and change the resources using X11 tools like
xrdb. Many
distribution do also load settings from the
~/.Xresources file when X
starts. urxvt will consult the following files/resources in order, with later
settings overwriting earlier ones:
1. app-defaults file in $XAPPLRESDIR
2. $HOME/.Xdefaults
3. RESOURCE_MANAGER property on root-window of screen 0
4. SCREEN_RESOURCES property on root-window of the current screen
5. $XENVIRONMENT file OR $HOME/.Xdefaults-<nodename>
6. resources specified via -xrm on the commandline
Note that when reading X resources,
urxvt recognizes two class names:
Rxvt and
URxvt. The class name
Rxvt allows resources
common to both
urxvt and the original
rxvt to be easily
configured, while the class name
URxvt allows resources unique to
urxvt, to be shared between different
urxvt configurations. If
no resources are specified, suitable defaults will be used. Command-line
arguments can be used to override resource settings. The following resources
are supported (you might want to check the urxvt
perl(3) manpage for
additional settings by perl extensions not documented here):
-
depth: bitdepth
- Compile xft: Attempt to find a visual with the given
bit depth; option -depth.
-
buffered: boolean
- Compile xft: Turn on/off double-buffering for xft
(default enabled). On some card/driver combination enabling it slightly
decreases performance, on most it greatly helps it. The slowdown is small,
so it should normally be enabled.
-
geometry: geom
- Create the window with the specified X window geometry
[default 80x24]; option -geometry.
-
background: colour
- Use the specified colour as the window's background colour
[default White]; option -bg.
-
foreground: colour
- Use the specified colour as the window's foreground colour
[default Black]; option -fg.
-
colorn: colour
- Use the specified colour for the colour value n,
where 0-7 corresponds to low-intensity (normal) colours and 8-15
corresponds to high-intensity (bold = bright foreground, blink = bright
background) colours. The canonical names are as follows: 0=black, 1=red,
2=green, 3=yellow, 4=blue, 5=magenta, 6=cyan, 7=white, but the actual
colour names used are listed in the COLOURS AND GRAPHICS section.
Colours higher than 15 cannot be set using resources (yet), but can be
changed using an escape command (see urxvt(7)).
Colours 16-79 form a standard 4x4x4 colour cube (the same as xterm with 88
colour support). Colours 80-87 are evenly spaces grey steps.
-
colorBD: colour
-
colorIT: colour
- Use the specified colour to display bold or italic
characters when the foreground colour is the default. If font styles are
not available (Compile styles) and this option is unset, reverse
video is used instead.
-
colorUL: colour
- Use the specified colour to display underlined characters
when the foreground colour is the default.
-
underlineColor: colour
- If set, use the specified colour as the colour for the
underline itself. If unset, use the foreground colour.
-
highlightColor: colour
- If set, use the specified colour as the background for
highlighted characters. If unset, use reverse video.
-
highlightTextColor: colour
- If set and highlightColor is set, use the specified colour
as the foreground for highlighted characters.
-
cursorColor: colour
- Use the specified colour for the cursor. The default is to
use the foreground colour; option -cr.
-
cursorColor2: colour
- Use the specified colour for the colour of the cursor text.
For this to take effect, cursorColor must also be specified. The
default is to use the background colour.
-
reverseVideo: boolean
-
True: simulate reverse video by foreground and
background colours; option -rv. False: regular screen
colours [default]; option +rv. See note in COLOURS AND
GRAPHICS section.
-
jumpScroll: boolean
-
True: specify that jump scrolling should be used.
When receiving lots of lines, urxvt will only scroll once a whole screen
height of lines has been read, resulting in fewer updates while still
displaying every received line; option -j.
False: specify that smooth scrolling should be used. urxvt will
force a screen refresh on each new line it received; option
+j.
-
skipScroll: boolean
-
True: (the default) specify that skip scrolling
should be used. When receiving lots of lines, urxvt will only scroll once
in a while (around 60 times per second), resulting in far fewer updates.
This can result in urxvt not ever displaying some of the lines it
receives; option -ss.
False: specify that everything is to be displayed, even if the
refresh is too fast for the human eye to read anything (or the monitor to
display anything); option +ss.
-
fading: number
- Fade the text by the given percentage when focus is lost;
option -fade.
-
fadeColor: colour
- Fade to this colour, when fading is used (see
fading:). The default colour is black; option
-fadecolor.
-
iconFile: file
- Set the application icon pixmap; option -icon.
-
scrollColor: colour
- Use the specified colour for the scrollbar [default
#B2B2B2].
-
troughColor: colour
- Use the specified colour for the scrollbar's trough area
[default #969696]. Only relevant for rxvt (non XTerm/NeXT) scrollbar.
-
borderColor: colour
- The colour of the border around the text area and between
the scrollbar and the text.
-
font: fontlist
- Select the fonts to be used. This is a comma separated list
of font names that are checked in order when trying to find glyphs for
characters. The first font defines the cell size for characters; other
fonts might be smaller, but not (in general) larger. A (hopefully)
reasonable default font list is always appended to it; option -fn.
Each font can either be a standard X11 core font (XLFD) name, with optional
prefix "x:" or a Xft font (Compile xft), prefixed with
"xft:".
In addition, each font can be prefixed with additional hints and
specifications enclosed in square brackets ("[]"). The only
available hint currently is "codeset=codeset-name", and this is
only used for Xft fonts.
For example, this font resource
URxvt.font: 9x15bold,\
-misc-fixed-bold-r-normal--15-140-75-75-c-90-iso10646-1,\
-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--15-140-75-75-c-90-iso10646-1, \
[codeset=JISX0208]xft:Kochi Gothic:antialias=false, \
xft:Code2000:antialias=false
specifies five fonts to be used. The first one is "9x15bold"
(actually the iso8859-1 version of the second font), which is the base
font (because it is named first) and thus defines the character cell grid
to be 9 pixels wide and 15 pixels high.
The second font is just used to add additional unicode characters not in the
base font, likewise the third, which is unfortunately non-bold, but the
bold version of the font does contain fewer characters, so this is a
useful supplement.
The third font is an Xft font with aliasing turned off, and the characters
are limited to the JIS 0208 codeset (i.e. japanese kanji). The font
contains other characters, but we are not interested in them.
The last font is a useful catch-all font that supplies most of the remaining
unicode characters.
-
boldFont: fontlist
-
italicFont: fontlist
-
boldItalicFont: fontlist
- The font list to use for displaying bold,
italic or bold italic
characters, respectively.
If specified and non-empty, then the syntax is the same as for the
font-resource, and the given font list will be used as is, which
makes it possible to substitute completely different font styles for bold
and italic.
If unset (the default), a suitable font list will be synthesized by
"morphing" the normal text font list into the desired shape. If
that is not possible, replacement fonts of the desired shape will be
tried.
If set, but empty, then this specific style is disabled and the normal text
font will being used for the given style.
-
intensityStyles: boolean
- When font styles are not enabled, or this option is enabled
( True, option -is, the default), bold/blink font styles
imply high intensity foreground/background colours. Disabling this option
( False, option +is) disables this behaviour, the high
intensity colours are not reachable.
-
title: string
- Set window title string, the default title is the
command-line specified after the -e option, if any, otherwise the
application name; option -title.
-
iconName: string
- Set the name used to label the window's icon or displayed
in an icon manager window, it also sets the window's title unless it is
explicitly set; option -n.
-
mapAlert: boolean
-
True: de-iconify (map) on receipt of a bell
character. False: no de-iconify (map) on receipt of a bell
character [default].
-
urgentOnBell: boolean
-
True: set the urgency hint for the wm on receipt of
a bell character. False: do not set the urgency hint [default].
urxvt resets the urgency hint on every focus change.
-
visualBell: boolean
-
True: use visual bell on receipt of a bell
character; option -vb. False: no visual bell [default];
option +vb.
-
loginShell: boolean
-
True: start as a login shell by prepending a `-' to
argv[0] of the shell; option -ls. False: start as a
normal sub-shell [default]; option +ls.
-
multiClickTime: number
- Specify the maximum time in milliseconds between
multi-click select events. The default is 500 milliseconds; option
-mc.
-
utmpInhibit: boolean
-
True: inhibit writing record into the system log
file utmp; option -ut. False: write record into the
system log file utmp [default]; option +ut.
-
print-pipe: string
- Specify a command pipe for vt100 printer [default
lpr(1)]. Use Print to initiate a screen
dump to the printer and Ctrl-Print or Shift-Print to include
the scrollback as well.
The string will be interpreted as if typed into the shell as-is.
Example:
URxvt.print-pipe: cat > $(TMPDIR=$HOME mktemp urxvt.XXXXXX)
This creates a new file in your home directory with the screen contents
every time you hit "Print".
-
scrollstyle: mode
- Set scrollbar style to rxvt, plain,
next or xterm. plain is the author's favourite.
-
thickness: number
- Set the scrollbar width in pixels.
-
scrollBar: boolean
-
True: enable the scrollbar [default]; option
-sb. False: disable the scrollbar; option +sb.
-
scrollBar_right: boolean
-
True: place the scrollbar on the right of the
window; option -sr. False: place the scrollbar on the left
of the window; option +sr.
-
scrollBar_floating: boolean
-
True: display an rxvt scrollbar without a trough;
option -st. False: display an rxvt scrollbar with a trough;
option +st.
-
scrollBar_align: mode
- Align the top, bottom or centre
[default] of the scrollbar thumb with the pointer on middle button
press/drag.
-
scrollTtyOutput: boolean
-
True: scroll to bottom when tty receives output;
option -si. False: do not scroll to bottom when tty receives
output; option +si.
-
scrollWithBuffer: boolean
-
True: scroll with scrollback buffer when tty
receives new lines (i.e. try to show the same lines) and
scrollTtyOutput is False; option -sw. False: do not
scroll with scrollback buffer when tty receives new lines; option
+sw.
-
scrollTtyKeypress: boolean
-
True: scroll to bottom when a non-special key is
pressed. Special keys are those which are intercepted by rxvt-unicode for
special handling and are not passed onto the shell; option -sk.
False: do not scroll to bottom when a non-special key is pressed;
option +sk.
-
saveLines: number
- Save number lines in the scrollback buffer [default
1000]; option -sl.
-
internalBorder: number
- Internal border of number pixels. This resource is
limited to 100; option -b.
-
externalBorder: number
- External border of number pixels. This resource is
limited to 100; option -w, -bw, -borderwidth.
-
borderLess: boolean
- Set MWM hints to request a borderless window, i.e. if
honoured by the WM, the rxvt-unicode window will not have window
decorations; option -bl.
-
skipBuiltinGlyphs: boolean
- Compile frills: Disable the usage of the built-in
block graphics/line drawing characters and just rely on what the specified
fonts provide. Use this if you have a good font and want to use its block
graphic glyphs; option -sbg.
-
termName: termname
- Specifies the terminal type name to be set in the
TERM environment variable; option -tn.
-
lineSpace: number
- Specifies number of lines (pixel height) to insert between
each row of the display [default 0]; option -lsp.
-
meta8: boolean
-
True: handle Meta (Alt) + keypress to set the 8th
bit. False: handle Meta (Alt) + keypress as an escape prefix
[default].
-
mouseWheelScrollPage: boolean
-
True: the mouse wheel scrolls a page full.
False: the mouse wheel scrolls five lines [default].
-
pastableTabs: boolean
-
True: store tabs as wide characters. False:
interpret tabs as cursor movement only; option "-ptab".
-
cursorBlink: boolean
-
True: blink the cursor. False: do not blink
the cursor [default]; option -bc.
-
cursorUnderline: boolean
-
True: Make the cursor underlined. False: Make
the cursor a box [default]; option -uc.
-
pointerBlank: boolean
-
True: blank the pointer when a key is pressed or
after a set number of seconds of inactivity. False: the pointer is
always visible [default].
-
pointerColor: colour
- Mouse pointer foreground colour.
-
pointerColor2: colour
- Mouse pointer background colour.
-
pointerShape: string
- Compile frills: Specifies the name of the mouse
pointer shape [default xterm]. See the macros in the
X11/cursorfont.h include file for possible values (omit the
"XC_" prefix).
-
pointerBlankDelay: number
- Specifies number of seconds before blanking the pointer
[default 2]. Use a large number (e.g. 987654321) to effectively disable
the timeout.
-
backspacekey: string
- The string to send when the backspace key is pressed. If
set to DEC or unset it will send Delete (code 127) or, with
control, Backspace (code 8) - which can be reversed with the
appropriate DEC private mode escape sequence.
-
deletekey: string
- The string to send when the delete key (not the keypad
delete key) is pressed. If unset it will send the sequence traditionally
associated with the Execute key.
-
cutchars: string
- The characters used as delimiters for double-click word
selection (whitespace delimiting is added automatically if resource is
given).
When the perl selection extension is in use (the default if compiled in, see
the urxvt perl(3) manpage), a suitable regex using these characters
will be created (if the resource exists, otherwise, no regex will be
created). In this mode, characters outside ISO-8859-1 can be used.
When the selection extension is not used, only ISO-8859-1 characters can be
used. If not specified, the built-in default is used:
BACKSLASH `"'&()*,;<=>?@[]^{|}
-
preeditType: style
-
OnTheSpot, OverTheSpot, OffTheSpot,
Root; option -pt.
-
inputMethod: name
-
name of inputMethod to use; option -im.
-
imLocale: name
- The locale to use for opening the IM. You can use an
"LC_CTYPE" of e.g. "de_DE.UTF-8" for normal text
processing but "ja_JP.EUC-JP" for the input extension to be able
to input japanese characters while staying in another locale; option
-imlocale.
-
imFont: fontset
- Specify the font-set used for XIM styles
"OverTheSpot" or "OffTheSpot". It must be a standard X
font set (XLFD patterns separated by commas), i.e. it's not in the same
format as the other font lists used in urxvt. The default will be set-up
to chose *any* suitable found found, preferably one or two pixels
differing in size to the base font. option -imfont.
-
tripleclickwords: boolean
- Change the meaning of triple-click selection with the left
mouse button. Instead of selecting a full line it will extend the
selection to the end of the logical line only; option -tcw.
-
disablePasteBrackets: boolean
- Prevent emission of paste bracket sequences; option
-dpb.
-
insecure: boolean
- Enable "insecure" mode. Rxvt-unicode offers some
escape sequences that echo arbitrary strings like the icon name or the
locale. This could be abused if somebody gets 8-bit-clean access to your
display, whether through a mail client displaying mail bodies unfiltered
or through write(1) or any other means. Therefore, these sequences
are disabled by default. (Note that many other terminals, including xterm,
have these sequences enabled by default, which doesn't make it safer,
though).
You can enable them by setting this boolean resource or specifying
-insecure as an option. At the moment, this enables display-answer,
locale, findfont, icon label and window title requests.
-
modifier: modifier
- Set the key to be interpreted as the Meta key to:
alt, meta, hyper, super, mod1,
mod2, mod3, mod4, mod5; option
-mod.
-
answerbackString: string
- Specify the reply rxvt-unicode sends to the shell when an
ENQ (control-E) character is passed through. It may contain escape values
as described in the entry on keysym following.
-
secondaryScreen: boolean
- Turn on/off secondary screen (default enabled).
-
rewrapMode: mode
- Sets long line rewrap behaviour on window resize to one of
auto (default), always or never.
-
secondaryScroll: boolean
- Turn on/off secondary screen scroll (default enabled). If
this option is enabled, scrolls on the secondary screen will change the
scrollback buffer and, when secondaryScreen is off, switching to/from the
secondary screen will instead scroll the screen up.
-
hold: boolean
- Turn on/off hold window after exit support. If enabled,
urxvt will not immediately destroy its window when the program executed
within it exits. Instead, it will wait till it is being killed or closed
by the user.
-
chdir: path
- Sets the working directory for the shell (or the command
specified via -e). The path must be an absolute path and it
must exist for urxvt to start. If it isn't specified then the current
working directory will be used; option -cd.
-
keysym.sym: action
- Compile frills: Associate action with keysym
sym. The intervening resource name keysym. cannot be
omitted.
Using this resource, you can map key combinations such as
"Ctrl-Shift-BackSpace" to various actions, such as outputting a
different string than would normally result from that combination, making
the terminal scroll up or down the way you want it, or any other thing an
extension might provide.
The key combination that triggers the action, sym, has the following
format:
(modifiers-)key
Where modifiers can be any combination of the following full or
abbreviated modifier names:
ISOLevel3 |
I |
AppKeypad |
K |
Control |
C |
NumLock |
N |
Shift |
S |
Meta |
M or A |
Lock |
L |
Mod1 |
1 |
Mod2 |
2 |
Mod3 |
3 |
Mod4 |
4 |
Mod5 |
5 |
The NumLock, Meta and ISOLevel3 modifiers are usually
aliased to whatever modifier the NumLock key, Meta/Alt keys or ISO Level3
Shift/AltGr keys are being mapped. AppKeypad is a synthetic
modifier mapped to the current application keymap mode state.
Due the the large number of modifier combinations, a key mapping will match
if at least the specified identifiers are being set, and no other
key mappings with those and more bits are being defined. That means that
defining a mapping for "a" will automatically provide
definitions for "Meta-a", "Shift-a" and so on, unless
some of those are defined mappings themselves. See the
"builtin:" action, below, for a way to work around this when
this is a problem.
The spelling of key depends on your implementation of X. An easy way
to find a key name is to use the xev(1) command. You can find a
list by looking for the "XK_" macros in the
X11/keysymdef.h include file (omit the "XK_" prefix).
Alternatively you can specify key by its hex keysym value (
0x0000 - 0xFFFF).
As with any resource value, the action string may contain backslash
escape sequences ("\n": newline, "\\": backslash,
"\000": octal number), see RESOURCES in "man 7 X" for
further details.
An action starts with an action prefix that selects a certain type of
action, followed by a colon. An action string without colons is
interpreted as a literal string to pass to the tty (as if it was prefixed
with "string:").
The following action prefixes are known - extensions can provide additional
prefixes:
- string:STRING
- If the action starts with "string:" (or
otherwise contains no colons), then the remaining "STRING" will
be passed to the program running in the terminal. For example, you could
replace whatever Shift-Tab outputs by the string "echo rm -rf /"
followed by a newline:
URxvt.keysym.Shift-Tab: string:echo rm -rf /\n
This could in theory be used to completely redefine your keymap.
In addition, for actions of this type, you can define a range of keysyms in
one shot by loading the "keysym-list" perl extension and
providing an action with pattern list/PREFIX/MIDDLE/SUFFIX,
where the delimiter `/' should be a character not used by the strings.
Its usage can be demonstrated by an example:
URxvt.keysym.M-C-0x61: list|\033<|abc|>
The above line is equivalent to the following three lines:
URxvt.keysym.Meta-Control-0x61: string:\033<a>
URxvt.keysym.Meta-Control-0x62: string:\033<b>
URxvt.keysym.Meta-Control-0x63: string:\033<c>
- command:STRING
- If action takes the form of
"command:STRING", the specified STRING is interpreted and
executed as urxvt's control sequence (basically the opposite of
"string:" - instead of sending it to the program running in the
terminal, it will be treated as if it were program output). This is most
useful to feed command sequences into urxvt.
For example the following means "change the current locale to
"zh_CN.GBK" when Control-Meta-c is being pressed":
URxvt.keysym.M-C-c: command:\033]701;zh_CN.GBK\007
The following example will map Control-Meta-1 and Control-Meta-2 to the
fonts "suxuseuro" and "9x15bold", so you can have some
limited font-switching at runtime:
URxvt.keysym.M-C-1: command:\033]50;suxuseuro\007
URxvt.keysym.M-C-2: command:\033]50;9x15bold\007
Other things are possible, e.g. resizing (see urxvt(7) for more info):
URxvt.keysym.M-C-3: command:\033[8;25;80t
URxvt.keysym.M-C-4: command:\033[8;48;110t
- builtin:
- The builtin action is the action that urxvt would execute
if no key binding existed for the key combination. The obvious use is to
undo the effect of existing bindings. The not so obvious use is to
reinstate bindings when another binding overrides too many modifiers.
For example if you overwrite the "Insert" key you will disable
urxvt's "Shift-Insert" mapping. To re-enable that, you can poke
"holes" into the user-defined keymap using the
"builtin:" replacement:
URxvt.keysym.Insert: <my insert key sequence>
URxvt.keysym.S-Insert: builtin:
The first line defines a mapping for "Insert" and any
combination of modifiers. The second line re-establishes the default
mapping for "Shift-Insert".
- builtin-string:
- This action is mainly useful to restore string mappings for
keys that have predefined actions in urxvt. The exact semantics are a bit
difficult to explain - basically, this action will send the string to the
application that would be sent if urxvt wouldn't have a built-in action
for it.
An example might make it clearer: urxvt normally pastes the selection when
you press "Shift-Insert". With the following bindings, it would
instead emit the (undocumented, but what applications running in the
terminal might expect) sequence "ESC [ 2 $" instead:
URxvt.keysym.S-Insert: builtin-string:
URxvt.keysym.C-S-Insert: builtin:
The first line disables the paste functionality for that key combination,
and the second reinstates the default behaviour for
"Control-Shift-Insert", which would otherwise be overridden.
Similarly, to let applications gain access to the "C-M-c" (copy to
clipboard) and "C-M-v" (paste clipboard) key combination, you
can do this:
URxvt.keysym.C-M-c: builtin-string:
URxvt.keysym.C-M-v: builtin-string:
- EXTENSION:STRING
- An action of this form invokes the action STRING, if
any, provided by the urxvt perl(3) extension EXTENSION. The
extension will be loaded automatically if necessary.
Not all extensions define actions, but popular extensions that do include
the selection and matcher extensions (documented in their
own manpages, urxvt- selection(1) and urxvt-matcher(1),
respectively).
From the silly examples department, this will rot13-"encrypt"
urxvt's selection when Alt-Control-c is pressed on typical PC keyboards:
URxvt.keysym.M-C-c: selection:rot13
- perl:STRING *DEPRECATED*
- This is a deprecated way of invoking commands provided by
perl extensions. It is still supported, but should not be used
anymore.
-
perl-ext-common: string
-
perl-ext: string
- Comma-separated list(s) of perl extension scripts (default:
"default") to use in this terminal instance; option -pe.
Extension names can be prefixed with a "-" sign to remove them
again, in case they had been specified earlier. This can be useful to
selectively disable some extensions loaded by default, or specified via
the "perl-ext-common" resource. For example,
"default,-selection" will use all the default extensions except
"selection".
To prohibit autoloading of extensions, you can prefix them with
"/", which will make urxvt refuse to automatically load them
(this can be overridden, however, by specifying the extension name again
without a prefix, though). This does not prohibit extensions themselves
loading other extensions. For example, "default,/background"
will keep the "background" extension from being loaded when a
background OSC sequence is received.
The default set includes the "selection",
"option-popup", "selection-popup",
"readline", "searchable-scrollback" and
"confirm-paste" extensions, as well as any extensions which are
mentioned in keysym resources.
Any extension such that a corresponding resource is given on the command
line is automatically appended to perl-ext.
Each extension is looked up in the library directories, loaded if necessary,
and bound to the current terminal instance. When the library search path
contains multiple extension files of the same name, then the first one
found will be used.
If both of these resources are the empty string, then the perl interpreter
will not be initialized. The rationale for having two options is that
perl-ext-common will be used for extensions that should be
available to all instances, while perl-ext is used for specific
instances.
-
perl-eval: string
- Perl code to be evaluated when all extensions have been
registered. See the urxvt perl(3) manpage.
-
perl-lib: path
- Colon-separated list of additional directories that hold
extension scripts. When looking for perl extensions, urxvt will first look
in these directories, then in $URXVT_PERL_LIB,
$HOME/.urxvt/ext and lastly in
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/urxvt/perl/.
See the urxvt perl(3) manpage.
-
selection.pattern-idx:
perl-regex
- Additional selection patterns, see the urxvtperl(3)
manpage for details.
-
selection-autotransform.idx:
perl-transform
- Selection auto-transform patterns, see the
urxvtperl(3) manpage for details.
-
searchable-scrollback: keysym
*DEPRECATED*
- This resource is deprecated and will be removed. Use a
keysym resource instead, e.g.:
URxvt.keysym.M-s: searchable-scrollback:start
-
url-launcher: string
- Specifies the program to be started with a URL argument.
Used by the "selection-popup" and "matcher" perl
extensions.
-
transient-for: windowid
- Compile frills: Sets the WM_TRANSIENT_FOR property
to the given window id.
-
override-redirect: boolean
- Compile frills: Sets override-redirect for the
terminal window, making it almost invisible to window managers; option
-override-redirect.
-
iso14755: boolean
- Turn on/off ISO 14755 (default enabled).
-
iso14755_52: boolean
- Turn on/off ISO 14755 5.2 mode (default enabled).
Lines of text that scroll off the top of the
urxvt window (resource:
saveLines) and can be scrolled back using the scrollbar or by
keystrokes. The normal
urxvt scrollbar has arrows and its behaviour is
fairly intuitive. The
xterm-scrollbar is without arrows and its
behaviour mimics that of
xterm
Scroll down with
Button1 (
xterm-scrollbar) or
Shift-Next.
Scroll up with
Button3 (
xterm-scrollbar) or
Shift-Prior.
Continuous scroll with
Button2.
To temporarily override mouse reporting, for either the scrollbar or the normal
text selection/insertion, hold either the Shift or the Meta (Alt) key while
performing the desired mouse action.
If mouse reporting mode is active, the normal scrollbar actions are disabled --
on the assumption that we are using a fullscreen application. Instead,
pressing Button1 and Button3 sends
ESC [ 6 ~ (Next) and
ESC [ 5
~ (Prior), respectively. Similarly, clicking on the up and down arrows
sends
ESC [ A (Up) and
ESC [ B (Down), respectively.
The behaviour of text selection and insertion/pasting mechanism is similar to
xterm(1).
-
Selecting:
- Left click at the beginning of the region, drag to the end
of the region and release; Right click to extend the marked region; Left
double-click to select a word; Left triple-click to select the entire
logical line (which can span multiple screen lines), unless modified by
resource tripleclickwords.
Starting a selection while pressing the Meta key (or Meta+Ctrl
keys) (Compile: frills) will create a rectangular selection instead
of a normal one. In this mode, every selected row becomes its own line in
the selection, and trailing whitespace is visually underlined and removed
from the selection.
-
Pasting:
- Pressing and releasing the Middle mouse button in an
urxvt window causes the value of the PRIMARY selection (or
CLIPBOARD with the Meta modifier) to be inserted as if it had been
typed on the keyboard.
Pressing Shift-Insert causes the value of the PRIMARY selection to be
inserted too.
rxvt-unicode also provides the bindings Ctrl-Meta-c and
<Ctrl-Meta-v> to interact with the CLIPBOARD selection. The first
binding causes the value of the internal selection to be copied to the
CLIPBOARD selection, while the second binding causes the value of the
CLIPBOARD selection to be inserted.
Changing fonts (or font sizes, respectively) via the keypad is not yet supported
in rxvt-unicode. Bug me if you need this.
You can, however, switch fonts at runtime using escape sequences, e.g.:
printf '\e]710;%s\007' "9x15bold,xft:Kochi Gothic"
You can use keyboard shortcuts, too:
URxvt.keysym.M-C-1: command:\033]710;suxuseuro\007\033]711;suxuseuro\007
URxvt.keysym.M-C-2: command:\033]710;9x15bold\007\033]711;9x15bold\007
rxvt-unicode will automatically re-apply these fonts to the output so far.
ISO 14755 is a standard for entering and viewing unicode characters and
character codes using the keyboard. It consists of 4 parts. The first part is
available if rxvt-unicode has been compiled with "--enable-frills",
the rest is available when rxvt-unicode was compiled with
"--enable-iso14755".
- •
- 5.1: Basic method
This allows you to enter unicode characters using their hexcode.
Start by pressing and holding both "Control" and
"Shift", then enter hex-digits (between one and six). Releasing
"Control" and "Shift" will commit the character as if
it were typed directly. While holding down "Control" and
"Shift" you can also enter multiple characters by pressing
"Space", which will commit the current character and lets you
start a new one.
As an example of use, imagine a business card with a japanese e-mail
address, which you cannot type. Fortunately, the card has the e-mail
address printed as hexcodes, e.g. "671d 65e5". You can enter
this easily by pressing "Control" and "Shift",
followed by "6-7-1-D-SPACE-6-5-E-5", followed by releasing the
modifier keys.
- •
- 5.2: Keyboard symbols entry method
This mode lets you input characters representing the keycap symbols of your
keyboard, if representable in the current locale encoding.
Start by pressing "Control" and "Shift" together, then
releasing them. The next special key (cursor keys, home etc.) you enter
will not invoke its usual function but instead will insert the
corresponding keycap symbol. The symbol will only be entered when the key
has been released, otherwise pressing e.g. "Shift" would enter
the symbol for "ISO Level 2 Switch", although your intention
might have been to enter a reverse tab (Shift-Tab).
- •
- 5.3: Screen-selection entry method
While this is implemented already (it's basically the selection mechanism),
it could be extended by displaying a unicode character map.
- •
- 5.4: Feedback method for identifying displayed characters
for later input
This method lets you display the unicode character code associated with
characters already displayed.
You enter this mode by holding down "Control" and
"Shift" together, then pressing and holding the left mouse
button and moving around. The unicode hex code(s) (it might be a combining
character) of the character under the pointer is displayed until you
release "Control" and "Shift".
In addition to the hex codes it will display the font used to draw this
character - due to implementation reasons, characters combined with
combining characters, line drawing characters and unknown characters will
always be drawn using the built-in support font.
With respect to conformance, rxvt-unicode is supposed to be compliant to both
scenario A and B of ISO 14755, including part 5.2.
urxvt tries to write an entry into the
utmp(5) file so that it can
be seen via the
who(1) command, and can accept
messages. To allow this feature,
urxvt may need to be installed setuid
root on some systems or setgid to root or to some other group on others.
In addition to the default foreground and background colours,
urxvt can
display up to 88/256 colours: 8 ANSI colours plus high-intensity (potentially
bold/blink) versions of the same, and 72 (or 240 in 256 colour mode) colours
arranged in an 4x4x4 (or 6x6x6) colour RGB cube plus a 8 (24) colour greyscale
ramp.
urxvt supports direct 24-bit fg/bg RGB colour escapes " ESC [ 38 ; 2
; R ; G ; Bm " / " ESC [ 48 ; 2; R ; G ; Bm ". However the
number of 24-bit colours that can be used is limited: an internal 7x7x5 (256
colour mode) or 6x6x4 (88 colour mode) colour cube is used to index into the
24-bit colour space. When indexing collisions happen, the nearest old colour
in the cube will be adapted to the new 24-bit RGB colour. That means one
cannot use many similar 24-bit colours. It's typically not a problem in common
scenarios.
Here is a list of the ANSI colours with their names.
color0 |
(black) |
= Black |
color1 |
(red) |
= Red3 |
color2 |
(green) |
= Green3 |
color3 |
(yellow) |
= Yellow3 |
color4 |
(blue) |
= Blue3 |
color5 |
(magenta) |
= Magenta3 |
color6 |
(cyan) |
= Cyan3 |
color7 |
(white) |
= AntiqueWhite |
color8 |
(bright black) |
= Grey25 |
color9 |
(bright red) |
= Red |
color10 |
(bright green) |
= Green |
color11 |
(bright yellow) |
= Yellow |
color12 |
(bright blue) |
= Blue |
color13 |
(bright magenta) |
= Magenta |
color14 |
(bright cyan) |
= Cyan |
color15 |
(bright white) |
= White |
foreground |
|
= Black |
background |
|
= White |
It is also possible to specify the colour values of
foreground,
background,
cursorColor,
cursorColor2,
colorBD,
colorUL as a number 0-15, as a convenient shorthand to reference the
colour name of color0-color15.
The following text gives values for the standard 88 colour mode (and values for
the 256 colour mode in parentheses).
The RGB cube uses indices 16..79 (16..231) using the following formulas:
index_88 = (r * 4 + g) * 4 + b + 16 # r, g, b = 0..3
index_256 = (r * 6 + g) * 6 + b + 16 # r, g, b = 0..5
The grayscale ramp uses indices 80..87 (232..239), from 10% to 90% in 10% steps
(1/26 to 25/26 in 1/26 steps) - black and white are already part of the RGB
cube.
Together, all those colours implement the 88 (256) colour xterm colours. Only
the first 16 can be changed using resources currently, the rest can only be
changed via command sequences ("escape codes").
Applications are advised to use terminfo or command sequences to discover number
and RGB values of all colours (yes, you can query this...).
Note that
-rv (
"reverseVideo: True") simulates reverse
video by always swapping the foreground/background colours. This is in
contrast to
xterm(1) where the colours are only swapped if they have
not otherwise been specified. For example,
urxvt -fg Black -bg White -rv
would yield White on Black, while on
xterm(1) it would yield Black on
White.
If Xft support has been compiled in and as long as Xft/Xrender/X don't get their
act together, rxvt-unicode will do its own alpha channel management:
You can prefix any colour with an opaqueness percentage enclosed in brackets,
i.e. "[percent]", where "percent" is a decimal percentage
(0-100) that specifies the opacity of the colour, where 0 is completely
transparent and 100 is completely opaque. For example, "[50]red" is
a half-transparent red, while "[95]#00ff00" is an almost opaque
green. This is the recommended format to specify transparency values, and
works with all ways to specify a colour.
For complete control, rxvt-unicode also supports
"rgba:rrrr/gggg/bbbb/aaaa" (exactly four hex digits/component)
colour specifications, where the additional "aaaa" component
specifies opacity (alpha) values. The minimum value of 0000 is completely
transparent, while "ffff" is completely opaque). The two example
colours from earlier could also be specified as
"rgba:ff00/0000/0000/8000" and "rgba:0000/ff00/0000/f332".
You probably need to specify
"-depth 32", too, to force a
visual with alpha channels, and have the luck that your X-server uses ARGB
pixel layout, as X is far from just supporting ARGB visuals out of the box,
and rxvt-unicode just fudges around.
For example, the following selects an almost completely transparent black
background, and an almost opaque pink foreground:
urxvt -depth 32 -bg rgba:0000/0000/0000/4444 -fg "[80]pink"
When not using a background image, then the interpretation of the alpha channel
is up to your compositing manager (most interpret it as transparency of
course).
When using a background pixmap or pseudo-transparency, then the background
colour will always behave as if it were completely transparent (so the
background image shows instead), regardless of how it was specified, while
other colours will either be transparent as specified (the background image
will show through) on servers supporting the RENDER extension, or fully opaque
on servers not supporting the RENDER EXTENSION.
Please note that due to bugs in Xft, specifying alpha values might result in
garbage being displayed when the X-server does not support the RENDER
extension.
urxvt sets and/or uses the following environment variables:
- TERM
- Normally set to "rxvt-unicode", unless
overwritten at configure time, via resources or on the command line.
- COLORTERM
- Either "rxvt", "rxvt-xpm", depending on
whether urxvt was compiled with background image support, and optionally
with the added extension "-mono" to indicate that rxvt-unicode
runs on a monochrome screen.
- COLORFGBG
- Set to a string of the form "fg;bg" or
"fg;xpm;bg", where "fg" is the colour code used as
default foreground/text colour (or the string "default" to
indicate that the default-colour escape sequence is to be used),
"bg" is the colour code used as default background colour (or
the string "default"), and "xpm" is the string
"default" if urxvt was compiled with background image support.
Libraries like "ncurses" and "slang" can (and do) use
this information to optimize screen output.
- WINDOWID
- Set to the (decimal) X Window ID of the urxvt window (the
toplevel window, which usually has subwindows for the scrollbar, the
terminal window and so on).
- TERMINFO
- Set to the terminfo directory iff urxvt was configured with
"--with-terminfo=PATH".
- DISPLAY
- Used by urxvt to connect to the display and set to the
correct display in its child processes if "-display" isn't used
to override. It defaults to ":0" if it doesn't exist.
- SHELL
- The shell to be used for command execution, defaults to
"/bin/sh".
-
RXVT_SOCKET [sic]
- The unix domain socket path used by urxvtc(1) and
urxvtd(1).
Default
$HOME/.urxvt/urxvtd-<nodename>.
- URXVT_PERL_LIB
- Additional :-separated library search path for perl
extensions. Will be searched after -perl-lib but before
~/.urxvt/ext and the system library directory.
- URXVT_PERL_VERBOSITY
- See urxvtperl(3).
- HOME
- Used to locate the default directory for the unix domain
socket for daemon communications and to locate various resource files
(such as ".Xdefaults")
- XAPPLRESDIR
- Directory where application-specific X resource files are
located.
- XENVIRONMENT
- If set and accessible, gives the name of a X resource file
to be loaded by urxvt.
- /etc/X11/rgb.txt
- Colour names.
urxvt(7),
urxvtc(1),
urxvtd(1), urxvt-
extensions(1), urxvt
perl(3),
xterm(1),
sh(1),
resize(1),
X(1),
pty(4),
tty(4),
utmp(5)
- Project Coordinator
- Marc A. Lehmann <[email protected]>.
<http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/rxvt-unicode.html>
- John Bovey
- University of Kent, 1992, wrote the original Xvt.
- Rob Nation <[email protected]>
- very heavily modified Xvt and came up with Rxvt
- Angelo Haritsis <[email protected]>
- wrote the Greek Keyboard Input (no longer in code)
- mj olesen <[email protected]>
- Wrote the menu system.
Project Coordinator (changes.txt 2.11 to 2.21)
- Oezguer Kesim <[email protected]>
- Project Coordinator (changes.txt 2.21a to 2.4.5)
- Geoff Wing <[email protected]>
- Rewrote screen display and text selection routines.
Project Coordinator (changes.txt 2.4.6 - rxvt-unicode)
- Marc Alexander Lehmann <[email protected]>
- Forked rxvt-unicode, unicode support, rewrote almost all
the code, perl extension, random hacks, numerous bugfixes and extensions.
Project Coordinator (Changes 1.0 -)
- Emanuele Giaquinta
<[email protected]>
- pty/utmp code rewrite, image code improvements, many random
hacks and bugfixes.