Display tab

The options are:

Backing store

Select to retain the contents of unmapped or obscured windows.

NOTE:There is a trade-off between increased network traffic and memory on your local computer — by saving the contents of a window, the server can avoid requests over the network to repaint the window. However, selecting this option may increase the memory requirements of the server.

 

Disabled

Disable backing store.

 

By request

Use backing store when a client requests it.

 

By request with save unders

Use backing store when a client requests it, and enable save unders Save unders is a window attribute that instructs the X server to preserve the area under a pop-up window, and repaint it when the pop-up window is closed. This option decreases the network traffic when menus or other pop-up windows are displayed. (the default).

Clients that explicitly disable backing store can still receive save under support.

 

When mapped

Use backing store whenever the window is mapped and the client does not specify a backing store window attribute. In X terminology, a window is "mapped" when it is eligible for display on the screen.

This setting, which is the recommended setting for low bandwidth sessions, reduces network traffic. However, it may also require more memory than the By request setting.

 

When mapped with save unders

Enable backing store as for When mapped, and enable save unders Save unders is a window attribute that instructs the X server to preserve the area under a pop-up window, and repaint it when the pop-up window is closed. This option decreases the network traffic when menus or other pop-up windows are displayed. .

Clients that explicitly disable backing store can still receive save under support.

Selection bound to clipboard

Determines which X selection atom "Atom" is a generic term for an element of information in the X Window System. A selection is a type of atom. to link to the native clipboard.

Selections are the primary mechanism for the exchange of information between X clients (for example, copying and pasting between windows).

A selection in an X client is associated with a selection atom. The X client chooses the selection atom to use. If the X client chooses the selection atom that matches the atom in Selection bound to clipboard, then the selection will be copied to the native clipboard.

The value selected in the Selection bound to clipboard list defines which X selection atom (PRIMARY, SECONDARY, or CLIPBOARD) or cut buffer (CUT_BUFFER<n>) is linked to the native clipboard.

NOTE:If you're using WordPerfect for Linux, set this option to CUT_BUFFER0. With the HP Visual Editor (ved), the option must be set to anything except PRIMARY.

 

PRIMARY

Choose PRIMARY (the default) if your X client uses the PRIMARY atom to store a text selection. The selection text is placed on the native clipboard. The data stays on the native clipboard until another selection is made.

 

SECONDARY

When the X client uses the SECONDARY atom to store a text selection, the selection is placed on the native clipboard. The data stays on the native clipboard until another selection is made.

 

CLIPBOARD

When the X client uses the X clipboard to store a text selection, the selection is placed on the native clipboard. The data stays on the native clipboard until another selection is made.

Permit X11R3 bugs

Select to cause Reflection X to emulate X11R3 server bugs (enabling X11R3 clients to run). If you are running xtest, select this option; otherwise, misleading xtest "failures" appear. This option is cleared by default.

Require display number

When cleared (the default), Reflection X attempts to use 0 (zero) as the display number. If using 0 fails, it attempts to use another display number.

When selected, Reflection X uses only the display number that is listed, whether it's 0 or another number you specify. If the X client application to which you are connecting requires a specific display number, enter it here. If a required display number is not available, the session will not start.

Screen Definition

Each X server instance can have one or more X screens associated with it, and each screen can be configured differently. Use the options in the Screen Definition table to customize each X screen.

Monitor

The monitor on which you would like Reflection to place an X screen.

To span two or more monitors with a single X screen, select All.

If your display encompasses more than one monitor, you can move a screen from the monitor where it initialized to another monitor in your display. However, if the X server is reset, the screen returns to its initial position rather than to its most recent one.

Default Visual Type

The visual type and pixel depth of the X terminal desktop. X clients often inherit this visual type on windows that they create.

 

<Best Visual>

Allow Reflection X to choose the most appropriate default visual type, based on the display adapter setting for the specified monitor.

For example, if the monitor's display adapter is configured for 256 colors, Reflection chooses PseudoColor, 8-bit depth. If the display adapter is configured for 24- or 32-bit True Color, Reflection chooses TrueColor, 24-bit depth. If the display adapter is configured in a way that doesn't correspond to any supported X visual, Reflection defaults to True Color, 24-bit depth.

 

PseudoColor, 8-bit depth

Specify a graphics card with a pixel depth of 8 bits (256 colors). This visual type is supported on displays with changeable hardware color maps.

An X client application can select exactly the color it wants — as long as your display hardware is capable of displaying it — and can change the color at will.

Also see the option for Set maximum colormaps to 1.

 

TrueColor, 24-bit depth

Give a pixel consisting of RGB subfields of 8 bits each. The color intensity of each subfield ramps from 0 (fully off) to 255 (fully on), and cannot be changed.

If you are running X clients that try to change colors, you cannot useTrueColor, 24-bit depth as a color model; select PseudoColor, 8-bit depth instead. X clients in this category include xfishtank and ico2 (with colors specified). See Display Problems in the Troubleshooting section for more information.

Virtual Width (Pixels)

The width of the virtual screen (in pixels).

Width and height dimensions can exceed the actual size of your display, creating a virtual screen for the X server root window.

Virtual Height (Pixels)

The height of the virtual screen (in pixels).

Width and height dimensions can exceed the actual size of your display, creating a virtual screen for the X server root window.

Width (mm)

The physical width (in millimeters) of the screen.

This number is provided to X clients when they query the X server for the screen size. It does not affect the way the server operates. If both the width and height are 0, Reflection X obtains the settings from your screen's current pixel resolution and density (dots per inch).

Height (mm)

The physical height (in millimeters) of the screen.

This number is provided to X clients when they query the X server for the screen size. It does not affect the way the server operates. If both the width and height are 0, Reflection X obtains the settings from your screen's current pixel resolution and density (dots per inch).

Black and White Pixels

Sets the pixel value for black and white in dynamic, indexed color maps such as PseudoColor, 8-bit.

The default is Black=0; > White=255.

NOTE:For static or direct color maps, such asTrueColor, 24-bit, the black pixel value is always 0 and the white pixel is always 255 (or the maximum color intensity).

Allocate B&W in Client Maps

Allocates black and white pixels as shared (read-only) when an X client's color map entry is created.

If this option is disabled, black and white pixels are not allocated at all, and their colors could subsequently be changed by any X client. However, colors are still associated as specified in the Black and White Pixels settings.

Linear Visuals

Sets an RGB (gamma) correction value on the X terminal window, which makes it possible for a client to interpret colors more correctly given the hardware installed on the computer.

Single Depth Visuals

Forces the X server to advertise only visuals that have the same depth as the depth of the visual specified for Default Visual Type.

Also see the option for Set maximum colormaps to 1.

Hide Title Bar

Causes the Reflection X screen to fill the physical computer screen such that no title bar is visible (and the Reflection X menu in the upper-left corner of the title bar cannot be accessed). To minimize the X screen, click Minimize from the Reflection X context menu (to access this menu, right-click the client icon from the taskbar).

Micro Focus strongly recommends to select this option when running GNOME 3 desktop sessions with the Monitor attribute "All" drop-down item selected. This allows Reflection to effectively use the unique characteristics of each monitor. For example, this allows monitors with different resolutions to be used seamlessly together.

Colors

Color scheme

Lists your color schemes, including all of the schemes you have created or imported. In X Manager for Domains the list also includes all of the public schemes created by the administrator(s). Color schemes translate string color names requested by clients into red, green, blue (RGB) values. If a client requests colors by name, the color scheme determines which colors are displayed by the X server. By changing the color scheme, you can change the displayed colors.

NOTE:Not all X clients request colors by name — many clients request colors by RGB value or other methods, instead of specifying a color name. Changing the color scheme changes the colors the X server displays only when clients request colors by name.

If you change a color scheme that is in use by a running session, the changes do not affect the session until it is restarted.

Edit

Opens the Color Schemes dialog box, from which you can change, create, or import a color scheme.

You cannot modify the Default color scheme. To create an editable color scheme, click Edit, then Clone.

Administrators can also create color schemes from the Administrative Console's Domain Definitions tab.

For additional information, see Customize a Color Scheme.

Set maximum colormaps to 1

Forces the maximum number of colormaps advertised to clients to be the same as the minimum number of colormaps. Some poorly written X clients expect this behavior from the X server.

The associated X clients will be told that a maximum of one colormap is available and, since one colormap will be installed at a time, the client's colors will be rendered by the most recently installed colormap (not necessarily the colormap associated with the window).

You should also set the following options in the Screen Definition table:

  • Set Default Visual Type to PseudoColor, 8-bit depth

  • Enable Single Depth Visuals

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