xli, xsetbg, xview - load images into an X11 window or onto the
root window
xli [global_options] {[image_options] image ...}
xli [global_options] [image_options] stdin < image
xli displays images in an X11 window or loads them onto the
root window. See the IMAGE TYPES section below for supported image
types.
If the filename stdin is given, xli will read the image
from standard input.
If the destination display cannot support the number of colors in
the image, the image will be dithered (monochrome destination) or have its
colormap reduced (color destination) as appropriate. This can also be done
forcibly with the -halftone, -dither, and -colors
options.
A variety of image manipulations can be specified, including gamma
correction, brightening, clipping, dithering, depth-reduction, rotation, and
zooming. Most of these manipulations have simple implementations; speed was
opted for above accuracy.
If you are viewing a large image in a window, the initial window
will be at most 90% of the size of the display unless the window manager
does not correctly handle window size requests or if you've used the
-fullscreen or -fillscreen options. You may move the image
around in the window by dragging with the first mouse button. The cursor
will indicate which directions you may drag, if any.
When the keyboard focus is in the window you can:
Type 'q' or '^C' to exit xli.
Type space, 'n' or 'f' to move to the next image in the list.
Type 'b' or 'p' to move to the previous image in the list.
Type . to reload the image.
Type l to rotate the image anti-clockwise.
Type r to rotate the image clockwise.
Type 0 to set the images assumed gamma to your display gamma
(usually darkens images)
Type 1 to set the images assumed gamma to 1.0
(usually lightens images)
Type 5-2 to lighten the image (5 in small steps, up to 2 in large steps)
Type 6-9 to darken the image (6 in small steps, up to 9 in large steps)
A wide variety of common image manipulations can be done by mixing
and matching the available options. See the section entitled HINTS
FOR GOOD IMAGE DISPLAYS for some ideas.
Xsetbg is equivalent to xli -onroot -quiet and
xview is equivalent to xli -view -verbose.
xli uses the resource class name _XSETROOT_Id for
window managers which need this resource set.
The following options affect the global operation of xli.
They may be specified anywhere on the command line.
- -default
- Set the root background to the default root weave. This is the same as
xsetroot with no arguments.
- -debug
- Talk to the X server in synchronous mode. This is useful for debugging. If
an X error is seen while in this mode, a core will be dumped.
- -dumpcore
- Signals will not be trapped, and instead a coredump will occur.
- -display
display_name
- X11 display name to send the image(s) to.
- -dispgamma
Display_gamma
- Specify the gamma correction value appropriate for the display device.
This overides the value read from the environment variable
DISPLAY_GAMMA, or the default value of 2.2, which is approximately
correct for many displays. A value of between 1.6 and 2.8 is reasonable.
If individual images are too bright or dark, use the -gamma option.
There is an image provided with xli called 'chkgamma.jpg' that
lets you set the display gamma reasonably accurately. This file contains two
grayscale ramps. The ramps are chosen to look linear to the human eye, one
using continuous tones, and the other using dithering. When the display
gamma is correct, then the two ramps should look symmetrical, and the point
at which they look equally bright should be almost exactly half way from the
top to the bottom. (To find this point it helps if you move away a little
from the screen, and de-focus your eyes a bit.)
If the equal brightness point is above center increase the gamma,
and decrease it if it is below the center. The value will usually be around
2.2 Once you've got it right, you can set the DISPLAY_GAMMA environment
variable in your .profile
- -fillscreen
- Use the whole screen for displaying an image. The image will be zoomed so
that it just fits the size of the screen. If -onroot is also specified, it
will be zoomed to completely fill the screen.
- -fit
- Force image to use the default visual and colormap. This is useful if you
do not want technicolor effects when the colormap focus is inside the
image window, but it may reduce the quality of the displayed image. This
is on by default if -onroot or -windowid is specified.
- -fork
- Fork xli. This causes xli to disassociate itself from the shell. This
option automatically turns on -quiet.
- -fullscreen
- Use the whole screen for displaying an image. The image will be surrounded
by a border if it is smaller than the screen. If -onroot is also
specified, the image will be zoomed so that it just fits the size of the
screen.
- -geometry
WxH[{+-X}{+-}Y]
- This sets the size of the window onto which the images are loaded to a
different value than the size of the image. When viewing an image in a
window, this can be used to set the size and position of the viewing
window. If the size is not specified in the geometry, (or is set to 0),
then the size will be chosen to be small enough to able to fit the window
in the screen (as usual).
- -goto image_name
- When the end of the list of images is reached, go to image
image_name. This is useful for generating looped slideshows. If
more than one image of the same name as the target exists on the argument
list, the first in the argument list is used.
- -help [option ...]
- Give information on an option or list of options. If no option is given, a
simple interactive help facility is invoked.
- -identify
- Identify the supplied images rather than display them.
- -install
- Forcibly install the images colormap when the window is focused. This
violates ICCCM standards and only exists to allow operation with naive
window managers. Use this option only if your window manager does not
install colormaps properly.
- -list
- List the images which are along the image path.
- -onroot
- Load image(s) onto the root window instead of viewing in a window. This
option automatically sets the -fit option. This is the opposite of
-view. XSetbg has this option set by default. If used in
conjunction with -fullscreen, the image will be zoomed to just fit. If
used with -fillscreen, the image will be zoomed to completely fill the
screen. -border, -at, and -center also affect the results.
- -path
- Displays the image path and image suffixes which will be used when looking
for images. These are loaded from ~/.xlirc and optionally from a system
wide file (normally /usr/lib/xlirc).
- -pixmap
- Force the use of a pixmap as backing-store. This is provided for servers
where backing-store is broken (such as some versions of the AIXWindows
server). It may improve scrolling performance on servers which provide
backing-store.
- -private
- Force the use of a private colormap. Normally colors are allocated shared
unless there are not enough colors available.
- -quiet
- Forces xli and xview to be quiet. This is the default for
xsetbg, but the others like to whistle.
- -supported
- List the supported image types.
- -verbose
- Causes xli to be talkative, telling you what kind of image it's
playing with and any special processing that it has to do. This is the
default for xview and xli.
- -version
- Print the version number and patchlevel of this version of
xli.
- -view
- View image(s) in a window. This is the opposite of -onroot and the
default for xview and xli.
- -visual
visual_name
- Force the use of a specific visual type to display an image. Normally
xli tries to pick the best available image for a particular image
type. The available visual types are: DirectColor, TrueColor, PseudoColor,
StaticColor, GrayScale, and StaticGray. Nonconflicting names may be
abbreviated and case is ignored.
- -windowid
hex_window_id
- Sets the background pixmap of a particular window ID. The argument must be
in hexadecimal and must be preceded by "0x" (eg -windowid
0x40000b. This is intended for setting the background pixmap of some
servers which use untagged virtual roots (eg HP-VUE), but can have
other interesting applications.
The following options may precede each image. They take effect
from the next image, and continue until overridden or canceled with
-newoptions.
- -border
color
- This sets the background portion of the window or clipped image which is
not covered by any images to be color.
- -brighten
percentage
- Specify a percentage multiplier for a color images colormap. A value of
more than 100 will brighten an image, one of less than 100 will darken
it.
- -colors n
- Specify the maximum number of colors to use in the image. This is a way to
forcibly reduce the depth of an image.
- -cdither
- -colordither
- Dither the image with a Floyd-Steinberg dither if the number of colors is
reduced. This will be slow, but will give a better looking result with a
restricted color set. -cdither and -colordither are
equivalent.
- -delay secs
- Sets xli to automatically advance to the following image, secs
seconds after the next image file is displayed.
- -dither
- Dither a color image to monochrome using a Floyd-Steinberg dithering
algorithm. This happens by default when viewing color images on a
monochrome display. This is slower than -halftone and affects the
image accuracy but usually looks much better.
- -gamma
Image_gamma
- Specify the gamma of the display the image was intended to be displayed
on. Images seem to come in two flavors: 1) linear color images, produced
by ray tracers, scanners etc. These sort of images generally look too dark
when displayed directly to a CRT display. 2) Images that have been
processed to look right on a typical CRT display without any sort of
processing. These images have been 'gamma corrected'. By default, xli
assumes that 8 bit images have been gamma corrected and need no other
processing. 24 bit images are assumed to be linear. If a linear image is
displayed as if it is gamma corrected it will look too dark, and a gamma
value of 1.0 should be specified, so that xli can correct the image for
the CRT display device. If a gamma corrected image is displayed as if it
were a linear image, then it will look too light, and a gamma value of
(approximately) 2.2 should be specified for that image. Some formats (RLE)
allow the image gamma to be embedded as a comment in the file itself, and
the -gamma option allows overriding of the file comment. In general,
values smaller than 2.2 will lighten the image, and values greater than
2.2 will darken the image. In general this will work better than the
-brighten option.
- -gray
- Convert an image to grayscale. This is very useful when displaying
colorful images on servers with limited color capability. The optional
spelling -grey may also be used.
- -idelay
secs
- Set the delay to be used for this image to secs seconds (see
-delay). If -delay was specified, this overrides it. If it
was not specified, this sets the automatic advance delay for this image
while others will wait for the user to advance them.
- -smooth
- Smooth a color image. This reduces blockiness after zooming an image up.
If used on a monochrome image, nothing happens. This option can take
awhile to perform, especially on large images. You may specify more than
one -smooth option per image, causing multiple iterations of the
smoothing algorithm.
- -title
window_title
- Set the titlebar of the window used to display the image. This will
overide any title that is read from the image file. The title will also be
used for the icon name.
- -xpm
color_context_key
- Select the prefered xpm colour map. XPM files may contain more than one
color mapping, each mapping being appropriate for a particular visual.
Normally xli will select an apropriate color mapping from that supported
by the XPM file by checking on the default X visual class and depth. This
option allows the user to overide this choice. Legal values of
color_context_key are: m, g4, g and c. m = mono, g4 = 4 level gray,
g = gray, c = color ).
- -xzoom
percentage
- Zoom the X axis of an image by percentage. A number greater than
100 will expand the image, one smaller will compress it. A zero value will
be ignored. This option, and the related -yzoom are useful for
correcting the aspect ratio of images to be displayed.
- -yzoom
percentage
- Zoom the Y axis of an image by percentage. See -xzoom for
more information.
- -zoom
percentage
- Zoom both the X and Y axes by percentage. See -xzoom for
more information. Technically the percentage actually zoomed is the square
of the number supplied since the zoom is to both axes, but I opted for
consistency instead of accuracy.
- -newoptions
- Reset options that propagate. The -bright, -colors, -colordither,
-delay, -dither, -gamma, -gray, -normalize, -smooth, -xzoom,
-yzoom, and -zoom options normally propagate to all following
images.
The following options may precede each image. These options are
local to the image they precede.
- -at X,Y
- Indicates coordinates to load the image at X,Y on the base
image. If this is an option to the first image, and the -onroot
option is specified, the image will be loaded at the given location on the
display background.
- -background
color
- Use color as the background color instead of the default (usually
white but this depends on the image type) if you are transferring a
monochrome image to a color display.
- -center
- Center the image on the base image loaded. If this is an option to the
first image, and the -onroot option is specified, the image will be
centered on the display background.
- -clip
X,Y,W,H
- Clip the image before loading it. X and Y define the
upper-left corner of the clip area, and W and H define the
extents of the area. A zero value for W or H will be
interpreted as the remainder of the image. Note that X and Y
may be negative, and that W and H may be larger than the
image. This causes a border to be placed around the image. The border
color may be set with the -border option.
- -expand
- Forces the image (after all other optional processing) to be expanded into
a True Color (24 bit) image. This is useful on systems which support 24
bit color, but where xli might choose to load a bitmap or 8 bit image into
one of the other smaller depth visuals supported on your system.
- -foreground
color
- Use color as the foreground color instead of black if you are
transferring a monochrome image to a color display. This can also be used
to invert the foreground and background colors of a monochrome image.
- -halftone
- Force halftone dithering of a color image when displaying on a monochrome
display. This option is ignored on monochrome images. This dithering
algorithm blows an image up by sixteen times; if you don't like this, the
-dither option will not blow the image up but will take longer to
process and will be less accurate.
- -invert
- Inverts a monochrome image. This is shorthand for -foreground
white -background black.
- -merge
- Merge this image onto the base image after local processing. The base
image is considered to be the first image specified or the last image that
was not preceded by -merge. If used in conjunction with -at
and -clip, very complex images can be built up. Note that the final
image will be the size of the first image, and that subsequent merged
images overlay previous images. The final image size can be altered by
using the -clip option on the base image to make it bigger or
smaller. This option is on by default for all images if the -onroot
or -windowid options are specified.
- -name
image_name
- Force the next argument to be treated as an image name. This is useful if
the name of the image is -dither, for instance.
- -normalize
- Normalize a color image.
- -rotate
degrees
- Rotate the image by degrees clockwise. The number must be a
multiple of 90.
To load the rasterfile "my.image" onto the background
and replicate it to fill the entire background:
xli -onroot my.image
To load a monochrome image "my.image" onto the
background, using red as the foreground color, replicate the image, and
overlay "another.image" onto it at coordinate (10,10):
xli -foreground red my.image -at 10,10 another.image
To center the rectangular region from 10 to 110 along the X axis
and from 10 to the height of the image along the Y axis:
xli -center -clip 10,10,100,0 my.image
To double the size of an image:
xli -zoom 200 my.image
To halve the size of an image:
xli -zoom 50 my.image
To brighten a dark image:
xli -brighten 150 my.image
To darken a bright image:
xli -brighten 50 my.image
Since images are likely to come from a variety of sources, they
may be in a variety of aspect ratios which may not be supported by your
display. The -xzoom and -yzoom options can be used to change
the aspect ratio of an image before display. If you use these options, it is
recommended that you increase the size of one of the dimensions instead of
shrinking the other, since shrinking looses detail. For instance, many GIF
and G3 FAX images have an X:Y ratio of about 2:1. You can correct this for
viewing on a 1:1 display with either -xzoom 50 or -yzoom 200
(reduce X axis to 50% of its size and expand Y axis to 200% of its size,
respectively) but the latter should be used so no detail is lost in the
conversion.
When zooming color images up you can reduce blockiness with
-smooth. For zooms of 300% or more, I recommend two smoothing passes
(although this can take awhile to do on slow machines). There will be a
noticeable improvement in the image.
You can perform image processing on a small portion of an image by
loading the image more than once and using the -merge, -at and
-clip options. Load the image, then merge it with a clipped,
processed version of itself. To brighten a 100x100 rectangular portion of an
image located at (50,50), for instance, you could type:
xli my.image -merge -at 50,50 -clip 50,50,100,100 -brighten 150
my.image
If you're using a display with a small colormap to display
colorful images, try using the -gray option to convert to
grayscale.
xlito (XLoadImageTrailingOptions) is a separate utility
that provides a file format independent way of marking image files with the
appropriate options to display correctly. It does this by appending to file
a string specified by the user, marked with some magic numbers so that this
string can be extracted by a program that knows where to look. Since almost
all image files have some sort of image size specifier, the programs that
load or manipulate these files do not look beyond the point at which they
have read the image, so trailing information can safely be appended to the
file. If appending this information causes trouble with other utilities, it
can simply be deleted.
xli will recognize these trailing options at the end of the
image files, and will treat the embedded string as if it were a sequence of
command line IMAGE OPTIONS. Any GLOBAL OPTIONS will be
ignored, and the IMAGE OPTIONS are never propagated to other
images.
Trailing options can be examined with:
xlito image_file ...
Changed or added with:
xlito -c "string of options" image_file
And deleted with:
xlito -d image_file ...
For example, if you have a gif file fred.gif which is too dark and
is the wrong aspect ratio, then it may need to be viewed with:
xli -yzoom 130 -gamma 1.0 fred.gif
to get it to look OK. These options can then be appended to the
file by:
xlito -c "-yzoom 130 -gamma 1.0" fred.gif
and from then on xli will get the appropriate options from the
image file itself. See the xlito manual entry for more details about
this utility.
The file ~/.xlirc (and optionally a system-wide file) defines the
path and default extensions that xli will use when looking for
images. This file can have two statements: "path=" and
"extension=" (the equals signs must follow the word with no spaces
between). Everything following the "path=" keyword will be
prepended to the supplied image name if the supplied name does not specify
an existing file. The paths will be searched in the order they are
specified. Everything following the "extension=" keyword will be
appended to the supplied image name if the supplied name does not specify an
existing file. As with paths, these extensions will be searched in the order
they are given. Comments are any portion of a line following a hash-mark
(#).
The following is a sample ~/.xlirc file:
# paths to look for images in
path= /usr/local/images
/home/usr1/guest/madd/images
/usr/include/X11/bitmaps
# default extensions for images; .Z is automatic; scanned in order
extension= .csun .msun .sun .face .xbm .bm
Versions of xli prior to version 01, patchlevel 03 would
load the system-wide file (if any), followed by the user's file. This
behavior made it difficult for the user to configure her environment if she
didn't want the default. Newer versions will ignore the system-wide file if
a personal configuration file exists.
xli currently supports the following image types:
CMU Window Manager raster files
Faces Project images
Fuzzy Bitmap (.fbm) images
GEM bit images
GIF images (Including GIF89a compatibility)
G3 FAX images
JFIF style jpeg images
McIDAS areafiles
MacPaint images
Windows, OS/2 RLE Image
Monochrome PC Paintbrush (.pcx) images
Photograph on CD Image
Portable Bitmap (.pbm, .pgm, .ppm) images
Sun monochrome rasterfiles
Sun color RGB rasterfiles
Targa (.tga) files
Utah Raster Toolkit (.rle) files
X pixmap (.xpm) files (Version 1, 2C and 3)
X10 bitmap files
X11 bitmap files
X Window Dump (except TrueColor and DirectColor)
Normal, compact, and raw PBM images are supported. Both standard
and run-length encoded Sun rasterfiles are supported. Any image whose name
ends in .Z is assumed to be a compressed image and will be filtered through
"uncompress". If HAVE_GUNZIP is defined in the Makefile.std make
file, then any image whose name ends in
Any file that looks like a uuencoded file will be decoded
automatically.
The original Author is:
Jim Frost
Saber Software
jimf@saber.com
Version 1.16 of xli is derived from xloadimage 3.01 has been
brought to you by:
Graeme Gill
graeme@labtam.oz.au
Version 1.17 of xli is derived from xli 1.16 by
smar@reptiles.org
For a more-or-less complete list of other contributors (there are
a lot of them), please see the README file enclosed with the
distribution.
xli - the image loader and viewer
xsetbg - pseudonym which quietly sets the background
xview - pseudonym which views in a window
xlito - the trailing options utility
/usr/lib/X11/Xli - default system-wide configuration file
~/.xlirc - user's personal configuration file
Copyright (c) 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 Jim Frost, Graeme Gill
and others.
Xli is copywritten material with a very loose copyright
allowing unlimited modification and distribution if the copyright notices
are left intact. Various portions are copywritten by various people, but all
use a modification of the MIT copyright notice. Please check the source for
complete copyright information. The intent is to keep the source free, not
to stifle its distribution, so please write to me if you have any
questions.
Zooming dithered images, especially downwards, is UGLY.
Images can come in a variety of aspect ratios. Xli cannot
detect what aspect ratio the particular image being loaded has, nor the
aspect ratio of the destination display, so images with differing aspect
ratios from the destination display will appear distorted. The solution to
this is to use xlito to append the appropriate options to the image
file. See HINTS FOR GOOD IMAGE DISPLAYS and XLITO for more
information.
The GIF format allows more than one image to be stored in a single
GIF file, but xli will only display the first.
One of the pseudonyms for xli, xview, is the same
name as Sun uses for their SunView-under-X package. This will be confusing
if you're one of those poor souls who has to use Sun's XView.
Some window managers do not correctly handle window size requests.
In particular, many versions of the twm window manager use the MaxSize hint
instead of the PSize hint, causing images which are larger than the screen
to display in a window larger than the screen, something which is normally
avoided. Some versions of twm also ignore the MaxSize argument's real
function, to limit the maximum size of the window, and allow the window to
be resized larger than the image. If this happens, xli merely places
the image in the upper-left corner of the window and uses the zero-value'ed
pixel for any space which is not covered by the image. This behavior is
less-than-graceful but so are window managers which are cruel enough to
ignore such details.
The order in which operations are performed on an image is
independent of the order in which they were specified on the command line.
Wherever possible I tried to order operations in such a way as to look the
best possible (zooming before dithering, for instance) or to increase speed
(zooming downward before compressing, for instance).
Display Gamma should setable in the ~/.xlirc file.
Embedded trailing options overide the command line Image
Options. Command line options should really overide trailing
options.