NAME
slrnface - show X-Faces in X11 terminal emulator
SYNOPSIS
slrnface [ -xOffsetChar x_char_offset ] [ -yOffsetChar y_char_offset ] [ -xOffsetPix x_pixel_offset ] [ -yOffsetPix y_pixel_offset ] [ -XFacePad left_padding ] [ -ink fg_color ] [ -paper bg_color ] [ -padColor pad_color ]
DESCRIPTION
The slrnface helper utility can be used from slrn(1), mutt(1) or similar programs to show X-Faces in Usenet articles or mail messages when those programs are run in an X11 terminal emulator. This utility is not intended to be run directly from the command line. Instead, the master programs should be configured to invoke slrnface when appropriate.
Different terminal emulators have different screen layouts. Some might have scroolbars (on either side), a menubar or something else. Terminal window which slrnface uses might contain some of these "decorations," but it is impossible to determine if that is the case at run time. Therefore it is impossible to determine the exact location at which the X11 window with the X-Face image should be placed. Default hardcoded values are appropriate for several terminal emulators, but not for all of them. The placement can be controlled by command line arguments, but it is suggested to use X resources for this task.
While slrnface is running and showing X-Face, the left mouse button can be used to move the window.
RESOURCES
The slrnface helper is controlled by the resources set for the terminal emulator in which it runs, not for the slrnface class or instance. That is because correct execution entirely depends on the master program and the geometry of the terminal emulator in use and has little to do with slrnface itself. All resources have a command line parameter equivalent.
However, a lot of popular terminal emulators have a certain amount of hardcoded brain damage and setting X resources will not have any effect with them. This usually happens because of illegal characters in the WM_CLASS property. In those cases command line arguments are the only remaining option.
xOffsetChar
The horizontal offset for the X-Face window from the
terminal’s upper right corner expressed in character
units.
yOffsetChar
The vertical offset for the X-Face window from the
terminal’s upper right corner expressed in character
units. The exact value in pixels will be calculated at run
time, as well as the pixel equivalent for
xOffestChar. There are some lousily coded terminals
which are not very helpful with this, so the calculation
might not be perfect.
xOffsetPix
The horizontal offset for the X-Face window from the
terminal’s upper right corner expressed in pixels.
yOffsetPix
The vertical offset for the X-Face window from the
terminal’s upper right corner expressed in pixels.
This value is added to the character offset provided by the
yOffsetChar resource and the resulting sum is
substracted from the vertical coordinate of the
terminal’s upper right corner. The equivalent
calculation for the horizontal coordinate is done with the
xOffsetChar and xOffsetPix resources. In both
cases, pixel value resources are provided for finer
control.
XFacePad
This value tells slrnface how many pixels should be
cleared on the left side of the X-Face image. In the
case of long subject lines the image may be displayed over
characters and having some spacing between them would be
beneficial.
ink
This is the foreground color for the X-Face image.
The more common name for this resource is foreground.
However, that name is not used because there is a high
probability that it would be inherited from the
terminal’s resources. A lot of users use light
foreground and dark background for terminals. Since
X-Faces should normally be viewed with dark
foreground on light background, inheriting the colors from
the terminal setup would present a negative image by
default. In order to avoid that, slrnface uses
different resource name.
paper
This is the background color for the X-Face
image.
padColor
This is the color for the padding region set with
XFacePad resource.
EXAMPLES
The following example demonstrates how to set resources for xterm.
Example 1:
horizontal offsets for xterm
Since slrnface looks at the resources defined for the
terminal’s class and name, an example setting is:
xterm.slrnface.xOffsetChar:
1
xterm.slrnface.xOffsetPix: 2
It is better to use the application name, rather than class, because some other terminals use XTerm as their class, since they try to be feature compatible. However, they might not have the same screen layout, so resources set for the terminal class might not yield the desired effect in all terminals.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
DISPLAY |
The name of the display where the terminal runs. This environment variable is the only way to pass it to slrnface. | ||
WINDOWID |
Used for determining terminal’s X window id. It must be set by a terminal emulator. |
LANG, LC_ALL, LC_MESSAGES
These environment variables will be used when determining the location of the appropriate resource file.
EXIT STATUS
The slrnface helper doesn’t print any diagnostic, because it doesn’t know if that is the appropriate action. In cases when diagnostic output is appropriate, it can’t guarantee that the output would be visible to the user. Therefore it returns distinct error status for every kind of problem and relies on the parent process to take the appropriate action.
It should be noted that slrnface forks early in its execution. The parent process exits immediately, returning success status to its parent. The child process continues execution, reading commands from the FIFO in the $HOME/.slrnfaces directory and executing them as appropriate. In the case where there is a problem with the process’ startup, the fork doesn’t happen and slrnface exits immediately, returning the appropriate error status. The following exit values are returned:
0 |
Successful completion. | ||
1 |
slrnface couldn’t connect to the display. | ||
2 |
Terminal emulator didn’t set the WINDOWID environment variable or its value was invalid. | ||
3 |
slrnface couldn’t find its controlling terminal. | ||
4 |
Terminal’s width or height are not set. | ||
5 |
There was a problem with the FIFO setup. | ||
6 |
fork(2) failed. |
FILES
$HOME/.slrnfaces/* |
A named pipe used for communication between slrnface and the master proces. | ||
slrnface.sl |
An example S-Lang hooks for setting up slrnface with slrn(1). |
SEE ALSO
slrn(1), mutt(1), X11(5), xprop(1), xterm(1), fork(2)
BUGS
Multiple X-Faces are not supported.
AUTHOR
Drazen Kacar <dave [AT] willfork.com>
Home page: http://dave.willfork.com/slrnface/