xstdcmap(1) manual page
Table of Contents
xstdcmap - X standard colormap utility
xstdcmap [-all] [-best]
[-blue] [-default] [-delete map] [-display display] [-gray] [-green] [-help] [-red]
[-verbose]
The xstdcmap utility can be used to selectively define
standard colormap properties. It is intended to be run from a user’s X startup
script to create standard colormap definitions in order to facilitate sharing
of scarce colormap resources among clients. Where at all possible, colormaps
are created with read-only allocations.
The following options may
be used with xstdcmap:
- -all
- This option indicates that all six standard
colormap properties should be defined on each screen of the display. Not
all screens will support visuals under which all six standard colormap
properties are meaningful. xstdcmap will determine the best allocations
and visuals for the colormap properties of a screen. Any previously existing
standard colormap properties will be replaced.
- -best
- This option indicates
that the RGB_BEST_MAP should be defined.
- -blue
- This option indicates that
the RGB_BLUE_MAP should be defined.
- -default
- This option indicates that the
RGB_DEFAULT_MAP should be defined.
- -delete map
- This option specifies that
a standard colormap property should be removed. map may be one of: default,
best, red, green, blue, or gray.
- -display display
- This option specifies the
host and display to use; see X11(7)
.
- -gray
- This option indicates that the
RGB_GRAY_MAP should be defined.
- -green
- This option indicates that the RGB_GREEN_MAP
should be defined.
- -help
- This option indicates that a brief description of
the command line arguments should be printed on the standard error. This
will be done whenever an unhandled argument is given to xstdcmap.
- -red
- This
option indicates that the RGB_RED_MAP should be defined.
- -verbose
- This option
indicates that xstdcmap should print logging information as it parses its
input and defines the standard colormap properties.
- DISPLAY
- to
get default host and display number.
X11(7)
Copyright 1989,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
See X11(7)
for a full statement of rights and permissions.
Donna Converse,
MIT X Consortium
Table of Contents