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Name

TinyX - tiny X server

Synopsis

Xvesa [:display] [option...]

Xchips [:display] [option...]

Xfbdev [:display] [option...]

Xi810 [:display] [option...]

Xigs [:display] [option...]

Xipaq [:display] [option...]

Xmach64 [:display] [option...]

Xsavage [:display] [option...]

Xsis530 [:display] [option...]

Xtrident [:display] [option...]

Xtrio [:display] [option...]

Xts300 [:display] [option...]

Description

TinyX is a family of X servers designed to be particularly small. This manual page describes the common functionality of the TinyX servers; for information on a specific X server, please refer to the relevant manual page.

This incarnation of TinyX is colloquially known as kdrive.

Options

In addition to the standard options accepted by all X servers (see Xserver(1) ), all the TinyX servers accept the following options:
-card pcmcia
Use pcmcia card as additional screen.
-dumb
Disable hardware acceleration.
-origin X,Y
Locates the next screen in the Xinerama virtual screen.
-screen widthxheight[xdepth[xfreq]][@rotation]
Use a screen of the specified width, height, screen depth, frequency, and rotation (0, 90, 180 and 270 are legal values).
-softCursor
Disable the hardware cursor.
-videoTest
Start the server, pause momentarily, and exit.
-zaphod
Disable switching screens by moving the pointer across a screen boundary.
-2button
Enable emulation of a middle mouse button by chording.
-3button
Disable emulation of a middle mouse button by chording.
-noserialmouse
Do not probe for a serial mouse.

See Also

X(7) , Xserver(1) , xdm(1) , xinit(1) , Xvesa(1) , Xfbdev(1) , XFree86(1) .

Authors

The TinyX common core was written by Keith Packard, based on XFree86 which, in turn, is loosely based on the X11R6 Sample Implementation. It was integrated into the XFree86 build process by David Dawes and X-Oz Technologies.


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