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Xterm

xterm
A sample Xterm, running the BASH shell, showing a listing of /etc.
A sample xterm, running the Bash shell, showing a listing of /etc.
Original author(s) Mark Vandevoorde
Developer(s) Thomas Dickey
Initial release 1984; 33 years ago (1984)
Stable release
Patch #327 / October 7, 2016; 6 months ago (2016-10-07)
Repository invisible-island.net/datafiles/release/xterm.tar.gz
Operating system X Window System
Type Terminal emulator
License MIT/X Consortium License
Website invisible-island.net/xterm/

In computing, xterm is the standard terminal emulator for the X Window System. A user can have many different invocations of xterm running at once on the same display, each of which provides independent input/output for the process running in it (normally the process is a Unix shell).

xterm originated prior to the X Window System. It was originally written as a stand-alone terminal emulator for the VAXStation 100 (VS100) by Mark Vandevoorde, a student of Jim Gettys, in the summer of 1984, when work on X started. It rapidly became clear that it would be more useful as part of X than as a standalone program, so it was retargeted to X. As Gettys tells the story, "part of why xterm's internals are so horrifying is that it was originally intended that a single process be able to drive multiple VS100 displays."

After many years as part of the X reference implementation, around 1996 the main line of development then shifted to XFree86 (which itself forked from X11R6.3), and it is now actively maintained by Thomas Dickey.

Many xterm variants are also available. Most terminal emulators for X started as variations on xterm.

It emulates the VT220 and Tektronix 4010, and has experimental support for ReGIS.

As with most X applications, xterm can be customized via global X resources files (e.g. /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/XTerm), per-user resource files (e.g. ~/XTerm, ~/.Xresources), or command-line arguments. Most of the command-line options correspond to resource settings, as noted in the manual page.

While the name of the program is xterm, the X resource class is XTerm. The uxterm script overrides this, using the UXTerm resource class.


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