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xearth(1)		    General Commands Manual		     xearth(1)

NAME
       xearth -	displays a shaded image	of the Earth in	an X window

SYNOPSIS
       xearth  [-proj  proj_type  ]  [-pos  pos_spec  ]	[-rot angle ] [-sunpos
       sun_pos_spec ] [-mag factor ] [-size size_spec ]	[-shift	 shift_spec  ]
       [-shade|-noshade]  [-label|-nolabel]  [-labelpos	 geom ]	[-markers|-no-
       markers]	[-markerfile file ] [-showmarkers]  [-stars|-nostars]  [-star-
       freq  frequency	] [-bigstars percent ] [-grid|-nogrid] [-grid1 grid1 ]
       [-grid2 grid2 ] [-day  pct  ]  [-night  pct  ]  [-term  pct  ]  [-gamma
       gamma_value  ]  [-wait  secs  ]	[-timewarp  timewarp_factor  ]	[-time
       fixed_time ] [-onepix|-twopix] [-mono|-nomono] [-ncolors	 num_colors  ]
       [-font  font_name  ]  [-root|-noroot] [-geometry	geom ] [-title title ]
       [-iconname iconname ] [-name  name  ]  [-fork|-nofork]  [-once|-noonce]
       [-nice priority ] [-gif]	[-ppm] [-display dpyname ] [-version]

DESCRIPTION
       Xearth  sets  the  X root window	to an image of the Earth, as seen from
       your favorite vantage point in space, correctly shaded for the  current
       position	 of  the  Sun.	By default, xearth updates the displayed image
       every five minutes. The time between updates can	be  changed  with  the
       -wait  option  (see below); updates can be disabled completely by using
       the -once option	(see below).

       If desired, Xearth can be configured to create and render into its  own
       top-level  X window instead of the root window; see the -root, -noroot,
       and -geometry options (below). Finally, xearth can also render directly
       into PPM	and GIF	files instead of drawing into an  X  window;  see  the
       -ppm and	-gif options (below).

       This man	page documents version 1.1 of xearth.

OPTIONS
       Xearth  understands the following command line options (corresponding X
       resources can be	found in the following section):

       -proj proj_type
	      Specify the projection type xearth should	use. Supported projec-
	      tion types are mercator, orthographic,  and  cylindrical;	 these
	      can  either be spelled out in full or abbreviated	to merc, orth,
	      or cyl, respectively. Xearth uses	an orthographic	projection  by
	      default.

       -pos pos_spec
	      Specify  the position from which the Earth should	be viewed. The
	      pos_spec (position specifier) consists of	 a  keyword,  possibly
	      followed	by  additional	arguments.  Valid keywords are:	fixed,
	      sunrel, orbit, moon, and random. (If you're having problems get-
	      ting xearth to accept a position specifier as a command line ar-
	      gument, make sure	and read the comments about position specifier
	      delimiters and using explicit quoting  in	 the  sixth  paragraph
	      following	this one.)

	      The  position  specifier keyword fixed should be followed	by two
	      arguments, interpreted as	numerical values indicating the	 lati-
	      tude  and	 longitude (expressed in decimal degrees) of a viewing
	      position that is fixed with respect to the Earth's surface. Pos-
	      itive and	negative values	of latitude  correspond	 to  positions
	      north and	south of the equator, respectively. Positive and nega-
	      tive  values  of longitude correspond to positions east and west
	      of Greenwich, respectively.

	      The position specifier keyword sunrel should be followed by  two
	      arguments,  interpreted  as numerical values indicating the off-
	      sets in latitude and longitude (expressed	in decimal degrees) of
	      a	viewing	position that is fixed with respect to the position of
	      the Sun. Positive	and negative values of latitude	and  longitude
	      are interpreted as for the fixed keyword.

	      The  position  specifier keyword orbit should be followed	by two
	      arguments, interpreted as	numerical values indicating the	period
	      (in hours) and orbital inclination (in  decimal  degrees)	 of  a
	      simple  circular orbit; the viewing position follows this	orbit.
	      Astute readers will surely note that these  parameters  are  not
	      sufficient  to  uniquely	specify	 a single circular orbit. This
	      problem is solved	by limiting the	space of  possible  orbits  to
	      those positioned over 0 degrees latitude,	0 degrees longitude at
	      time zero	(the Un*x epoch, see time(3)).

	      The  position  specifier	keyword	moon should not	be followed by
	      any arguments. When this keyword is used,	the  viewing  position
	      is  the  current	position of the	moon, recalculated at each up-
	      date.

	      The position specifier keyword random should not be followed  by
	      any  arguments.  When this keyword is used, the viewing position
	      is selected at random each time an update	occurs.

	      Components of a  position	 specifier  are	 delimited  by	either
	      whitespace,  forward  slashes  (/),  or  commas. Note that using
	      whitespace to separate position specifier	components when	invok-
	      ing xearth from a	shell may require explicit quoting  to	ensure
	      the  entire  position  specifier is passed as a single argument.
	      For example, if you want to use spaces to	delimit	components and
	      are using	a "typical" shell, you'd need to use something like:

		  -pos "fixed 42.33 -71.08"

	      or

		  -pos 'fixed 42.33 -71.08'

	      to make things work. If you'd  rather  not  have	to  explicitly
	      quote  things,  you can use forward slashes or commas instead of
	      spaces to	separate components, as	shown below.

		  -pos fixed,42.33,-71.08
		  -pos fixed/42.33/-71.08

	      If a position specifier is not provided, xearth uses  a  default
	      position	specifier  of  "sunrel	0 0" (such that	the entire day
	      side of the Earth	is always visible).

       -rot angle
	      Specify a	rotated	viewing	position such that the	north  is  not
	      "straight	up" in the center of the rendered image. The angle can
	      be  specified either as a	numeric	value or the keyword galactic.
	      When angle is a numeric, it represents the number	of degrees  by
	      which  the  image	is to be rotated. Positive values of angle ro-
	      tate the rendered	image counterclockwise;	negative values	rotate
	      the rendered image clockwise. The	keyword	galactic  orients  the
	      image  so	that the galactic north	is straight up:	the sun	is po-
	      sitioned somewhere on the	plane passing through  the  horizontal
	      center of	the screen. The	default	value of angle is 0.

       -sunpos sun_pos_spec
	      Specify  a  fixed	 point on the Earth's surface where the	Sun is
	      always directly overhead.	The sun_pos_spec (Sun position	speci-
	      fier)  consists  of two components, both numerical values; these
	      components are interpreted as the	 latitude  and	longitude  (in
	      decimal  degrees)	 of  the point where the Sun is	directly over-
	      head.

	      The details provided for position	specifiers (see	 above)	 about
	      the  interpretation of positive and negative latitude and	longi-
	      tude values and the characters used to delimit specifier	compo-
	      nents apply to Sun position specifiers as	well.

	      By default, xearth calculates the	actual position	of the Sun and
	      updates this position with the progression of time.

       -mag factor
	      Specify  the  magnification of the displayed image. When the or-
	      thographic projection is in use, the diameter  of	 the  rendered
	      Earth  image is factor times the shorter of the width and	height
	      of the image (see	the -size option, below). For the mercator and
	      cylindrical projections, the width of the	rendered image is fac-
	      tor times	the width of the image (see the	-size option,  below).
	      The default magnification	factor is 1.

       -size size_spec
	      Specify  the  size  of  the  image to be rendered. The size_spec
	      (size specifier) consists	of two components, both	positive inte-
	      gers; these components are interpreted as	the width  and	height
	      (in pixels) of the image.

	      The  details  provided for position specifiers (see above) about
	      the characters used to delimit  specifier	 components  apply  to
	      size specifiers as well.

	      When  rendering  into the	X root window, these values default to
	      the dimensions of	the root window. When producing	a PPM  or  GIF
	      file  instead  of	drawing	in the X root window (see the -ppm and
	      -gif options, below), both values	default	to 512.

	      When rendering into its own top-level X window, any values spec-
	      ified using this option are ignored;  dimensions	for  the  top-
	      level window can be specified using the -geometry	option.

       -shift shift_spec
	      Specify  that  the  center of the	rendered Earth image should be
	      shifted by some  amount  from  the  center  of  the  image.  The
	      shift_spec  (shift  specifier)  consists of two components, both
	      integers;	these components are interpreted as  the  offsets  (in
	      pixels) in the X and Y directions.

	      The  details  provided for position specifiers (see above) about
	      the characters used to delimit  specifier	 components  apply  to
	      shift specifiers as well.

	      By  default,  the	 center	of the rendered	Earth image is aligned
	      with the center of the image.

       -shade |	-noshade
	      Enable/disable shading. When shading is enabled, the surface  of
	      the Earth	is shaded according to the current position of the Sun
	      (and  the	 values	 provided  for the -day, -night, and -term op-
	      tions, below). When shading is disabled, use flat	colors	(green
	      and  blue)  to  render land and water. Shading is	enabled	by de-
	      fault.

       -label |	-nolabel
	      Enable/disable labeling. If labeling is enabled  and  xearth  is
	      rendering	 into  an X window, provide a label that indicates the
	      current date and time and	current	viewing	and sun	positions. The
	      position of the label can	be controlled using the	-labelpos  op-
	      tion (see	below).	Labeling is disabled by	default.

       -labelpos geom
	      Specify  where the label should be drawn.	If labeling is enabled
	      and xearth is rendering into an X	window,	geom is	interpreted as
	      the "position" part an  X-style  geometry	 specification	(e.g.,
	      {+-}<xoffset>{+-}<yoffset>;  positive  and  negative  values  of
	      xoffset denote offsets from the left and right edges of the dis-
	      play, respectively; positive and negative	values of yoffset  de-
	      note  offsets  from the top and bottom edges of the display, re-
	      spectively) indicating how the label should be positioned.   The
	      label  position defaults to "-5-5" (i.e.,	five pixels inside the
	      lower right-hand corner of the display).

       -markers	| -nomarkers
	      Enable/disable markers. If markers are  enabled  and  xearth  is
	      rendering	 into  an X window, display small red circles and text
	      labels indicating	the location  of  interesting  places  on  the
	      Earth's surface. Markers are enabled by default.

       -markerfile file
	      Specify  a  file	from which user-defined	marker data (locations
	      and names) should	be read. Each line in  the  marker  data  file
	      consists	of  three required components: the latitude and	longi-
	      tude (expressed in decimal degrees) followed by the text of  the
	      label  that  should be used. Individual components are delimited
	      by either	whitespace, forward slashes (/), or commas. Components
	      that need	to include delimiter characters	 (e.g.,	 a  multi-word
	      label)  should be	enclosed in double quotes. For example,	a line
	      in a typical marker data file might look something like:

		  42.33	-71.08 "Boston,	MA"    # USA

	      Everything between a `#' character and the end of	a line,	inclu-
	      sive, is a considered to be a comment.  Blank  lines  and	 lines
	      containing only comments are allowed.

	      In  addition  to	the three required components, xearth supports
	      optional following "key=value" components. In  this  version  of
	      xearth,  the  only supported "key" is "align", which can be used
	      to control where marker labels are  drawn	 in  relation  to  the
	      marker  proper.  Supported alignment values are "left", "right",
	      "above", and "below"; the	default	behavior (if no	 alignment  is
	      specified) is "align=right".

	      The  marker data file is reread every time xearth	redraws	an im-
	      age into an X window. In this way, the marker positions and  la-
	      bels can be dynamic (e.g., given appropriate data	sources, mark-
	      ers  could  be  used to encode hurricane positions, where	earth-
	      quakes have happened recently, temperatures at fixed  locations,
	      or other forms of	"real-time" data).

	      Xearth includes a	built-in set of	marker data for	76 major loca-
	      tions  around  the  world.  The built-in data can	be selected by
	      specifying "built-in" for	the file argument; this	is the default
	      behavior.	The built-in set of marker data	can be examined	either
	      by using the -showmarkers	option (see below) or by  reading  the
	      BUILT-IN	file included with the xearth source distribution (see
	      OBTAINING	THE XEARTH SOURCE DISTRIBUTION,	below).

       -showmarkers
	      This option indicates that xearth	should load  the  marker  data
	      (whether	built-in  or  user-specified),	print  a copy of it to
	      standard out in a	form suitable for use with the -markers	option
	      (see above), and then exit.

       -stars |	-nostars
	      Enable/disable stars. If stars are enabled, the black background
	      of "space" is filled with	a random pattern of "stars"  (individ-
	      ual  white  pixels).  The	fraction of background pixels that are
	      turned into stars	can be controlled with	the  -starfreq	option
	      (see below). Stars are enabled by	default.

       -starfreq frequency
	      Set  the density of the random star pattern (see -stars, above);
	      frequency	indicates  the	fraction  of  background  pixels  that
	      should be	turned into "stars". The default value of frequency is
	      0.002.

       -bigstars percent
	      Set the percentage of double-width stars (see -stars, above); by
	      default,	all  stars  are	a single pixel,	but this option	can be
	      used to create some stars	that are composed  of  two  horizontal
	      pixels.	This  provides	a  slightly  less  uniform look	to the
	      "night sky".

       -grid | -nogrid
	      Enable/disable the display of a longitude/latitude grid  on  the
	      Earth's  surface.	 The  spacing of major grid lines and dots be-
	      tween major grid lines can be controlled	with  the  -grid1  and
	      -grid2 options (see below). Grid display is disabled by default.

       -grid1 grid1
	      Specify  the  spacing  of	 major grid lines if grid display (see
	      -grid, above) is enabled;	major grid  lines  are	drawn  with  a
	      90/grid1	degree spacing.	The default value for grid1 is 6, cor-
	      responding to 15 degrees between major grid lines.

       -grid2 grid2
	      Specify the spacing of dots along	major grid lines if grid  dis-
	      play  (see -grid,	above) is enabled. Along the equator and lines
	      of longitude, grid dots are drawn	with a 90/(grid1 x grid2)  de-
	      gree spacing. The	spacing	of grid	dots along parallels (lines of
	      latitude)	other than the equator is adjusted to keep the surface
	      distance	between	 grid dots approximately constant. The default
	      value for	grid2 is 15; combined with the default grid1 value  of
	      6,  this	corresponds to placing grid dots on a one degree spac-
	      ing.

       -day pct
	      Specify the brightness that should be used to shade the day side
	      of the Earth when	shading	is enabled. Pct	should be  an  integer
	      between  0  and 100, inclusive, where 0 indicates	total darkness
	      and 100 indicates	total illumination.  This  value  defaults  to
	      100.

       -night pct
	      Specify  the  brightness	that should be used to shade the night
	      side of the Earth	when shading is	enabled. Pct should be an  in-
	      teger  between  0	 and  100,  inclusive, where 0 indicates total
	      darkness and 100 indicates total illumination.  This  value  de-
	      faults  to 5 (if this seems overly dark, you may want to double-
	      check that appropriate gamma correction is being	employed;  see
	      -gamma, below).

       -term pct
	      Specify  the  shading discontinuity at the terminator (day/night
	      line). Pct should	be an integer between 0	and 100, inclusive.  A
	      value  of	x indicates that the shading should immediately	jump x
	      percent of the difference	between	day and	night  shading	values
	      (see  -day  and -night, above) when crossing from	the night side
	      to the day side of the terminator. Thus a	value of  0  indicates
	      no  discontinuity	(the original xearth behavior),	and a value of
	      100 yields a maximal discontinuity (such	that  the  entire  day
	      side  of	the earth is shaded with the -day shading value). This
	      value defaults to	1.

       -gamma gamma_value
	      When xearth is rendering into an X  window,  adjust  the	colors
	      xearth  uses by a	gamma value. Values less than 1.0 yield	darker
	      colors; values greater than 1.0 yield brighter colors.  The  de-
	      fault  gamma_value  is  1.0, appropriate for use on systems with
	      built-in gamma correction. For systems  without  built-in	 gamma
	      correction, appropriate gamma values are often in	the 2.3	to 2.6
	      range.

	      See the GAMMA-TEST file included with the	xearth source distrib-
	      ution for	information about a simple test	that allows you	to di-
	      rectly  estimate the gamma of your display system	(see OBTAINING
	      THE XEARTH SOURCE	DISTRIBUTION, below).

       -wait secs
	      When rendering into an X window, wait secs seconds  between  up-
	      dates. This value	defaults to 300	seconds	(five minutes).

       -timewarp timewarp_factor
	      Scale  the  apparent  rate  at  which  time  progresses by time-
	      warp_factor. The default value of	timewarp_factor	is 1.0.

       -time fixed_time
	      Instead of using the current time	to determine  the  "value"  of
	      time-dependent  positions	 (e.g.,	 the  position the sun), use a
	      particular fixed_time (expressed in seconds since	the Un*x epoch
	      (see time(3)).

       -onepix | -twopix
	      Specify whether xearth should use	one or two pixmaps  when  ren-
	      dering into an X window. If only one pixmap is used, partial re-
	      draws  may  be visible at	times in the window (when areas	of the
	      window are exposed and redrawn during the	time xearth is render-
	      ing the next image). If two pixmaps are used, xearth  uses  them
	      to double-buffer changes such that partial redraws are (almost?)
	      never  seen.  Using  only	 one pixmap has	the advantage of using
	      quite a bit less memory in the X server; this can	 be  important
	      in environments where server-side	memory is a fairly limited re-
	      source. Two pixmaps is the default.

       -mono | -nomono
	      If  rendering  into an X window, enable/disable monochrome mode.
	      Monochrome mode is enabled by default on	systems	 with  one-bit
	      framebuffers  (see  the  "depth of root window" information pro-
	      vided by xdpyinfo(1)) and	disabled by default otherwise.

       -ncolors	num_colors
	      If rendering into	an X window or a GIF output file, specify  the
	      number  of  colors  that should be used. (If markers are enabled
	      (see -markers, above), the actual	number of colors used  may  be
	      one  larger than num_colors.) The	default	value of num_colors is
	      64.

	      When rendering into an X window, the maximum allowable value for
	      num_colors is 1024. In  practice,	 using	values	of  num_colors
	      larger  than  twice the number of	distinct shades	of red,	green,
	      or blue supported	by your	hardware is likely to  provide	little
	      additional benefit, or, in some cases, produce "banding" effects
	      in  the  image.  Thus,  on systems that can support 256 distinct
	      shades of	red, green, or blue (eight bits	 per  component),  the
	      largest  practical value of num_colors is	around 512. Similarly,
	      on systems that support only five	 or  six  bits	per  component
	      (e.g., many systems with 16-bit displays), the largest practical
	      value of num_colors is probably around 64.

	      When  rendering  into  a	GIF output file, the maximum allowable
	      value for	num_colors is 256.

       -font font_name
	      If rendering into	an X window, use font_name  for	 drawing  text
	      labels (see -label and -markers, above). By default, xearth uses
	      the "variable" font.

       -root | -noroot
	      When  rendering  into  an	X window, select whether xearth	should
	      render into the X	root window (-root) or create and render  into
	      a	 top-level X window (-noroot). By default, xearth renders into
	      the X root window.

       -geometry geom
	      Cause xearth to create and render	into a top-level X window with
	      the specified geometry. When this	option is  used,  the  -noroot
	      option  can  be elided. Use of the -root overrides the effect of
	      -geometry. By default (if	-noroot	is specified by	no geometry is
	      provided), xearth	uses a geometry	of "512x512".

       -title title
	      When rendering into a top-level X	window,	 this  option  can  be
	      used  to specify the window title	string that might be displayed
	      by a  window  manager.  By  default,  xearth  uses  a  title  of
	      "xearth".

       -iconname iconname
	      When  rendering  into  a	top-level X window, this option	can be
	      used to specify the icon name that might be  used	 by  a	window
	      manager  for the window. By default, xearth uses an icon name of
	      "xearth".

       -name name
	      When rendering into an X window, this  option  can  be  used  to
	      specify  the  application	 name  under which X resources are ob-
	      tained, rather than the default executable file name. The	speci-
	      fied name	should not contain "." or "*" characters.

       -fork | -nofork
	      When rendering into an  X	 window,  enable/disable  forking.  If
	      forking  is  enabled, xearth forks a child process to handle all
	      rendering	calculations and screen	updates	(in essence, automati-
	      cally putting itself in the background). Forking is disabled  by
	      default.

       -once | -noonce
	      Disable/enable  updates.	If  updates  are enabled and xearth is
	      rendering	into an	X window, xearth updates the  displayed	 image
	      periodically (the	time between updates can be controlled via the
	      -wait  option, above). If	updates	are disabled, xearth only ren-
	      ders an image once and then exits. Updates are  enabled  by  de-
	      fault.

       -nice priority
	      Run  the	xearth process with priority priority (see nice(1) and
	      setpriority(2)). By default, xearth runs at the priority of  the
	      process that invoked it, usually 0.

       -gif   Instead  of  drawing in an X window, write a GIF file (eight-bit
	      color) to	standard out.

       -ppm   Instead of drawing in an X window,  write	 a  PPM	 file  (24-bit
	      color) to	standard out.

       -display	dpyname
	      Attempt to connect to the	X display named	dpyname.

       -version
	      Print what version of xearth this	is.

X RESOURCES
       The behavior of xearth can also be controlled using the following X re-
       sources:

       proj (projection	type)
	      Specify  the  projection	type  xearth  should  use  (see	-proj,
	      above).

       pos (position specifier)
	      Specify the position from	which the Earth	should be viewed  (see
	      -pos, above).

       rot (float)
	      Specify the viewing rotation (see	-rot, above).

       sunpos (sun position specifier)
	      Specify  a  fixed	 point on the Earth's surface where the	Sun is
	      always directly overhead (see -sunpos, above).

       mag (float)
	      Specify the magnification	of  the	 displayed  image  (see	 -mag,
	      above).

       size (size specifier)
	      Specify the size of the image to be rendered (see	-size, above).

       shift (shift specifier)
	      Specify  that  the  center of the	rendered Earth image should be
	      shifted by some amount from the center of	the image (see -shift,
	      above).

       shade (boolean)
	      Enable/disable shading (see -shade, above).

       label (boolean)
	      Enable/disable labeling (see -label, above).

       labelpos	(geometry)
	      Specify where the	label should be	drawn (see -labelpos, above).

       markers (boolean)
	      Enable/disable markers (see -markers, above).

       markerfile (file	name)
	      Specify a	file from which	user-defined  marker  data  (locations
	      and names) should	be read	(see -markerfile, above).

       stars (boolean)
	      Enable/disable stars (see	-stars,	above).

       starfreq	(float)
	      Set  the	density	 of  the  random  star pattern (see -starfreq,
	      above).

       bigstars	(int)
	      Set  the	percentage  of	stars  that  are  double  width	  (see
	      -bigstars, above).

       grid (boolean)
	      Enable/disable  the  display of a	longitude/latitude grid	on the
	      Earth's surface (see -grid, above).

       grid1 (integer)
	      Specify the spacing of major grid	lines if grid display  is  en-
	      abled (see -grid1, above).

       grid2 (integer)
	      Specify  the spacing of dots along major grid lines if grid dis-
	      play is enabled (see -grid2, above).

       day (integer)
	      Specify the brightness that should be used to shade the day side
	      of the Earth when	shading	is enabled (see	-day, above).

       night (integer)
	      Specify the brightness that should be used to  shade  the	 night
	      side of the Earth	when shading is	enabled	(see -night, above).

       term (integer)
	      Specify  the shading discontinuity at the	terminator (see	-term,
	      above).

       gamma (float)
	      Specify the gamma	correction xearth should  use  when  selecting
	      colors (see -gamma, above).

       wait (integer)
	      Specify  the delay between updates when rendering	into an	X win-
	      dow (see -wait, above).

       timewarp	(float)
	      Specify the apparent rate	at which time progresses  (see	-time-
	      warp, above).

       time (integer)
	      Specify a	particular fixed time that should be used to determine
	      the "value" of time-dependent positions (see -time, above).

       twopix (boolean)
	      Specify  whether	xearth should use one or two pixmaps when ren-
	      dering into an X window (see -onepix and -twopix,	above).

       mono (boolean)
	      Specify whether xearth should use	monochrome mode	when rendering
	      into an X	window (see -mono and -nomono, above).

       ncolors (integer)
	      Specify the number of colors xearth should  use  (see  -ncolors,
	      above). The ncolors resource is only used	when rendering into an
	      X	 window	 --  the number	of colors to use when rendering	into a
	      GIF file can only	be specified using the -ncolors	 command  line
	      option.

       font (font name)
	      Use the named font for drawing text labels (see -font, above).

       root (boolean)
	      Specify whether xearth should render into	the X root window or a
	      top-level	X window (see -root, -noroot, and -geometry, above).

       geometry	(geometry)
	      Specify  the geometry of a top-level X window that xearth	should
	      create and render	into (see -geometry, above).

       title (string)
	      When rendering into a top-level X	window,	specify	the window ti-
	      tle that xearth should use (see -title, above).

       iconname	(string)
	      When rendering into a top-level X	window,	specify	the icon  name
	      that xearth should use (see -iconname, above).

       fork (boolean)
	      When  rendering  into  an	X window, enable/disable the automatic
	      forking of a child process to handle  the	 updates  (see	-fork,
	      above).

       once (boolean)
	      When  rendering into an X	window,	disable/enable updates for the
	      displayed	image (see -once, above).

       nice (integer)
	      Specify the priority at which the	xearth process should  be  run
	      (see -nice, above).

OBTAINING THE XEARTH SOURCE DISTRIBUTION
       The  latest-and-greatest	 version  of xearth should always be available
       via a link from	the  xearth  WWW  home	page  (URL  http://www.cs.col-
       orado.edu/~tuna/xearth/index.html),   or,  for  the  web-deprived,  via
       anonymous ftp from cag.lcs.mit.edu in /pub/tuna.

NOTES
       Thanks to Frank Solensky	for the	"-pos moon" and	"-rot galactic"	stuff.

       The map information used	in xearth was derived from the "CIA World Data
       Bank II map database," as taken from some "cbd" files that were	appar-
       ently originally	generated by Brian Reid	at DEC WRL.

       The  Graphics  Interchange  Format(c) is	the Copyright property of Com-
       puServe Incorporated. GIF(sm) is	a Service Mark property	of  CompuServe
       Incorporated.

       Thanks to Robert	Berger for allowing me to include his nifty gamma mea-
       surement	image and associated text in the xearth	source distribution.

       Thanks to Jamie Zawinski	for suggesting that I look at his xscreensaver
       package	for a good example of how to use the resource and command line
       option parts of Xt; his code saved me piles of lossage.

       Thanks to Chris Metcalf for the -bigstars  stuff,  a  pile  of  general
       source code cleaning, and spell checking	everything carefully.

       Thanks  to  Chris  Hayward,  Chris  Metcalf, Sherman Mui, Dan Rich, and
       Leonard Zubkoff for giving the pre-release of version 1.0 a test	drive.

       Kudos to	Jef Poskanzer for his excellent	PBMPLUS	toolkit.

       Finally,	thanks to everybody that sent encouragement, suggestions,  and
       patches.	 Apologies  to the many	people whose good ideas	didn't make it
       into this release.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 1989, 1990, 1993-1995, 1999 by Kirk Lauritz Johnson

       Portions	of the xearth source code, as marked, are:

	 Copyright (C) 1989, 1990, 1991	by Jim Frost
	 Copyright (C) 1992 by Jamie Zawinski <jwz@lucid.com>

       Permission to use, copy,	modify and freely distribute xearth  for  non-
       commercial  and	not-for-profit purposes	is hereby granted without fee,
       provided	that both the above copyright notice and this  permission  no-
       tice appear in all copies and in	supporting documentation.

       Unisys  Corporation  holds  worldwide  patent  rights on	the Lempel Zev
       Welch (LZW) compression technique employed in the CompuServe GIF	 image
       file format as well as in other formats.	Unisys has made	it clear, how-
       ever,  that it does not require licensing or fees to be paid for	freely
       distributed, non-commercial applications	(such as xearth)  that	employ
       LZW/GIF	technology.  Those wishing further information about licensing
       the LZW patent should contact Unisys directly at	 (lzw_info@unisys.com)
       or by writing to

	 Unisys	Corporation
	 Welch Licensing Department
	 M/S-C1SW19
	 P.O. Box 500
	 Blue Bell, PA 19424

       The author makes	no representations about the suitability of this soft-
       ware for	any purpose. It	is provided "as	is" without express or implied
       warranty.

       THE  AUTHOR  DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, IN-
       CLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND  FITNESS,	IN  NO
       EVENT  SHALL  THE  AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR	CONSE-
       QUENTIAL	DAMAGES	OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF  USE,
       DATA  OR	PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER
       TORTIOUS	ACTION,	ARISING	OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION	WITH THE USE  OR  PER-
       FORMANCE	OF THIS	SOFTWARE.

AUTHOR
	 Kirk Johnson <tuna@indra.com>

       Patches,	 bug reports, and suggestions are welcome, but I can't guaran-
       tee that	I'll get around	to doing anything about	them in	a timely fash-
       ion.

KLJ				 November 1999			     xearth(1)

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