kmscon kmscon December 2012 Developer David Herrmann dh.herrmann@googlemail.com kmscon 1 kmscon KMS/DRM based System Console kmscon OPTIONS kmscon -l OPTIONS -- /bin/login /bin/login-OPTIONS Description kmscon is a KMS/DRM-based system console with an integrated terminal emulator for linux operating systems. It was designed as a replacement for the linux kernel console and virtual terminals. When run in default mode, kmscon allocates a virtual terminal and provides a terminal emulator on it. It can thus be used as replacement for the linux console and agetty1 on virtual terminals. Compared to the linux console, kmscon provides a rich set of enhanced features including full internationalized keyboard support, full UTF-8 input/font support, hardware-accelerated rendering, multi-seat support and more. When run in listener mode, kmscon watches the system for new seats and automatically provides a system console on it. Default configuration directory is /etc/kmscon/ and the main configuration file is called /etc/kmscon/kmscon.conf. You can provide an additional configuration file for each seat via /etc/kmscon/{seatname}.kmscon.conf. Any command-line option that can be passed to kmscon can also be put into those configuration files. Command-line options overwrite configuration file options. And per-seat configuration files overwrite the global configuration file. Options Boolean options take no arguments. If the default value is true, then you can disable the option by prefixing it with no-. General Options: Prints a short help text and exits. (default: off) Be more verbose. (default: off) Print debug messages. Works only if kmscon was compiled with debug mode enabled. (default: off) Suppress notices and warnings. (default: off) Specify path to config directory. (default: /etc/kmscon/) Run kmscon in listen-mode. See section below for more information. (default: off) Seat Options: Use this VT. If not specified, kmscon tries to find a VT by itself. On seats without VTs, kmscon simply activates itself automatically without using any VT. Please note that you cannot use this option if kmscon runs on multiple seats (see ). To avoid this, specify this option in a seat configuration /etc/kmscon/{seat}.kmscon.conf. You must not run multiple applications on a single VT, otherwise, you might get an unresponsive system. Also note, by default, kmscon tries to use it's controlling terminal as VT and if that fails, it tries to allocate a new unused VT. If kmscon is started on a VT that is currently not active, this option makes kmscon activate this VT during startup. The same way, during shutdown kmscon will reactivate the VT that was previously active. (default: on) List of seats kmscon will run on. Use 'all' to make kmscon run on all seats. Use 'all,' to make kmscon run on a seat called 'all' (empty entries are ignored). Use 'current' to make kmscon run on the current seat. (default: "current") If kmscon runs on multiple seats, all seats are independent of each other. You can either run a different kmscon process on ecah seat or make a single kmscon process run on multiple seats. In the latter case, global state can be shared to reduce memory consumption (like glyph-caches). Session Options: Change the maximum number of sessions that are allowed on each seat. Use '0' for no limit. (default: 50) Allow keyboard-shortcuts to control the session manager. This allows the use to create new sessions, kill sessions and switch sessions via keyboard input. (default: off) Start a terminal session after setup is done. (default: on) Start cdev-VT-emulation session after setup is done. This is limited to mode. (default: off) Terminal Options: Specify the application that is started on new terminal sessions. This takes no argument but instead everything left after all options have been parsed is used as argument to this option. Note that nothing after two dashes is parsed as regular option by kmscon. (default: /bin/login) This example starts '/bin/bash -i' on each new terminal session: ./kmscon --login --debug --no-switchvt -- /bin/bash -i This changes the $TERM environment variable that is set on new terminal sessions. (default: xterm-256color) Change the default color-palette. This shouldn't be used anymore. Dynamic color palettes should be implemented instead. Maximum scrollback-buffer line count. (default: 1000) Input Options: Keyboard model. This should normally not be changed. (default: {xkb default}) Keyboard layout. (default: {xkb default}) German keyboard example: --xkb-layout=de Keyboard variant. (default: {xkb default}) Keyboard options. (default: {xkb default}) Delay after key was pressed until key-repeat starts (in milliseconds). (default: 250) Time between two key-repeats (in milliseconds). (default: 50) Grabs / Keyboard-Shortcuts: All keyboard shortcuts (here: grabs) in kmscon can be modified with these options. The argument to such an option is a list of comma-separated keyboard-shortcuts that should trigger the specified action. To disable a shortcut, pass an empty argument (empty list). A keyboard shortcut exists of a list of modifiers followed by a single key. All modifiers must be down when the key is pressed for the shortcut to be detected. A modifier is sorrounded by '<' and '>' (like '<shift>'). A key is the name of a keysym (like 'a' or 'Return'). Keysyms are case-sensitive and kmscon will suggest a keysym name if you entered a wrong case. However, kmscon can not always guess the right case as lower-case-only keysyms are ambiguous. If a key generates multiple keysyms in your keyboard layout, you can match these keys by concatenating the keysyms with a '+' (like 'H+E+L+L+O'). This does not mean that all the listed keys must be pressed! It's rather a way to match multi-keysym keys. Valid modifiers are: Shift, Control/Ctrl, Alt, Logo (Windows/Apple key) Scroll up in scrollback buffer by one line. (default: <Shift>Up) Scroll down in scrollback buffer by one line. (default: <Shift>Down) Scroll up in scrollback buffer by one page. (default: <Shift>Prior/PageUp) Scroll down in scrollback buffer by one page. (default: <Shift>Next/PageDown) Switch to next session. (default: <Ctrl><Logo>Right) Switch to previous session. (default: <Ctrl><Logo>Left) Switch to dummy session (black screen). (default: <Ctrl><Logo>Escape) Close current session (press twice to kill it). (default: <Ctrl><Logo>BackSpace) Create new terminal session next to current session. (default: <Ctrl><Logo>Return) Video Options: Use DRM devices as display devices, too. fbdev devices are always used, but DRM devices are only used if this option is on. (default: on) Use 3D hardware acceleration. Note that this should be used in conjunction with . On newer hardware, this can speed up rendering by multiple orders of magnitude. However, on older hardware this might even slow down rendering speed. (default: off) GPU selection algorithm. If 'all' then all found GPUs are used. If 'aux' then primary and auxiliary GPUs are used. If 'primary' then only primary GPUs are used. Primary GPUs are the default GPU on a seat. There is always only one primary GPU on a seat. Auxiliary GPUs are hotpluggable GPUs that provide additional independent displays. (default: all) Select console render engine. Available engines are 'bblit', 'bbulk' and 'gltex'. (default: detect by GPU type) Display timing information of the render engines. This should only be used to debug render engines. (default: off) Font Options: Select font-engine. Available engines are 'pango', 'freetype2', 'unifont' and '8x16'. (default: pango) Font size in points. (default: 15) Font name. (default: monospace) DPI used for font-rendering. Per monitor DPI values overwrite this global default. (default: 96) Default Mode In default mode, kmscon acts as a replacement for agetty1. kmscon opens a virtual terminal and provides a system console on it. It replaces the linux-console on this VT. You can select the virtual terminal via the option. kmscon will seamlessly integrate into existing setups so you can use X, Wayland or any other Graphics Systems simultaneously. You can even use the linux-console on all the other virtual terminals. By default, kmscon runs on seat0 but you can change the seat via the option. For seats without virtual terminals, kmscon will automatically activate itself and run exclusively on that seat. If the virtual terminal or the seat that kmscon runs on is gone, kmscon will automatically exit. See the Listener-Mode to avoid this. kmscon spawns login1 on each new terminal. After a session exits, kmscon automatically respawns the next session. You can change the program that is spawned with the option. To stop kmscon, send SIGTERM to the kmscon process. Keyboard input is done by libxkbcommon. This provides the same features as the X11 Keyboard System but without any dependencies on X11 libraries. See the --xkb-{option} options for ways to change the keyboard layout, model, repeat rates and more. For instance changes the keyboard layout to German. kmscon uses KMS/DRM to access graphics devices (like the X-Server does). Compared to the linux console this allows kmscon to provide much better font-rendering and enhanced monitor control. However, for backwards compatibility, kmscon can also use fbdev devices. Hotpluggable graphics devices are marked as auxiliary devices, primary GPUs on a seat are marked as primary. Other GPUs stay unmarked. By default kmscon uses all graphics devices but you can make it use only primary or auxiliary devices with the option. Listener Mode If started in listen-mode () kmscon will run as system daemon and provide a system console on each seat that shows up if that seat does not have virtual terminals. On seats with virtual terminals you should run kmscon in default mode. Several options are exclusively limited to listen-mode, other than these, kmscon behaves the same way as in default-mode. Sessions If kmscon is active on a seat, the internal session-manager is woken up. At most times, only the terminal-session is active, but kmscon can also support any other session type. You can switch between sessions with keyboard-shortcuts and you can create/destroy sessions during runtime. Dummy sessions simply show a black screen and are used if no other session is available. Otherwise, dummy sessions are hidden from the user so they cannot switch to it. Terminal sessions provide a terminal emulator. They are the main session type and provide all the terminal-emulation functionality. CDev sessions provide a way to hook-up external applications as kmscon sessions. They provide fake virtual terminals on seats that don't have them so you can switch between multiple graphics applications/servers without needing VTs. See Virtual Terminals below. Virtual Terminals Historically, linux provides virtual terminals (VT) only on seat seat0. This is because only one VT can be active at a time but in multi-seat environments you want multiple active VTs, one per seat. It is easy to run kmscon on seat0 on a VT, however, if you want to run kmscon on another seat, there are no VTs. This means, you can only run one application that uses graphics devices on these seats. In most environments this is the X-Server. But if you want to run kmscon together with the X-Server (or any other graphics server), you need a mechanism to notify these servers when they are active. This is done via VT APIs on seat0. But note that if the kernel is compiled without CONFIG_VT (which controls whether VTs are available), then even seat0 does not have VTs. On seats without VTs we need a replacement API. However, a new API would require modifying every application that uses the VT API to also support the new replacement if you want to run it on those seats. Therefore, kmscon provides a backwards-compatible API. It uses the linux CUSE API to create VTs for all seats that have no VTs. You need to pass to kmscon to enable this. kmscon will then create one cdev (character device) for each seat and calls it /dev/ttyF{seatname} ('F' for 'fake'). This character device provides the same API as a VT so your X-Server (or even kmscon in default-mode) can use it instead of a real VT. In contrast to real VTs, each application that opens this fake VT will get a different VT assigned. So you can use multiple X-Servers all opening /dev/ttyF{seatname} and they will each show up as different kmscon session. But note that not all TTY ioctls are available on fake VTs. kmscon only emulates the API that is currently used by most VT users. If you want to run an application that needs more functionality, please open a bug-report. Switching VTs is done by signaling the active process to go asleep and signaling the new VT to wake up. If kmscon emulates VTs, it needs to be able to send these signals to the processes running on fake VTs. In most situations this means kmscon must have root priviledges. See Also kmscon.conf5, console4