Provided by: foot_1.13.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       foot - Wayland terminal emulator

SYNOPSIS

       foot [OPTIONS]
       foot [OPTIONS] <command> [COMMAND OPTIONS]

       All trailing (non-option) arguments are treated as a command, and its arguments, to
       execute (instead of the default shell).

DESCRIPTION

       foot is a Wayland terminal emulator. Running it without arguments will start a new
       terminal window with your default shell.

       You can override the default shell by appending a custom command to the foot command line

           foot sh -c "echo hello world && sleep 5"

OPTIONS

       -c,--config=PATH
           Path to configuration file, see foot.ini(5) for details.

       -C,--check-config
           Verify configuration and then exit with 0 if ok, otherwise exit with 230 (see EXIT
           STATUS).

       -o,--override=[SECTION.]KEY=VALUE
           Override an option set in the configuration file. If SECTION is not given, defaults to
           main.

       -f,--font=FONT
           Comma separated list of fonts to use, in fontconfig format (see FONT FORMAT).

           The first font is the primary font. The remaining fonts are fallback fonts that will
           be used whenever a glyph cannot be found in the primary font.

           The fallback fonts are searched in the order they appear. If a glyph cannot be found
           in any of the fallback fonts, the dynamic fallback list from fontconfig (for the
           primary font) is searched.

           Default: monospace.

       -w,--window-size-pixels=WIDTHxHEIGHT
           Set initial window width and height, in pixels. Default: 700x500.

       -W,--window-size-chars=WIDTHxHEIGHT
           Set initial window width and height, in characters. Default: not set.

       -t,--term=TERM
           Value to set the environment variable TERM to (see TERMINFO and ENVIRONMENT). Default:
           foot.

       -T,--title=TITLE
           Initial window title. Default: foot.

       -a,--app-id=ID
           Value to set the app-id property on the Wayland window to. Default: foot.

       -m,--maximized
           Start in maximized mode. If both --maximized and --fullscreen are specified, the last
           one takes precedence.

       -F,--fullscreen
           Start in fullscreen mode. If both --maximized and --fullscreen are specified, the last
           one takes precedence.

       -L,--login-shell
           Start a login shell, by prepending a '-' to argv[0].

       -D,--working-directory=DIR
           Initial working directory for the client application. Default: CWD of foot.

       -s,--server[=PATH|FD]
           Run as a server. In this mode, a single foot instance hosts multiple terminals
           (windows). Use footclient(1) to launch new terminals.

           This saves some memory since for example fonts and glyph caches can be shared between
           the terminals.

           It also saves upstart time since the config has already been loaded and parsed, and
           most importantly, fonts have already been loaded (and their glyph caches are likely to
           already have been populated).

           Each terminal will have its own rendering threads, but all Wayland communication, as
           well as input/output to the shell, is multiplexed in the main thread. Thus, this mode
           might result in slightly worse performance when multiple terminals are under heavy
           load.

           Also be aware that should one terminal crash, it will take all the others with it.

           The default path is $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/foot-$WAYLAND_DISPLAY.sock.

           If $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR is not set, the default path is instead /tmp/foot.sock.

           If $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR is set, but $WAYLAND_DISPLAY is not, the default path is
           $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/foot.sock.

           Note that if you change the default, you will also need to use the --server-socket
           option in footclient(1) and point it to your custom socket path.

           If the argument is a number, foot will interpret it as the file descriptor of a socket
           provided by a supervision daemon (such as systemd or s6), and use that socket as it's
           own.

           Two systemd units (foot-server@.{service,socket}) are provided to use that feature
           with systemd. They need to be instantiated with the value of $WAYLAND_DISPLAY
           (multiples instances can co-exists).

           Note that starting foot --server as a systemd service will use the environment of the
           systemd user instance; thus, if you need specific environment variables, you'll need
           to import them using systemctl --user import-environment or use a drop-in for the
           foot-server service.

       -H,--hold
           Remain open after child process exits.

       -p,--print-pid=FILE|FD
           Print PID to this file, or FD, when successfully started. The file (or FD) is closed
           immediately after writing the PID. When a FILE as been specified, the file is unlinked
           at exit.

           This option can only be used in combination with -s,--server.

       -d,--log-level={info,warning,error,none}
           Log level, used both for log output on stderr as well as syslog. Default: info.

       -l,--log-colorize=[{never,always,auto}]
           Enables or disables colorization of log output on stderr. Default: auto.

       -S,--log-no-syslog
           Disables syslog logging. Logging is only done on stderr. This option can only be used
           in combination with -s,--server.

       -v,--version
           Show the version number and quit.

       -e
           Ignored; for compatibility with xterm -e.

           This option was added in response to several program launchers passing -e to arbitrary
           terminals, under the assumption that they all implement the same semantics for it as
           xterm(1). Ignoring it allows foot to be invoked as e.g. foot -e man foot with the same
           results as with xterm, instead of producing an "invalid option" error.

KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS

       The following keyboard shortcuts are available by default. They can be changed in
       foot.ini(5). There are also more actions (disabled by default) available; see foot.ini(5).

   NORMAL MODE
       shift+page up/page down
           Scroll up/down in history

       ctrl+shift+c, XF86Copy
           Copy selected text to the clipboard

       ctrl+shift+v, XF86Paste
           Paste from clipboard

       shift+insert
           Paste from the primary selection.

       ctrl+shift+r
           Start a scrollback search

       ctrl++, ctrl+=
           Increase font size by 0.5pt

       ctrl+-
           Decrease font size by 0.5pt

       ctrl+0
           Reset font size

       ctrl+shift+n
           Spawn a new terminal. If the shell has been configured to emit the OSC 7 escape
           sequence, the new terminal will start in the current working directory.

       ctrl+shift+u
           Activate URL mode, allowing you to "launch" URLs.

       ctrl+shift+z
           Jump to the previous, currently not visible, prompt. Requires shell integration.

       ctrl+shift+x
           Jump to the next prompt. Requires shell integration.

   SCROLLBACK SEARCH
       ctrl+r
           Search backward for the next match. If the search string is empty, the last searched-
           for string is used.

       ctrl+s
           Search forward for the next match. If the search string is empty, the last searched-
           for string is used.

       ctrl+w
           Extend current selection (and thus the search criteria) to the end of the word, or the
           next word if currently at a word separating character.

       ctrl+shift+w
           Same as ctrl+w, except that the only word separating characters are whitespace
           characters.

       ctrl+v, ctrl+shift+v, ctrl+y, XF86Paste
           Paste from clipboard into the search buffer.

       shift+insert
           Paste from primary selection into the search buffer.

       escape, ctrl+g, ctrl+c
           Cancel the search

       return
           Finish the search and copy the current match to the primary selection. The terminal
           selection is kept, allowing you to press ctrl+shift+c to copy it to the clipboard.

   URL MODE
       t
           Toggle URL visibility in jump label.

       escape, ctrl+g, ctrl+c, ctrl+d
           Exit URL mode without launching a URL.

   MOUSE SHORTCUTS
       left, single-click
           Drag to select; when released, the selected text is copied to the primary selection.
           This feature is normally disabled whenever the client has enabled mouse tracking, but
           can be forced by holding shift.

           Holding ctrl will create a block selection.

       left, double-click
           Selects the word (separated by spaces, period, comma, parenthesis etc) under the
           pointer. Hold ctrl to select everything under the pointer up to, and until, the next
           space characters.

       left, triple-click
           Selects the entire row

       middle
           Paste from the primary selection

       right
           Extend current selection. Clicking immediately extends the selection, while hold-and-
           drag allows you to interactively resize the selection.

       wheel
           Scroll up/down in history

FONT FORMAT

       The font is specified in FontConfig syntax. That is, a colon-separated list of font name
       and font options.

       Examples:
       •   Dina:weight=bold:slant=italic
       •   Courier New:size=12

URLs

       Foot supports URL detection. But, unlike many other terminal emulators, where URLs are
       highlighted when they are hovered and opened by clicking on them, foot uses a keyboard
       driven approach.

       Pressing ctrl+shift+u enters “URL mode”, where all currently visible URLs are underlined,
       and is associated with a “jump-label”. The jump-label indicates the key sequence (e.g.
       ”AF”) to use to activate the URL.

       The key binding can, of course, be customized, like all other key bindings in foot. See
       show-urls-launch and show-urls-copy in foot.ini(5).

       show-urls-launch by default opens the URL with xdg-open. This can be changed with the url-
       launch option.

       show-urls-copy is an alternative to show-urls-launch, that changes what activating a URL
       does; instead of opening it, it copies it to the clipboard. It is unbound by default.

       Jump label colors, the URL underline color, and the letters used in the jump label key
       sequences can be configured.

ALT/META CHARACTERS

       By default, foot prefixes meta characters with ESC. This corresponds to XTerm's
       metaSendsEscape option set to true.

       This can be disabled programmatically with E[?1036l (and enabled again with E[?1036h).

       When disabled, foot will instead set the 8:th bit of meta character and then UTF-8 encode
       it. This corresponds to XTerm's eightBitMeta option set to true.

       This can also be disabled programmatically with rmm (Reset Meta Mode, E[?1034l), and
       enabled again with smm (Set Meta Mode, E[?1034h).

BACKSPACE

       Foot transmits DEL (^?) on backspace. This corresponds to XTerm's backarrowKey option set
       to false, and to DECBKM being reset.

       To instead transmit BS (^H), press ctrl+backspace.

       Note that foot does not implement DECBKM, and that the behavior described above cannot be
       changed.

       Finally, pressing alt will prefix the transmitted byte with ESC.

KEYPAD

       By default, Num Lock overrides the run-time configuration keypad mode; when active, the
       keypad is always considered to be in numerical mode. This corresponds to XTerm's numLock
       option set to true.

       In this mode, the keypad keys always sends either numbers (Num Lock is active) or cursor
       movement keys (up, down, left, right, page up, page down etc).

       This can be disabled programmatically with E[?1035l (and enabled again with E[?1035h).

       When disabled, the keypad sends custom escape sequences instead of numbers, when in
       application mode.

CONFIGURATION

       foot will search for a configuration file in the following locations, in this order:

           •   XDG_CONFIG_HOME/foot/foot.ini (defaulting to $HOME/.config/foot/foot.ini if unset)
           •   XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/foot/foot.ini (defaulting to /etc/xdg/foot/foot.ini if unset)

       An example configuration file containing all options with their default value commented
       out will usually be installed to /etc/xdg/foot/foot.ini.

       For more information, see foot.ini(5).

SHELL INTEGRATION

   Current working directory
       New foot terminal instances (bound to ctrl+shift+n by default) will open in the current
       working directory, if the shell in the “parent” terminal reports directory changes.

       This is done with the OSC-7 escape sequence. Most shells can be scripted to do this, if
       they do not support it natively. See the wiki (https://codeberg.org/dnkl/foot/wiki#user-
       content-spawning-new-terminal-instances-in-the-current-working-directory) for details.

   Jumping between prompts
       Foot can move the current viewport to focus prompts of already executed commands (bound to
       ctrl+shift+z/x by default).

       For this to work, the shell needs to emit an OSC-133;A (\E]133;A\E\\) sequence before each
       prompt.

       In zsh, one way to do this is to add a precmd hook:

           precmd() {
               print -Pn "\e]133;A\e\\"
           }

       See the wiki (https://codeberg.org/dnkl/foot/wiki#user-content-jumping-between-prompts)
       for details, and examples for other shells.

TERMINFO

       Client applications use the terminfo identifier specified by the environment variable TERM
       (set by foot) to determine terminal capabilities.

       Foot has two terminfo definitions: foot and foot-direct, with foot being the default.

       The difference between the two is in the number of colors they describe; foot describes
       256 colors and foot-direct 16.7 million colors (24-bit truecolor).

       Note that using the foot terminfo does not limit the number of usable colors to 256;
       applications can still use 24-bit RGB colors. In fact, most applications work best with
       foot (including 24-bit colors). Using *-direct terminfo entries has been known to crash
       some ncurses applications even.

       There are however applications that need a *-direct terminfo entry for 24-bit support.
       Emacs is one such example.

       While using either foot or foot-direct is strongly recommended, it is possible to use e.g.
       xterm-256color as well. This can be useful when remoting to a system where foot's terminfo
       entries cannot easily be installed.

       Note that terminfo entries can be installed in the user's home directory. I.e. if you do
       not have root access, or if there is no distro package for foot's terminfo entries, you
       can install foot's terminfo entries manually, by copying foot and foot-direct to
       ~/.terminfo/f/.

XTGETTCAP

       XTGETTCAP is an escape sequence initially introduced by XTerm, and also implemented (and
       extended, to some degree) by Kitty.

       It allows querying the terminal for terminfo classic, file-based, terminfo definition. For
       example, if all applications used this feature, you would no longer have to install foot’s
       terminfo on remote hosts you SSH into.

       XTerm’s implementation (as of XTerm-370) only supports querying key (as in keyboard keys)
       capabilities, and three custom capabilities:

       •   TN - terminal name
       •   Co -  number of colors (alias for the colors capability)
       •   RGB - number of bits per color channel (different semantics from the RGB capability in
           file-based terminfo definitions!).

       Kitty has extended this, and also supports querying all integer and string capabilities.

       Foot supports this, and extends it even further, to also include boolean capabilities.
       This means foot’s entire terminfo can be queried via XTGETTCAP.

       Note that both Kitty and foot handles responses to multi-capability queries slightly
       differently, compared to XTerm.

       XTerm will send a single DCS reply, with ;-separated capability/value pairs. There are a
       couple of issues with this:

       •   The success/fail flag in the beginning of the response is always 1 (success), unless
           the very first queried capability is invalid.
       •   XTerm will not respond at all to an invalid capability, unless it’s the first one in
           the XTGETTCAP query.
       •   XTerm will end the response at the first invalid capability.

       In other words, if you send a large multi-capability query, you will only get responses up
       to, but not including, the first invalid capability. All subsequent capabilities will be
       dropped.

       Kitty and foot on the other hand, send one DCS response for each capability in the multi
       query. This allows us to send a proper success/fail flag for each queried capability.
       Responses for all queried capabilities are always sent. No queries are ever dropped.

EXIT STATUS

       Foot will exit with code 230 if there is a failure in foot itself.

       In all other cases, the exit code is that of the client application (i.e. the shell).

ENVIRONMENT

   Variables used by foot
       SHELL
           The default child process to run, when no command argument is specified and the shell
           option in foot.ini(5) is not set.

       HOME
           Used to determine the location of the configuration file, see foot.ini(5) for details.

       XDG_CONFIG_HOME
           Used to determine the location of the configuration file, see foot.ini(5) for details.

       XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
           Used to determine the location of the configuration file, see foot.ini(5) for details.

       XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
           Used to construct the default PATH for the --server option, when no explicit argument
           is given (see above).

       WAYLAND_DISPLAY
           Used to construct the default PATH for the --server option, when no explicit argument
           is given (see above).

       XCURSOR_THEME
           The name of the Xcursor(3) theme to use for pointers (typically set by the Wayland
           compositor).

       XCURSOR_SIZE
           The size to use for Xcursor(3) pointers (typically set by the Wayland compositor).

   Variables set in the child process
       TERM
           terminfo/termcap identifier. This is used by client applications to determine which
           capabilities a terminal supports. The value is set according to either the --term
           command-line option or the term config option in foot.ini(5).

       COLORTERM
           This variable is set to truecolor, to indicate to client applications that 24-bit RGB
           colors are supported.

       In addition to the variables listed above, custom environment variables may be defined in
       foot.ini(5).

BUGS

       Please report bugs to https://codeberg.org/dnkl/foot/issues

       Before you open a new issue, please search existing bug reports, both open and closed
       ones. Chances are someone else has already reported the same issue.

       The report should contain the following:

       •   Foot version (foot --version).
       •   Log output from foot (start foot from another terminal).
       •   Which Wayland compositor (and version) you are running.
       •   If reporting a crash, please try to provide a bt full backtrace with symbols.
       •   Steps to reproduce. The more details the better.

IRC

       #foot on irc.libera.chat

SEE ALSO

       foot.ini(5), footclient(1)

                                            2022-08-31                                    foot(1)