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xscreensaver-command(1) |
XScreenSaver manual |
xscreensaver-command(1) |
xscreensaver-command - control a running xscreensaver process
xscreensaver-command [-display host:display.screen] [-help | -demo
| -prefs | -activate | -deactivate | -cycle | -next | -prev | -select n
| -exit | -restart | -lock | -suspend | -version | -time | -watch]
The xscreensaver-command program controls a running xscreensaver
process by sending it client-messages.
xscreensaver(1) has a client-server model: the xscreensaver
process is a daemon that runs in the background; it is controlled by other
foreground programs such as xscreensaver-command and
xscreensaver-demo(1).
This program, xscreensaver-command, is a
command-line-oriented tool; the xscreensaver-demo(1). program is a
graphical tool.
xscreensaver-command accepts the following command-line options:
- -help
- Prints a brief summary of command-line options.
- -demo
- This just launches the xscreensaver-demo(1) program, in which one
can experiment with the various graphics hacks available, and edit
parameters.
- -demo number
- When the -demo option is followed by an integer, it instructs the
xscreensaver daemon to run that hack, and wait for the user to
click the mouse before deactivating (i.e., mouse motion does not
deactivate.) This is the mechanism by which xscreensaver-demo(1)
communicates with the xscreensaver(1) daemon. (The first hack in
the list is numbered 1, not 0.)
- -prefs
- Like the no-argument form of -demo, but brings up that program's
Preferences panel by default.
- -activate
- Tell xscreensaver to turn on immediately (that is, blank the screen, as if
the user had been idle for long enough.) The screensaver will deactivate
as soon as there is any user activity, as usual.
It is useful to run this from a menu; you may wish to run it
as
sleep 5 ; xscreensaver-command -activate
to be sure that you have time to take your hand off the mouse before the
screensaver comes on. (Because if you jiggle the mouse, xscreensaver will
notice, and deactivate.)
- -deactivate
- This tells xscreensaver to pretend that there has just been user activity.
This means that if the screensaver is active (the screen is blanked), then
this command will cause the screen to un-blank as if there had been
keyboard or mouse activity. If the screen is locked, then the password
dialog will pop up first, as usual. If the screen is not blanked, then
this simulated user activity will re-start the countdown (so, issuing the
-deactivate command periodically is one way to prevent the
screen from blanking.)
- -cycle
- If the screensaver is active (the screen is blanked), then stop the
current graphics demo and run a new one (chosen randomly.)
- -next
- This is like either -activate or -cycle, depending on which
is more appropriate, except that the graphics hack that will be run is the
next one in the list, instead of a randomly-chosen one. In other words,
repeatedly executing -next will cause the xscreensaver process to invoke
each graphics demo sequentially. (Though using the -demo option is
probably an easier way to accomplish that.)
- -prev
- This is like -next, but cycles in the other direction.
- -select number
- Like -activate, but runs the Nth element in the list of
hacks. By knowing what is in the programs list, and in what order,
you can use this to activate the screensaver with a particular graphics
demo. (The first element in the list is numbered 1, not 0.)
- -exit
- Causes the xscreensaver process to exit gracefully. This does nothing if
the display is currently locked.
Warning: never use kill -9 with
xscreensaver while the screensaver is active. If you are using a
virtual root window manager, that can leave things in an inconsistent
state, and you may need to restart your window manager to repair the
damage.
- -lock
- Tells the running xscreensaver process to lock the screen immediately.
This is like -activate, but forces locking as well, even if locking
is not the default (that is, even if xscreensaver's lock resource
is false, and even if the lockTimeout resource is non-zero.)
Note that locking doesn't work unless the xscreensaver
process is running as you. See xscreensaver(1) for details.
- -suspend
- Like -activate, but ignores lockTimeout and immediately
powers off the screen without fading out. This is intended to be run just
after your laptop's lid is closed, and just before the CPU halts, to lock
things down quickly.
- -version
- Prints the version of xscreensaver that is currently running on the
display: that is, the actual version number of the running xscreensaver
background process, rather than the version number of
xscreensaver-command. (To see the version number of
xscreensaver-command itself, use the -help option.)
- -time
- Prints the time at which the screensaver last activated or deactivated
(roughly, how long the user has been idle or non-idle: but not quite,
since it only tells you when the screen became blanked or
un-blanked.)
- -restart
- Causes the screensaver process to exit and then restart with the same
command line arguments as last time. You shouldn't really need to do this,
since xscreensaver notices when the .xscreensaver file has changed
and re-reads it as needed.
- -watch
- Prints a line each time the screensaver changes state: when the screen
blanks, locks, unblanks, or when the running hack is changed. This option
never returns; it is intended for use by shell scripts that want to react
to the screensaver in some way. An example of its output would be:
BLANK Fri Nov 5 01:57:22 1999
RUN 34
RUN 79
RUN 16
LOCK Fri Nov 5 01:57:22 1999
RUN 76
RUN 12
UNBLANK Fri Nov 5 02:05:59 1999
The above shows the screensaver activating, running three different hacks,
then locking (perhaps because the lock-timeout went off) then unblanking
(because the user became active, and typed the correct password.) The hack
numbers are their index in the `programs' list (starting with 1, not 0, as
for the -select command.)
For example, suppose you want to run a program that turns down
the volume on your machine when the screen blanks, and turns it back up
when the screen un-blanks. You could do that by running a Perl program
like the following in the background. The following program tracks the
output of the -watch command and reacts accordingly:
#!/usr/bin/perl
my $blanked = 0;
open (IN, "xscreensaver-command -watch |");
while (<IN>) {
if (m/^(BLANK|LOCK)/) {
if (!$blanked) {
system "sound-off";
$blanked = 1;
}
} elsif (m/^UNBLANK/) {
system "sound-on";
$blanked = 0;
}
}
Note that LOCK might come either with or without a preceding BLANK
(depending on whether the lock-timeout is non-zero), so the above program
keeps track of both of them.
If xscreensaver is running, but you want it to stop running screen hacks (e.g.,
if you are logged in remotely, and you want the console to remain locked but
just be black, with no graphics processes running) you can accomplish that by
simply powering down the monitor remotely. In a minute or so, xscreensaver
will notice that the monitor is off, and will stop running screen hacks. You
can power off the monitor like so:
xset dpms force off
See the xset(1) manual for more info.
You can also use xscreensaver-demo(1) to make the monitor
power down after a few hours, meaning that xscreensaver will run graphics
until it has been idle for the length of time you specified; and after that,
the monitor will power off, and screen hacks will stop being run.
If an error occurs while communicating with the xscreensaver daemon, or
if the daemon reports an error, a diagnostic message will be printed to
stderr, and xscreensaver-command will exit with a non-zero value. If
the command is accepted, an indication of this will be printed to stdout, and
the exit value will be zero.
- DISPLAY
- to get the host and display number of the screen whose saver is to be
manipulated.
- PATH
- to find the executable to restart (for the -restart command). Note
that this variable is consulted in the environment of the
xscreensaver process, not the xscreensaver-command
process.
The latest version of xscreensaver(1) and related tools can always be
found at https://www.jwz.org/xscreensaver/
X(1), xscreensaver(1), xscreensaver-demo(1), xset(1)
Copyright © 1992-2019 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.
Jamie Zawinski <jwz@jwz.org>, 13-aug-1992.
Please let me know if you find any bugs or make any
improvements.
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