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===============================================================================
vtcol
===============================================================================
*******************************************************************************
color schemes for the Linux™ console
*******************************************************************************
:Date: 2021-12-11
:Version: 0.42.6
:Manual section: 1
:Manual group: console
Synopsis
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
**vtcol** [--help] [--version] [--verbose] <command> [<args>]
Description
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
**vtcol** manipulates and inspects the color map of the Linux console
using ``ioctl_console(2)`` syscalls.
vtcol commands
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
``vtcol`` actions are grouped into subcommands depending on the functionality
they operate on:
**help**
Prints this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
**colors**
Inspect and manipulate the console palette.
**leds**
Keyboad LED state.
vtcol colors commands
#####################
**set**
Set the scheme for the current terminal with ``PIO_CMAP``. ::
$ vtcol colors set solarized
**list**
List predefined schemes. ::
$ vtcol colors list
4 color schemes available:
* solarized
* solarized_light
* default
* phosphor
These are only the schemes built into the ``vtcol`` binary. Any
other scheme can be loaded using the ``--file`` argument.
**dump**
Print the palette of the specified scheme in more or less human readable
representation.
**get**
Get the current color scheme with ``GIO_CMAP``. The result is matched
against the builtin schemes; if a scheme matches, only its preferred name
is printed (e. g. ``solarized_light``). ::
$ vtcol colors get
solarized
Otherwise the palette is printed as with the ``dump`` subcommand.
**toggle**
Like ``vtcol colors set`` but supports two ``SCHEME`` arguments.
First the active scheme is checked against *the first positional argument*;
if there is a match, the scheme specified by the *second argument* will be
loaded, otherwise the first one. The effect is that in repeated invocations
of the same command the scheme is toggled between the two arguments. E. g.
use: ::
$ vtcol colors toggle solarized solarized_light
to cycle the console palette between “dark mode” and “light mode”.
**fade**
Transition between two color schemes with a fading effect. If no starting
color scheme is specified, the current one is used. ::
$ vtcol colors fade --ms 1337 --from solarized --to solarized_light
vtcol leds commands
###################
**get**
Get the current led state. Example: ::
$ vtcol leds get
caps: false, num: false, scroll: false
**set**
.. TODO:: unimplemented!()
colors set options
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
::
vtcol colors set [--file FILE]
vtcol colors set [SCHEME]
``SCHEME``
Load the predefined color scheme *SCHEME*. For a list of options, use
``vtcol colors list``. Alternatively, ``-`` can be used to specify *stdin*.
``-f FILE, --file FILE``
Load color scheme from *FILE* which can be a filesystem path or the special
argument ``-`` to specify *stdin*.
Mutually exclusive with *SCHEME*.
colors toggle options
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
`vtcol colors toggle ONE TWO``
``ONE``
First scheme to alternate between. Will be loaded *unless* it is the active
scheme.
``TWO``
Second scheme to alternate between. Will be loaded if *ONE* is the active
scheme.
colors fade options
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
::
vtcol colors fade [--clear] [--frequency HZ] [--ms MS]
[--from START] --to END
``END``
The scheme to transition to. After completion this will remain the active
scheme of the current console.
``START``
Load the predefined color scheme *SCHEME* before starting the transition.
``-f HZ, --frequency HZ``
Screen update rate in ``HZ / s``.
``-m MS, --ms MS``
Duration of the transition in milliseconds.
``-c, --clear``
Whether to clear the console after each update step. This causes the
background color to be applied to the entire screen and not just the parts
that changed for a more uniform transition. The downside of ``--clear`` is
that all text is erased as well.
Scheme file syntax overview
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
.. TODO:: unimplemented!()
Examples
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Get the current color scheme: ::
$ vtcol colors get
2. Turn your screen into an 80s style monochrome lookalike: ::
$ vtcol colors set phosphor
3. Reset console to default colors: ::
$ vtcol colors set default
4. Set color scheme from stdin: ::
$ <./schemes/zebra vtcol colors set -
5. List available builtin schemes: ::
$ vtcol colors list
6. Cycle between night mode and day mode: ::
$ vtcol colors toggle solarized solarized_light
7. Transition from dark to light scheme while dumping some data for effect: ::
$ vtcol colors fade -m 1500 -f solarized -t solarized_light & dmesg
8. Dump current scheme in binary form: ::
$ vtcol colors get --base64
Copyright
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright: 2015-2021 Philipp Gesang
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation, either version 3 of the License.
See also
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
**ioctl_console**\(2), **tty**\(4)
The ``setcolors`` utility should be considered prior art, visit
`<https://github.com/EvanPurkhiser/linux-vt-setcolors>`.
Notes
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Upstream resides at `<https://gitlab.com/phgsgng/vtcol>`.
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