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xorg.conf(5)		      File Formats Manual		  xorg.conf(5)

NAME
       xorg.conf, xorg.conf.d -	configuration files for	Xorg X server

INTRODUCTION
       Xorg  supports several mechanisms for supplying/obtaining configuration
       and run-time parameters:	command	line options,  environment  variables,
       the  xorg.conf and xorg.conf.d configuration files, auto-detection, and
       fallback	defaults. When the same	information is supplied	in  more  than
       one  way,  the highest precedence mechanism is used. The	list of	mecha-
       nisms is	ordered	from highest precedence	to lowest. Note	that  not  all
       parameters  can be supplied via all methods. The	available command line
       options and environment variables (and some defaults) are described  in
       the Xserver(1) and Xorg(1) manual pages.	Most configuration file	param-
       eters, with their defaults, are described below.	Driver and module spe-
       cific  configuration parameters are described in	the relevant driver or
       module manual page.

DESCRIPTION
       Xorg uses a configuration file called xorg.conf and files ending	in the
       suffix .conf from the directory xorg.conf.d for its initial setup.  The
       xorg.conf configuration file is searched	for in	the  following	places
       when the	server is started as a normal user:

	   /etc/X11/<cmdline>
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/<cmdline>
	   /etc/X11/$XORGCONFIG
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/$XORGCONFIG
	   /etc/X11/xorg.conf
	   /etc/xorg.conf
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/xorg.conf.<hostname>
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/xorg.conf
	   /usr/local/lib/X11/xorg.conf.<hostname>
	   /usr/local/lib/X11/xorg.conf

       where  _cmdline_	is a relative path (with no ".." components) specified
       with the	-config	command	line option, $XORGCONFIG is the	relative  path
       (with  no  ".." components) specified by	that environment variable, and
       _hostname_ is the machine's hostname as reported	by gethostname(3).

       When the	Xorg server is started by the "root"  user,  the  config  file
       search locations	are as follows:

	   <cmdline>
	   /etc/X11/<cmdline>
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/<cmdline>
	   $XORGCONFIG
	   /etc/X11/$XORGCONFIG
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/$XORGCONFIG
	   /etc/X11/xorg.conf
	   /etc/xorg.conf
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/xorg.conf.<hostname>
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/xorg.conf
	   /usr/local/lib/X11/xorg.conf.<hostname>
	   /usr/local/lib/X11/xorg.conf

       where _cmdline_ is the path specified with the -config command line op-
       tion (which may be absolute or relative), $XORGCONFIG is	the path spec-
       ified by	that environment variable (absolute or relative), $HOME	is the
       path specified by that environment variable (usually  the  home	direc-
       tory), and _hostname_ is	the machine's hostname as reported by gethost-
       name(3).

       Additional configuration	files are searched for in the following	direc-
       tories when the server is started as a normal user:

	   /etc/X11/<cmdline>
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/<cmdline>
	   /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/xorg.conf.d

       where  _cmdline_	is a relative path (with no ".." components) specified
       with the	-configdir command line	option.

       When the	Xorg server is started by the "root" user, the	config	direc-
       tory search locations are as follows:

	   <cmdline>
	   /etc/X11/<cmdline>
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/<cmdline>
	   /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d
	   /usr/local/etc/X11/xorg.conf.d

       where  _cmdline_	is the path specified with the -configdir command line
       option (which may be absolute or	relative).

       Finally,	configuration files will also be searched for in  a  directory
       reserved	 for system use.  This is to separate configuration files from
       the vendor or 3rd party packages	from those  of	local  administration.
       These files are found in	the following directory:

	   /usr/local/share/X11/xorg.conf.d

       The  xorg.conf  and  xorg.conf.d	files are composed of a	number of sec-
       tions which may be present in any order,	or omitted to use default con-
       figuration values.  Each	section	has the	form:

	   Section  "SectionName"
	       SectionEntry
	       ...
	   EndSection

       The section names are:

	   Files	  File pathnames
	   ServerFlags	  Server flags
	   Module	  Dynamic module loading
	   Extensions	  Extension enabling
	   InputDevice	  Input	device description
	   InputClass	  Input	class description
	   OutputClass	  Output class description
	   Device	  Graphics device description
	   VideoAdaptor	  Xv video adaptor description
	   Monitor	  Monitor description
	   Modes	  Video	modes descriptions
	   Screen	  Screen configuration
	   ServerLayout	  Overall layout
	   DRI		  DRI-specific configuration
	   Vendor	  Vendor-specific configuration

       The  following obsolete section names are still recognised for compati-
       bility purposes.	 In new	config files, the InputDevice  section	should
       be used instead.

	   Keyboard	  Keyboard configuration
	   Pointer	  Pointer/mouse	configuration

       The old XInput section is no longer recognised.

       The ServerLayout	sections are at	the highest level.  They bind together
       the input and output devices that will be used in a session.  The input
       devices are described in	the InputDevice	sections.  Output devices usu-
       ally consist of multiple	independent components (e.g., a	graphics board
       and  a  monitor).   These multiple components are bound together	in the
       Screen sections,	and it is these	that are referenced by the  ServerLay-
       out section.  Each Screen section binds together	a graphics board and a
       monitor.	 The graphics boards are described in the Device sections, and
       the monitors are	described in the Monitor sections.

       Config  file  keywords are case-insensitive, and	"_" characters are ig-
       nored.  Most strings (including Option names)  are  also	 case-insensi-
       tive, and insensitive to	white space and	"_" characters.

       Each  config  file  entry  usually  takes up a single line in the file.
       They consist of a keyword, which	is possibly followed by	 one  or  more
       arguments,  with	the number and types of	the arguments depending	on the
       keyword.	 The argument types are:

	   Integer     an integer number in decimal, hex or octal
	   Real	       a floating point	number
	   String      a string	enclosed in double quote marks (")

       Note: hex integer values	must be	prefixed with "0x", and	 octal	values
       with "0".

       A  special  keyword called Option may be	used to	provide	free-form data
       to various components of	the server.  The Option	keyword	 takes	either
       one or two string arguments.  The first is the option name, and the op-
       tional second argument is the option value.  Some commonly used	option
       value types include:

	   Integer     an integer number in decimal, hex or octal
	   Real	       a floating point	number
	   String      a sequence of characters
	   Boolean     a boolean value (see below)
	   Frequency   a frequency value (see below)

       Note  that  all	Option	values,	 not just strings, must	be enclosed in
       quotes.

       Boolean options may optionally have a value specified.  When  no	 value
       is specified, the option's value	is TRUE.  The following	boolean	option
       values are recognised as	TRUE:

	   1, on, true,	yes

       and the following boolean option	values are recognised as FALSE:

	   0, off, false, no

       If an option name is prefixed with  "No",  then	the  option  value  is
       negated.

       Example:	the following option entries are equivalent:

	   Option "Accel"   "Off"
	   Option "NoAccel"
	   Option "NoAccel" "On"
	   Option "Accel"   "false"
	   Option "Accel"   "no"

       Frequency  option  values  consist  of a	real number that is optionally
       followed	by one of the following	frequency units:

	   Hz, k, kHz, M, MHz

       When the	unit name is omitted, the correct  units  will	be  determined
       from  the  value	 and  the expectations of the appropriate range	of the
       value.  It is recommended that the units	always be specified when using
       frequency option	values to avoid	any errors in determining the value.

FILES SECTION
       The  Files  section  is used to specify some path names required	by the
       server.	Some of	these paths can	also be	set from the command line (see
       Xserver(1) and Xorg(1)).	 The command line settings override the	values
       specified in the	config file.  The Files	section	is  optional,  as  are
       all of the entries that may appear in it.

       The entries that	can appear in this section are:

       FontPath	"path"
	      sets  the	search path for	fonts.	This path is a comma separated
	      list of font path	elements which the Xorg	 server	 searches  for
	      font databases.  Multiple	FontPath entries may be	specified, and
	      they will	be concatenated	to build up the	fontpath used  by  the
	      server.	Font  path  elements  can be absolute directory	paths,
	      catalogue	directories or a font server identifier.  The  formats
	      of the later two are explained below:

	      Catalogue	directories:

		  Catalogue directories	can be specified using the prefix cat-
		  alogue: before the directory name. The directory can then be
		  populated  with  symlinks pointing to	the real font directo-
		  ries,	using the following syntax in the symlink name:

		      _identifier_:[attribute]:pri=_priority_

		  where	_identifier_ is	an  alphanumeric  identifier,  [attri-
		  bute]	is an attribute	which will be passed to	the underlying
		  FPE and _priority_ is	a number used to  order	 the  fontfile
		  FPEs.	Examples:

		      75dpi:unscaled:pri=20 -_ /usr/share/X11/fonts/75dpi
		      gscript:pri=60 -_	/usr/share/fonts/default/ghostscript
		      misc:unscaled:pri=10 -_ /usr/share/X11/fonts/misc

	      Font server identifiers:

		  Font server identifiers have the form:

		      _trans_/_hostname_:_port-number_

		  where	_trans_	is the transport type to use to	connect	to the
		  font server (e.g., unix for UNIX-domain sockets or tcp for a
		  TCP/IP  connection),	_hostname_  is the hostname of the ma-
		  chine	running	the font server, and _port-number_ is the port
		  number that the font server is listening on (usually 7100).

	      When  this entry is not specified	in the config file, the	server
	      falls back to the	compiled-in default font path, which  contains
	      the following font path elements (which can be set inside	a cat-
	      alogue directory):

		  /usr/local/share/fonts/X11/misc/
		  /usr/local/share/fonts/X11/TTF/
		  /usr/local/share/fonts/X11/OTF/
		  /usr/local/share/fonts/X11/Type1/
		  /usr/local/share/fonts/X11/100dpi/
		  /usr/local/share/fonts/X11/75dpi/

	      Font path	elements that are found	to be invalid are removed from
	      the font path when the server starts up.

       ModulePath "path"
	      sets  the	 search	 path  for loadable Xorg server	modules.  This
	      path is a	comma separated	list of	 directories  which  the  Xorg
	      server searches for loadable modules loading in the order	speci-
	      fied.  Multiple ModulePath entries may be	 specified,  and  they
	      will be concatenated to build the	module search path used	by the
	      server.  The default module path is

		  lib/xorg/modules

       XkbDir "path"
	      sets the base directory for keyboard layout files.  The  -xkbdir
	      command  line  option can	be used	to override this.  The default
	      directory	is

		  /usr/local/share/X11/xkb

SERVERFLAGS SECTION
       In addition to options specific to this section (described below),  the
       ServerFlags section is used to specify some global Xorg server options.
       All of the entries in this section are Options, although	 for  compati-
       bility  purposes	 some  of  the old style entries are still recognised.
       Those old style entries are not documented here,	and using them is dis-
       couraged.  The ServerFlags section is optional, as are the entries that
       may be specified	in it.

       Options specified in this section (with the exception of	the  "Default-
       ServerLayout" Option) may be overridden by Options specified in the ac-
       tive ServerLayout section.  Options with	command	line  equivalents  are
       overridden  when	 their	command	 line equivalent is used.  The options
       recognised by this section are:

       Option "Debug"  "string"
	      This comma-separated list	provides a way to control various  de-
	      bugging  switches	 from the config file.	At the moment the only
	      defined value is dmabuf_capable which instructs glamor to	enable
	      some unstable buffer management code.

       Option "DefaultServerLayout"  "layout-id"
	      This  specifies  the  default ServerLayout section to use	in the
	      absence of the -layout command line option.

       Option "DontVTSwitch"  "boolean"
	      This disallows the use of	the  Ctrl+Alt+Fn  sequence  (where  Fn
	      refers  to one of	the numbered function keys).  That sequence is
	      normally used to switch to another "virtual terminal" on operat-
	      ing  systems  that  have	this feature.  When this option	is en-
	      abled, that key sequence has no special meaning and is passed to
	      clients.	Default: off.

       Option "DontZap"	 "boolean"
	      This  disallows the use of the Terminate_Server XKB action (usu-
	      ally on Ctrl+Alt+Backspace, depending on XKB options).  This ac-
	      tion  is	normally used to terminate the Xorg server.  When this
	      option is	enabled, the action has	no effect.  Default: off.

       Option "DontZoom"  "boolean"
	      This  disallows  the  use	 of   the   Ctrl+Alt+Keypad-Plus   and
	      Ctrl+Alt+Keypad-Minus  sequences.	 These sequences allows	you to
	      switch between video modes.  When	this option is enabled,	 those
	      key sequences have no special meaning and	are passed to clients.
	      Default: off.

       Option "DisableVidModeExtension"	 "boolean"
	      This disables the	parts of the VidMode  extension	 used  by  the
	      xvidtune client that can be used to change the video modes.  De-
	      fault: the VidMode extension is enabled.

       Option "AllowNonLocalXvidtune"  "boolean"
	      This allows the xvidtune client (and other clients that use  the
	      VidMode extension) to connect from another host.	Default: off.

       Option "AllowMouseOpenFail"  "boolean"
	      This  tells the mousedrv(4) and vmmouse(4) drivers to not	report
	      failure if the mouse device can't	be opened/initialised.	It has
	      no effect	on the evdev(4)	or other drivers.  Default: false.

       Option "BlankTime"  "time"
	      sets  the	 inactivity timeout for	the blank phase	of the screen-
	      saver.  time is in minutes.  This	 is  equivalent	 to  the  Xorg
	      server's	-s flag, and the value can be changed at run-time with
	      xset(1).	Default: 10 minutes.

       Option "StandbyTime"  "time"
	      sets the inactivity timeout for the standby phase	of DPMS	 mode.
	      time  is	in  minutes,  and the value can	be changed at run-time
	      with xset(1).  Default: 10 minutes.  This	is only	 suitable  for
	      VESA  DPMS  compatible monitors, and may not be supported	by all
	      video drivers.  It is only enabled for  screens  that  have  the
	      "DPMS" option set	(see the MONITOR section below).

       Option "SuspendTime"  "time"
	      sets  the	inactivity timeout for the suspend phase of DPMS mode.
	      time is in minutes, and the value	can  be	 changed  at  run-time
	      with  xset(1).   Default:	10 minutes.  This is only suitable for
	      VESA DPMS	compatible monitors, and may not be supported  by  all
	      video  drivers.	It  is	only enabled for screens that have the
	      "DPMS" option set	(see the MONITOR section below).

       Option "OffTime"	 "time"
	      sets the inactivity timeout for the  off	phase  of  DPMS	 mode.
	      time  is	in  minutes,  and the value can	be changed at run-time
	      with xset(1).  Default: 10 minutes.  This	is only	 suitable  for
	      VESA  DPMS  compatible monitors, and may not be supported	by all
	      video drivers.  It is only enabled for  screens  that  have  the
	      "DPMS" option set	(see the MONITOR section below).

       Option "MaxClients"  "integer"
	      Set  the	maximum	 number	of clients allowed to connect to the X
	      server.  Acceptable values are 64, 128, 256 or 512.

       Option "NoPM"  "boolean"
	      Disables something to do with power management events.  Default:
	      PM enabled on platforms that support it.

       Option "Xinerama"  "boolean"
	      enable or	disable	XINERAMA extension.  Default is	disabled.

       Option "IndirectGLX" "boolean"
	      enable  or  disable indirect GLX contexts. Indirect GLX contexts
	      are disabled by default.

       Option "DRI2" "boolean"
	      enable or	disable	DRI2. DRI2 is disabled by default.

       Option "GlxVisuals" "string"
	      This option controls how many GLX	visuals	the GLX	 modules  sets
	      up.  The default value is	typical, which will setup up a typical
	      subset of	the GLXFBConfigs provided by the driver	as  GLX	 visu-
	      als.   Other  options are	minimal, which will set	up the minimal
	      set allowed by the GLX specification and all  which  will	 setup
	      GLX visuals for all GLXFBConfigs.

       Option "UseDefaultFontPath" "boolean"
	      Include  the default font	path even if other paths are specified
	      in xorg.conf. If enabled,	other font paths are included as well.
	      Enabled by default.

       Option "IgnoreABI" "boolean"
	      Allow  modules  built  for a different, potentially incompatible
	      version of the X server to load. Disabled	by default.

       Option "AutoAddDevices" "boolean"
	      If this option is	disabled, then no devices will be  added  from
	      the HAL or udev backends.	Enabled	by default.

       Option "AutoEnableDevices" "boolean"
	      If  this option is disabled, then	the devices will be added (and
	      the DevicePresenceNotify event  sent),  but  not	enabled,  thus
	      leaving policy up	to the client.	Enabled	by default.

       Option "AutoAddGPU" "boolean"
	      If  this	option	is disabled, then no GPU devices will be added
	      from the udev backend. Enabled by	default. (May need to be  dis-
	      abled to setup Xinerama).

       Option "AutoBindGPU"  "boolean"
	      If  enabled  then	secondary GPUs will be automatically set up as
	      output-sinks and offload-sources.	 Making	 e.g.  laptop  outputs
	      connected	 only  to the secondary	GPU directly available for use
	      without needing to run "xrandr  --setprovideroutputsource".  En-
	      abled by default.

       Option "Log" "string"
	      This option controls whether the log is flushed and/or synced to
	      disk after each message.	Possible values	 are  flush  or	 sync.
	      Unset by default.

MODULE SECTION
       The  Module section is used to specify which Xorg server	modules	should
       be loaded.  This	section	is ignored when	the Xorg server	 is  built  in
       static  form.   The type	of modules normally loaded in this section are
       Xorg server extension modules.  Most other module types are loaded  au-
       tomatically when	they are needed	via other mechanisms.  The Module sec-
       tion is optional, as are	all of the entries that	may  be	 specified  in
       it.

       Entries	in  this section may be	in two forms.  The first and most com-
       monly used form is an entry that	uses the Load  keyword,	 as  described
       here:

       Load  "modulename"
	      This  instructs the server to load the module called modulename.
	      The module name given should be the module's standard name,  not
	      the  module file name.  The standard name	is case-sensitive, and
	      does not include the "lib" or "cyg" prefixes, or	the  ".so"  or
	      ".dll" suffixes.

	      Example: the DRI extension module	can be loaded with the follow-
	      ing entry:

		  Load "dri"

       Disable	"modulename"
	      This instructs the server	to not load the	module called  module-
	      name.   Some  modules  are  loaded by default in the server, and
	      this overrides that default. If a	Load instruction is given  for
	      the  same	 module,  it overrides the Disable instruction and the
	      module is	loaded.	The module name	given should be	 the  module's
	      standard	name,  not  the	module file name. As with the Load in-
	      struction, the standard name is case-sensitive, and does not in-
	      clude the	"lib" prefix, or the ".a", ".o", or ".so" suffixes.

       The  second form	of entry is a SubSection, with the subsection name be-
       ing the module name, and	the contents of	the SubSection	being  Options
       that are	passed to the module when it is	loaded.

       Example:	 the  extmod  module  (which contains a	miscellaneous group of
       server extensions) can be loaded, with the XFree86-DGA  extension  dis-
       abled by	using the following entry:

	   SubSection "extmod"
	      Option  "omit XFree86-DGA"
	   EndSubSection

       Modules	are searched for in each directory specified in	the ModulePath
       search path, and	in the drivers,	extensions, input, internal, and  mul-
       timedia	subdirectories	of  each of those directories.	In addition to
       this, operating system specific subdirectories of  all  the  above  are
       searched	first if they exist.

       To  see what extension modules are available, check the extensions sub-
       directory under:

	   lib/xorg/modules

       The "extmod", "dbe", "dri", "dri2", "glx", and "record" extension  mod-
       ules  are  loaded  automatically,  if they are present, unless disabled
       with "Disable" entries.	It is  recommended  that  at  very  least  the
       "extmod"	 extension  module be loaded.  If it isn't, some commonly used
       server extensions (like the SHAPE extension) will not be	available.

EXTENSIONS SECTION
       The Extensions section is used to specify which X11 protocol extensions
       should  be enabled or disabled.	The Extensions section is optional, as
       are all of the entries that may be specified in it.

       Entries in this section are listed as Option statements with  the  name
       of the extension	as the first argument, and a boolean value as the sec-
       ond.  The extension name	is case-sensitive, and matches the form	 shown
       in the output of	"Xorg -extension ?".

	      Example:	the MIT-SHM extension can be disabled with the follow-
	      ing entry:

		  Section "Extensions"
		      Option "MIT-SHM" "Disable"
		  EndSection

INPUTDEVICE SECTION
       The config file may  have  multiple  InputDevice	 sections.   Recent  X
       servers	employ	HAL  or	udev backends for input	device enumeration and
       input hotplugging. It is	usually	not necessary to  provide  InputDevice
       sections	in the xorg.conf if hotplugging	is in use (i.e.	AutoAddDevices
       is enabled). If hotplugging is enabled, InputDevice sections using  the
       mouse, kbd and vmmouse driver will be ignored.

       If  hotplugging	is  disabled, there will normally be at	least two: one
       for the core (primary) keyboard and one for the core pointer.   If  ei-
       ther  of	 these two is missing, a default configuration for the missing
       ones will be used. In the absence of an explicitly specified core input
       device,	the  first InputDevice marked as CorePointer (or CoreKeyboard)
       is used.	 If there is no	match there, the first InputDevice  that  uses
       the  "mouse"  (or  "kbd") driver	is used.  The final fallback is	to use
       built-in	default	configurations.	 Currently the	default	 configuration
       may not work as expected	on all platforms.

       InputDevice sections have the following format:

	   Section "InputDevice"
	       Identifier "name"
	       Driver	  "inputdriver"
	       options
	       ...
	   EndSection

       The  Identifier and Driver entries are required in all InputDevice sec-
       tions.  All other entries are optional.

       The Identifier entry specifies the unique name for this	input  device.
       The Driver entry	specifies the name of the driver to use	for this input
       device.	When using the loadable	server,	the input driver  module  "in-
       putdriver"  will	be loaded for each active InputDevice section.	An In-
       putDevice section is considered active if it is referenced by an	active
       ServerLayout  section, if it is referenced by the -keyboard or -pointer
       command line options, or	if it  is  selected  implicitly	 as  the  core
       pointer	or keyboard device in the absence of such explicit references.
       The most	commonly used input drivers are	evdev(4) on Linux systems, and
       kbd(4) and mousedrv(4) on other platforms.

       InputDevice  sections  recognise	some driver-independent	Options, which
       are described here.  See	the individual input driver manual pages for a
       description of the device-specific options.

       Option "AutoServerLayout"  "boolean"
	      Always  add  the device to the ServerLayout section used by this
	      instance of the server. This affects implied layouts as well  as
	      explicit	layouts	 specified  in the configuration and/or	on the
	      command line.

       Option "CorePointer"
	      Deprecated, see Floating

       Option "CoreKeyboard"
	      Deprecated, see Floating

       Option "AlwaysCore"  "boolean"
	      Deprecated, see Floating

       Option "SendCoreEvents"	"boolean"
	      Deprecated, see Floating

       Option "Floating"  "boolean"
	      When enabled, the	input device is	set up floating	and  does  not
	      report events through any	master device or control a cursor. The
	      device is	only available to clients using	the X Input  Extension
	      API.  This  option  is  disabled	by default.  The options Core-
	      Pointer, CoreKeyboard, AlwaysCore, and SendCoreEvents,  are  the
	      inverse of option	Floating (i.e.	SendCoreEvents "on" is equiva-
	      lent to Floating "off" ).

	      This option controls the startup behavior	only, a	device may  be
	      reattached or set	floating at runtime.

       Option "TransformationMatrix" "a	b c d e	f g h i"
	      Specifies	 the  3x3 transformation matrix	for absolute input de-
	      vices. The input device will be bound to the area	given  in  the
	      matrix.	In  most configurations, "a" and "e" specify the width
	      and height of the	area the device	is bound to, and "c"  and  "f"
	      specify the x and	y offset of the	area.  The value range is 0 to
	      1, where 1 represents the	width or height	of  all	 root  windows
	      together,	 0.5  represents half the area,	etc. The values	repre-
	      sent a 3x3 matrix, with the first, second	 and  third  group  of
	      three values representing	the first, second and third row	of the
	      matrix, respectively.  The identity matrix is "1 0 0 0 1 0  0  0
	      1".

   POINTER ACCELERATION
       For  pointing devices, the following options control how	the pointer is
       accelerated or decelerated with respect to physical device motion. Most
       of these	can be adjusted	at runtime, see	the xinput(1) man page for de-
       tails. Only the most important acceleration options are discussed here.

       Option "AccelerationProfile"  "integer"
	      Select the profile. In layman's terms, the  profile  constitutes
	      the "feeling" of the acceleration. More formally,	it defines how
	      the transfer function (actual acceleration as a function of cur-
	      rent  device velocity and	acceleration controls) is constructed.
	      This is mainly a matter of personal preference.

	      0	     classic (mostly compatible)
	     -1	     none (only	constant deceleration is applied)
	      1	     device-dependent
	      2	     polynomial	(polynomial function)
	      3	     smooth linear (soft knee, then linear)
	      4	     simple (normal when slow, otherwise accelerated)
	      5	     power (power function)
	      6	     linear (more speed, more acceleration)
	      7	     limited (like linear, but maxes out at threshold)

       Option "ConstantDeceleration"  "real"
	      Makes the	pointer	go deceleration	times slower than normal. Most
	      useful for high-resolution devices. A value between 0 and	1 will
	      speed up the pointer.

       Option "AdaptiveDeceleration"  "real"
	      Allows to	actually decelerate the	pointer	when  going  slow.  At
	      most,  it	 will  be  adaptive deceleration times slower. Enables
	      precise pointer placement	without	sacrificing speed.

       Option "AccelerationScheme"  "string"
	      Selects the scheme, which	is the underlying algorithm.

	      predictable   default algorithm (behaving	more predictable)
	      lightweight   old	acceleration code (as specified	in the X protocol spec)
	      none	    no acceleration or deceleration

       Option "AccelerationNumerator"  "integer"

       Option "AccelerationDenominator"	 "integer"
	      Set numerator and	denominator of the  acceleration  factor.  The
	      acceleration  factor  is a rational which, together with thresh-
	      old, can be used to tweak	profiles to suit the users needs.  The
	      simple  and limited profiles use it directly (i.e. they acceler-
	      ate by the factor), for other profiles it	 should	 hold  that  a
	      higher acceleration factor leads to a faster pointer. Typically,
	      1	is unaccelerated and values up to 5 are	sensible.

       Option "AccelerationThreshold"  "integer"
	      Set the threshold, which is roughly the velocity (usually	device
	      units  per 10 ms)	required for acceleration to become effective.
	      The precise effect varies	with the profile however.

INPUTCLASS SECTION
       The config file may have	multiple InputClass sections.  These  sections
       are optional and	are used to provide configuration for a	class of input
       devices as they are automatically added.	An input device	can match more
       than  one  InputClass  section. Each class can override settings	from a
       previous	class, so it is	best to	arrange	the  sections  with  the  most
       generic matches first.

       InputClass sections have	the following format:

	   Section "InputClass"
	       Identifier  "name"
	       entries
	       ...
	       options
	       ...
	   EndSection

       The Identifier entry is required	in all InputClass sections.  All other
       entries are optional.

       The Identifier entry specifies the unique name for  this	 input	class.
       The Driver entry	specifies the name of the driver to use	for this input
       device.	After all classes have been examined, the "inputdriver"	module
       from  the  first	 Driver	 entry will be enabled when using the loadable
       server.

       When an input device is automatically added,  its  characteristics  are
       checked	against	 all InputClass	sections. Each section can contain op-
       tional entries to narrow	the match of the class.	If  none  of  the  op-
       tional entries appear, the InputClass section is	generic	and will match
       any input device. If more than one of these entries  appear,  they  all
       must match for the configuration	to apply.

       There  are  two types of	match entries used in InputClass sections. The
       first allows various tokens to be matched against attributes of the de-
       vice.  An  entry	 can be	constructed to match attributes	from different
       devices by separating arguments with a '|' character. Multiple  entries
       of the same type	may be supplied	to add multiple	matching conditions on
       the same	attribute. For example:

	   Section "InputClass"
	       Identifier   "My	Class"
	       # product string	must contain example and
	       # either	gizmo or gadget
	       MatchProduct "example"
	       MatchProduct "gizmo|gadget"
	       NoMatchDriver "drivername"
	       ...
	   EndSection

       MatchProduct  "matchproduct"
	      This entry can be	used to	check if the substring	"matchproduct"
	      occurs in	the device's product name.

       MatchVendor  "matchvendor"
	      This  entry  can be used to check	if the substring "matchvendor"
	      occurs in	the device's vendor name.

       MatchDevicePath "matchdevice"
	      This entry can be	used to	check if the device file  matches  the
	      "matchdevice" pathname pattern.

       MatchOS "matchos"
	      This  entry can be used to check if the operating	system matches
	      the case-insensitive "matchos" string. This entry	is  only  sup-
	      ported on	platforms providing the	uname(2) system	call.

       MatchPnPID "matchpnp"
	      The  device's  Plug and Play (PnP) ID can	be checked against the
	      "matchpnp" shell wildcard	pattern.

       MatchUSBID "matchusb"
	      The device's USB ID can be checked against the "matchusb"	 shell
	      wildcard pattern.	The ID is constructed as lowercase hexadecimal
	      numbers separated	by a ':'. This	is  the	 same  format  as  the
	      lsusb(8) program.

       MatchDriver "matchdriver"
	      Check  the  case-sensitive string	"matchdriver" against the cur-
	      rently configured	driver of the device. Ordering of sections us-
	      ing  this	 entry is important since it will not match unless the
	      driver has been set by the config	backend	or a  previous	Input-
	      Class section.

       MatchTag	"matchtag"
	      This  entry  can be used to check	if tags	assigned by the	config
	      backend matches the "matchtag" pattern. A	match is found	if  at
	      least  one  of the tags given in "matchtag" matches at least one
	      of the tags assigned by the backend.

       MatchLayout "matchlayout"
	      Check the	case-sensitive string "matchlayout" against  the  cur-
	      rently  active ServerLayout section. The empty string "" matches
	      an implicit layout which appears if no named  ServerLayout  sec-
	      tions have been found.

       The  above  directives  have equivalents	for negative matching with the
       NoMatchProduct, NoMatchVendor, NoMatchDevicePath, NoMatchOS, NoMatchPn-
       PID,  NoMatchUSBID, NoMatchDriver, NoMatchTag, and NoMatchLayout	direc-
       tives. These NoMatch directives match if	the subsequent	match  is  not
       met by the device.

       The  second  type of entry is used to match device types. These entries
       take a boolean argument similar to Option entries.

       MatchIsKeyboard	   "bool"

       MatchIsPointer	   "bool"

       MatchIsJoystick	   "bool"

       MatchIsTablet	   "bool"

       MatchIsTabletPad	   "bool"

       MatchIsTouchpad	   "bool"

       MatchIsTouchscreen  "bool"

       When an input device has	been matched to	the  InputClass	 section,  any
       Option  entries	are applied to the device. One InputClass specific Op-
       tion is recognized. See the InputDevice section above for a description
       of the remaining	Option entries.

       Option "Ignore" "boolean"
	      This  optional entry specifies that the device should be ignored
	      entirely,	and not	added to the server. This can be  useful  when
	      the  device is handled by	another	program	and no X events	should
	      be generated.

OUTPUTCLASS SECTION
       The config file may have	multiple OutputClass sections.	These sections
       are  optional and are used to provide configuration for a class of out-
       put devices as they are automatically  added.   An  output  device  can
       match  more than	one OutputClass	section.  Each class can override set-
       tings from a previous class, so it is best to arrange the sections with
       the most	generic	matches	first.

       OutputClass sections have the following format:

	   Section "OutputClass"
	       Identifier  "name"
	       entries
	       ...
	   EndSection

       The  Identifier	entry  is  required  in	all OutputClass	sections.  All
       other entries are optional.

       The Identifier entry specifies the unique name for this	output	class.
       The  Driver entry specifies the name of the driver to use for this out-
       put device.  After all classes have been	examined,  the	"outputdriver"
       module from the first Driver entry will be enabled when using the load-
       able server.

       When an output device is	automatically added, its  characteristics  are
       checked against all OutputClass sections.  Each section can contain op-
       tional entries to narrow	the match of the class.	 If none  of  the  op-
       tional  entries	appear,	 the  OutputClass  section is generic and will
       match any output	device.	 If more than one  of  these  entries  appear,
       they all	must match for the configuration to apply.

       The  following  list of tokens can be matched against attributes	of the
       device.	An entry can be	constructed to match attributes	from different
       devices by separating arguments with a '|' character.

       For example:

	   Section "OutputClass"
	       Identifier   "My	Class"
	       # kernel	driver must be either foo or bar
	       MatchDriver "foo|bar"
	       ...
	   EndSection

       MatchDriver "matchdriver"
	      Check the	case-sensitive string "matchdriver" against the	kernel
	      driver of	the device.

       When an output device has been matched to the OutputClass section,  any
       Option  entries are applied to the device. One OutputClass specific Op-
       tion is recognized. See the Device section below	for a  description  of
       the remaining Option entries.

       Option "PrimaryGPU" "boolean"
	      This  option specifies that the matched device should be treated
	      as the primary GPU, replacing the	selection of the GPU  used  as
	      output by	the firmware. If multiple output devices match an Out-
	      putClass section with the	PrimaryGPU option set, the  first  one
	      enumerated becomes the primary GPU.

       A  OutputClass  Section	may contain ModulePath entries.	When an	output
       device matches an OutputClass section, any ModulePath entries  in  that
       OutputClass  are	pre-pended to the search path for loadable Xorg	server
       modules.	See ModulePath in the Files section for	more info.

DEVICE SECTION
       The config file may have	multiple Device	sections.  There  must	be  at
       least one, for the video	card being used.

       Device sections have the	following format:

	   Section "Device"
	       Identifier "name"
	       Driver	  "driver"
	       entries
	       ...
	   EndSection

       The  Identifier and Driver entries are required in all Device sections.
       All other entries are optional.

       The Identifier entry specifies the unique name for  this	 graphics  de-
       vice.   The  Driver  entry  specifies the name of the driver to use for
       this graphics device.  When using the loadable server, the driver  mod-
       ule  "driver"  will be loaded for each active Device section.  A	Device
       section is considered active if it is referenced	by  an	active	Screen
       section.

       Device  sections	recognise some driver-independent entries and Options,
       which are described here.  Not all drivers make use of these driver-in-
       dependent  entries,  and	many of	those that do don't require them to be
       specified because the information is auto-detected.  See	the individual
       graphics	 driver	 manual	 pages for further information about this, and
       for a description of the	device-specific	options.  Note	that  most  of
       the Options listed here (but not	the other entries) may be specified in
       the Screen section instead of here in the Device	section.

       BusID  "bus-id"
	      This specifies the bus  location	of  the	 graphics  card.   For
	      PCI/AGP cards, the bus-id	string has the form PCI:bus@domain:de-
	      vice:function (e.g., "PCI:1@0:0:0" might be appropriate  for  an
	      AGP  card). The "@domain"	part can be left out for PCI domain 0.
	      This field is usually  optional  in  single-head	configurations
	      when  using the primary graphics card.  In multi-head configura-
	      tions, or	when using a secondary graphics	card in	a  single-head
	      configuration,  this entry is mandatory.	Its main purpose is to
	      make an unambiguous connection between the  device  section  and
	      the  hardware  it	is representing.  This information can usually
	      be found by running the pciaccess	tool scanpci.

       Screen  number
	      This option is mandatory for cards where a single	PCI entity can
	      drive more than one display (i.e., multiple CRTCs	sharing	a sin-
	      gle graphics accelerator and video memory).  One Device  section
	      is  required  for	each head, and this parameter determines which
	      head each	of the Device sections applies to.  The	 legal	values
	      of  number  range	 from  0  to one less than the total number of
	      heads per	entity.	 Most drivers require that the primary	screen
	      (0) be present.

       Chipset	"chipset"
	      This  usually  optional  entry specifies the chipset used	on the
	      graphics board.  In most cases this entry	is  not	 required  be-
	      cause  the  drivers  will	 probe	the  hardware to determine the
	      chipset type.  Don't specify it unless the driver-specific docu-
	      mentation	recommends that	you do.

       Ramdac  "ramdac-type"
	      This  optional  entry  specifies	the type of RAMDAC used	on the
	      graphics board.  This is only used by a few of the drivers,  and
	      in  most cases it	is not required	because	the drivers will probe
	      the hardware to determine	the RAMDAC type	where possible.	 Don't
	      specify  it  unless the driver-specific documentation recommends
	      that you do.

       DacSpeed	 speed

       DacSpeed	 speed-8 speed-16 speed-24 speed-32
	      This optional entry specifies the	RAMDAC speed rating (which  is
	      usually printed on the RAMDAC chip).  The	speed is in MHz.  When
	      one value	is given, it applies to	all framebuffer	 pixel	sizes.
	      When  multiple  values  are given, they apply to the framebuffer
	      pixel sizes 8, 16, 24 and	32 respectively.  This is not used  by
	      many drivers, and	only needs to be specified when	the speed rat-
	      ing of the RAMDAC	is different from the  defaults	 built	in  to
	      driver,  or  when	 the  driver can't auto-detect the correct de-
	      faults.  Don't specify it	unless the driver-specific  documenta-
	      tion recommends that you do.

       Clocks  clock ...
	      specifies	the pixel that are on your graphics board.  The	clocks
	      are in MHz, and may be specified as  a  floating	point  number.
	      The value	is stored internally to	the nearest kHz.  The ordering
	      of the clocks is important.  It must match the  order  in	 which
	      they  are	selected on the	graphics board.	 Multiple Clocks lines
	      may be specified,	and each is concatenated  to  form  the	 list.
	      Most  drivers do not use this entry, and it is only required for
	      some older boards	with non-programmable clocks.	Don't  specify
	      this  entry  unless the driver-specific documentation explicitly
	      recommends that you do.

       ClockChip  "clockchip-type"
	      This optional entry is used to specify the clock	chip  type  on
	      graphics boards which have a programmable	clock generator.  Only
	      a	few Xorg drivers support programmable clock  chips.   For  de-
	      tails, see the appropriate driver	manual page.

       VideoRam	 mem
	      This  optional  entry  specifies the amount of video ram that is
	      installed	on the graphics	board.	This is	 measured  in  kBytes.
	      In  most	cases  this  is	 not  required because the Xorg	server
	      probes the graphics  board  to  determine	 this  quantity.   The
	      driver-specific  documentation  should indicate when it might be
	      needed.

       MemBase	baseaddress
	      This optional entry specifies  the  memory  base	address	 of  a
	      graphics board's linear frame buffer.  This entry	is not used by
	      many drivers, and	it should only be specified if the driver-spe-
	      cific documentation recommends it.

       IOBase  baseaddress
	      This  optional  entry specifies the IO base address.  This entry
	      is not used by many drivers, and it should only be specified  if
	      the driver-specific documentation	recommends it.

       ChipID  id
	      This  optional  entry  specifies a numerical ID representing the
	      chip type.  For PCI cards, it is usually the  device  ID.	  This
	      can be used to override the auto-detection, but that should only
	      be done when the driver-specific documentation recommends	it.

       ChipRev	rev
	      This optional entry specifies the	chip  revision	number.	  This
	      can be used to override the auto-detection, but that should only
	      be done when the driver-specific documentation recommends	it.

       MatchSeat  seat-id
	      Only apply this Device section if	 X  server  was	 started  with
	      -seat seat-id option.

       Option "ModeDebug" "boolean"
	      Enable  printing of additional debugging information about mode-
	      setting to the server log.

       Option "NoOutputInitialSize" "width height"
	      Normally,	the X server infers the	initial	screen size  based  on
	      any  connected  outputs.	 However, if no	outputs	are connected,
	      the X server picks a default screen size of 1024	x  768.	  This
	      option  overrides	the default screen size	to use when no outputs
	      are connected.  In contrast to the "Virtual" Display  SubSection
	      entry,  which  applies unconditionally, "NoOutputInitialSize" is
	      only used	if no outputs are detected when	the X server starts.

       Option "PreferCloneMode"	"boolean"
	      If enabled, bring	up monitors of a screen	in clone mode  instead
	      of  horizontal extended layout by	default. (Defaults to off; the
	      video driver can change the default value, but this  option  can
	      always override it)

       Options
	      Option flags may be specified in the Device sections.  These in-
	      clude driver-specific options  and  driver-independent  options.
	      The  former  are described in the	driver-specific	documentation.
	      Some of the latter are described below in	the section about  the
	      Screen section, and they may also	be included here.

VIDEOADAPTOR SECTION
       Nobody wants to say how this works.  Maybe nobody knows ...

MONITOR	SECTION
       The  config file	may have multiple Monitor sections.  There should nor-
       mally be	at least one, for the monitor being used, but a	 default  con-
       figuration will be created when one isn't specified.

       Monitor sections	have the following format:

	   Section "Monitor"
	       Identifier "name"
	       entries
	       ...
	   EndSection

       The only	mandatory entry	in a Monitor section is	the Identifier entry.

       The  Identifier	entry specifies	the unique name	for this monitor.  The
       Monitor section may be used to provide information about	the specifica-
       tions  of  the monitor, monitor-specific	Options, and information about
       the video modes to use with the monitor.

       With RandR 1.2-enabled drivers, monitor sections	may be	tied  to  spe-
       cific  outputs of the video card.  Using	the name of the	output defined
       by the video driver plus	the identifier of a monitor section, one asso-
       ciates  a monitor section with an output	by adding an option to the De-
       vice section in the following format:

       Option "Monitor-outputname" "monitorsection"

       (for example, Option "Monitor-VGA" "VGA monitor"	for a VGA output)

       In the absence of specific association of monitor sections to  outputs,
       if  a  monitor  section is present the server will associate it with an
       output to preserve compatibility	for  previous  single-head  configura-
       tions.

       Specifying  video modes is optional because the server will use the DDC
       or other	information provided by	the monitor to automatically configure
       the  list  of  modes available.	When modes are specified explicitly in
       the Monitor section (with the Mode, ModeLine,  or  UseModes  keywords),
       built-in	 modes	with  the same names are not included.	Built-in modes
       with different names are, however, still	implicitly included, when they
       meet the	requirements of	the monitor.

       The entries that	may be used in Monitor sections	are described below.

       VendorName  "vendor"
	      This optional entry specifies the	monitor's manufacturer.

       ModelName  "model"
	      This optional entry specifies the	monitor's model.

       HorizSync  horizsync-range
	      gives  the  range(s) of horizontal sync frequencies supported by
	      the monitor.  horizsync-range may	be a comma separated  list  of
	      either  discrete	values or ranges of values.  A range of	values
	      is two values separated by a dash.  By default the values	are in
	      units  of	 kHz.  They may	be specified in	MHz or Hz if MHz or Hz
	      is added to the end of the line.	The data given here is used by
	      the Xorg server to determine if video modes are within the spec-
	      ifications of the	monitor.  This information should be available
	      in  the monitor's	handbook.  If this entry is omitted, a default
	      range of 28-33kHz	is used.

       VertRefresh  vertrefresh-range
	      gives the	range(s) of vertical refresh frequencies supported  by
	      the monitor.  vertrefresh-range may be a comma separated list of
	      either discrete values or	ranges of values.  A range  of	values
	      is two values separated by a dash.  By default the values	are in
	      units of Hz.  They may be	specified in MHz or kHz	if MHz or  kHz
	      is added to the end of the line.	The data given here is used by
	      the Xorg server to determine if video modes are within the spec-
	      ifications of the	monitor.  This information should be available
	      in the monitor's handbook.  If this entry	is omitted, a  default
	      range of 43-72Hz is used.

       DisplaySize  width height
	      This  optional entry gives the width and height, in millimetres,
	      of the picture area of the monitor.  If given this  is  used  to
	      calculate	the horizontal and vertical pitch (DPI)	of the screen.

       Gamma  gamma-value

       Gamma  red-gamma	green-gamma blue-gamma
	      This  is an optional entry that can be used to specify the gamma
	      correction for the monitor.  It may be  specified	 as  either  a
	      single value or as three separate	RGB values.  The values	should
	      be in the	range 0.1 to 10.0, and the default is  1.0.   Not  all
	      drivers are capable of using this	information.

       UseModes	 "modesection-id"
	      Include the set of modes listed in the Modes section called mod-
	      esection-id.  This makes all of the modes	defined	in  that  sec-
	      tion available for use by	this monitor.

       Mode  "name"
	      This is an optional multi-line entry that	can be used to provide
	      definitions for video modes for the monitor.  In most cases this
	      isn't  necessary because the built-in set	of VESA	standard modes
	      will be sufficient.  The Mode keyword indicates the start	 of  a
	      multi-line video mode description.  The mode description is ter-
	      minated with the EndMode keyword.	 The mode description consists
	      of the following entries:

	      DotClock	clock
		  is the dot (pixel) clock rate	to be used for the mode.

	      HTimings	hdisp hsyncstart hsyncend htotal
		  specifies the	horizontal timings for the mode.

	      VTimings	vdisp vsyncstart vsyncend vtotal
		  specifies the	vertical timings for the mode.

	      Flags  "flag" ...
		  specifies  an	optional set of	mode flags, each of which is a
		  separate string in  double  quotes.	"Interlace"  indicates
		  that	the mode is interlaced.	 "DoubleScan" indicates	a mode
		  where	each scanline is doubled.  "+HSync" and	 "-HSync"  can
		  be  used  to	select	the  polarity  of  the	HSync  signal.
		  "+VSync" and "-VSync"	can be used to select the polarity  of
		  the  VSync  signal.  "Composite" can be used to specify com-
		  posite sync on hardware where	this is	supported.   Addition-
		  ally,	on some	hardware, "+CSync" and "-CSync"	may be used to
		  select the composite sync polarity.

	      HSkew  hskew
		  specifies the	number of pixels (towards the  right  edge  of
		  the  screen)	by  which  the	display	enable signal is to be
		  skewed.  Not all drivers use this information.  This	option
		  might	 become	 necessary  to override	the default value sup-
		  plied	by the server (if any).	 "Roving" horizontal lines in-
		  dicate  this	value  needs to	be increased.  If the last few
		  pixels on a scan line	appear on the left of the screen, this
		  value	should be decreased.

	      VScan  vscan
		  specifies  the  number  of times each	scanline is painted on
		  the screen.  Not all drivers use this	 information.	Values
		  less	than 1 are treated as 1, which is the default.	Gener-
		  ally,	the "DoubleScan" Flag  mentioned  above	 doubles  this
		  value.

       ModeLine	 "name"	mode-description
	      This  entry  is a	more compact version of	the Mode entry,	and it
	      also can be used to specify video	modes for the  monitor.	  This
	      is  a  single  line  format for specifying video modes.  In most
	      cases this isn't necessary because  the  built-in	 set  of  VESA
	      standard modes will be sufficient.

	      The  mode-description  is	 in  four sections, the	first three of
	      which are	mandatory.  The	first is the dot (pixel) clock.	  This
	      is  a single number specifying the pixel clock rate for the mode
	      in MHz.  The second section is a list of four numbers specifying
	      the  horizontal  timings.	  These	 numbers are the hdisp,	hsync-
	      start, hsyncend, and htotal values.  The third section is	a list
	      of  four numbers specifying the vertical timings.	 These numbers
	      are the vdisp, vsyncstart, vsyncend, and vtotal values.  The fi-
	      nal  section is a	list of	flags specifying other characteristics
	      of the mode.  Interlace indicates	that the mode  is  interlaced.
	      DoubleScan  indicates  a	mode  where  each scanline is doubled.
	      +HSync and -HSync	can be used to	select	the  polarity  of  the
	      HSync  signal.   +VSync and -VSync can be	used to	select the po-
	      larity of	the VSync signal.  Composite can be  used  to  specify
	      composite	 sync  on hardware where this is supported.  Addition-
	      ally, on some hardware, +CSync and -CSync	may be used to	select
	      the  composite  sync polarity.  The HSkew	and VScan options men-
	      tioned above in the Mode entry  description  can	also  be  used
	      here.

       Option "DPMS" "bool"
	      This  option  controls whether the server	should enable the DPMS
	      extension	for power management for this screen.  The default  is
	      to enable	the extension.

       Option "SyncOnGreen" "bool"
	      This  option  controls  whether  the video card should drive the
	      sync signal on the green color pin.  Not all cards support  this
	      option,  and  most  monitors  do not require it.	The default is
	      off.

       Option "Primary"	"bool"
	      This optional entry specifies that the monitor should be treated
	      as the primary monitor. (RandR 1.2-supporting drivers only)

       Option "PreferredMode" "name"
	      This  optional  entry  specifies a mode to be marked as the pre-
	      ferred initial mode of the monitor.  (RandR 1.2-supporting driv-
	      ers only)

       Option "ZoomModes" "name	name ..."
	      This  optional entry specifies modes to be marked	as zoom	modes.
	      It is possible to	switch to  the	next  and  previous  mode  via
	      Ctrl+Alt+Keypad-Plus  and	Ctrl+Alt+Keypad-Minus.	All these key-
	      pad available modes are selected	from  the  screen  mode	 list.
	      This  list  is  a	 copy of the compatibility output monitor mode
	      list.  Since this	output is the output connected to  the	lowest
	      dot-area monitor,	as determined from its largest size mode, that
	      monitor defines the available zoom modes.	 (RandR	1.2-supporting
	      drivers only)

       Option "Position" "x y"
	      This optional entry specifies the	position of the	monitor	within
	      the X screen.  (RandR 1.2-supporting drivers only)

       Option "LeftOf" "output"
	      This optional entry specifies that the monitor should  be	 posi-
	      tioned  to  the  left  of	 the output (not monitor) of the given
	      name.  (RandR 1.2-supporting drivers only)

       Option "RightOf"	"output"
	      This optional entry specifies that the monitor should  be	 posi-
	      tioned  to  the  right  of the output (not monitor) of the given
	      name.  (RandR 1.2-supporting drivers only)

       Option "Above" "output"
	      This optional entry specifies that the monitor should  be	 posi-
	      tioned above the output (not monitor) of the given name.	(RandR
	      1.2-supporting drivers only)

       Option "Below" "output"
	      This optional entry specifies that the monitor should  be	 posi-
	      tioned below the output (not monitor) of the given name.	(RandR
	      1.2-supporting drivers only)

       Option "Enable" "bool"
	      This optional entry specifies  whether  the  monitor  should  be
	      turned  on  at  startup.	By default, the	server will attempt to
	      enable all connected monitors.   (RandR  1.2-supporting  drivers
	      only)

       Option "DefaultModes" "bool"
	      This optional entry specifies whether the	server should add sup-
	      ported default modes to the list of modes	offered	on this	 moni-
	      tor.  By	default, the server will add default modes; you	should
	      only disable this	if you can guarantee that EDID will be	avail-
	      able  at	all times, or if you have added	custom modelines which
	      the server can use.  (RandR 1.2-supporting drivers only)

       Option "MinClock" "frequency"
	      This optional entry specifies the	minimum	 dot  clock,  in  kHz,
	      that is supported	by the monitor.

       Option "MaxClock" "frequency"
	      This  optional  entry  specifies	the maximum dot	clock, in kHz,
	      that is supported	by the monitor.

       Option "Ignore" "bool"
	      This optional entry specifies that the monitor should be ignored
	      entirely,	and not	reported through RandR.	 This is useful	if the
	      hardware reports the  presence  of  outputs  that	 don't	exist.
	      (RandR 1.2-supporting drivers only)

       Option "Rotate" "rotation"
	      This  optional entry specifies the initial rotation of the given
	      monitor.	 Valid	values	for  rotation  are  "normal",  "left",
	      "right", and "inverted".	(RandR 1.2-supporting drivers only)

MODES SECTION
       The  config file	may have multiple Modes	sections, or none.  These sec-
       tions provide a way of defining sets of video  modes  independently  of
       the  Monitor  sections.	 Monitor  sections may include the definitions
       provided	in these sections by using  the	 UseModes  keyword.   In  most
       cases  the Modes	sections are not necessary because the built-in	set of
       VESA standard modes will	be sufficient.

       Modes sections have the following format:

	   Section "Modes"
	       Identifier "name"
	       entries
	       ...
	   EndSection

       The Identifier entry specifies the unique name for this set of mode de-
       scriptions.  The	other entries permitted	in Modes sections are the Mode
       and ModeLine entries that are described above in	the Monitor section.

SCREEN SECTION
       The config file may have	multiple Screen	sections.  There  must	be  at
       least  one,  for	 the  "screen"	being used.  A "screen"	represents the
       binding of a graphics device (Device section) and  a  monitor  (Monitor
       section).   A Screen section is considered "active" if it is referenced
       by an active ServerLayout section or by the -screen  command  line  op-
       tion.   If  neither of those is present,	the first Screen section found
       in the config file is considered	the active one.

       Screen sections have the	following format:

	   Section "Screen"
	       Identifier "name"
	       Device	  "devid"
	       GPUDevice  "devid"
	       Monitor	  "monid"
	       entries
	       ...
	       SubSection "Display"
		  entries
		  ...
	       EndSubSection
	       ...
	   EndSection

       The Identifier entry is mandatory.  All others are optional.

       The Identifier entry specifies the unique name for  this	 screen.   The
       Screen  section	provides information specific to the whole screen, in-
       cluding screen-specific Options.	 In multi-head	configurations,	 there
       will  be	 multiple  active Screen sections, one for each	head.  The en-
       tries available for this	section	are:

       Device  "device-id"
	      This entry specifies the Device section  to  be  used  for  this
	      screen.	When multiple graphics cards are present, this is what
	      ties a specific card to a	screen.	 The device-id must match  the
	      Identifier of a Device section in	the config file.

       GPUDevice  "device-id"
	      This  entry  specifies  the  Device section to be	used as	a sec-
	      ondary GPU device	for this screen.  When multiple	graphics cards
	      are  present,  this  is what ties	a specific secondary card to a
	      screen.  The device-id must match	the  Identifier	 of  a	Device
	      section  in the config file. This	can be specified up to 4 times
	      for a single screen.

       Monitor	"monitor-id"
	      specifies	which monitor description  is  to  be  used  for  this
	      screen.	If a Monitor name is not specified, a default configu-
	      ration is	used.  Currently the  default  configuration  may  not
	      function as expected on all platforms.

       VideoAdaptor  "xv-id"
	      specifies	 an  optional  Xv video	adaptor	description to be used
	      with this	screen.

       DefaultDepth  depth
	      specifies	which color depth the server should  use  by  default.
	      The -depth command line option can be used to override this.  If
	      neither is specified, the	default	depth is driver-specific,  but
	      in most cases is 8.

       DefaultFbBpp  bpp
	      specifies	 which	framebuffer  layout  to	 use  by default.  The
	      -fbbpp command line option can be	used  to  override  this.   In
	      most  cases  the	driver	will  chose the	best default value for
	      this.  The only case where there is even a choice	in this	 value
	      is  for  depth 24, where some hardware supports both a packed 24
	      bit framebuffer layout and a sparse 32 bit framebuffer layout.

       MatchSeat  seat-id
	      Only apply this Screen section if	 X  server  was	 started  with
	      -seat seat-id option.

       Options
	      Various  Option  flags  may  be specified	in the Screen section.
	      Some are driver-specific and are described in the	 driver	 docu-
	      mentation.   Others  are driver-independent, and will eventually
	      be described here.

       Option "Accel"
	      Enables 2D hardware acceleration.	 This option is	on by default,
	      but  it may be necessary to turn it off if there are bugs	in the
	      driver.  There are many options to disable specific  accelerated
	      operations, listed below.	 Note that disabling an	operation will
	      have no effect if	the operation is not accelerated (whether  due
	      to lack of support in the	hardware or in the driver).

       Option "GlxVendorLibrary" "string"
	      This  option  specifies  a space-separated list of OpenGL	vendor
	      libraries	to use for the screen. This may	be used	to  select  an
	      alternate	 implementation	 for development, debugging, or	alter-
	      nate feature sets.  Default: mesa.

       Option "InitPrimary" "boolean"
	      Use the Int10 module to initialize the  primary  graphics	 card.
	      Normally,	 only  secondary cards are soft-booted using the Int10
	      module, as the primary card has already been initialized by  the
	      BIOS at boot time.  Default: false.

       Option "NoInt10"	"boolean"
	      Disables	the Int10 module, a module that	uses the int10 call to
	      the BIOS of the graphics card to initialize it.  Default:	false.

       Each Screen section may optionally contain one or more Display  subsec-
       tions.	Those  subsections  provide depth/fbbpp	specific configuration
       information, and	the one	chosen depends on the depth and/or fbbpp  that
       is  being  used	for  the screen.  The Display subsection format	is de-
       scribed in the section below.

DISPLAY	SUBSECTION
       Each Screen section may have multiple Display  subsections.   The  "ac-
       tive"  Display  subsection  is  the first that matches the depth	and/or
       fbbpp values being used,	or failing that, the first that	has neither  a
       depth  or fbbpp value specified.	 The Display subsections are optional.
       When there isn't	one that matches the depth and/or fbbpp	 values	 being
       used,  all the parameters that can be specified here fall back to their
       defaults.

       Display subsections have	the following format:

	       SubSection "Display"
		   Depth  depth
		   entries
		   ...
	       EndSubSection

       Depth  depth
	      This entry specifies what	colour depth the Display subsection is
	      to  be used for.	This entry is usually specified, but it	may be
	      omitted to create	a match-all Display subsection or when wishing
	      to  match	 only against the FbBpp	parameter.  The	range of depth
	      values that are allowed depends on  the  driver.	 Most  drivers
	      support  8,  15,	16  and	24.  Some also support 1 and/or	4, and
	      some may support other values (like 30).	Note: depth means  the
	      number  of  bits	in a pixel that	are actually used to determine
	      the pixel	colour.	 32 is not a valid depth value.	 Most hardware
	      that  uses  32  bits  per	pixel only uses	24 of them to hold the
	      colour information, which	means that the colour depth is 24, not
	      32.

       FbBpp  bpp
	      This entry specifies the framebuffer format this Display subsec-
	      tion is to be used for.  This entry is only needed when  provid-
	      ing depth	24 configurations that allow a choice between a	24 bpp
	      packed framebuffer format	and a 32bpp sparse framebuffer format.
	      In most cases this entry should not be used.

       Weight  red-weight green-weight blue-weight
	      This  optional  entry specifies the relative RGB weighting to be
	      used for a screen	is being used at depth 16 for drivers that al-
	      low  multiple formats.  This may also be specified from the com-
	      mand line	with the -weight option	(see Xorg(1)).

       Virtual	xdim ydim
	      This optional entry specifies the	virtual	screen	resolution  to
	      be  used.	  xdim	must  be a multiple of either 8	or 16 for most
	      drivers, and a multiple of 32 when running in  monochrome	 mode.
	      The  given  value	 will be rounded down if this is not the case.
	      Video modes which	are too	large for the specified	 virtual  size
	      will  be	rejected.   If	this entry is not present, the virtual
	      screen resolution	will be	set to accommodate all the valid video
	      modes  given in the Modes	entry.	Some drivers/hardware combina-
	      tions do not support virtual screens.  Refer to the  appropriate
	      driver-specific documentation for	details.

       ViewPort	 x0 y0
	      This  optional  entry  sets the upper left corner	of the initial
	      display.	This is	only relevant when the virtual screen  resolu-
	      tion is different	from the resolution of the initial video mode.
	      If this entry is not given, then the  initial  display  will  be
	      centered in the virtual display area.

       Modes  "mode-name" ...
	      This  optional  entry  specifies the list	of video modes to use.
	      Each mode-name specified must be in double  quotes.   They  must
	      correspond  to  those specified or referenced in the appropriate
	      Monitor section (including implicitly referenced	built-in  VESA
	      standard	modes).	  The  server will delete modes	from this list
	      which don't satisfy various requirements.	 The first valid  mode
	      in  this list will be the	default	display	mode for startup.  The
	      list of valid modes is  converted	 internally  into  a  circular
	      list.    It  is  possible	 to  switch  to	 the  next  mode  with
	      Ctrl+Alt+Keypad-Plus and to the previous mode with Ctrl+Alt+Key-
	      pad-Minus.   When	 this entry is omitted,	the valid modes	refer-
	      enced by the appropriate Monitor section will be used.   If  the
	      Monitor  section	contains  no modes, then the selection will be
	      taken from the built-in VESA standard modes.

       Visual  "visual-name"
	      This optional entry sets the default root	visual type.  This may
	      also  be specified from the command line (see the	Xserver(1) man
	      page).  The visual types available for depth 8 are  (default  is
	      PseudoColor):

		  StaticGray
		  GrayScale
		  StaticColor
		  PseudoColor
		  TrueColor
		  DirectColor

	      The  visual type available for the depths	15, 16 and 24 are (de-
	      fault is TrueColor):

		  TrueColor
		  DirectColor

	      Not all drivers support DirectColor at these depths.

	      The visual types available for the depth 4 are (default is Stat-
	      icColor):

		  StaticGray
		  GrayScale
		  StaticColor
		  PseudoColor

	      The  visual type available for the depth 1 (monochrome) is Stat-
	      icGray.

       Black  red green	blue
	      This optional entry allows the "black" colour to	be  specified.
	      This is only supported at	depth 1.  The default is black.

       White  red green	blue
	      This  optional  entry allows the "white" colour to be specified.
	      This is only supported at	depth 1.  The default is white.

       Options
	      Option flags may be specified in the Display subsections.	 These
	      may  include  driver-specific options and	driver-independent op-
	      tions.  The former are described in the driver-specific documen-
	      tation.	Some  of the latter are	described above	in the section
	      about the	Screen section,	and they may also be included here.

SERVERLAYOUT SECTION
       The config file may have	multiple  ServerLayout	sections.   A  "server
       layout" represents the binding of one or	more screens (Screen sections)
       and one or more input devices (InputDevice sections) to form a complete
       configuration.	In  multi-head	configurations,	 it also specifies the
       relative	layout of the heads.  A	 ServerLayout  section	is  considered
       "active"	 if  it	is referenced by the -layout command line option or by
       an Option "DefaultServerLayout" entry in	the ServerFlags	 section  (the
       former  takes  precedence  over	the latter).  If those options are not
       used, the first ServerLayout section found in the config	file  is  con-
       sidered	the  active one.  If no	ServerLayout sections are present, the
       single active screen and	two active (core) input	devices	 are  selected
       as described in the relevant sections above.

       ServerLayout sections have the following	format:

	   Section "ServerLayout"
	       Identifier   "name"
	       Screen	    "screen-id"
	       ...
	       InputDevice  "idev-id"
	       ...
	       options
	       ...
	   EndSection

       Each  ServerLayout  section  must have an Identifier entry and at least
       one Screen entry.

       The Identifier entry specifies the unique name for this server  layout.
       The  ServerLayout  section  provides  information specific to the whole
       session,	including session-specific Options.  The  ServerFlags  options
       (described  above)  may be specified here, and ones given here override
       those given in the ServerFlags section.

       The entries that	may be used in this section are	described here.

       Screen  screen-num "screen-id" position-information
	      One of these entries must	be given for each screen being used in
	      a	 session.  The screen-id field is mandatory, and specifies the
	      Screen section being referenced.	The screen-num	field  is  op-
	      tional,  and  may	 be  used  to  specify	the  screen  number in
	      multi-head configurations.  When	this  field  is	 omitted,  the
	      screens  will  be	numbered in the	order that they	are listed in.
	      The numbering starts from	0, and must be consecutive.  The posi-
	      tion-information	field  describes  the way multiple screens are
	      positioned.  There are a number of different ways	that this  in-
	      formation	can be provided:

	      x	y

	      Absolute	x y
		  These	 both specify that the upper left corner's coordinates
		  are (x,y).  The Absolute keyword is  optional.   Some	 older
		  versions  of	XFree86	 (4.2 and earlier) don't recognise the
		  Absolute keyword, so it's safest to just specify the coordi-
		  nates	without	it.

	      RightOf	"screen-id"

	      LeftOf	"screen-id"

	      Above	"screen-id"

	      Below	"screen-id"

	      Relative	"screen-id" x y
		  These	give the screen's location relative to another screen.
		  The first four position the screen immediately to the	right,
		  left,	 above or below	the other screen.  When	positioning to
		  the right or left, the top edges are	aligned.   When	 posi-
		  tioning  above  or  below,  the left edges are aligned.  The
		  Relative form	specifies the offset of	 the  screen's	origin
		  (upper  left	corner)	 relative  to  the  origin  of another
		  screen.

       InputDevice  "idev-id" "option" ...
	      One of these entries should be given for each input device being
	      used in a	session.  Normally at least two	are required, one each
	      for the core pointer and keyboard	devices.  If either  of	 those
	      is  missing, suitable InputDevice	entries	are searched for using
	      the method described above  in  the  INPUTDEVICE	section.   The
	      idev-id field is mandatory, and specifies	the name of the	Input-
	      Device section being referenced.	Multiple option	fields may  be
	      specified,  each	in  double quotes.  The	options	permitted here
	      are any that may also be	given  in  the	InputDevice  sections.
	      Normally	only  session-specific	input  device options would be
	      used here.  The most commonly used options are:

		  "CorePointer"
		  "CoreKeyboard"
		  "SendCoreEvents"

	      and the first two	should normally	be used	to indicate  the  core
	      pointer and core keyboard	devices	respectively.

       MatchSeat  seat-id
	      Only  apply  this	 ServerLayout  section if X server was started
	      with -seat seat-id option.

       Options
	      In addition to  the  following,  any  option  permitted  in  the
	      ServerFlags  section  may	also be	specified here.	 When the same
	      option appears in	both places, the value	given  here  overrides
	      the one given in the ServerFlags section.

       Option "IsolateDevice"  "bus-id"
	      Restrict	device	resets to the specified	bus-id.	 See the BusID
	      option (described	in DEVICE SECTION, above) for  the  format  of
	      the  bus-id  parameter.	This  option  overrides	SingleCard, if
	      specified.  At present, only PCI devices can be isolated in this
	      manner.

       Option "SingleCard"  "boolean"
	      As  IsolateDevice, except	that the bus ID	of the first device in
	      the layout is used.

       Here is an example of a ServerLayout section for	a dual headed configu-
       ration with two mice:

	   Section "ServerLayout"
	       Identifier  "Layout 1"
	       Screen	   "MGA	1"
	       Screen	   "MGA	2" RightOf "MGA	1"
	       InputDevice "Keyboard 1"	"CoreKeyboard"
	       InputDevice "Mouse 1"	"CorePointer"
	       InputDevice "Mouse 2"	"SendCoreEvents"
	       Option	   "BlankTime"	"5"
	   EndSection

DRI SECTION
       This  optional  section is used to provide some information for the Di-
       rect Rendering Infrastructure.  Details about the format	of  this  sec-
       tion can	be found on-line at _https://dri.freedesktop.org/_.

VENDOR SECTION
       The optional Vendor section may be used to provide vendor-specific con-
       figuration information.	Multiple Vendor	sections may be	 present,  and
       they  may  contain  an Identifier entry and multiple Option flags.  The
       data therein is not used	in this	release.

SEE ALSO
       General:	X(7), Xserver(1), Xorg(1), cvt(1), gtf(1).

       Not all modules or interfaces are available on all platforms.

       Display drivers:	apm(4),	ati(4),	 chips(4),  cirrus(4),	cyrix(4),  fb-
       dev(4),	glide(4),  glint(4),  i128(4),	i740(4),  imstt(4),  intel(4),
       mga(4), neomagic(4), nv(4), openchrome(4), r128(4),  radeon(4),	rendi-
       tion(4),	 savage(4),  s3virge(4),  siliconmotion(4), sis(4), sisusb(4),
       sunbw2(4),  suncg14(4),	suncg3(4),  suncg6(4),	sunffb(4),  sunleo(4),
       suntcx(4),   tdfx(4),   trident(4),   tseng(4),	 vesa(4),   vmware(4),
       voodoo(4), wsfb(4), xgi(4), xgixp(4).

       Input drivers: acecad(4), citron(4), elographics(4), evdev(4), fpit(4),
       joystick(4), kbd(4), libinput(4), mousedrv(4), mutouch(4), penmount(4),
       synaptics(4), vmmouse(4), void(4), wacom(4).

       Other modules and interfaces: exa(4), fbdevhw(4), v4l(4).

AUTHORS
       This   manual   page   was   largely   rewritten	  by	David	 Dawes
       _dawes@xfree86.org_.

X Version 11		      xorg-server 21.1.4		  xorg.conf(5)

NAME | INTRODUCTION | DESCRIPTION | FILES SECTION | SERVERFLAGS SECTION | MODULE SECTION | EXTENSIONS SECTION | INPUTDEVICE SECTION | INPUTCLASS SECTION | OUTPUTCLASS SECTION | DEVICE SECTION | VIDEOADAPTOR SECTION | MONITOR SECTION | MODES SECTION | SCREEN SECTION | DISPLAY SUBSECTION | SERVERLAYOUT SECTION | DRI SECTION | VENDOR SECTION | SEE ALSO | AUTHORS

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