st [-aiv] [-c class] [-f
font] [-g geometry] [-n name] [-o
iofile] [-T title] [-t title] [-l
line] [-w windowid] [[-e] command
[arguments...]]
st [-aiv] [-c class] [-f
font] [-g geometry] [-n name] [-o
iofile] [-T title] [-t title] [-w
windowid] -l line [stty_args...]
st is a simple terminal emulator.
- -a
- disable alternate screens in terminal
- -c class
- defines the window class (default $TERM).
- -f font
- defines the font to use when st is run.
- -g geometry
- defines the X11 geometry string. The form is
[=][<cols>{xX}<rows>][{+-}<xoffset>{+-}<yoffset>].
See XParseGeometry(3) for further details.
- -i
- will fixate the position given with the -g option.
- -n name
- defines the window instance name (default $TERM).
- -o iofile
- writes all the I/O to iofile. This feature is useful when recording
st sessions. A value of "-" means standard output.
- -T title
- defines the window title (default 'st').
- -t title
- defines the window title (default 'st').
- -w windowid
- embeds st within the window identified by windowid
- -l line
- use a tty line instead of a pseudo terminal. line should be
a (pseudo-)serial device (e.g. /dev/ttyS0 on Linux for serial port 0).
When this flag is given remaining arguments are used as flags for
stty(1). By default st initializes the serial line to 8 bits, no
parity, 1 stop bit and a 38400 baud rate. The speed is set by appending it
as last argument (e.g. 'st -l /dev/ttyS0 115200'). Arguments before the
last one are stty(1) flags. If you want to set odd parity on 115200
baud use for example 'st -l /dev/ttyS0 parenb parodd 115200'. Set the
number of bits by using for example 'st -l /dev/ttyS0 cs7 115200'. See
stty(1) for more arguments and cases.
- -v
- prints version information to stderr, then exits.
- -e command [
arguments ... ]
- st executes command instead of the shell. If this is used it
must be the last option on the command line, as in xterm / rxvt.
This option is only intended for compatibility, and all the remaining
arguments are used as a command even without it.
st can be customized by creating a custom config.h and
(re)compiling the source code. This keeps it fast, secure and simple.
See the LICENSE file for the authors.
See the LICENSE file for the terms of redistribution.
See the TODO file in the distribution.