Xnest(1)                    General Commands Manual                   Xnest(1)

NAME
       Xnest - a nested X server

SYNOPSIS
       Xnest [ options ]

DESCRIPTION
       Xnest is both an X client and an X server.  Xnest is a client of the
       real server which manages windows and graphics requests on its behalf.
       Xnest is a server to its own clients.  Xnest manages windows and
       graphics requests on their behalf.  To these clients, Xnest appears to
       be a conventional server.

OPTIONS
       Xnest supports all standard options of the sample server
       implementation.  For more details, please see Xserver(1).  The
       following additional arguments are supported as well.

       -display string
              This option specifies the display name of the real server that
              Xnest should try to connect to.  If it is not provided on the
              command line, Xnest will read the DISPLAY environment variable
              in order to find out this information.

       -sync  This option tells Xnest to synchronize its window and graphics
              operations with the real server.  This is a useful option for
              debugging, but it will slow down Xnest's performance
              considerably.  It should not be used unless absolutely
              necessary.

       -full  This option tells Xnest to utilize full regeneration of real
              server objects and reopen a new connection to the real server
              each time the nested server regenerates.  The sample server
              implementation regenerates all objects in the server when the
              last client of this server terminates.  When this happens, Xnest
              by default maintains the same top-level window and the same real
              server connection in each new generation.  If the user selects
              full regeneration, even the top-level window and the connection
              to the real server will be regenerated for each server
              generation.

       -class string
              This option specifies the default visual class of the nested
              server.  It is similar to the -cc option from the set of
              standard options except that it will accept a string rather than
              a number for the visual class specification.  The string must be
              one of the following six values: StaticGray, GrayScale,
              StaticColor, PseudoColor, TrueColor, or DirectColor.  If both
              the -class and -cc options are specified, the last instance of
              either option takes precedence.  The class of the default visual
              of the nested server need not be the same as the class of the
              default visual of the real server, but it must be supported by
              the real server.  Use xdpyinfo(1) to obtain a list of supported
              visual classes on the real server before starting Xnest.  If the
              user chooses a static class, all the colors in the default color
              map will be preallocated.  If the user chooses a dynamic class,
              colors in the default color map will be available to individual
              clients for allocation.

       -depth int
              This option specifies the default visual depth of the nested
              server.  The depth of the default visual of the nested server
              need not be the same as the depth of the default visual of the
              real server, but it must be supported by the real server.  Use
              xdpyinfo(1) to obtain a list of supported visual depths on the
              real server before starting Xnest.

       -sss   This option tells Xnest to use the software screen saver.  By
              default, Xnest will use the screen saver that corresponds to the
              hardware screen saver in the real server.  Of course, even this
              screen saver is software-generated since Xnest does not control
              any actual hardware.  However, it is treated as a hardware
              screen saver within the sample server code.

       -geometry WxH+X+Y
              This option specifies the geometry parameters for the top-level
              Xnest window.  See “GEOMETRY SPECIFICATIONS” in X(7) for a
              discusson of this option's syntax.  This window corresponds to
              the root window of the nested server.  The width W and height H
              specified with this option will be the maximum width and height
              of each top-level Xnest window.  Xnest will allow the user to
              make any top-level window smaller, but it will not actually
              change the size of the nested server root window.  Xnest does
              not yet support the RANDR extension for resizing, rotation, and
              reflection of the root window.  If this option is not specified,
              Xnest will choose W and H to be 3/4ths the dimensions of the
              root window of the real server.

       -bw int
              This option specifies the border width of the top-level Xnest
              window.  The integer parameter int must be positive.  The
              default border width is 1.

       -name string
              This option specifies the name of the top-level Xnest window as
              string.  The default value is the program name.

       -scrns int
              This option specifies the number of screens to create in the
              nested server.  For each screen, Xnest will create a separate
              top-level window.  Each screen is referenced by the number after
              the dot in the client display name specification.  For example,
              xterm -display :1.1 will open an xterm(1) client in the nested
              server with the display number :1 on the second screen.  The
              number of screens is limited by the hard-coded constant in the
              server sample code, which is usually 3.

       -install
              This option tells Xnest to do its own color map installation by
              bypassing the real window manager.  For it to work properly, the
              user will probably have to temporarily quit the real window
              manager.  By default, Xnest will keep the nested client window
              whose color map should be installed in the real server in the
              WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS property of the top-level Xnest window.  If
              this color map is of the same visual type as the root window of
              the nested server, Xnest will associate this color map with the
              top-level Xnest window as well.  Since this does not have to be
              the case, window managers should look primarily at the
              WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS property rather than the color map
              associated with the top-level Xnest window.  Unfortunately,
              window managers are not very good at doing that yet so this
              option might come in handy.

       -parent window_id
              This option tells Xnest to use window_id as the root window
              instead of creating a window.

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
       Starting up Xnest is just as simple as starting up xclock(1) from a
       terminal emulator.  If a user wishes to run Xnest on the same
       workstation as the real server, it is important that the nested server
       is given its own listening socket address.  Therefore, if there is a
       server already running on the user's workstation, Xnest will have to be
       started up with a new display number.  Since there is usually no more
       than one server running on a workstation, specifying ‘Xnest :1’ on the
       command line will be sufficient for most users.  For each server
       running on the workstation, the display number needs to be incremented
       by one.  Thus, if you wish to start another Xnest, you will need to
       type ‘Xnest :2’ on the command line.

       To run clients in the nested server, each client needs to be given the
       same display number as the nested server.  For example, ‘xterm -display
       :1’ will start up an xterm process in the first nested server and
       ‘xterm -display :2’ will start an xterm in the second nested server
       from the example above.  Additional clients can be started from these
       xterms in each nested server.

   Xnest as a client
       Xnest behaves and looks to the real server and other real clients as
       another real client.  It is a rather demanding client, however, since
       almost any window or graphics request from a nested client will result
       in a window or graphics request from Xnest to the real server.
       Therefore, it is desirable that Xnest and the real server are on a
       local network, or even better, on the same machine.  Xnest assumes that
       the real server supports the SHAPE extension.  There is no way to turn
       off this assumption dynamically.  Xnest can be compiled without the
       SHAPE extension built in, in which case the real server need not
       support it.  Dynamic SHAPE extension selection support may be
       considered in further development of Xnest.

       Since Xnest need not use the same default visual as the the real
       server, the top-level window of the Xnest client always has its own
       color map.  This implies that other windows' colors will not be
       displayed properly while the keyboard or pointer focus is in the Xnest
       window, unless the real server has support for more than one installed
       color map at any time.  The color map associated with the top window of
       the Xnest client need not be the appropriate color map that the nested
       server wants installed in the real server.  In the case that a nested
       client attempts to install a color map of a different visual from the
       default visual of the nested server, Xnest will put the top window of
       this nested client and all other top windows of the nested clients that
       use the same color map into the WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS property of the
       top-level Xnest window on the real server.  Thus, it is important that
       the real window manager that manages the Xnest top-level window looks
       at the WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS property rather than the color map
       associated with the top-level Xnest window.  Since most window managers
       don't yet appear to implement this convention properly, Xnest can
       optionally do direct installation of color maps into the real server
       bypassing the real window manager.  If the user chooses this option, it
       is usually necessary to temporarily disable the real window manager
       since it will interfere with the Xnest scheme of color map
       installation.

       Keyboard and pointer control procedures of the nested server change the
       keyboard and pointer control parameters of the real server.  Therefore,
       after Xnest is started up, it will change the keyboard and pointer
       controls of the real server to its own internal defaults.

   Xnest as a server
       Xnest as a server looks exactly like a real server to its own clients.
       For the clients, there is no way of telling if they are running on a
       real or a nested server.

       As already mentioned, Xnest is a very user-friendly server when it
       comes to customization.  Xnest will pick up a number of command-line
       arguments that can configure its default visual class and depth, number
       of screens, etc.

       The only apparent intricacy from the users' perspective about using
       Xnest as a server is the selection of fonts.  Xnest manages fonts by
       loading them locally and then passing the font name to the real server
       and asking it to load that font remotely.  This approach avoids the
       overload of sending the glyph bits across the network for every text
       operation, although it is really a bug.  The consequence of this
       approach is that the user will have to worry about two different font
       paths — a local one for the nested server and a remote one for the real
       server — since Xnest does not propagate its font path to the real
       server.  The reason for this is because real and nested servers need
       not run on the same file system which makes the two font paths mutually
       incompatible.  Thus, if there is a font in the local font path of the
       nested server, there is no guarantee that this font exists in the
       remote font path of the real server.  The xlsfonts(1) client, if run on
       the nested server, will list fonts in the local font path and, if run
       on the real server, will list fonts in the remote font path.  Before a
       font can be successfully opened by the nested server, it has to exist
       in local and remote font paths.  It is the users' responsibility to
       make sure that this is the case.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       Make dynamic the requirement for the SHAPE extension in the real
       server, rather than having to recompile Xnest to turn this requirement
       on and off.

       Perhaps there should be a command-line option to tell Xnest to inherit
       the keyboard and pointer control parameters from the real server rather
       than imposing its own.

       Xnest should read a customization input file to provide even greater
       freedom and simplicity in selecting the desired layout.

       There is no support for backing store and save unders, but this should
       also be considered.

       The proper implementation of fonts should be moved into the os layer.

BUGS
       Doesn't run well on servers supporting different visual depths.

       Still crashes randomly.

       Probably has some memory leaks.

AUTHOR
       Davor Matic, MIT X Consortium

SEE ALSO
       Xserver(1), xdpyinfo(1), X(7)

X Version 11                  xorg-server 1.20.14                     Xnest(1)