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dtterm(1)

CDE

NAME

dtterm - emulate a terminal window

SYNOPSIS

dtterm [+/-132] [+/-aw] [-background background_color] [-bd border_color] [-bg background_color] [-bordercolor border_color] [-borderwidth border_width] [+/-bs] [-bw border_width] [-C] [-display display_name] [-e program_argument ...] [-fb fontset] [-fg foreground_color] [-fn fontset] [-font fontset] [-foreground foreground_color] [-geometry geometry_string] [-help] [+/-miconic] [+/-mj] [+/-kshMode] [+/-l] [-lf file_name] [+/-ls] [+/-map] [+/-mb] [-ms pointer_color] [-name prog_name] [-nb number] [+/-rw] [-S ccn] [-S c.n] [+/-sb] [+/-sf] [-sl screens[s|l]] [-ti term_id] [-title title_string] [-tm term_modes] [-tn term_name] [-usage] [+/-vb] [-w border_width] [-xrm resource_string]

DESCRIPTION

The dtterm utility provides runtime support of legacy applications written for terminals conforming to ANSI X3.64-1979 and ISO 6429:1992(E), such as the DEC VT220.

OPTIONS

The following options are available: -132 Recognize the DECCOLM escape sequence and resize the window appropriately. Normally, dtterm ignores the DECCOLM escape sequence, which switches between 80- and 132-column mode. +132 Ignore the DECCOLM escape sequence. This is the default behavior. -aw Allow auto-wraparound. This option allows the cursor to automatically wrap to the beginning of the next line when it is at the right-most position of a line and text is output. this is the default behavior. +aw Do not allow auto-wraparound. -background background_color Specify the terminal window background and the default background for the scroll bar and the X11 pointer cursor. This option defaults to either the primary colorset background (default) or select pixel (see -bs). The background_color argument describes the background color. -bd border_color Specify the border color for all windows. The shell widget's window border need not be visible when re-parenting window managers, such as dtwm(1), are used. The default is the color black. The border_color argument describes the border color. -bg background_color Equivalent to -background. The background_color argument describes the background color. -bordercolor border_color Equivalent to -bd. The border_color argument describes the border color. -borderwidth border_width Specify the border width of the shell widget's window. This value may be overridden by re-parenting window managers. The default is zero. The border_width argument specifies the width of the window border in pixels. -bs Use the Motif select color instead of the background color for the terminal window's background color. +bs Do not use the Motif select color instead of the background color for the terminal window's background color. This is the default behavior. -bw border_width Equivalent to -borderwidth. The border_width argument specifies the width of the window border in pixels. -C Specify that output directed to /dev/console be directed instead to the terminal window. It is provided as a way to prevent output, which would normally be displayed on the internal terminal emulator (ITE), from overwriting the X server's display. It is not provided as a general purpose mechanism to direct the output from an arbitrary system's /dev/console to an arbitrary X server. Ownership of, and read-write permission for, /dev/console is required in order to redirect console output. -display display_name Specify the X11 display server. This defaults to the DISPLAY environment variable. The display_name argument specifies the X11 display to which dtterm connects. -e program_argument ... Specify an executable program and any command-line arguments dtterm invokes as a subprocess when dtterm is started. It must be the last option on the command line. The program_argument arguments specify the program and any command-line arguments to be invoked by dtterm. -fb fontset Specify an XFontSet used by dtterm when displaying bold terminal text. The XFontSet should be specified as a Motif XmFontList(3X). The terminal emulator supports only character or mono-spaced fonts. When using proportional fonts, the behavior is undefined. The terminal emulator generates a default bold font based on the XLFD name of the userFont. If that font is not available, the terminal emulator generates bold text by overstriking (with a one pixel offset) the userFont. The fontset argument specifies the bold terminal XFontSet used by dtterm. -fg foreground_color Specify the foreground color of the terminal window as well as the default foreground color used by dtterm for the scroll bar and the for the X11 pointer cursor. This option defaults to either the primary colorset foreground (default) or select pixel. The foreground_color argument specifies the foreground color. -fn fontset Specify an XFontSet used by dtterm when displaying terminal text. It should be specified as a Motif XmFontList(3X). Only character or mono-spaced fonts are supported. When using proportional fonts, the behavior is undefined. This font is not used to display non-terminal text (such as menu bar, popup menus or dialogs). The default uses the XmNtextFontList value of the parent bulletin board (see the XmBulletinBoard widget) in the same manner as the XmText widget. The fontset argument specifies the terminal XFontSet. -font fontset Equivalent to -fn. The fontset argument specifies the terminal XFontSet. -foreground foreground_color Equivalent to -fg. The foreground_color argument specifies the foreground color used by dtterm. -geometry geometry_string Specify the terminal window's preferred size and position. Width and height are expressed in characters. The default size is 24 lines of 80 characters each. There is no default position. The geometry_string argument specifies the terminal geometry used by dtterm. -help Display a message summarizing dtterm usage. -iconic Display the terminal emulator initially in an iconified state. +iconic Display the terminal emulator initially as a normal window. This is the default behavior. -j Use jump scrolling. With jump scrolling, the screen may be scrolled more than one line at a time. This provides for faster screen updates when multiple lines of text are sent to the terminal. The maximum number of lines that may be jump scrolled is limited to the number of lines in the terminal window. The dtterm terminal emulator guarantees that all lines are displayed. This is the default behavior. +j Do not use jump scrolling. -kshMode Enable ksh mode. In ksh mode, a key pressed with the extend modifier bit set generates an escape character followed by the character generated by the un-extended keystroke. This option is provided for use with emacs command-line editor mode of ksh(1). It conflicts with the normal meta key use for generating extended single byte characters and for generating multi-byte Asian characters. +kshMode Do not enable ksh(1) mode. This is the default behavior. -l Enables output logging. When dtterm enables logging, all output received from the subprocess is logged either to a file or to a command pipeline (as specified via the -lf option described in the following paragraph). Since data are logged directly from the subprocess, the log file includes all escape characters and carriage-return and newline pairs the terminal line discipline sends. The application may enable and disable logging via escape sequences. +l Disable output logging. This is the default behavior. -lf file_name Name the file to which dtterm writes the output log. If the file_name argument begins with a pipe symbol (|), dtterm assumes the rest of the string to be a command to be used as the endpoint of a pipe. The default file name is DttermLog XXXXX (where XXXXX is a unique value) and is created in the directory from which the subprocess was started. The file_name argument specifies the log file name used by dtterm for logging. -ls Start a login shell (the first character of argv[0] is a dash), indicating to the shell that it should read the system's profile and the user's .profile files (for ksh(1) and sh(1)), or the system's csh.login and the user's .login (for csh(1)). +ls Start a normal (non-login) shell. This is the default behavior. -map Map (de-iconify) dtterm upon subprocess output if dtterm is unmapped (iconified). The user can specify, via the mapOnOutputDelay resource, an initial period of time during which dtterm does not map itself upon subprocess output. +map Indicate there is no special mapping behavior. This is the default behavior. -mb Ring a bell when the user types at a specified distance from the right margin. The distance from the right margin is specified by the -nb option. +mb Do not ring a bell when the user types near the right margin. This is the default behavior. -ms pointer_color Specify the foreground color used by dtterm for the terminal window's (X11) pointer cursor. The default is the terminal window's foreground color (see -foreground). The pointer_color argument specifies the pointer foreground color used by dtterm. -name prog_name Specify the X11 name of the dtterm window. The prog_name argument specifies the name to use. -nb number Ring the bell this number of characters from the right margin when enabled. The default is 10. The number argument specifies the number of characters. -rw Enable reverse-wraparound. +rw Do not enable reverse-wraparound. This is the default behavior. -Sccn Run the terminal emulator against a pre-opened pty or STREAMS pseudo-terminal device. The terminal emulator provides this option to use when the pseudo-terminal device name is of the form tty?? (that is, exactly two characters following the tty). This option is intended for use when dtterm is programmatically invoked from within another application. The cc argument specifies the last two characters of the pseudo-terminal device's slave name where the pseudo-terminal device slave name is of the form tty??. This value is ignored, but must be exactly two characters in length. The n argument specifies the file descriptor number that corresponds to the pseudo-terminal device's already opened master side. -Sc.n Equivalent to -Sccn, but provided for systems with a larger pseudo- terminal device name space. The c argument specifies the last component of the pseudo-terminal device slave name. The terminal emulator ignores this value and the value may be empty. The n argument specifies the number of the file descriptor that corresponds to the pseudo-terminal device's already opened master side. -sb Display a scroll bar. This is the default behavior. +sb Do not display a scroll bar. -sf Generate Sun Function Key escape sequences instead of standard ANSI escape sequences for the terminal's function keys. +sf Generate standard ANSI escape sequences instead of Sun Function Key escape sequences for the terminal's function keys. This is the default behavior. -sl screens[s|l] Specify the number of lines in the terminal buffer beyond the length of the window. The option value consists of a number followed by an optional suffix. If no suffix is included or the suffix is ``l'' (ell), the total length of the terminal buffer is screens plus the length of the terminal window. If the suffix is ``s'' (ess) the total length of the terminal buffer is (screens+1) times the length of the terminal window. The dtterm utility attempts to maintain the same buffer-to-window ratio when the window is resized larger. The default is 4s. The screens argument specifies the number of screens or lines to save. -ti term_id Specify the name used by dtterm to select the correct response to terminal ID queries. Valid values are vt100, vt101, vt102, and vt220. The default is vt220. The term_id argument specifies the terminal ID to use. -title title_string Specify the window title. When used with the -e option, the default is the last component of the program's path; otherwise, the default is the last component of the name used to execute dtterm (that is, argv[0]). The title_string argument specifies the title used by dterm. -tm term_modes Specify a string containing terminal-setting keywords and the characters to which they can be bound. Allowable keywords include: intr, quit, erase, kill, eof, eol, swtch, start, stop, brk, susp, dsusp, rprnt, flush, weras and lnext. The terminal emulator correctly parses and silently ignores keywords that do not apply to a specific architecture. Control characters can be specified as ^ char (for example, ^c or ^u), and ^? can be used to indicate Delete. This is useful for overriding the default terminal settings without having to do an stty(1) every time a DtTerm widget is created. The default is NULL. The term_modes argument specifies the terminal mode string. -tn term_name Specify a name to which dtterm sets the TERM environment variable. The default is dtterm. The term_name argument specifies the terminal name used by dtterm. -usage Display a usage message on the screen. -vb Use a visual bell instead of an audible one. Flash the window instead of ringing the terminal bell whenever a <control>-G is received. +vb Use an audio bell instead of a visual one. This is the default behavior. -w border_width Equivalent to -borderwidth. The border_width argument specifies the width of the window border in pixels. -xrm resource_string Allow the user to specify the X11 Resource Manager-style resources on the command line. The resource_string argument specifies an X11 resource string. (See XrmParseCommand(3X11) for more information.)

OPERANDS

None.

STDIN

Not used.

INPUT FILES

None.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

The following environment variables affect the execution of dtterm: DISPLAY Specify the default X Windows display to connect to (see -display). The terminal emulator sets the subprocess's DISPLAY environment variable to the connected X11 display name. HOME Determine the user's home directory, the location of configuration files. LANG Provide a default value for the internationalization variables that are unset or null. If LANG is unset or null, the corresponding value from the implementation-specific default locale will be used. If any of the internationalization variables contains an invalid setting, the utility behaves as if none of the variables had been defined. LC_ALL If set to a non-empty string value, override the values of all the other internationalization variables. LC_MESSAGES Determine the locale that is used to affect the format and contents of diagnostic messages written to standard error and informative messages written to standard output. NLSPATH Determine the location of message catalogues for the processing of LC_MESSAGES. SHELL Determine the default application to run. XAPPLRESDIR Specify the name of a directory that contains application- specific resources. If this environment variable is defined, and is set to an existing directory, then it is searched (in addition to the standard locations) for files containing application-specific resource specifications. XENVIRONMENT Specify the name of a resource file with user- or machine- specific resources. If this variable is not defined, dtterm looks for a file named $HOME/.Xdefaults-hostname instead, where hostname is the name of the host where the application is executing. XFILESEARCHPATH Define a language-dependent location of app-defaults. XMODIFIER Specify which input method to use. XUSERFILESEARCHPATH Control where X applications look for their app-defaults resource files. The default is located in the directory /usr/dt/app-defaults. The user must set XUSERFILESEARCHPATH if the user's resource files are not in this location. The terminal emulator creates the following variable when it invokes another process: TERM The terminal emulator sets the subprocess's TERM environment variable to the termName resource value. Applications use this variable to determine the type of escape sequences to use when driving the terminal emulator. TERMINAL_EMULATOR The terminal emulator sets the subprocess's TERMINAL_EMULATOR environment variable to dtterm to indicate that the process is running from a dtterm terminal emulator. WINDOWID The terminal emulator sets the subprocess's WINDOWID environment variable to the window number of the window in which text is rendered.

RESOURCES

The dtterm utility allows the user to specify behavior through X11 resources as well as the command-line interface. The following is a list of the defined resources: ______________________________________________________________________________ Name Class Type Default ______________________________________________________________________________ allowSendEvents AllowSendEvents Boolean False appCursorDefault AppCursorDefault Boolean False appKeypadDefault AppKeypadDefault Boolean False autoWrap AutoWrap Boolean True background Background String backgroundIsSelect BackgroundIsSelect Boolean False backSpaceIsDelete BackSpaceIsDelete Boolean True for PC keyboard; otherwise False blinkRate BlinkRate int 250 borderColor BorderColor String ``black'' borderWidth BorderWidth int 0 c132 C132 Boolean False charCursorStyle CharCursorStyle String ``char_cursor_box'' consoleMode ConsoleMode Boolean False foreground Foreground String geometry Geometry String NULL iconic Iconic Boolean False iconName IconName String ``dtterm'' jumpScroll JumpScroll Boolean True kshMode KshMode Boolean False logging Logging Boolean False logFile LogFile String ``DttermLogXXXXX'' (where XXXXX is a unique value) logInhibit LogInhibit Boolean False loginShell LoginShell Boolean False mapOnOutput AutoMap Boolean False mapOnOutputDelay MapDelay int 0 marginBell MarginBell Boolean False menuBar MenuBar Boolean True menuPopup MenuPopup Boolean True nMarginBell NMarginBell int 10 pointerBlank PointerBlank Boolean False pointerBlankDelay PointerBlankDelay int 2 pointerColor Foreground String foreground color pointerColorBackground Background String background color pointerShape PointerShape String ``xterm'' reverseWrap ReverseWrap Boolean False saveLines SaveLines String 4s scrollBar ScrollBar Boolean True sunFunctionKeys SunFunctionKeys Boolean False termId TermId String ``vt220'' termName TermName String ``dtterm'' title Title String ``dtterm'' ttyModes TtyModes String NULL userBoldFont UserBoldFont XmFontList dynamic userFont UserFont XmFontList dynamic visualBell VisualBell Boolean False allowSendEvents Specifies that the terminal emulator allow synthetic events (generated and sent by another application). Enabling this resource opens up a possible security hole. appCursorDefault If True, the cursor keys are initially in application mode. If False, the cursor keys are initially in cursor mode. appKeypadDefault If True, the keypad keys are initially in application mode. If False, the keypad keys are initially in numeric mode. autoWrap Specifies whether or not auto-wraparound is initially enabled. background Specifies the background color of the terminal window as well as the default background color for the scroll bar. This resource defaults to either the primary colorset background or select pixel (see backgroundIsSelect). backgroundIsSelect Specifies that the terminal window should use the Motif select color instead of the background color for the terminal window's background color. backspaceIsDelete Defaults to True if a PC keyboard is connected, otherwise defaults to False. When True, the terminal sends a delete-key signal when it receives a backspace. Enables the backspace key of a PC keyboard to act like the delete key of an LK401. blinkRate Specifies the number of milliseconds the cursor is in the on and off states while blinking. A value of 250 blinks the cursor two times per second. A value of zero turns blinking off. borderColor Specifies the border color for the window. The window border need not be visible when re-parenting window managers are used. borderWidth Specifies the border width of the shell widget's window. This value may be overridden by re-parenting window managers. c132 Specifies whether or not the DECCOLM escape sequence, which switches between a 132- and 80-column window, is honored. charCursorStyle This resource specifies the shape of the text cursor. A char_cursor_box value specifies a cursor the width and height of the base font's bounding box. A char_cursor_bar value specifies a cursor the width of the base font's bounding box, 2 pixels high, and drawn with its top on the baseline. consoleMode Specifies that output directed at /dev/console be directed instead to the terminal window. It is provided as a way to prevent output, that would normally be displayed on the internal terminal emulator (ITE), from overwriting the X server's display. It is not provided as a general mechanism to direct the output from an arbitrary system's /dev/console to an arbitrary X server. Ownership of, and read-write permission for, /dev/console is required in order to redirect console output. foreground Specifies the foreground of the terminal window as well as the default used by dtterm for the scroll bar and the color used for the pointer cursor. This resource defaults to the primary colorset foreground pixel. geometry Specifies the terminal window's preferred size and position. The default size is 24 lines of 80 characters each. There is no default position. iconGeometry Specifies the preferred position of the terminal emulator's icon. Window managers may ignore this value. There is no default. iconic Specifies whether or not the terminal emulator is initially displayed in an iconified state. iconName Specifies the name for the icon. When used with the -e option, the default is the last component of the program's path; otherwise, the default is the last component of the name used to execute dtterm (that is, argv[0]). jumpScroll Specifies that dtterm use jump scrolling. With jump scrolling, the screen may be scrolled more than one line at a time. This provides for faster screen updates when multiple lines of text are sent to the terminal. The maximum number of lines that may be jump scrolled is limited to the number of lines in the terminal window. The dtterm terminal emulator guarantees that all lines are displayed. kshMode Enables ksh mode. With ksh mode, a key pressed with the extend modifier bit set generates an escape character followed by the character generated by the un-extended keystroke. This option is provided for use with the emacs command-line editor mode of ksh(1). It conflicts with the normal meta key use for generating extended single byte characters and for generating multi-byte Asian characters. logging Enables output logging. When logging is enabled, all output received from the subprocess is logged either to a file or to a command pipeline (as specified via the logFile option). Since the data is logged directly from the subprocess, it includes all escape characters and carriage-returns and newline pairs the terminal line discipline sends. Logging may be enabled and disabled via escape sequences. logFile Specifies the filename to which dtterm writes the output log. If the filename begins with a pipe symbol (|), dtterm assumes the rest of the string is a command to be used as the endpoint of a pipe. The default filename is DttermLog XXXXX (where XXXXX is a unique value) and is created in the directory from which the subprocess was started. logInhibit Indicates that dtterm inhibit device and file logging. loginShell Indicates that the shell that is started be a login shell (that is, the first character of argv[0] is a dash), indicating that the shell should read the system's profile and the user's .profile files (for ksh(1) and sh(1)) or the system csh.login and the user's .login (for csh(1)). mapOnOutput Indicates that the terminal emulator map (de-iconify) itself upon subprocess output if it is unmapped (iconified). The user can specify, via the mapOnOutputDelay resource, an initial period of time during which dtterm does not map itself upon subprocess output. mapOnOutputDelay Specifies the number of seconds after start-up that dtterm does not honor the mapOnOutput resource. This allows the application to send initial output (for example, shell prompts) to the terminal without auto mapping the window. The default is zero (no delay). marginBell Specifies whether or not the bell rings when the user types near the right margin. The distance from the right margin is specified by the nMarginBell resource. menuBar Indicates that dtterm displays a pulldown menu bar. The default is True. menuPopup Indicates that dtterm displays a popup menu. The default is True. nMarginBell Specifies the number of characters from the right margin at which the margin bell rings, when enabled. pointerBlank Specifies that dtterm puts the pointer cursor into blanking mode. In this mode, the cursor turns on when the pointer is moved, and is blanked after a selectable number of seconds or after keyboard input. The pointerBlankDelay resource sets the delay. pointerBlankDelay Specifies the number of seconds to wait after the pointer has stopped moving before blanking the pointer (see pointerBlank). A value of zero delays pointer blanking until a key is pressed. pointerColor Specifies the foreground color used by dtterm for the terminal window's pointer (X11) cursor. The default is the terminal window's foreground color (see foreground). pointerColorBackground Specifies the background color used by dtterm for the terminal window's pointer (X11) cursor. The default is the terminal window's background color (see background). pointerShape Specifies the X cursor font character used by dtterm as the pointer cursor. The font character must be specified as a string from the X11/cursorfont.h header with the leading XC_ removed. The default is xterm(1X). reverseWrap Specifies whether or not reverse-wraparound is enabled. saveLines Specifies the number of lines in the terminal buffer beyond the length of the window. The option value consists of a number followed by an optional suffix. If no suffix is included or the suffix is ``l'' (ell), the total length of the terminal buffer is screens plus the length of the terminal window. If the suffix is ``s'' (ess) the total length of the terminal buffer is (screens+1) times the length of the terminal window. The dtterm utility attempts to maintain the same buffer-to-window ratio when the window is resized larger. scrollBar Specifies that dtterm displays a scroll bar. sunFunctionKeys Specifies whether dtterm generates Sun Function Key escape sequences instead of standard ANSI escape sequences for the terminal's function keys. termId Supplies the name used to select the correct response to terminal ID queries. Valid values are vt100, vt101, vt102, and vt220. termName Specifies a name to which dtterm sets the TERM environment variable. The default is dtterm. title Specifies the window title. When used with the -e option, the default is the last component of the program's path; otherwise, the default is the last component of the name used to execute dtterm (that is, argv[0]). ttyModes Specifies a string containing terminal-setting keywords and the characters to which they can be bound. Allowable keywords include: intr, quit, erase, kill, eof, eol, swtch, start, stop, brk, susp, dsusp, rprnt, flush, weras and lnext. The terminal emulator correctly parses and silently ignores keywords that do not apply to a specific architecture. Control characters can be specified as ^ char (for example, ^c or ^u), and ^? can be used to indicate Delete. This is useful for overriding the default terminal settings without having to do an stty(1) every time a DtTerm widget is created. userBoldFont Specifies an XFontSet used by dtterm when displaying bold terminal text. The XFontSet should be specified as a Motif XmFontList(3X). The terminal emulator supports only character or mono-spaced fonts. When using proportional fonts, the behavior is undefined. The terminal emulator generates a default bold font based on the XLFD name of the userFont. If that font is not available, dtterm generates bold text by overstriking (with a one pixel offset) the userFont. userFont Specifies an XFontSet used by dtterm when displaying terminal text. XFontSet should be specified as a Motif XmFontList(3X). The terminal emulator supports only character or mono-spaced fonts. Even if a proportional font is specified, a default mono-spaced font is used. This font is not used to display non-terminal text (such as menu bar, popup menu and dialog). The default is the XmNtextFontList value of the parent bulletin board (see the XmBulletinBoard widget) in the same manner as the XmText widget. visualBell Indicates that a visual bell is preferred over an audible one. Instead of ringing the terminal bell whenever a <control>-G is received, the window is flashed. Resource/Option Correspondence Many of the preceding resources correspond to the command-line arguments. The following table describes the relationship between the two: Command-line option Resource Setting ___________________________________________________________________________ -132 *c132: True +132 *c132: False -aw *autoWrap: True +aw *autoWrap: False -background background_color *background: background_color -bd border_color *borderColor: border_color -bg background_color *background: background_color -bordercolor border_color *borderColor: border_color -borderwidth border_width .borderWidth: border_width -bs *backgroundIsSelect: True +bs *backgroundIsSelect: False -bw border_width .borderWidth: border_width -C *consoleMode: True -display display_name .display: display_name -e program_argument... -fb fontset *userBoldFont: fontset -fg foreground_color *foreground: foreground_color -fn fontset *userFont: fontset -font fontset *userFont: fontset -foreground foreground_color *foreground: foreground_color -geometry geometry_string .geometry: geometry_string -iconic .iconic: True +iconic .iconic: False -j *jumpScroll: True +j *jumpScroll: False -kshMode *kshMode: True +kshMode *kshMode: False -l *logging: True +l *logging: False -lf file_name *logFile: file_name -ls *loginShell: True +ls *loginShell: False -map *mapOnOutput: True +map *mapOnOutput: False -mb *marginBell: True +mb *marginBell: False -ms pointer_color *pointerColor: pointer_color -name prog_name .name: prog_name -nb number *nMarginBell: number -rw *reverseWrap: True +rw *reverseWrap: False -sb *scrollBar: True +sb *scrollBar: False -sf *sunFunctionKeys: True +sf *sunFunctionKeys: False -sl screenss *saveLines: screens * lines/screen -sl lines *saveLines: lines -ti term_id *termId: term_id -title title_string .title: title_string -tm term_modes *ttyModes: term_modes -tn term_name *termName: term_name -vb *visualBell: True +vb *visualBell: False -w border_width .borderWidth: border_width

ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS

The dtterm utility takes the standard action for all signals.

STDOUT

Not used.

STDERR

Used only for diagnostic messages.

OUTPUT FILES

None.

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION

None.

EXIT STATUS

0 successful completion >0 an error occurred

CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS

Default.

APPLICATION USAGE

None.

EXAMPLES

None.

SEE ALSO

DtTerm(5), stty(1), dtterm(5), X(1X), XmFontList(3X), XmText(3X), pty(7), tty(7).