1:blackbox

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      blackbox - a window manager for X11
      

Contents

SYNOPSIS

      blackbox -help | -version
      blackbox [ -rc rcfile ] [ -display display ]

DESCRIPTION

      Blackbox is a window manager for the Open Group's X Window System, Version 11 Release 6 and above.  Its design is
      meant to be visually minimalist and fast.
 
      Blackbox is similar to the NeXT interface and Windowmaker. Applications  are  launched  using  a  menu  which  is
      accessed by right clicking on the root window. Workspaces, a system of virtual desktops are controlled via a menu
      which is accessed by middle clicking on the root window and by using the toolbar. Individual windows can be  con-
      trolled by buttons on the title bar and more options are available by right clicking on the title bar.
 
      Blackbox  is  able  to  generate  beautiful window decorations on the fly at high speed. Themes, called styles in
      Blackbox terminology, are very flexible but the use of pixmaps has been purposefully avoided to eliminate  depen-
      dencies and excess memory usage.
 
      Blackbox  itself does not directly handle key bindings like most other window managers. This task is handled by a
      separate utility called bbkeys. Although Blackbox has a built-in workspace (paging) system, bbpager,  which  pro-
      vides  a  graphical pager, is popular with many users.  bbkeys, bbpager and several other bbtools can be found by
      going to
 
           http://bbtools.thelinuxcommunity.org/
 
      The slit is an edge of the screen which can hold specially designed programs called dock apps (from Windowmaker).
      In addition, the popular program gkrellm will also run in the slit.  There is a huge selection of dockapps avail-
      able and they run the gamut from must-have gadgets to utterly useless (but cute and/or funny) eye candy.
 
           http://www.bensinclair.com/dockapp/
           http://dockapps.org/

OPTIONS

      Blackbox supports the following command line options:
 
      -help  Display command line options, compiled-in features, and exit.
 
      -version
             Display version and exit.
 
      -rc rcfile
             Use an alternate resource file.
 
      -display display
             Start Blackbox on the specified display, and set the DISPLAY environment variable to this value  for  pro-
             grams started by Blackbox.

STARTING AND EXITING BLACKBOX

      The  most  common  method  for starting Blackbox is to place the the command "blackbox" (no quotes) at the end of
      your ~/.xinitrc or ~/.xsession file.  The advantage of putting Blackbox at the end of the  file  is  that  the  X
      Server  will  shutdown  when  you exit Blackbox. Blackbox can also be started from the command line of a terminal
      program like xterm in an X session that does not already have a window manager running.
 
      On startup, Blackbox will look for ~/.blackboxrc and use the resource session.menuFile to determine where to  get
      the menu for the session.  If this file is not found Blackbox will use /usr/share/blackbox/menu as the menu file.
      If that fails as well Blackbox will use a default menu that contains commands  to  start  an  xterm  as  well  as
      restart and exit the window manager.  The other resources available in the ~/.blackboxrc file are discussed later
      in this manual under the heading RESOURCE FILE.
 
      On exit, Blackbox writes its current configuration to ~/.blackboxrc.
 
           NOTE:
           If ~/.blackboxrc is modified during a Blackbox
           session, Blackbox must be restarted with the
           "restart" command on the main menu or the changes
           will be lost on exit. Restart causes Blackbox to
           re-read ~/.blackboxrc and apply the changes immediately.
 
      Blackbox can be exited by selecting "exit" on the main menu (discussed shortly), killing it gently from a  termi-
      nal or by the X Window System shutdown hot key combo Ctrl+Alt+BackSpace.

USING BLACKBOX

      A three button mouse has the following functions when clicking on the root window:
 
      Button Two  (Middle Button)
             Open workspace menu
 
      Button Three  (Right Button)
             Open main menu
 
      Note that Button One (Left Button) is not used.
 
      Main Menu
             The  default  installation  assumes  you have a number of common X Window System programs in their typical
             locations. The default menu is defined by a plain text file named 'menu'. It is heavily commented and cov-
             ers  a number of details of menu file syntax. This file can also be edited graphically by using the exten-
             sion program bbconf which makes menu creation very easy. Menu file syntax is discussed later in this  man-
             ual.
 
                  Caveat:
                  Menus can run arbitrary command lines, but
                  if you wish to use a complex command line
                  it is best to place it in a shell script.
                  Remember to put #!/bin/sh on the first
                  line and chmod 755 on the file to make it
                  executable.
 
      Workspace Menu
             This  menu gives the user control of the workspace system. The user can create a new workspace, remove the
             last workspace or go to an application via either the icon menu or  a  workspace  entry.   Workspaces  are
             listed  by  name. Clicking on the workspace name will take you to that workspace with focus on the program
             under the mouse. If there are programs already running in the workspace, they will  appear  in  a  pop-out
             menu.  Clicking on the application name will jump to the workspace and focus that application. If a middle
             click is used the window will be brought to the current workspace.
 
             Blackbox uses an external program, bbpager, to provide a traditional, graphical paging  interface  to  the
             workspace  system. Many Blackbox users run another extension program - bbkeys - to provide keyboard short-
             cuts for workspace control.
 
                  Caveat:
                  To name a workspace the user must right
                  click on the toolbar, select "Edit current
                  workspace name," type the workspace name,
                  And_Press_Enter to finish.
 
             Workspaces can also be named in the .blackboxrc file as described in RESOURCES.
 
      The Slit
             The Slit provides a user positionable window for running utility programs called "dockapps". To learn more
             about dockapps refer to the web sites mentioned in the Description. Dockapps automatically run in the slit
             in most cases, but may require a special command switch.  Often, -w is used for "withdrawn" into the slit.
 
             gkrellm is a very useful and modern dockapp that gives the user near real time information on machine per-
             formance. Other dockapps include clocks, notepads, pagers, key grabbers, fishbowls, fire places and  many,
             many others.
 
             Only mouse button three is captured by the Blackbox slit. This menu allows the user to change the position
             of the slit, and sets the state of Always on top, and Auto hide. These all do what the user expects.
 
                  Caveat:
                  When starting Dockapps from an external script
                  a race condition can take place where the shell
                  rapidly forks all of the dockapps, which then
                  take varied and random times to draw themselves
                  for the first time. To get the dockapps to start
                  in a given order, follow each dockapp with
                  sleep 2; This ensures that each dockapp is placed
                  in the correct order by the slit.
 
                  i.e.
                  #!/bin/sh
                  speyes -w & sleep 2
                  gkrellm -w & sleep 2
 
      The Toolbar
             The toolbar provides an alternate method for cycling through multiple  workspaces  and  applications.  The
             left  side  of  the toolbar is the workspace control, the center is the application control, and the right
             side is a clock. The format of the clock can be controlled as described under RESOURCES.
 
             Mouse button 3 raises a menu that allows configuration of the toolbar. It can be positioned either at  the
             top or the bottom of the screen and can be set to auto hide and/or to always be on top.
 
                  Caveat:
                  The toolbar is a permanent fixture. It
                  can only be removed by modifying the source and
                  rebuilding, which is beyond the scope of this
                  document. Setting the toolbar to auto hide is
                  the next best thing.


      Window Decorations
             Window  decorations  include handles at the bottom of each window, a title bar, and three control buttons.
             The handles at the bottom of the window are divided into three sections.   The  two  corner  sections  are
             resizing  handles The center section is a window moving handle. The bottom center handle and the title bar
             respond to a number of mouse clicks and key + mouse click combinations. The three  buttons  in  the  title
             bar,  left  to  right,  are  iconify, maximize, and close. The resize button has special behavior detailed
             below.
 
      Button One  (Left Button)
             Click and drag on titlebar to move or resize from bottom corners.  Click the iconify button  to  move  the
             window  to the icon list.  Click the maximize button to fully maximize the window.  Click the close button
             to close the window and application.  Double-Click the title bar to shade the window.
 
      Alt + Button One
             Click anywhere on client window and drag to move the window.
 
      Button Two  (Middle Button)
             Click the titlebar to lower the window.  Click the maximize button to maximize the window vertically.
 
      Button Three  (Right Button)
             Click on title bar or bottom center handle pulls down a control menu.  Click the maximize button to  maxi-
             mize the window horizontally.
 
      Alt + Button Three
             Click anywhere on client window and drag to resize the window.
 
      The control menu contains:
 
      Send To ...
 
                  Button One  (Left Button)
                  Click to send this window to another workspace.
 
                  Button Two  (Middle Button)
                  Click to send this window to another workspace, change
                  to that workspace and keep the application focused.
                  as well.
 
      Shade  This is the same action as Double-Click with Button One.
 
      Iconify
             Hide the window.  It can be accessed with the icon menu.
 
      Maximize
             Toggle window maximization.
 
      Raise  Bring window to the front above the other windows and
             focus it.
 
      Lower  Drop the window below the other ones.
 
      Stick  Stick this window to the glass on the inside of
             the monitor so it does not hide when you change
             workspaces.
 
      Kill Client
             This kills the client program with -SIGKILL (-9)
             Only use this as a last resort.
 
      Close  Send a close signal to the client application.

STYLES

      Styles  are a collection of colors, fonts, and textures that control the appearance of Blackbox. These character-
      istics are recorded in style files. The default system style files  are  located  in  /usr/share/blackbox/styles.
      The  menu  system will identify the style by its filename, and styles can be sorted into different directories at
      the user's discretion.
 
      There are over 700 styles available for Blackbox. The official distribution point for Blackbox styles is
 
           http://blackbox.themes.org/
 
      All themes should install by simply downloading them to ~/.blackbox/ then unzip it, and de-tar it.
 
      On open Unixes this will be:
 
      tar zxvf stylename.tar.gz
 
      On commercial Unixes this will be something like:
 
      gunzip stylename.tar.gz && tar xvf stylename.tar
 
      Check your system manuals for specifics or check with your network administrator.
 
      An entry should appear in the styles menu immediately.
 
           Security Warning
           Style files can execute shell scripts and other
           executables. It would is wise to check the
           rootCommand in the style file and make sure that
           it is benign.
 
      Things that go wrong.
 
      1. The theme is pre Blackbox 0.51.
             Style file syntax changed with version 0.51
 
      2. The style tarball was formatted incorrectly.
             Some styles use the directories ~/.blackbox/Backgrounds and ~/.blackbox/Styles
 
             This can fixed by adding a [stylemenu] (~/.blackbox/Styles) to your menu file. To be  a  complete  purist,
             hack the style file with the correct paths and move the files into the correct directories
 
      3. The rootCommmand line is broken.
             The  rootCommand  line  in the style file will run an arbitrary executable. It is important that this exe-
             cutable be set to bsetbg to maintain portability between systems  with  different  graphics  software.  In
             addition bsetbg can execute a shell script and do it in a portable fashion as well.
 
      The documented method for creating styles is as follows:
 
      1. Create or acquire the background for the style if
             it will not be using bsetroot to draw a patterned background for the root window.
 
                  NOTE:
                  Blackbox runs on a wide variety
                  of systems ranging from PCs with 640x480 256 color
                  displays to ultra high speed workstations with 25"
                  screens and extreme resolution. For best results a
                  style graphic should be at least 1024x768.
 
      2. Create a style file.
             The best way to do this is to make a copy of a similar style and then edit it.
 
             The  style file is a list of X resources and other external variables. Manipulating these variables allows
             users to completely change the appearance of Blackbox. The user can also change the root window  image  by
             using the wrapper program bsetbg.
 
             bsetbg  knows  how  to  use a number of programs to set the root window image. This makes styles much more
             portable since various platforms have different graphics software. For more info see bsetbg(1).
 
      3. Background images should be placed in
             ~/.blackbox/backgrounds The style file should be placed in ~/.blackbox/styles any other information  about
             the  style  should be placed in ~/.blackbox/about/STYLE_NAME/.  This would include README files, licenses,
             etc.
 
             Previous versions of Blackbox put backgrounds and styles in different directories. The directories  listed
             above  are the only officially supported directories.  However you may put them whereever you like as long
             as you update your menu file so it knows where to find your styles.
 
      4. To create a consistent experience and to ensure
             portability between all systems it is important to use the following format to create your style  archive.
 
             first create a new directory named after your style NEW_STYLE
 
             In this directory create the directories
 
                  backgrounds
                  styles
                  about/NEW_STYLE
 
             Next put everything for the theme in these locations. Finally type
 
             tar cvzf NEW_STYLE.tar.gz *
 
             If you are using commercial Unix you may need to use gzip and tar separately.
 
             Now  when  a  user  downloads  a new style file she knows that all she has to do is put the tarball in her
             Blackbox directory, unzip->un-tar it and then click on it in her style menu.
 
      Style File Syntax and Details
 
             By far the easiest way to create a new style is to use bbconf. bbconf allows  complete  control  of  every
             facet of style files and gives immediate updates of the current style as changes are made.
 
             The style file format is not currently documented in a man page.  There is a readme document included with
             the Blackbox source containing this information.

MENU FILE

      The default menu file is installed in /usr/share/blackbox/menu.  This menu can be customized as a system  default
      menu or the user can create a personal menu.
 
      To  create  a personal menu copy the default menu to a file in your home directory.  Then, open ~/.blackboxrc and
      add or modify the resource session.menuFile:  ~/.blackbox/menu
 
      Next, edit the new menu file. This can be done during a Blackbox session  and  the  menu  will  automatically  be
      updated when the code checks for file changes.
 
      The  default menu included with Blackbox has numerous comments describing the use of all menu commands. Menu com-
      mands follow this general form:
 
      [command]  (label|filename) {shell command|filename}
 
      Blackbox menu commands:
 
         #    string...
             Hash (or pound or number sign) is used as the comment delimiter. It can be used as a full line comment  or
             as an end of line comment after a valid command statement.
 
      [begin]  (string)
             This  tag is used only once at the beginning of the menu file. "string" is the name or description used at
             the top of the menu.
 
      [end]
             This tag is used at the end of the menu file and at the end of a submenu block.
 
      [exec]  (label string) {command string}
             This is a very flexible tag that allows the user  to  run  an  arbitrary  shell  command  including  shell
             scripts.  If  a  command  is too large to type on the command line by hand it is best to put it in a shell
             script.
 
      [nop]  (label string)
             This tag is used to put a divider in the menu.  label string is an optional description.
 
      [submenu]  (submenu name) {title string}
             This creates a sub-menu with the name submenu name and if given, the string title string will be the title
             of the pop up menu itself.
 
      [include]  (filename)
             This  command inserts filename into the menu file at the point at which it is called.  filename should not
             contain a begin end pair. This feature can be used to include the system menu or include a piece  of  menu
             that is updated by a separate program.
 
      [stylesdir]  (description) (path)
             Causes  Blackbox  to  search path for style files. Blackbox lists styles in the menu by their file name as
             returned by the OS.
 
      [stylesmenu]  (description) {path}
             This command creates a submenu with the name description with the contents of path.  By creating a submenu
             and then populating it with stylesmenu entries the user can create an organized library of styles.
 
      [workspaces]  (description)
             Inserts  a link into the main menu to the workspace menu. If used, description is an optional description.
 
      [config]  (label)
             This command causes Blackbox to insert a menu that gives the user control over focus models, dithering and
             other system preferences.
 
      [reconfig]  (label) {shell command}
             The  reconfig  command  causes Blackbox to reread its configuration files. This does not include ~/.black-
             boxrc which is only reread when Blackbox is restarted. If shell command is included Blackbox will run this
             command or shell script before rereading the files. This can be used to switch between multiple configura-
             tions
 
      [restart]  (label) {shell command}
             This command is actually an exit command that defaults to restarting Blackbox. If provided  shell  command
             is  run instead of Blackbox. This can be used to change versions of Blackbox. Not that you would ever want
             to do this but, it could also be used to start a different window manager.
 
      [exit]  (label)
             Shuts down Blackbox. If Blackbox is the last command in your ~/.xinitrc file, this action will also  shut-
             down X.
 
                  Here is a working example of a menu file:
                  [begin] (MenuName)
                     [exec] (xterm) {xterm -ls -bg black -fg green}
                     [submenu] (X utilities)
                        [exec] (xcalc) {xcalc}
                     [end]
                     [submenu] (styles)
                        [stylesmenu] (built-in styles) {/usr/share/blackbox/styles}
                        [stylesmenu] (custom styles) {~/.blackbox/styles}
                     [end]
                     [workspaces] (workspace list)
                     [config] (configure)
                     [reconfig] (config play desktop) {play-config-blackbox}
                     [reconfig] (config work desktop) {work-config-blackbox}
                     [restart] (start Blackbox beta 7) {blackbox-beta7}
                     [restart] (start Blackbox cvs) {blackbox-cvs}
                     [restart] (restart)
                     [exit] (exit)
                  [end]

RESOURCE FILE

      $HOME/.blackboxrc  These options are stored in the ~/.blackboxrc file.  They control various features of Blackbox
      and most can be set from menus. Some of these can only be set by editing .blackboxrc directly.
 
      NOTE: Blackbox only reads this file during start up. To make changes take effect during a  Blackbox  session  the
      user must choose "restart" on the main menu.  If you do not do so, your changes will be lost when Blackbox exits.
 
      Some resources are named with a <num> after screen. This should be replaced with the number of the screen that is
      being configured. The default is 0 (zero).
 
      Menu Configurable  (Slit Menu):
         Right click (button 3) on the slit border.
 
      session.screen<num>.slit.placement  SEE BELOW
         Determines  the position of the slit.  Certain combinations of slit.placement with slit.direction are not ter-
         ribly useful, i.e. TopCenter with Vertical direction puts the slit through the middle  of  your  screen.  Cer-
         tainly some will think that is cool if only to be different...
 
              Default is CenterLeft.
              [  TopLeft  |   TopCenter  |   TopRight  |
               CenterLeft |              | CenterRight |
               BottomLeft | BottomCenter | BottomRight ]
 
      session.screen<num>.slit.direction  [Horizontal|Vertical]
         Determines the direction of the slit.
 
              Default is Vertical.
 
      session.screen<num>.slit.onTop  [True|False]
         Determines whether the slit is always visible over windows or if the focused window can hide the slit.
 
              Default is True.
 
      session.screen<num>.slit.autoHide  [True|False]
         Determines  whether  the  slit hides when not in use.  The session.autoRaiseDelay time determines how long you
         must hover to get the slit to raise and how long it stays visible after mouse out.
 
              Default is False.
 
      Menu Configurable  (Main Menu):
 
      session.screen<num>.focusModel  SEE BELOW
         Sloppy focus (mouse focus) is the conventional X Window behavior and can be modified with AutoRaise or  Click-
         Raise.
 
         AutoRaise causes the window to automatically raise after session.autoRaiseDelay milliseconds.
 
         ClickRaise causes the window to raise if you click anywhere inside the client area of the window.
 
         Sloppy focus alone requires a click on the titlebar, border or lower grip to raise the window.
 
         ClickToFocus  requires  a  click on a Blackbox decoration or in the client area to focus and raise the window.
         ClickToFocus cannot be modified by AutoRaise or ClickRaise.
 
              Default is SloppyFocus
              [SloppyFocus [[AutoRaise & ClickRaise]  |
                            [AutoRaise | ClickRaise]] |
              ClickToFocus]
 
      session.screen<num>.windowPlacement  SEE BELOW
         RowSmartPlacement tries to fit new windows  in  empty  space  by  making  rows.   Direction  depends  on  ses-
         sion.screen<num>.rowPlacementDirection
 
         ColSmartPlacement  tries  to  fit  new  windows  in  empty  space  by making columns Direction depends on ses-
         sion.screen<num>.colPlacementDirection
 
         CascadePlacement places the new window down and to the right of the most recently created window.
 
              Default is RowSmartPlacement.
              [RowSmartPlacement | ColSmartPlacement | CascadePlacement]
 
      session.screen<num>.rowPlacementDirection  [LeftToRight|RightToLeft]
         Determines placement direction for new windows.
 
              Default is LeftToRight.
 
      session.screen<num>.colPlacementDirection  [TopToBottom|BottomToTop]
         Determines placement direction for new windows.
 
              Default is TopToBottom.
 
      session.imageDither  [True|False]
         This setting is only used when running in low color modes. Image Dithering helps to  show  an  image  properly
         even if there are not enough colors available in the system.
 
              Default is False.
 
      session.opaqueMove  [True|False]
         Determines  whether  the window's contents are drawn as it is moved.  When False the behavior is to draw a box
         representing the window.
 
              Default is False.
 
      session.screen<num>.fullMaximization  [True|False]
         Determines if the maximize button will cause an application to maximize over the slit and toolbar.
 
              Default is False.
 
      session.screen<num>.focusNewWindows  [True|False]
         Determines if newly created windows are given focus after they initially draw themselves.
 
              Default is False.
 
      session.screen<num>.focusLastWindow  [True|False]
         This is actually "when moving between workspaces, remember which window has focus when leaving a workspace and
         return the focus to that window when I return to that workspace."
 
              Default is False.
 
      session.screen<num>.disableBindingsWithScrollLock  [True|False]
         When  this resource is enabled, turning on scroll lock keeps Blackbox from grabbing the Alt and Ctrl keys that
         it normally uses for mouse controls. This feature allows users of drawing  and  modeling  programs  which  use
         keystrokes  to  modify mouse actions to maintain their sanity.  *NOTE* this has _no_ affect on bbkeys.  If you
         need bbkeys to also behave this way it has a similar option in its config file.  Refer to the  bbkeys  manpage
         for details.
 
              Default is False.
 
      Menu Configurable  (Workspace Menu):
         Middle click (button 2) on the root window (AKA Desktop) to reach this menu
 
      session.screen<num>.workspaces  [integer]
         Workspaces may be created or deleted by middle clicking on the desktop and choosing "New Workspace" or "Remove
         Last". After creating a workspace, right click on the toolbar to name it.
 
              Default is 1
 
      Menu Configurable  (Toolbar Menu):
 
      session.screen<num>.workspaceNames  [string[, string...]]
         Workspaces are named in the order specified in this resource. Names should be delimited by  commas.  If  there
         are more workspaces than explicit names, un-named workspaces will be named as "Workspace [number]".
 
              Default is
              Workspace 1.
 
      session.screen<num>.toolbar.placement  SEE BELOW
         Set toolbar screen position.
 
              Default is BottomCenter
              [  TopLeft  |   TopCenter  |   TopRight  |
               BottomLeft | BottomCenter | BottomRight ]
 
      session.screen<num>.toolbar.onTop  [True|False]
         Determines whether the toolbar is always visible over windows or if the focused window can hide the toolbar.
 
              Default is True.
 
      session.screen<num>.toolbar.autoHide  [True|False]
         Determines whether the toolbar hides when not in use.  The session.autoRaiseDelay time determines how long you
         must hover to get the toolbar to raise, and how long it stays visible after mouse out.
 
              Default is False.
 
      Configurable in  ~/.Blackboxrc only:
 
      session.screen<num>.toolbar.widthPercent  [1-100]
         Percentage of screen used by the toolbar.  A number from 1-100 that sets the width of the toolbar.   0  (zero)
         does  not  cause  the toolbar to disappear, instead the toolbar is set to the default. If you want to lose the
         toolbar there are patches that can remove it.
 
              Default is 66.
 
      session.screen<num>.strftimeFormat  [string]
         A C language date format string, any combination of specifiers can be used. The default is %I:%M %p which gen-
         erates a 12 hour clock with minutes and an am/pm indicator appropriate to the locale.
 
              24 hours and minutes    %H:%M
              12 hours and minute     %I:%M %p
              month/day/year          %m/%d/%y
              day/month/year          %d/%m/%y
 
              Default is hours:minutes am/pm
              See
              strftime 3
              for more details.
 
      session.screen<num>.dateFormat  [American|European]
         NOTE: Only used if the strftime() function is not available on  your system.
 
              Default is American, (mon/day/year).
 
      session.screen<num>.clockFormat  [12/24]
         NOTE: Only used if the strftime() function is not available on your system.
 
              Default is 12-hour format.
 
      session.screen<num>.edgeSnapThreshold  [integer]
         When set to 0 this turns off edge snap. When set to one or greater edge snap will cause a window that is being
         moved to snap to the nearest screen edge, the slit, or or the toolbar. Windows will not snap  to  each  other.
         The  value  represents  a number in pixels which is the distance between the window and a screen edge which is
         required before the window is snapped to the screen edge.  If you prefer this functionality values between 6 -
         10 work nicely.
 
              Default value is 0
 
      session.menuFile  [filepath]
         Full path to the current menu file.
 
              Default is /usr/share/blackbox/menu
 
      session.colorsPerChannel  [2-6]
         The number of colors taken from the X server for use on pseudo color displays. This value must be set to 4 for
         8 bit displays.
 
              Default is 4.
 
      session.doubleClickInterval  [integer]
         This is the maximum time that Blackbox will wait after one click to catch a double click. This only applies to
         Blackbox actions, such as double click shading, not to the X server in general.
 
              Default is 250 milliseconds.
 
      session.autoRaiseDelay  [integer]
         This  is  the  time  in  milliseconds  used for auto raise and auto hide behaviors. More than about 1000 ms is
         likely useless.
 
              Default is 250 millisecond.
 
      session.cacheLife  [integer]
         Determines the maximum number of minutes that the X server will cache unused decorations.
 
              Default is 5 minutes
 
      session.cacheMax  [integer]
         Determines how many kilobytes that Blackbox may take from the X server  for  storing  decorations.  Increasing
         this number may enhance your performance if you have plenty of memory and use lots of different windows.
 
              Default is 200 Kilobytes


ENVIRONMENT

      HOME   Blackbox uses $HOME to find its .blackboxrc rc file and its .blackbox directory for menus and style direc-
             tories.
 
      DISPLAY
             If a display is not specified on the command line, Blackbox will use the value of $DISPLAY.

FILES

      blackbox
             Application binary
 
      ~/.blackboxrc
             User's startup and resource file.
 
      /usr/share/blackbox/menu
             Default system wide menu

WEB SITES

      General info website:
           http://blackboxwm.sourceforge.net/
 
      Development website:
           http://sourceforge.net/projects/blackboxwm/

BUGS

      If you think you have found a bug, please help by going to the development website and select "Bugs" in the upper
      menu.  Check the bug list to see if your problem has already been reported. If it has please read the summary and
      add any information that you believe would help. If your bug has not been submitted select "Submit New" and  fill
      out the form.

AUTHORS AND HISTORY

      Sean  Shaleh  Perry   <shaleh@debian.org> is the current maintainer and is actively working together with Brad to
      keep Blackbox up-to-date and stable as a rock.
 
      Brad Hughes  <bhughes@trolltech.com> originally designed and coded Blackbox in 1997 with the intent of creating a
      memory  efficient  window  manager with no dependencies on external libraries.  Brad's original idea has become a
      popular alternative to other window managers.
 
      Jeff Raven  <jraven@psu.edu> then picked up the torch for the 0.61.x series after Brad took a full  time  job  at
      TrollTech.
 
      This  manual page was written by: R.B. Brig Young  <secretsaregood@yahoo.com> he is solely responsible for errors
      or omissions.  Comments, corrections, and suggestions are welcomed.

RELATED

           bsetbg(1), bsetroot(1),
           bbkeys(1), bbconf(1)

CATEGORY

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