.ds q \N'34' .TH xcompmgr 1 "xcompmgr 1.1.10" "X Version 11" .SH NAME xcompmgr \- sample X compositing manager .SH SYNOPSIS .BI "xcompmgr [\-d " display "] [\-r " radius "]" .BI "[\-o " opacity "] [\-l " left-offset "]" .BI "[\-t " top-offset "] [\-acCfFnsS]" .SH DESCRIPTION .B xcompmgr is a sample compositing manager for X servers supporting the XFIXES, DAMAGE, and COMPOSITE extensions. It enables basic eye-candy effects. .SH OPTIONS .TP .BI \-d\ display Specifies the display to manage. .TP .BI \-r\ radius Specifies the blur radius for client-side shadows. .TP .BI \-o\ opacity Specifies the opacity for client-side shadows. .TP .BI \-l\ left-offset Specifies the left offset for client-side shadows. .TP .BI \-t\ top-offset Specifies the top offset for client-side shadows. .TP .BI \-I\ fade-in-step Specifies the opacity change between steps while fading in. .TP .BI \-O\ fade-out-step Specifies the opacity change between steps while fading out. .TP .BI \-D\ fade-delta Specifies the time (in milliseconds) between steps in a fade. .TP .BI \-a Automatic server-side compositing. This instructs the server to use the standard composition rules. Useful for debugging. .TP .BI \-c Client-side compositing with soft shadows and translucency support. .TP .BI \-f When \-c is specified, enables a smooth fade effect for transient windows like menus, and for all windows on hide and restore events. .TP .BI \-n Simple client-side compositing. This is the default mode. .TP .BI \-s Server-side compositing with hard-edged shadows. .TP .BI \-C When \-c is specified, attempts to avoid painting shadows on panels and docks. .TP .BI \-F When \-f is specified, also enables the fade effect when windows change their opacity, as with transset(1). .TP .BI \-S Enables synchronous operation. Useful for debugging. .SH BUGS Probably. Please report any you find to https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg/app/xcompmgr/. .SH AUTHORS Keith Packard, with contributions from Matthew Allum, Eric Anholt, Dan Doel, Thomas Luebking, Matthew Hawn, Ely Levy, Phil Blundell, and Carl Worth.