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urxvt(1)			 RXVT-UNICODE			      urxvt(1)

NAME
       urxvtd -	urxvt terminal daemon

SYNOPSIS
       urxvtd [-q|--quiet] [-o|--opendisplay] [-f|--fork] [-m|--mlock]
       [-e|--eval perlstring]

       urxvtd -q -o -f	  # for	.xsession use

DESCRIPTION
       This manpage describes the urxvtd daemon, which is the same vt102
       terminal	emulator as urxvt, but runs as a daemon	that can open multiple
       terminal	windows	within the same	process.

       You can run it from your	X startup scripts, for example,	although it is
       not dependent on	a working DISPLAY and, in fact,	can open windows on
       multiple	X displays on the same time.

       Advantages of running a urxvt daemon include faster creation time for
       terminal	windows	and a lot of saved memory.

       The disadvantage	is a possible impact on	stability - if the main
       program crashes,	all processes in the terminal windows are terminated.
       For example, as there is	no way to cleanly react	to abnormal connection
       closes, "xkill" and server resets/restarts will kill the	urxvtd
       instance	including all windows it has opened.

OPTIONS
       urxvtd currently	understands a few options only.	Bundling of options is
       not yet supported.

       -q, --quiet
	   Normally, urxvtd outputs the	message	"rxvt-unicode daemon listening
	   on  <path>"	after  binding to its control socket. This option will
	   suppress this message (errors and warnings will still be logged).

       -o, --opendisplay
	   This	forces urxvtd to open a	connection to the current $DISPLAY and
	   keep	it open.

	   This	is useful if you want to bind an instance  of  urxvtd  to  the
	   lifetime  of	a specific display/server. If the server does a	reset,
	   urxvtd will be killed automatically.

       -f, --fork
	   This	makes urxvtd fork after	it has bound  itself  to  its  control
	   socket.

       -m, --mlock
	   This	 makes urxvtd call mlockall(2) on itself. This locks urxvtd in
	   RAM and prevents it from being swapped out to disk, at the cost  of
	   consuming a lot more	memory on most operating systems.

	   Note:  In order to use this feature,	your system administrator must
	   have	set your user's	RLIMIT_MEMLOCK to a size greater than or equal
	   to  the  size  of  the  urxvtd  binary  (or	to   unlimited).   See
	   /etc/security/limits.conf.

	   Note	 2:  There  is a known bug in glibc (possibly fixed in 2.8 and
	   later  versions)  where  calloc  returns  non-zeroed	 memory	  when
	   mlockall  is	 in  effect.  If  you  experience crashes or other odd
	   behaviour while using --mlock, try it without it.

       -e, --eval perlstring
	   Evaluate the	given perl code	after basic  initialisation  (requires
	   perl	support	to be enabled when compiling urxvtd).

	   This	 can  be  used	for  example  to  configure  the internal perl
	   interpreter,	which is shared	between	 all  terminal	instances,  or
	   create additional listening sockets for additional protocols.

	   The code is currently executed before creating the normal listening
	   sockets: this might change in future	versions.

EXAMPLES
       This is a useful	invocation of urxvtd in	a .xsession-style script:

	  urxvtd -q -f -o

       This  waits  till  the  control	socket is available, opens the current
       display and forks into the background. When you log-out,	the server  is
       reset and urxvtd	is killed.

ENVIRONMENT
       RXVT_SOCKET
	   Both	 urxvtc	and urxvtd use the environment variable	RXVT_SOCKET to
	   create a listening socket and to contact the	urxvtd,	 respectively.
	   If  the  variable is	missing	then $HOME/.urxvt/urxvtd-<nodename> is
	   used.

       LISTEN_PID, LISTEN_FDS, LISTEN_FDNAMES
	   if these environment	variables are set, urxvtd checks  for  a  file
	   descriptor  passed  by  the	service	 manager  via  systemd	native
	   interface. If one is	provided, urxvtd  uses	it  as	its  listening
	   socket instead of creating one as specified above.

       DISPLAY
	   Only	 used  when  the  "--opendisplay"  option  is  specified. Must
	   contain a valid X display name.

SEE ALSO
       urxvt(7), urxvtc(1)

9.31				  2023-01-02			      urxvt(1)

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