.TH LCDd 8 "February 10, 2014" LCDproc "LCDproc suite" .SH NAME LCDd - LCDproc server daemon .SH SYNOPSIS .B LCDd [\fB\-hf\fP] [\fB\-c\fP \fIconfig\fP] [\fB\-d\fP \fIdriver\fP] [\fB\-i\fP \fIbool\fP] [\fB\-a\fP \fIaddr\fP] [\fB\-p\fP \fIport\fP] [\fB\-u\fP \fIuser\fP] [\fB\-w\fP \fItime\fP] [\fB\-r\fP \fIlevel\fP] [\fB\-s\fP \fIbool\fP] .SH DESCRIPTION \fBLCDd\fP is the server part of LCDproc, a daemon which listens to a certain port (normally 13666) and displays information on an LCD display. It works with several types and sizes of displays. .PP Most settings of \fBLCDd\fP are configured through its configuration file \fI/etc/LCDd.conf\fP, some of them can be overridden using command line options. Before running \fBLCDd\fP you should carefully read through that file and modify everything necessary according to your needs. Otherwise you might encounter \fBLCDd\fP not running properly on your system. .PP To make full use of \fBLCDd\fP, a client such as lcdproc(1), lcdexec(1), or lcdvc is required. .SH OPTIONS Available options are: .TP .B \-h Display help screen .TP .B \-c \fIconfig\fP Use a configuration file other than \fI/etc/LCDd.conf\fP .TP .B \-d \fIdriver\fP Specify a driver to use (output only to first), overriding the \fBDriver\fP parameter in the config file's \fB[Server]\fP section. .TP .B \-f Run in the foreground, overriding the \fBForeground\fP parameter in the config file's \fB[Server]\fP section. The default, if not specified in the config file, is to daemonize \fBLCDd\fP as it is intended to operate in the background. .TP .B \-i \fIbool\fP Tell whether the to enable (\fI1\fP) or disable (\fI0\fP) showing the LCDproc server screen in n the screen rotation, overriding \fBServerScreen\fP in the config file's \fB[Server]\fP section. .TP .B \-w \fIwaittime\fP Time to pause at each screen (in seconds), overriding the \fBWaitTime\fP parameter in the config file's \fB[Server]\fP section. .TP .B \-a \fIaddr\fP Bind to network address \fIaddr\fP, overriding the \fBBind\fP parameter in the config file's \fB[Server]\fP section. .TP .B \-p \fIport\fP Listen on port \fIport\fP for incoming connections, overriding the \fBPort\fP parameter in the config file's \fB[Server]\fP section. .TP .B \-u \fIuser\fP Run as user \fIuser\fP, overriding the \fBUser\fP parameter in the config file's \fB[Server]\fP section. .TP .B \-s \fIbool\fP Output messages to syslog (\fI1\fP) or to stdout (\fI0\fP), overriding the \fBReportToSyslog\fP parameter in the config file's \fB[Server]\fP section. .TP .B \-r \fIlevel\fP Set reporting level to \fIlevel\fP, overriding th \fBReportLevel\fP parameter in the config file's \fB[Server]\fP section. .SS SUPPORTED DRIVERS Currently supported display drivers include: .TP .B bayrad BayRAD LCD modules by EMAC Inc. .TP .B CFontz CrystalFontz CFA-632 and CFA-634 serial LCD displays .TP .B CFontzPacket CrystalFontz CFA-533, CFA-631, CFA-633 and CFA-635 serial/USB LCD displays .TP .B curses Standard video display using the (n)curses library .TP .B CwLnx serial/USB displays by Cwlinux (http://www.cwlinux.com) .TP .B ea65 VFD front panel display on Aopen XC Cube EA65 media barebone .TP .B EyeboxOne LCD display on the EyeboxOne .TP .B futaba The Futaba TOSD-5711BB VFDisplay on Elonex Artisan/Scaleo Media Centre PCs .TP .B g15 LCD display on the Logitech G15 keyboard .TP .B glcd generic driver for graphical LCDs with FreeType rendering support. This driver supports the following sub-drivers (a.k.a. \fIconnection types\fP): .RS .TP .B glcd2usb Till Harbaum's open source/open hardware GLCD2USB (http://www.harbaum.org/till/glcd2usb/) .TP .B picolcdgfx picoLCD 256x64 Sideshow graphic LCD (Mini-Box.com) .TP .B png Write out screens as PNG images .TP .B serdisplib Uses serdisplib (http://serdisplib.sourceforge.net/) for output .TP .B t6963 Toshiba T6963 based LCD displays (graphic mode) .RE .TP .B glcdlib graphical LCDs supported by graphlcd-base .TP .B glk Matrix Orbital GLK Graphic Displays .TP .B hd44780 Hitachi HD44780 LCD displays. This driver supports the following sub-drivers (a.k.a. \fIconnection types\fP): .RS .TP .B 4bit LCD 4bit-mode, connected to a PC parallel port .TP .B 8bit LCD 8bit-mode, connected to a PC parallel port .TP .B serialLpt LCD in 4bit-mode through a 4094 shift register .TP .B winamp LCD in 8bit-mode using \fIWinAmp\fP-wiring, connected to a PC parallel port .TP .B picanlcd LCD driven by a PIC-an-LCD chip/board by Dale Wheat, connected to a serial port .TP .B lcdserializer LCD driven by a PIC16C54-based piggy-back board, connected to a serial port .TP .B los-panel LCD driven by an Atmel AVR based board, connected to a serial port .TP .B ezio Portwell EZIO-100 and EZIO-300 LCD connected to a serial port (http://drivers.portwell.com/CA_Manual/EZIO/) .TP .B vdr-lcd ???, connected to a serial port .TP .B vdr-wakeup VDR-Wake module by Frank Jepsen (http://www.jepsennet.de/vdr/) .TP .B pertelian Pertelian X2040 module (http://pertelian.com/) .TP .B lis2 LIS2 from VLSystem (http://www.vlsys.co.kr), connected to USB .TP .B mplay MPlay Blast from VLSystem (http://www.vlsys.co.kr), connected to USB .TP .B usblcd LCD device from Adams IT Services (http://www.usblcd.de/) .TP .B bwctusb USB-to-HD44780 converter by BWCT (http://www.bwct.de) .TP .B lcd2usb Till Harbaum's open source/open hardware LCD2USB (http://www.harbaum.org/till/lcd2usb/) .TP .B usbtiny Devices based on Dick Streefland's USBtiny firmware .TP .B uss720 USS-720 USB-to-IEEE 1284 Bridge (Belkin F5U002 USB Parallel Printer Adapters) .TP .B usb4all Sprut's open source / open hardware USB-4-all (http://www.sprut.de/) .TP .B ftdi USB connection via a FTDI FT2232D chip in bitbang mode .TP .B i2c LCD in 4-bit mode driven by PCF8574(A) / PCA9554(A), connected via I2C bus .TP .B piplate Adafruit RGB Positive 16x2 LCD+Keypad for Raspberry Pi .TP .B spi LCD with KS0073 or equivalent in serial mode, connected via SPI bus .TP .B pifacecad PiFace Control and Display for the Raspberry Pi (http://www.piface.org.uk/) .TP .B ethlcd TCP connection using open source/open hardware ethlcd (http://manio.skyboo.net/ethlcd/) .TP .B raspberrypi LCD driven by the GPIO pins of a Raspberry Pi .TP .B gpio LCD connection via GPIO pins controlled by the linux sysfs interface .RE .TP .B i2500vfd 140x32 pixel VFD Display of the Intra2net Intranator 2500 appliance .TP .B icp_a106 ICP Peripheral Communication Protocol alarm/LCD board used in QNAP devices and 19" rack cases made by ICP .TP .B imon iMON IR/VFD modules in cases by Soundgraph/Ahanix/Silverstone/Uneed/Accent .TP .B imonlcd iMON IR/LCD modules in cases by Soundgraph/Ahanix/Silverstone/Uneed/Accent/Antec .TP .B irtrans IRTrans IR/VFD modules in cases by Ahanix (e.g. MCE303) and possibly others May require irserver (http://www.irtrans.de/en/download/linux.php) to be running for connectivity. .TP .B IOWarrior Code Mercenaries IOWarrior .TP .B irman IrMan infrared (input) .TP .B joy Joystick driver (input) .TP .B lb216 LB216 LCD displays .TP .B lcdm001 kernelconcepts.de 20x4 serial LCD displays .TP .B lcterm serial LCD terminal from Helmut Neumark Elektronik (http://www.neumark.de) .TP .B linux_input Linux event devices (input) .TP .B lirc Infrared (input) .TP .B lis L.I.S MCE 2005 20x2 VFD (http://vlsys.co.kr) .TP .B MD8800 VFD displays in Medion MD8800 PCs .TP .B mdm166a Futuba MDM166A displays .TP .B ms6931 MSI-6931 displays in 1U rack servers by MSI .TP .B mtc_s16209x MTC_S16209x LCD displays by Microtips Technology Inc .TP .B MtxOrb Matrix Orbital displays (except Matrix Orbital GLK displays) .TP .B mx5000 LCD display on the Logitech MX5000 keyboard .TP .B NoritakeVFD Noritake VFD Device CU20045SCPB-T28A .TP .B Olimex_MOD_LCD1x9 Olimex MOD-LCD1x9 14 segment display .TP .B rawserial Dumps the entire framebuffer to the serial port at a configurable rate. .TP .B picolcd Mini-box.com USB LCD (PicoLCD 20x4 & picoLCD 20x2) .TP .B pyramid LCD displays from Pyramid (http://www.pyramid.de) .TP .B sdeclcd Watchguard Firebox LCD display based on SDEC LMC-S2D20 (http://www.sdec.com.tw) .TP .B sed1330 SED1330/SED1335 (aka S1D13300/S1D13305) based graphical displays .TP .B sed1520 122x32 pixel graphic displays based on SED1520 controllers .TP .B serialPOS Driver for Point Of Sale ("POS") devices using various protocols (currently AEDEX only) .TP .B serialVFD Text VFDs of various manufacturers, see LCDproc user-documentation for further details. .TP .B shuttleVFD Shuttle VFD (USB-based) .TP .B sli Wirz SLI driver (unknown) .TP .B stv5730 STV5730A on-screen display chip .TP .B SureElec LCD devices from SURE electronics (http://www.sureelectronics.net) .TP .B svga VGA monitors using svgalib .TP .B t6963 Toshiba T6963 based LCD displays (text mode) .TP .B text Standard "hard-copy" text display .TP .B tyan LCD module in Tyan Barebone GS series .TP .B ula200 ULA-200 device from ELV (http://www.elv.de) .TP .B vlsys_m428 VFD/IR combination in case MonCaso 320 from Moneual .TP .B yard2 yard2 LCD module .TP .B xosd On Screen Display on X11 .PP Multiple drivers can be used simultaneously; thus, for example, a Matrix Orbital display (MtxOrb driver) can be combined with an infrared driver (irmanin driver). .SH INVOCATION .RS .I LCDd -d MtxOrb -d joy .RE The invocation example above will start \fBLCDd\fP reading its configuration from the default configuration file \fI/etc/LCDd.conf\fP but overriding the drivers specified therein with the Matrix Orbital driver and the Joystick input driver. .SH LCDPROC CLIENT-SERVER PROTOCOL There is a basic sequence: .TP 1. Open a TCP connection to the LCDd server port (usually 13666). .TP 2. Say "hello" .TP 3. The server will return some information on the type of display available. .TP 4. Define (and use) a new screen and its widgets. .TP 5. Close the socket when done displaying data. .PP .SS CLIENT COMMANDS There are many commands for the client to send to the LCDd server: .TP .B hello This starts a client-server session with the LCDd server; the server will return a data string detailing the type of display and its size. .TP .B client_set -name \fIname\fP Set the client's name. .TP .B screen_add \fI#id\fP Add a new screen to the display. .TP .B screen_del \fI#id\fP Remove a screen from the display. .TP .B screen_set \fI#id\fP [\fB-name\fI "name"\fP] [\fB-wid\fI width\fP] [\fB-hgt\fI height\fP] [\fB-priority\fI prio\fP] [\fB-duration\fI int\fP] [\fB-timeout\fI int\fP] [\fB-heartbeat\fI mode\fP] [\fB-backlight\fI mode\fP] [\fB-cursor\fI mode\fP] [\fB-cursor_x\fI xpos\fP] [\fB-cursor_y\fI ypos\fP] Initialize a screen, or reset its data. .TP .B widget_add \fI#screen #id type\fR [\fB-in \fI#frame\fR] Add a widget of type \fItype\fP to screen \fI#screen\fR. .TP .B widget_del \fI#screen #id\fR Delete widget \fI#id\fR from screen \fI#screen\fR. .TP .B widget_set \fI#screen #id data\fR Set the data used to define a particular widget \fI#id\fR on screen \fI#screen\fR. .SS HEARTBEAT MODES Valid heartbeat mode values (for the \fBscreen_set\fR command) are: .TP .B on Display pulsing heart symbol. .TP .B off No heartbeat display. .TP .B open Use client's heartbeat setting. This is the default. .SS BACKLIGHT MODES Valid backlight mode values (for the \fBscreen_set\fR command) are: .TP .B on Turn backlight on. .TP .B off Turn backlight off .TP .B toggle Turn backlight off when it is on and vice versa. .TP .B open Use client's backlight setting. This is the default. .TP .B blink Blinking backlight .TP .B flash Flashing blacklight .SS Priorities Valid priority settings (used in the \fBscreen_set\fR command) are as follows: .TP .B input The client is doing interactive input. .TP .B alert The screen has an important message for the user. .TP .B foreground an active client .TP .B info Normal info screen, default priority. .TP .B background The screen is only visible when no normal info screens exists. .TP .B hidden The screen will never be visible. .PP For compatibility with older versions of clients a mapping of numeric priority values is also supported: .TP .B 1 - 64 foreground .TP .B 65 - 192 normal .TP .B 193 - (infinity) background .PP An example of how to properly use priorities is as follows: .PP Imagine you're making an mp3 player for lcdproc. When the song changes, it's nice to display the new name immediately. So, you could set your screen's priority to \fBforeground\fP, wait for the server to display (or ignore) your screen, then set the screen back to \fBnormal\fP. This would cause the mp3 screen to show up as soon as the one on screen was finished, then return to normal priority afterward. .PP Or, let's say your client monitors the health of hospital patients. If one of the patients has a heart attack, you could set the screen priority to \fBalert\fP, and it would be displayed immediately. It wouldn't even wait for the previous screen to finish. Also, the display would stay on screen most of the time until the user did something about it. .SS WIDGET TYPES Widgets can be any of the following: .TP .B string A text string to display (as is). .TP .B hbar A horizontal bar graph. .TP .B vbar A vertical bar graph. .TP .B title A title displayed across the top of the display, within a banner. .TP .B icon A graphic icon. .TP .B scroller A scrolling text display, scrolling either horizontally or vertically. .TP .B frame A \fIcontainer\fR to contain other widgets, permitting them to be referred to as a single unit. A widget is put inside a frame by using the \-in \fI#id\fR parameter, where \fI#id\fR refers to the id of the frame. .TP .B num Displays a large decimal digit .PP Widgets are drawn on the screen in the order they are created. .SS SETTING WIDGET DATA In the \fBwidget_set\fR command, the \fIdata\fR argument depends on which widget is being set. Each widget takes a particular set of arguments which defines its form and behavior: .TP .B string \fIx y text\fP Displays \fItext\fP at position (\fIx\fP,\fIy\fP). .TP .B title \fItext Uses \fItext\fP as title to display. .TP .B hbar \fIx y length\fP Displays a horizontal bar starting at position (\fIx\fP,\fIy\fP) that is \fIlength\fP pixels wide. .TP .B vbar \fIx y length\fP Displays a vertical bar starting at position (\fIx\fP,\fIy\fP) that is \fIlength\fP pixels high. .TP .B icon \fIx y name\fP Displays the icon \fIname\fP at position (\fIx\fP,\fIy\fP). .TP .B scroller \fIleft top right bottom direction speed text\fP The \fItext\fR defined will scroll in the direction defined. Valid directions are \fBh\fR (horizontal), \fBm\fR (marquee) and \fBv\fR (vertical). The speed defines how many "movements" (or changes) will occur per frame. A positive number indicates frames per movement; a negative number indicates movements per frame. .TP .B frame \fIleft top right bottom wid hgt dir speed\fP Frames define a visible "box" on screen, from the (\fIleft\fR, \fItop\fR) corner to the (\fIright\fR, \fIbottom\fR) corner. The actual data may be bigger, and is defined as \fIwid\fR (width) by \fIhgt\fR (height); if it is bigger, then the frame will scroll in the direction (\fIdir\fR) and \fIspeed\fR defined. .TP .B num \fIx int\fP Displays large decimal digit \fIint\fP at the horizontal position \fIx\fP, which is a normal character x coordinate on the display. The special value 10 for \fIint\fP displays a colon. .SH BUGS If \fBLCDd\fP seems not to work as expected, try to run it in the foreground with reporting level set to maximum and reporting to stderr. This can be achieved without changes to the config file by using the command line: .RS .I LCDd -f -r 5 -s 0 .RE .SH FILES \fB/etc/LCDd.conf\fR, LCDd's default configuration file .SH SEE ALSO lcdproc-config(5), lcdproc(1), lcdexec(1) .SH AUTHOR Many people have contributed to LCDd. See the \fICREDITS\fP file for more details. .PP All questions should be sent to the lcdproc mailing list. The mailing list, and the newest version of LCDproc, should be available from here: .PP http://www.lcdproc.org/ .SH LEGAL STUFF The lcdproc package is released as "WorksForMe-Ware". In other words, it is free, kinda neat, and we don't guarantee that it will do anything in particular on any machine except the ones it was developed on. .PP It is technically released under the GNU GPL license (you should have received the file, "COPYING", with LCDproc) (also, look on http://www.fsf.org/ for more information), so you can distribute and use it for free -- but you must make the source code freely available to anyone who wants it. .PP For any sort of real legal information, read the GNU GPL (GNU General Public License). It's worth reading.