.if n .sp 1
.if t .sp .5
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-.TH XScreenSaver 1 "30-Oct-99 (3.19)" "X Version 11"
+.TH XScreenSaver 1 "09-Nov-2013 (5.23)" "X Version 11"
.SH NAME
xscreensaver-demo - interactively control the background xscreensaver daemon
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B xscreensaver\-demo
-[\-display \fIhost:display.screen\fP] [\-prefs] [\-xrm \fIresources\fP]
+[\-display \fIhost:display.screen\fP]
+[\-prefs]
+[--debug]
.SH DESCRIPTION
The \fIxscreensaver\-demo\fP program is a graphical front-end for
setting the parameters used by the background
file; and a tool for demoing the various graphics hacks that
the \fIxscreensaver\fP daemon will launch.
-The main dialog box contains a scrolling list, a text field, and a number
-of buttons.
+The main window consists of a menu bar and two tabbed pages. The first page
+is for editing the list of demos, and the second is for editing various other
+parameters of the screensaver.
+.SH MENU COMMANDS
+All of these commands are on either the \fBFile\fP or \fBHelp\fP menus:
+.TP 4
+.B Blank Screen Now
+Activates the background \fIxscreensaver\fP daemon, which will then run
+a demo at random. This is the same as running
+.BR xscreensaver-command (1)
+with the \fI\-activate\fP option.
+.TP 4
+.B Lock Screen Now
+Just like \fBBlank Screen Now\fP, except the screen will be locked as
+well (even if it is not configured to lock all the time.) This is the
+same as running
+.BR xscreensaver-command (1)
+with the \fI\-lock\fP option.
+.TP 4
+.B Kill Daemon
+If the xscreensaver daemon is running on this screen, kill it.
+This is the same as running
+.BR xscreensaver-command (1)
+with the \fI\-exit\fP option.
+.TP 4
+.B Restart Daemon
+If the xscreensaver daemon is running on this screen, kill it.
+Then launch it again. This is the same as doing
+``\fIxscreensaver-command -exit\fP'' followed by ``\fIxscreensaver\fP''.
-Double-clicking on one of the programs in the list will run it. The screen
-will go black, and the program will run in full-screen mode, just as it would
-if the \fIxscreensaver\fP daemon had launched it. Clicking the mouse again
-will stop the demo and un-blank the screen, making the dialog box visible
-again.
-
-Single-clicking in the list will place the indicated program and its args
-in the text field to be edited. Edit the arguments and hit return to run
-the program with the parameters you have specified. This will also save
-your changes to your \fI~/.xscreensaver\fP file: so any changes you make
-in this way are persistent.
-
-If one of the lines in the scrolling list begins with the character "-",
-then that means that the program is disabled: \fIxscreensaver\fP will not
-select it to be run (though you can still try it out by clicking on it.)
-Rather than just deleting the programs you don't want to run, you might
-want to disable them in this way instead, so that you can more easily change
-your mind later.
-
-If the line begins with the name of a visual, followed by a colon, then
-that program will only be run on that kind of visual. For example, you can
-specify that a particular program should only be run if color is available,
-and another should only be run in monochrome. See the discussion of
-the \fIprograms\fP parameter in the \fIConfiguration\fP section of the
-.BR xscreensaver (1)
-manual.
+Note that it is \fInot\fP the same as doing
+``\fIxscreensaver-command -restart\fP''.
+.TP 4
+.B Exit
+Exits the \fIxscreensaver-demo\fP program (this program) without
+affecting the background \fIxscreensaver\fP daemon, if any.
+.TP 4
+.B About...
+Displays the version number of this program, \fIxscreensaver-demo\fP.
+.TP 4
+.B Documentation...
+Opens up a web browser looking at the XScreenSaver web page, where you
+can find online copies of the
+.BR xscreensaver (1),
+.BR xscreensaver\-demo (1),
+and
+.BR xscreensaver\-command (1)
+manuals.
+.SH DISPLAY MODES TAB
+This page contains a list of the names of the various display modes, a
+preview area, and some fields that let you configure screen saver behavior.
+.TP 4
+.B Mode
+This option menu controls the activation behavior of the screen saver.
+The options are:
+.RS 4
+.TP 4
+.B Disable Screen Saver
+Don't ever blank the screen, and don't ever allow the monitor to power down.
+.TP 4
+.B Blank Screen Only
+When blanking the screen, just go black: don't run any graphics.
+.TP 4
+.B Only One Screen Saver
+When blanking the screen, only ever use one particular display mode (the
+one selected in the list.)
+.TP 4
+.B Random Screen Saver
+When blanking the screen, select a random display mode from among those
+that are enabled and applicable. If there are multiple monitors
+connected, run a different display mode on each one. This is the default.
+.TP 4
+.B Random Same Saver
+This is just like \fBRandom Screen Saver\fP, except that the \fIsame\fP
+randomly-chosen display mode will be run on all monitors, instead of
+different ones on each.
+.RE
+.TP 4
+.B Demo List
+Double-clicking in the list on the left will let you try out the indicated
+demo. The screen will go black, and the program will run in full-screen
+mode, just as it would if the \fIxscreensaver\fP daemon had launched it.
+Clicking the mouse again will stop the demo and un-blank the screen.
-The buttons are:
-.TP 8
-.B Run Next
-Clicking this button will run the next program in the list after the
-currently-selected one, and will wrap around to the top when it reaches
-the bottom.
-.TP 8
-.B Run Previous
-Opposite of Run Next; at the top, it wraps around to the bottom.
-.TP 8
-.B Preferences
-This pops up a second dialog box, in which you have the option to
-interactively change most of the screensaver's operational parameters,
-such as its timeouts, and whether it should lock the screen. When you
-click OK, your chosen settings will take effect immediately, and will
-also be saved to the \fI~/.xscreensaver\fP file in your home directory,
-so that the settings will persist next time.
-.TP 8
-.B Quit
-Exits the \fIxscreensaver-demo\fP program. The background \fIxscreensaver\fP
-daemon will continue running as before.
-.P
-The Preferences dialog box lets you change the following settings.
+Single-clicking in the list will run it in the small preview pane on the
+right. (But beware: many of the display modes behave somewhat differently
+when running in full-screen mode, so the scaled-down view might not give
+an accurate impression.)
-(There are more settings available, but these are the most commonly used
-ones; see the manual for
-.BR xscreensaver (1)
-for other parameters that can be set by editing the \fI~/.xscreensaver\fP
-file, or the X resource database.)
-.TP 8
-.B Saver Timeout
+When \fBMode\fP is set to \fBRandom Screen Saver\fP, each name in the list
+has a checkbox next to it: this controls whether this display mode is
+enabled. If it is unchecked, then that mode will not be chosen. (Though
+you can still run it explicitly by double-clicking on its name.)
+.TP 4
+.B Arrow Buttons
+Beneath the list are a pair of up and down arrows. Clicking on the down
+arrow will select the next item in the list, and then run it in full-screen
+mode, just as if you had double-clicked on it. The up arrow goes the other
+way. This is just a shortcut for trying out all of the display modes in turn.
+.TP 4
+.B Blank After
After the user has been idle this long, the \fIxscreensaver\fP daemon
will blank the screen.
-.TP 8
-.B Cycle Timeout
+.TP 4
+.B Cycle After
After the screensaver has been running for this long, the currently
running graphics demo will be killed, and a new one started.
If this is 0, then the graphics demo will never be changed:
only one demo will run until the screensaver is deactivated by user
activity.
-.TP 8
-.B Verbose\
-Whether to print lots of debugging information.
-.TP 8
-.B Install Colormap
-Whether to install a private colormap while the screensaver is active, so
-that the graphics hacks can get as many colors as possible. (This only
-applies when the screen's default visual is being used, since non-default
-visuals get their own colormaps automatically.) This can also be overridden
-on a per-demo basis.
-.TP 8
-.B Fade Colormap
+.TP 4
+.B Lock Screen
+When this is checked, the screen will be locked when it activates.
+.TP 4
+.B Lock Screen After
+This controls the length of the ``grace period'' between when the
+screensaver activates, and when the screen becomes locked. For
+example, if this is 5 minutes, and \fIBlank After\fP is 10 minutes,
+then after 10 minutes, the screen would blank. If there was user
+activity at 12 minutes, no password would be required to un-blank the
+screen. But, if there was user activity at 15 minutes or later (that
+is, \fILock Screen After\fP minutes after activation) then a password
+would be required. The default is 0, meaning that if locking is
+enabled, then a password will be required as soon as the screen blanks.
+.TP 4
+.B Preview
+This button, below the small preview window, runs the demo in full-screen
+mode so that you can try it out. This is the same thing that happens when
+you double-click an element in the list. Click the mouse to dismiss the
+full-screen preview.
+.TP 4
+.B Settings
+This button will pop up a dialog where you can configure settings specific
+to the display mode selected in the list.
+.SH SETTINGS DIALOG
+When you click on the \fISettings\fP button on the \fIDisplay Modes\fP
+tab, a configuration dialog will pop up that lets you customize settings
+of the selected display mode. Each display mode has its own custom
+configuration controls on the left side.
+
+On the right side is a paragraph or two describing the display mode.
+Below that is a \fBDocumentation\fP button that will display the display
+mode's manual page, if it has one, in a new window (since each of the
+display modes is actually a separate program, they each have their
+own manual.)
+
+The \fBAdvanced\fP button reconfigures the dialog box so that you can
+edit the display mode's command line directly, instead of using the
+graphical controls.
+.SH ADVANCED TAB
+This tab lets you change various settings used by the xscreensaver daemon
+itself, as well as some global options shared by all of the display modes.
+
+.B Image Manipulation
+
+Some of the graphics hacks manipulate images. These settings control
+where those source images come from.
+(All of these options work by invoking the
+.BR xscreensaver\-getimage (1)
+program, which is what actually does the work.)
+.RS 4
+.TP 4
+.B Grab Desktop Images
+If this option is selected, then they are allowed to manipulate the
+desktop image, that is, a display mode might draw a picture of your
+desktop melting, or being distorted in some way. The
+security-paranoid might want to disable this option, because if it is
+set, it means that the windows on your desktop will occasionally be
+visible while your screen is locked. Others will not be able to
+\fIdo\fP anything, but they may be able to \fIsee\fP whatever you left
+on your screen.
+.TP 4
+.B Grab Video Frames
+If your system has a video capture card, selecting this option will allow
+the image-manipulating modes to capture a frame of video to operate on.
+.TP 4
+.B Choose Random Image
+If this option is set, then the image-manipulating modes will select a
+random image file to operate on, from the specified source. That
+source may be a local directory, which will be recursively searched
+for images. Or, it may be the URL of an RSS or Atom feed (e.g., a
+Flickr gallery), in which case a random image from that feed will be
+selected instead. The contents of the feed will be cached locally and
+refreshed periodically as needed.
+.PP
+If more than one of the above image-related options are selected, then
+one will be chosen at random. If none of them are selected, then an
+image of video colorbars will be used instead.
+.RE
+.PP
+.B Text Manipulation
+
+Some of the display modes display and manipulate text. The following
+options control how that text is generated. (These parameters control
+the behavior of the
+.BR xscreensaver\-text (1)
+program, which is what actually does the work.)
+.RS 4
+.TP 4
+.B Host Name and Time
+If this checkbox is selected, then the text used by the screen savers
+will be the local host name, OS version, date, time, and system load.
+.TP 4
+.B Text
+If this checkbox is selected, then the literal text typed in the
+field to its right will be used. If it contains % escape sequences,
+they will be expanded as per
+.BR strftime (2).
+.TP 4
+.B Text File
+If this checkbox is selected, then the contents of the corresponding
+file will be displayed.
+.TP 4
+.B Program
+If this checkbox is selected, then the given program will be run,
+repeatedly, and its output will be displayed.
+.TP 4
+.B URL
+If this checkbox is selected, then the given HTTP URL will be downloaded
+and displayed repeatedly. If the document contains HTML, RSS, or Atom,
+it will be converted to plain-text first.
+
+Note: this re-downloads the document every time the screen saver
+runs out of text, so it will probably be hitting that web server multiple
+times a minute. Be careful that the owner of that server doesn't
+consider that to be abusive.
+.RE
+.PP
+.B Power Management Settings
+
+These settings control whether, and when, your monitor powers down.
+.RS 4
+.TP 4
+.B Power Management Enabled
+Whether the monitor should be powered down after a period of inactivity.
+
+If this option is grayed out, it means your X server does not support
+the XDPMS extension, and so control over the monitor's power state is
+not available.
+
+If you're using a laptop, don't be surprised if this has no effect:
+many laptops have monitor power-saving behavior built in at a very low
+level that is invisible to Unix and X. On such systems, you can
+typically only adjust the power-saving delays by changing settings
+in the BIOS in some hardware-specific way.
+.TP 4
+.B Standby After
+If \fIPower Management Enabled\fP is selected, the monitor will go black
+after this much idle time. (Graphics demos will stop running, also.)
+.TP 4
+.B Suspend After
+If \fIPower Management Enabled\fP is selected, the monitor will go
+into power-saving mode after this much idle time. This duration should
+be greater than or equal to \fIStandby\fP.
+.TP 4
+.B Off After
+If \fIPower Management Enabled\fP is selected, the monitor will fully
+power down after this much idle time. This duration should be greater
+than or equal to \fISuspend\fP.
+.TP 4
+.B Quick Power-off in "Blank Only" Mode
+If the display mode is set to \fIBlank Screen Only\fP and this is
+checked, then the monitor will be powered off immediately upon
+blanking, regardless of the other power-management settings. In this
+way, the power management idle-timers can be completely disabled, but
+the screen will be powered off when black. (This might be preferable
+on laptops.)
+.RE
+.PP
+.B Fading and Colormaps
+
+These options control how the screen fades to or from black when
+a screen saver begins or ends.
+.RS 4
+.TP 4
+.B Fade To Black When Blanking
If selected, then when the screensaver activates, the current contents
-of the screen will fade to black instead of simply winking out. This only
-works on displays with writable colormaps, that is, if the screen's default
-visual is a PseudoColor visual. A fade will also be done when
-switching graphics hacks (when the \fICycle Timeout\fP expires.)
-.TP 8
-.B Unfade Colormap
+of the screen will fade to black instead of simply winking out. (Note:
+this doesn't work with all X servers.) A fade will also be done when
+switching graphics hacks (when the \fICycle After\fP expires.)
+.TP 4
+.B Unfade From Black When Unblanking
The complement to \fIFade Colormap\fP: if selected, then when the screensaver
deactivates, the original contents of the screen will fade in from black
-instead of appearing immediately. This only works on displays with writable
-colormaps, and when \fIFade Colormap\fP is also selected.
-.TP 8
+instead of appearing immediately. This is only done if \fIFade Colormap\fP
+is also selected.
+.TP 4
.B Fade Duration
When fading or unfading are selected, this controls how long the fade will
take.
-.TP 8
-.B Fade Ticks
-This controls how many times a second the colormap will be changed to
-effect a fade. Higher numbers yield smoother fades, but may make the
-fades take longer than the specified number of seconds, if your server
-isn't fast enough to keep up.
-.TP 8
-.B Require Password
-Whether the screen saver should lock the screen when it activates.
-.TP 8
-.B Lock Timeout
-If \fIRequire Password\fP is selected, this controls the length of
-the ``grace period'' between when the screensaver activates, and when the
-screen becomes locked. For example, if this is 0:05:00,
-and \fISaver Timeout\fP is 0:10:00, then after 10 minutes, the screen
-would blank. If there was user activity at 12 minutes, no password
-would be required to un-blank the screen. But, if there was user activity
-at 15 minutes or later (that is, \fILock Timeout\fP minutes after
-activation) then a password would be required. The default is 0, meaning
-that if locking is enabled, then a password will be required as soon as the
-screen blanks.
-.TP 8
-.B Password Timeout
-When the screensaver is prompting for a password, the prompt dialog box will
-stay on the screen for this long before giving up, and reverting to
-screen-saving mode.
+.TP 4
+.B Install Colormap
+On 8-bit screens, whether to install a private colormap while the
+screensaver is active, so that the graphics hacks can get as many
+colors as possible. This does nothing if you are running in 16-bit
+or better.
+.PP
+.RE
+There are more settings than these available, but these are the most
+commonly used ones; see the manual for
+.BR xscreensaver (1)
+for other parameters that can be set by editing the \fI~/.xscreensaver\fP
+file, or the X resource database.
.SH COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
.I xscreensaver\-demo
accepts the following command line options.
is managing that same display.
.TP 8
.B \-prefs
-Start up in Preferences mode: this is just like launching the program with
-no arguments, and then pressing the \fIPreferences\fP button.
+Start up with the \fBAdvanced\fP tab selected by default
+instead of the \fBDisplay Modes\fP tab.
+.TP 8
+.B \-debug
+Causes lots of diagnostics to be printed on stderr.
.P
It is important that the \fIxscreensaver\fP and \fIxscreensaver\-demo\fP
processes be running on the same machine, or at least, on two machines
to find the sub-programs to run. However, note that the sub-programs
are actually launched by the \fIxscreensaver\fP daemon, not
by \fIxscreensaver-demo\fP itself. So, what matters is what \fB$PATH\fP
-the \fIxscreensaver\fP program sees.
+that the \fIxscreensaver\fP program sees.
.TP 8
.B HOME
for the directory in which to read and write the \fI.xscreensaver\fP file.
.B XENVIRONMENT
to get the name of a resource file that overrides the global resources
stored in the RESOURCE_MANAGER property.
+.TP 8
+.B HTTP_PROXY\fR or \fPhttp_proxy
+to get the default HTTP proxy host and port.
.SH UPGRADES
-The latest version can always be found at
-http://www.jwz.org/xscreensaver/
+The latest version of xscreensaver, an online version of this manual,
+and a FAQ can always be found at http://www.jwz.org/xscreensaver/
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR X (1),
.BR xscreensaver (1),
-.BR xscreensaver\-command (1)
+.BR xscreensaver\-command (1),
+.BR xscreensaver\-getimage (1),
+.BR xscreensaver\-text (1)
.SH COPYRIGHT
-Copyright \(co 1992, 1993, 1997, 1998, 1999
-by Jamie Zawinski. Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell
-this software and its documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without
-fee, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that
-both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting
-documentation. No representations are made about the suitability of this
-software for any purpose. It is provided "as is" without express or implied
-warranty.
+Copyright \(co 1992-2013 by Jamie Zawinski.
+Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software
+and its documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee,
+provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that
+both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in
+supporting documentation. No representations are made about the
+suitability of this software for any purpose. It is provided "as is"
+without express or implied warranty.
.SH AUTHOR
Jamie Zawinski <jwz@jwz.org>, 13-aug-92.