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Table of Contents
viewfax - display fax files in an X11 window
viewfax [-fnluirvW24]
[-hheight] [-wwidth] [-zzoom] [-ddisplay] [-gwxh+x+y] [-bbell] [-mmemory] filename...
viewfax displays one or more fax files in an X11 window. The
input files may be either raw, single-page faxes received by a fax modem
with a program such as mgetty(1), or tiff files such as those used by hylafax.
The first (or only) page of "PC-Research"-style (DigiFAX) files produced
by the ghostscript dfaxhigh or dfaxlow drivers can also be displayed.
Input
files using any common fax encoding such as group 3 (1 and 2 dimensional)
and group 4 can be displayed.
The fax images are rendered at full resolution
and then successively scaled down by a linear factor of 2 prior to display,
until they fit on the screen. The display can be controlled interactively
using mouse and keyboard commands. The left mouse button expands the image
by a factor of two and the right button reduces it by the same factor. If
the image is bigger than the available window size, the middle mouse button
can be used to reposition it within the window. Hold down the middle button
while dragging the image to its new position.
If the mouse has a scroll-wheel
it can be used to move an oversized image vertically. With the shift key
depressed, the wheel scrolls through the pages. The shift sense is inverted
if viewfax is started with -W on the command-line.
Further interaction is
controlled by single-key commands:
- h or Help
- displays a page of help information.
Type ’q’ to return to the original document.
- p or Prior or PgUP or - or BackSpace
- displays the previous page from the command-line list.
- n or Next or PgDn
or + or space
- displays the next page from the command-line list.
- Shift HOME
- displays the first page from the command-line list.
- Shift END
- displays the
last page from the command-line list.
- z
- zoom in (same as right mouse button).
- Shift Z
- zoom out (same as left mouse button).
- u
- turns the image upside down,
which is useful if the fax was originally fed the wrong way into the machine.
- Shift U
- turns this and all following pages upside down.
- l
- turns the image
through 90 degrees, to view landscape text.
- Shift L
- turns this and all following
pages sideways.
- m
- produce a left/right mirror image of the page.
- Shift M
- mirror this and all following pages.
- cursor arrows
- reposition the displayed
image if it exceeds the window size.
- HOME
- repositions so that the top left
corner is visible.
- END
- makes the bottom right corner visible.
- Print
- if the
environment variable VIEWFAX_PRINT is defined, the current page is printed.
All pages are printed with Shift Print.
- e
- if the environment variable VIEWFAX_EDIT
is defined, the current page is passed to the editor. All input files can
be edited with Shift e.
- q
- terminates the program.
- Shift Q
- terminates the
program with non-zero exit status. Can be used to abort a shell script,
e.g. when the user is previewing an outbound fax and decides not to send
it.
viewfax is designed to "do the right thing" when given just a
filename. Special cases can be handled with the following options. (Note
that tiff-files contain a header which overrides the -f, -n, -h, -w, -l, -m, and
-u flags.)
- -f
- indicates that raw input files are fine resolution (7.7 lines/mm)
faxes. This is the default unless the filename begins with "fn". Tiff and
"PC-Research" (DigiFAX) files are self-specifying.
- -n
- indicates that raw input
files are normal resolution (3.85 lines/mm) faxes. Each fax line is duplicated
in the displayed image to give approximately equal vertical and horizontal
scales.
- -hheight
- specifies the number of fax lines. If this option is missing,
viewfax counts the number of lines in the input file.
- -wwidth
- specifies the
number of pixels in each scan-line. The default value is 1728.
- -l
- display
in landscape mode.
- -u
- turn the image upside down.
- -i
- invert pixels (black/white).
- -b
- preferred warning style: ’a’ for audible bell (console beep), ’v’ for visible
bell (flash the window), ’n’ for neither. ’v’ is the default.
- -d or -display
- use
specified X server
- -g or -geometry
- the preferred size and position of the
window, specified as widthxheight+x+y. If a position is given (x and y
values), viewfax asks the window manager to place the window there. The
initial size of the window is constrained to be at most widthxheight.
If
the window is subsequently resized due to the user zooming in or out, the
geometry is taken as a constraint on the screen area which may be used
by viewfax.
If you do not supply a geometry value, everything works fine
with ICCCM-compliant window managers like olwm, mwm, twm, and tvtwm. When
fully zoomed out the viewfax window will occupy the entire screen.
Users
of fvwm will notice that the title bar and left border are moved off screen
when viewfax repositions the window to (0,0). A workaround is to use -geometry
+5+23 when using fvwm. The proper fix would be for someone to update the
routine HandleConfigureRequest() in fvwm/events.c to correspond to the code
in twm/events.c.
- -mmemory limit
- each page is kept in memory after being fetched
and expanded, which saves time if the user returns to it in the same session.
To prevent viewfax from using all the available swap space, a limit is
placed on the total size of cached images. This defaults to 4 MBytes, enough
for about 6 typical pages. If the memory limit is exceeded, old images
are discarded and must be reloaded from disk if the user returns to them.
The operation of this mechanism is transparent apart from the occasional
delays due to reloading. The value specified on the command line can be
suffixed k or m for kilo- or megabytes.
- -r
- the bit order of the bytes in the
input file is reversed. The fax specification deals only with serial data
transmission. Modem manufacturers have to decide whether the first bit
received should be placed in the most significant or the least significant
position in a byte. The consensus is to pack most significant first, but
the -r flag is available to deal with the opposite order.
- -v
- produce some
informative messages (verbose mode).
- -zzoom
- specifies an initial zoom factor.
A full-scale fax will usually not fit on the screen. If the -z option is
not specified, viewfax scales the image by a power of 2 such that it is
fully visible at a reduced size. The user can then use the mouse buttons
(see above) to view expanded portions of the image.
- -2
- Assume that raw input
files use group 3 two dimensional coding.
- -4
- Assume that raw input files
use group 4 coding. The number of fax lines (-h option) is required in this
case.
- VIEWFAX_PRINT
- Defines a command that will print one or
more fax pages.
- VIEWFAX_EDIT
- Defines a command that will calls an editor
on one or more fax pages.
These two variables are optional. If a variable
is undefined, the corresponding keyboard command is ignored. If the variable
is defined, it should contain the name of a command or executable script
that performs the desired function. The command should process a single
page if called with a -p page-number argument. Alternatively, if can be called
with just a list of filenames, meaning that all pages should be processed.
Here is an oversimplified example of a print command. Note that it assumes
that the format is tiff and will fail when handed a raw fax file.
VIEWFAX_PRINT=printfax
/usr/local/bin/printfax:
#!/bin/sh
case "$1" in
-p) shift
dopt=‘expr $1 - 1‘
shift
tiff2ps -d ${dopt} -2 -h 11.69 -w 8.27 "$1" | lp
;;
*) tiff2ps -2 -h 11.69 -w 8.27 "$*" | lp
;;
esac
mgetty (http://alpha.greenie.net/mgetty/) controls data/fax/voice
modems.
hylafax (http://www.hylafax.org/) is a full-function fax client/server
system.
g3topbm(1) and xv(1) can be used in a pipeline to view faxes. This
will usually be slower than using viewfax, but xv has many capabilities
for manipulating the image and saving it in other formats.
faxview.tcl,
(ftp://ftp.leo.org/pub/comp/os/unix/networking/mgetty/faxview.tcl.gz) a simple
dialog for viewing FAX messages by Ralph Schleicher (rs@purple.in-ulm.de).
This is a useful tool which provides a file menu from which incoming faxes
can be selected for display with viewfax.
CCITT (now ITU) Recommendation
T.4, Standardization of Group 3 Facsimile Apparatus for Document Transmission.
CCITT (now ITU) Recommendation T.6, Facsimile Coding Schemes and Coding
Control Functions for Group 4 Facsimile Apparatus.
The user interface
does not comply with any known style guide.
The help text looks moth-eaten because it is encoded as a fax. This avoids
dealing with X11 fonts.
The program does not refer to the X resources database.
Frank D. Cringle
(fdc@cliwe.ping.de).
Table of Contents