.TH LOOKING-GLASS-CLIENT 1 "June 04, 2018" .\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage. .SH NAME looking-glass-client \- Low latency KVM FrameRelay implementation .SH SYNOPSIS \fBlooking-glass-client\fP [\fIOPTIONS\fP] .SH DESCRIPTION LookingGlass enables you to use shared memory to pass rendered frames from a virtual machine back to the host system. A LookingGlass Host implementation is required to run on the guest virtual machine. It is recommended that the client and host versions match. .SH OPTIONS .TP .BI -h Print out this help .TP .BI -C\ \fIPATH\fP Specify an additional configuration file to load .TP .BI -f\ \fIPATH\fP Specify the path to the shared memory file [default: /dev/shm/looking-glass] .TP .BI -L\ \fISIZE\fP Specify the size in MB of the shared memory file (0 = detect) [default: 0] .TP .BI -s Disable spice client .TP .BI -c\ \fIHOST\fP Specify the spice host or UNIX socket [default: 127.0.0.1] .TP .BI -p\ \fIPORT\fP Specify the spice port or 0 for UNIX socket [default: 5900] .TP .BI -j Disable cursor position scaling .TP .BI -M Don't hide the host cursor .TP .BI -K Set the FPS limit [default: 200] .TP .BI -k Enable FPS display .TP .BI -g\ \fINAME\fP Force the use of a specific renderer .TP .BI -o\ \fIOPTION\fP Specify a renderer option (ie: opengl:vsync=0) Alternatively specify "list" to list all renderers and their options .TP .BI -a Auto resize the window to the guest .TP .BI -n Don't allow the window to be manually resized .TP .BI -r Don't maintain the aspect ratio .TP .BI -d Borderless mode .TP .BI -F Borderless fullscreen mode .TP .BI -x\ \fIXPOS\fP Initial window X position [default: center] .TP .BI -y\ \fIYPOS\fP Initial window Y position [default: center] .TP .BI -w\ \fIWIDTH\fP Initial window width [default: 1024] .TP .BI -b\ \fIHEIGHT\fP Initial window height [default: 768] .TP .BI -Q Ignore requests to quit (ie: Alt+F4) .TP .BI -l License information .RE .SH AUTHOR looking-glass-client is written by Geoffrey McRae (https://looking-glass.hostfission.com/) .PP This manual page was written by Lennart Weller , for the Debian project (but may be used by others).