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xfs(1)									xfs(1)

NAME
       xfs - X font server

SYNOPSIS
       xfs [ -config configuration_file ] [ -daemon ] [ -droppriv ] [ -ls lis‐
       ten_socket ] [ -nodaemon ] [ -port tcp_port ] [ -user username ]

DESCRIPTION
       xfs is the X Window System font server.	It supplies fonts to X	Window
       System display servers.	The server is usually run by a system adminis‐
       trator, and started via init(8).	 Users may also wish to start  private
       font servers for specific sets of fonts.

       To  connect  to a font server, see the documentation for your X server;
       it likely supports the syntax documented in  the	 “FONT	SERVER	NAMES”
       section of X(7).

OPTIONS
       -config configuration_file
	      specifies	 the configuration file xfs will use.  If this parame‐
	      ter is not specified, xfs will read its configuration  from  the
	      default file, /etc/X11/fs/config.

       -daemon
	      instructs	 xfs  to fork and go into the background automatically
	      at startup.  If this option is not specified, xfs will run as  a
	      regular  process	(unless it was built to daemonize by default).
	      When running as a daemon, xfs will attempt to create a  file  in
	      which  it	 stores its process ID, and will delete that file upon
	      exit;

       -droppriv
	      instructs xfs to attempt to run as user and  group  xfs  (unless
	      the  -user option is used).  This has been implemented for secu‐
	      rity reasons, as xfs may have undiscovered buffer	 overflows  or
	      other  paths  for possible exploit, both local and remote.  When
	      using this option, you may also wish  to	specify	 ‘no-listen  =
	      tcp’  in the config file, which ensures that xfs will not to use
	      a TCP port at all.  By default, xfs runs with the user and group
	      IDs of the user who invoked it.

       -ls listen_socket
	      specifies	 a  file descriptor which is already set up to be used
	      as the listen socket.  This option is only intended to  be  used
	      by  the  font  server itself when automatically spawning another
	      copy of itself to handle additional connections.

       -nodaemon
	      instructs xfs not to daemonize (fork and detach  from  its  con‐
	      trolling	terminal).   This  option only has an effect if xfs is
	      built to daemonize by default, which is not the stock configura‐
	      tion.

       -port tcp_port
	      specifies	 the  TCP  port number on which the server will listen
	      for connections.	The default port number is 7100.  This	option
	      is  ignored if xfs is configured to not listen to TCP transports
	      at all (see “Configuration File Format” below).

       -user username
	      instructs xfs to run as the user username.   See	-droppriv  for
	      why this may be desired.	By default, xfs runs with the user and
	      group IDs of the user who invoked it.

INPUT FILES
       xfs reads and serves any font file format recognized by	the  X	server
       itself.	 It  locates  font  files through the specification of a cata‐
       logue, which is declared in xfs's configuration file.

   Configuration File Format
       xfs reads its configuration from a text file (see the -config option in
       the  “OPTIONS” section above).  The configuration language is a list of
       keyword and value pairs.	 Each keyword is followed by  an  equals  sign
       (‘=’) and then the desired value.

       Recognized keywords include:

       alternate-servers (list of strings)
	      lists  alternate	servers	 for  this font server.	 See the “FONT
	      SERVER NAMES” section of X(7) for the syntax of the string.

       catalogue (list of strings)
	      declares as ordered list of font path element names  from	 which
	      fonts  will be served.  The current implementation only supports
	      a single catalogue  ("all")  containing  all  of	the  specified
	      fonts.  A	 special  directory with symlinks to font paths can be
	      specified using a catalogue:<dir> entry. See the	CATALOGUE  DIR
	      section below for details.

       client-limit (cardinal)
	      determines  the  number of clients this font server will support
	      before refusing service.	This is useful for tuning the load  on
	      each individual font server.

       clone-self (boolean)
	      indicates	 whether  this	font  server  should  attempt to clone
	      itself  when  the	 number	 of  connected	clients	 reaches   the
	      client-limit.

       default-point-size (cardinal)
	      The  default  pointsize  (in  decipoints) for font requests that
	      don't specify a point size.  The default is 120.

       default-resolutions (list of resolutions)
	      indicates the resolutions the server supports by default.	  This
	      information may be used as a hint for pre-rendering, and substi‐
	      tuted into requests for scaled fonts which do not specify a res‐
	      olution.	 A  resolution is a comma-separated pair of horizontal
	      and vertical resolutions in pixels per inch.   Multiple  resolu‐
	      tions are separated by commas.

       deferglyphs (string)
	      sets  the	 mode  for  delayed  fetching  and  caching of glyphs.
	      string should be one of ‘none’, meaning glyphs deferment is dis‐
	      abled,  ‘all’,  meaning  it  is enabled for all fonts, and ‘16’,
	      meaning it is enabled only for 16-bit fonts.

       error-file (string)
	      indicates the filename of the  error  file.   All	 warnings  and
	      errors  will  be logged here, unless use-syslog is set to a true
	      value (see below).

       no-listen (trans-type)
	      disables the specified transport type.  For example, TCP/IP con‐
	      nections can be disabled with ‘no-listen = tcp’.

       port (cardinal)
	      indicates	 the TCP port on which the server will listen for con‐
	      nections.

       use-syslog (boolean)
	      determines whether errors and diagnostics should be reported via
	      syslog(3) (on supported systems) instead of being written to the
	      error-file (see above).

CATALOGUE DIR
       You can specify	a  special  kind  of  font  path  in  the  form	 cata‐
       logue:<dir>.   The directory specified after the catalogue: prefix will
       be scanned for symlinks and each symlink destination will be added as a
       local fontfile FPE.

       The  symlink  can  be  suffixed by attributes such as 'unscaled', which
       will be passed through to the underlying fontfile FPE. The only	excep‐
       tion  is	 the  newly introduced 'pri' attribute, which will be used for
       ordering the font paths specified by the symlinks.

       An example configuration:

	   75dpi:unscaled:pri=20 -> /usr/share/X11/fonts/75dpi
	   ghostscript:pri=60 -> /usr/share/fonts/default/ghostscript
	   misc:unscaled:pri=10 -> /usr/share/X11/fonts/misc
	   type1:pri=40 -> /usr/share/X11/fonts/Type1
	   type1:pri=50 -> /usr/share/fonts/default/Type1

       This will add /usr/share/X11/fonts/misc	as  the	 first	FPE  with  the
       attribute  the  attribute unscaled etc. This is functionally equivalent
       to setting the following font path:

	   /usr/share/X11/fonts/misc:unscaled,
	   /usr/share/X11/fonts/75dpi:unscaled,
	   /usr/share/X11/fonts/Type1,
	   /usr/share/fonts/default/Type1,
	   /usr/share/fonts/default/ghostscript

   Example Configuration File
       #
       # sample font server configuration file
       #

       # allow a max of 10 clients to connect to this font server.
       client-limit = 10

       # When a font server reaches the above limit, start up a new one.
       clone-self = on

       # Identify alternate font servers for clients to use.
       alternate-servers = hansen:7101,hansen:7102

       # Look for fonts in the following directories.  The first is a set of
       # TrueType outlines, the second is a set of misc bitmaps (such as terminal
       # and cursor fonts), and the last is a set of 100dpi bitmaps.
       #
       catalogue = /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/TTF,
		   /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/misc,
		   /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/100dpi/

       # in 12 points, decipoints
       default-point-size = 120

       # 100 x 100 and 75 x 75
       default-resolutions = 100,100,75,75

       # Specify our log filename.
       error-file = /var/log/xfs.log

       # Direct diagnostics to our own log file instead of using syslog.
       use-syslog = off

OUTPUT FILES
       When operating in daemon mode, xfs sends	 diagnostic  messages  (errors
       and  warnings)  to  the system log via the syslog C library function by
       default.	 However, these messages can be sent to an alternate  location
       via the error-file and use-syslog configuration variables; see “Config‐
       uration File Format”, above.

ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
       xfs handles the following signals specially:

       SIGTERM
	      causes the font server to exit cleanly.

       SIGUSR1
	      causes xfs to re-read its configuration file.

       SIGUSR2
	      causes xfs to flush any cached data it may have.

       SIGHUP causes xfs to reset, closing all active connections and re-read‐
	      ing the configuration file.

BUGS
       Multiple catalogues should be supported.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       Significant  further development of xfs is unlikely.  One of the origi‐
       nal motivations behind it was  the  single-threaded  nature  of	the  X
       server  —  a  user's  X	session	 could seem to ‘freeze up’ while the X
       server took a moment to rasterize a font.   This	 problem  with	the  X
       server, which remains single-threaded in all popular implementations to
       this day, has been mitigated on two fronts: machines have  gotten  much
       faster,	and  client-side  font	rendering  (particularly  via  the Xft
       library) is the norm in contemporary software.

AUTHORS
       Dave Lemke, Network Computing Devices, Inc
       Keith Packard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

SEE ALSO
       X(7), xfsinfo(1), fslsfonts(1), init(8), syslog(3), The X Font  Service
       Protocol, Font Server Implementation Overview

X Version 11			   xfs 1.0.8				xfs(1)
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