Provided by: gwyddion_2.67-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       gwyddion - SPM data visualization and analysis

SYNOPSIS

       gwyddion [OPTION...] [FILE...]

DESCRIPTION

       Gwyddion is a graphical SPM (Scanning Probe Microscope) data visualization and analysis
       program, using Gtk+.

OPTIONS

       The program accepts all standard Gtk+, Gdk, and GtkGLExt options like --display or --sync.
       Please see documentation of these packages for description of toolkit options.

       The behaviour of the remote control options --remote-* is undefined when more than one
       instance of Gwyddion is running on the display. They can choose an arbitrary instance to
       communicate to. The last remote control option given (including --new-instance) overrides
       all preceding ones.

       If a directory is given as FILE argument the program opens a file chooser in this
       directory.

       Gwyddion options:

       --help
           Prints a brief help and terminates.

       --version
           Prints version information and terminates.

       --no-splash
           Disables splash screen on program startup.

       --remote-new
           Opens files given on the command line in an already running instance of Gwyddion on
           the display. Runs a new instance if none is running.

           This is probably the most useful remote control option. File type associations are
           usually installed to run Gwyddion with this option.

       --remote-existing
           Opens files given on the command line in an already running instance of Gwyddion on
           the display. Fails if none is running.

           This is useful if you want to handle the case of Gwyddion not running differently than
           by starting it.

       --remote-query
           Succeeds if an instance of Gwyddion is already running on the display and prints its
           instance identifier. Fails if none is running.

           The instance identifier depends on the remote control backend in use. In some cases it
           is useful as a global window identifier, in some it is not. With libXmu this option
           prints the X11 Window, on Win32 HWND is printed, while with LibUnique the startup id
           is printed.

       --new-instance
           Runs a new instance of Gwyddion. It can also used to override preceding remote control
           options and to ensure a new instance is run when the default remote control behaviour
           is modified.

       --identify
           Instead of running the user interface and opening FILEs, it detects the file type for
           each and terminates.

           The SPM file type printed corresponds to the description shown in the list of
           supported file formats in the user guide. The file type is followed (in square
           brackets) by the name of Gwyddion file import module that would be used to load the
           file and detection score. Scores considerably lower than 100 mean that although the
           detection produced a possible file type, it is unsure about it.

           If the file type is not recognised at all, Unknown is printed as the file type. The
           program exit code is 1 if any FILE was not recognised.

       --check
           Instead of running the user interface and opening FILEs, it loads the files, performs
           a sanity check on them (printing errors to standard error output) and terminates.

       --disable-gl
           Disables OpenGL entirely, including any checks whether it is available. This option,
           of course, has any effect only if Gwyddion was built with OpenGL support and one of
           the most visible effects is that 3D view becomes unavailable. However, you may find it
           useful if you encounter a system so broken that even checking for OpenGL capabilities
           leads to X server errors. It can also help when you run Gwyddion remotely using X11
           forwarding and the start-up time seems excessively long.

       --log-to-file
           Write messages from GLib, Gtk+, Gwyddion, etc. to ~/.gwyddion/gwyddion.log or file
           given in GWYDDION_LOGFILE environment variable. This option is most useful on Unix as
           on Win32 messages are redirected to a file by default. Logging to a file and console
           are not exclusive; messages can go to both.

       --no-log-to-file
           Prevents writing messages from GLib, Gtk+, Gwyddion, etc. to a file. This is most
           useful on Win32 where messages are written to a file by default.

       --log-to-console
           Print messages from GLib, Gtk+, Gwyddion, etc. to the console. More precisely,
           debugging messages are printed to the standard output, errors and warnings to the
           standard error. On Unix messages are printed to the console by default. Logging to a
           file and console are not exclusive; messages can go to both.

       --no-log-to-file
           Disables printing messages to the console. This is most useful on Unix where messages
           are printed to the console by default.

       --disable-modules=MODULE,...
           Prevents the registration modules of given names. This is mostly useful for
           development and debugging. For instance, you might want to use --disable-modules=pygwy
           when running under Valgrind for faster startup (and possibly to avoid extra errors).

       --startup-time
           Prints wall-clock time taken by various startup (and shutdown) tasks. Useful only for
           developers and people going to complain about too slow startup.

ENVIRONMENT

       On Linux/Unix, following environment variables can be used to override compiled-in
       installation paths (MS Windows version always looks to directories relative to path where
       it was installed). Note they are intended to override system installation paths therefore
       they are not path lists, they can contain only a single path.

       GWYDDION_DATADIR
           Base data directory where resources (color gradients, OpenGL materials, ...) were
           installed. Gwyddion looks into its gwyddion subdirectory for resources.

           When it is unset, it defaults to compiled-in value of ${datadir} which is usually
           /usr/local/share.

       GWYDDION_LIBDIR
           Base library directory where modules were installed. Gwyddion looks into its
           gwyddion/modules subdirectory for modules.

           When it is unset, it defaults to compiled-in value of ${libdir} which is usually
           /usr/local/lib or /usr/local/lib64.

       GWYDDION_LIBEXECDIR
           Base lib-exec directory where plug-ins were installed. Gwyddion looks into its
           gwyddion/plugins subdirectory for plug-ins.

           When it is unset, it defaults to compiled-in value of ${libexecdir} which is usually
           /usr/local/libexec.

       GWYDDION_LOCALEDIR
           Locale data directory where message catalogs (translations) were installed.

           When it is unset, it defaults to compiled-in value of ${datadir}/locale which is
           usually /usr/local/share/locale.

       Other variables that influence Gwyddion run-time behaviour include GLib+ variables[1] and
       Gtk+ variables[2] and some Gwyddion-specific variables:

       GWYDDION_LOGFILE
           Name of file to redirect log messages to. On MS Windows, messages are always sent to a
           file as working with the terminal is cumbersome there. The default log file location,
           gwyddion.log in user's Documents and Settings, can be overridden with
           GWYDDION_LOGFILE. On Unix, messages go to the terminal by default and this environment
           variable has effect only if --log-to-file is given.

       If Gwyddion is built with OpenMP support, it utilizes parallelization (not all data
       processing methods implement parallelization, but a sizable part does). OpenMP environment
       variables such as OMP_NUM_THREADS can be used to tune it.

FILES

       ~/.gwyddion/settings
           Saved user settings and tool states. Do not edit while Gwyddion is running, it will
           overwrite it at exit.

       ~/.gwyddion/glmaterials, ~/.gwyddion/gradients, ...
           User directories with various resources (OpenGL materials, color gradients, ...).

       $GWYDDION_DATADIR/gwyddion/glmaterials, $GWYDDION_DATADIR/gwyddion/gradients ...
           The same for system-wide resources.

       ~/.gwyddion/pixmaps
           Directory to place user icons to. This is mainly useful for installation of modules to
           home.

       $GWYDDION_DATADIR/gwyddion/pixmaps,
           The same for system-wide icons.

       ~/.gwyddion/modules
           Directory to place user modules to. They should be placed into file, graph, process,
           layer, and tools subdirectories according to their kind, though this is more a
           convention than anything else.

       $GWYDDION_LIBDIR/gwyddion/modules,
           The same for system-wide modules.

       ~/.gwyddion/plugins
           Directory to place user plug-ins to. They should be placed into file and process
           subdirectories according to their kind.

       $GWYDDION_LIBEXECDIR/gwyddion/plugins,
           The same for system-wide plug-ins.

       ~/.gwyddion/pygwy
           Directory to place user python modules or scripts to.

SEE ALSO

       gwyddion-thumbnailer(1), gxsm(1)

AUTHOR

       Yeti
           Author.

NOTES

        1. GLib+ variables
           http://library.gnome.org/devel/glib/stable/glib-running.html

        2. Gtk+ variables
           http://library.gnome.org/devel/gtk/stable/gtk-running.html