From 4aed2c8219774f5d797760606b8489a92ddc5163 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: toma Date: Wed, 25 Nov 2009 17:56:58 +0000 Subject: Copy the KDE 3.5 branch to branches/trinity for new KDE 3.5 features. BUG:215923 git-svn-id: svn://anonsvn.kde.org/home/kde/branches/trinity/kdebase@1054174 283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da --- doc/konsole/Makefile.am | 3 + doc/konsole/index.docbook | 1465 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ doc/konsole/konsole.png | Bin 0 -> 8848 bytes doc/konsole/tabbar.png | Bin 0 -> 3641 bytes 4 files changed, 1468 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/konsole/Makefile.am create mode 100644 doc/konsole/index.docbook create mode 100644 doc/konsole/konsole.png create mode 100644 doc/konsole/tabbar.png (limited to 'doc/konsole') diff --git a/doc/konsole/Makefile.am b/doc/konsole/Makefile.am new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e786da562 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/konsole/Makefile.am @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ + +KDE_LANG = en +KDE_DOCS = AUTO diff --git a/doc/konsole/index.docbook b/doc/konsole/index.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..826964fa4 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/konsole/index.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,1465 @@ + + + + + +]> + + + + +The &konsole; Handbook + +&Jonathan.Singer; &Jonathan.Singer.mail; +&Kurt.Hindenburg; &Kurt.Hindenburg.mail; + + +&Kurt.Hindenburg; &Kurt.Hindenburg.mail; + + + +&Waldo.Bastian; &Waldo.Bastian.mail; + + + + +&Mike.McBride; &Mike.McBride.mail; + + + + + + + + +200020012002 +&Jonathan.Singer; + + +2005 +&Kurt.Hindenburg; + + +&FDLNotice; + +2006-08-16 +1.6.2 + +This document is the user handbook for the &konsole; + application. +&konsole; is an X terminal emulator for &kde;. + + +KDE +konsole +kdebase +command +line + + + + + +Introduction to &konsole; + + +What is a terminal? +&UNIX; operating systems were +originally designed as text-only systems, controlled by keyboard +commands -- what is known as a command-line interface +(CLI). The &X-Window; and &kde; and other projects +have since added the graphical interface you are now using. However, +the underlying CLI system is still there, and is +frequently the easiest, fastest and most powerful way to perform many +tasks. +&konsole; is what is known as an X terminal +emulator, often referred to as a terminal or a shell. It gives you the +equivalent of an old-fashioned text screen on your desktop, but one +which can easily share the screen with your graphical +applications. &Windows; users may be familiar with the +MS-DOS Prompt utility, which has the analogous +function of offering a DOS command-line under +&Windows;. (Although the &UNIX; CLIs offer far more +power and ease of use than does DOS!) + +Explaining the use of the &UNIX; CLI is +beyond the scope of this document, as it would require a lengthy +book. Fortunately, many such books are available in every language in +any good bookstore or library. There are also tutorials available on +the Internet. Enjoy &kde;, but don't be shy about learning to use the +command-line! You will find that even learning just the basics will +make your computer use much more efficient and enjoyable. + + + +What makes &konsole; special? +&konsole;'s +advanced features include simple configuration and the ability to use +multiple terminal shells in a single window, making for a less +cluttered desktop. + +Using &konsole;, a user can open: + +&Linux; console sessions +Shell sessions +Screen sessions +Midnight Commander file manager +sessions +Root console + sessions +Root + Midnight Commander sessions +User created sessions + + +These sessions can be renamed to help you keep track of all your shells, +or signaled (STOP, CONT, +HUP, INT, +TERM, KILL). + +For more control over &konsole;, a user can: + +hide/show the menubar and/or +frame +select the size of a &konsole; window, fonts, color +schemes, and key mapping +change location of the scrollbar or hide the +scrollbar +change location of the tabbar or hide the +tabbar + + +All chosen settings can be made the default for forthcoming sessions by +saving them. + +For those with a deep interest in the taxonomy of free X +terminals, there are two others of this kind: +xterm, the original, written even before X +itself (a month or two), and xvt, a +lightweight xterm clone, on which most +other currently available derivatives (notably +eterm) are based. + +After a decade, &konsole; is the first rewrite from the ground +up. While xterm has definitely been hacked +to death (its README begins with the words +Abandon All Hope, Ye Who Enter Here), &konsole; offers +a fresh start using contemporary technologies and understanding of +X. + + + + + +Use of &konsole; + + +Startup + +When &konsole; is started, an application (typically a &UNIX; +shell) runs in the window. Simply type at the prompt. + + +&konsole; Screen + + + + + +&konsole; Screen + +&konsole; with 4 +terminal sessions open. + + +A Tip of the Day window may also appear on +startup, offering hints on the use of &konsole;. If you do not wish to +receive tips, uncheck the Show tips on startup +box. + + + +History + +As lines scroll off the top of the screen, they can be reviewed +by moving the scroll bar upwards, scrolling with a mouse wheel or through +the use of the &Shift;Page Up (to move +back a page), &Shift;Page +Down (to move forward a page), &Shift;Up Arrow (to move up a +line) and &Shift;Down Arrow (to move down a +line) keys (provided the History option is on). + +In addition, &konsole; mimics the FreeBSD console when +scroll lock is pressed. When scroll lock is on, +ordinary in- and output from the shell is suspended, and you can +scroll through the history with Page Up, Page +Down, and Up Arrow and Down +Arrow. + +&konsole;'s history can be configured via +SettingsHistory... + + + +&konsole; provides a number of history related actions located in the +Edit menu. + + + + +Find in History... + + +Find Next + + +Find Previous + + +Save History As... + + +Clear History + + +Clear All Histories + + + +In &konsole;, references to history are to +the text that is displayed in &konsole;'s window. +The shell that is running in &konsole; (e.g. bash) also +has a history which is unrelated to &konsole;'s +history. + + + + +Sessions +If you often have to log into remote machines, or always run a similar set of +terminal applications, you can use &konsole;'s Session feature +along with &kde;'s session management to automate a lot of this for you. +Let's take the following example: +You often have open an ssh session to the machine +administration ready for generic administration +tasks. +You may have noticed the New Session button on &konsole;'s tab +bar contains a menu if you click and hold on it, and you can choose new session +types here. We are going to add new entries to this menu. + + +Click on the menu entry SettingsConfigure &konsole;... + +Choose the Session tab. + + +Fill in the first entry with a name. This is the +name that will show in the menu, and will be the default label instead +of Shell when you start a session of this type. + + +Enter a command just as you normally would if you opened a new +shell and were going to issue that command. For our first example above, you +might type ssh administration. + +On the lower part of the panel, configure this +session's appearance. You can have a different font, colour scheme, +and $TERM type for each session. + +Press the Save +Session... button. A dialog will ask you to confirm the filename. + + +Press OK. + + + +You should now be able to press and hold the New Session button +on the tab bar, and select your new session type from the list. A new shell +session will open within the &konsole; window, with the result of your executed +command. In our example, you will be at an ssh +passphrase prompt, and when you provide your passphrase, you will be logged +into the remote machine. +You can avoid this step also, by using +ssh-agent, but that is a topic for another goodie. +Perhaps you want to remotely tail your http error logs on a +webserver, you could use a commandline something like +ssh +webserver tail + +/var/log/httpd-error.log. + +You can use this to execute local commands as well. Try creating a +session where the command is tail /var/log/messages. + In this case, exiting the +running application will close the shell session as well. + +One really nice use of this feature is if you find you always have the +same set of open sessions, &kde; can open them all for you automatically +when you start a new &kde; session. Simply have them open as you like +when you exit &kde;, and they will be saved with your &kde; session, and +restored just like any other application when you restart &kde;. + +You can assign +shortcuts +to any session. + + + + + +Mouse Buttons + +This section details the use of the mouse buttons for the common +right handed mouse button order. +For the left handed mouse button order, swap left and right in the text below. + + + + + +Left + + All &LMB; clicks will be sent to a mouse-aware +application running in &konsole;. +If an application will react on mouse clicks, &konsole; +indicates this by showing an arrow cursor. If not, an I-beam (bar) +cursor is shown. + +Holding the &LMB; down and +dragging the mouse over the screen with a mouse-unaware application +running will mark a region of the text. While dragging, the marked +text is displayed reversed for visual feedback. Select Copy +from the Edit menu to copy the marked text to the clipboard for further use +within &konsole; or another application. The selected text can also be +dragged and dropped into compatible applications. Click on the selected +text and drag it to the desired location. Depending on your &kde; settings, +you may need to hold the &Ctrl; key while dragging. + +Normally, new-line characters are inserted at the end of each +line selected. This is best for cut and paste of source code, or the output +of a particular command. For ordinary text, the line breaks are often +not important. One might prefer, however, for the text to be a stream +of characters that will be automatically re-formatted when pasted into +another application. To select in text-stream mode, hold down the +&Ctrl; key while selecting normally. + +Pressing the &Ctrl; and &Alt; keys along with the &LMB; +will select a column of text. + + +Double-click with the &LMB; to select a word; +triple-click to select an entire line. + +If the upper or lower edge of the text area is touched while +marking, &konsole; scrolls up or down, eventually exposing text within +the history buffer. The scrolling stops when the mouse stops +moving. + +After the mouse is released, &konsole; attempts to keep the text +in the clipboard visible by holding the marked area reversed. The +marked area reverts back to normal as soon as the contents of the +clipboard change, the text within the marked area is altered or the +&LMB; is clicked. + +To mark text on a mouse-aware application (Midnight Commander, for example) +the &Shift; key has to be pressed when clicking. + + + + + +Middle + +Pressing the &MMB; +pastes text currently in the clipboard. Holding down the &Ctrl; key as you +press the &MMB; pastes the text and sends +it to &konsole;. + +If you have a mouse with only two buttons, pressing both +the &LMB; and &RMB; +together emulates the +&MMB; +of a three button mouse. + +If you have a wheel as the middle button, +rolling it in a mouse-unaware program will move &konsole;'s scrollbar. + + + + + +Right + +The items that appear in the menu when the &RMB; +is pressed depend on whether the menubar is visible. + +Menubar is visible: +Set Selection End, +Copy, +Paste, +Send Signal, +Detach Session, +Rename Session..., +Bookmarks +and Close Session +menu items. + +Menubar is hidden: +Show Menubar, +Set Selection End, +Copy, +Paste, +Send Signal, +New Session, +Detach Session, +Rename Session..., +Bookmarks, +Settings +and Close Session +menu items. + +In a mouse-aware application, press the &Shift; key along with the +&RMB; to get the pop-up menu. + + +Pressing the &Ctrl; key and &RMB; brings up the +Session menu. + + + + + + + + + +Menu Bar + +The menubar is at the top of the &konsole; window. +The menubar can be activated and deactivated by the +&Alt; key. +SettingsHide +Menubar allows the menubar to be hidden. When +the menubar is hidden, Show Menubar can be +reached by right clicking in the +window or by &Alt;&Ctrl;M +, which is the default shortcut for activating the menubar. +The menubar can also be toggled by assigning it a shortcut. + + + +<guimenu>Session</guimenu> Menu + + + +SessionNew +Shell +Open a new session with a terminal +shell. &Alt;&Ctrl;N + can also be used, as described in more detail below. + + + +SessionNew +Window +Open a new &konsole; window. + + + +SessionNew Linux +Console +Open a new session emulating a text-only &Linux; +system. +See the file README.linux.console in +the &konsole; source package for detailed information on how the &Linux; +console differs from a typical &UNIX; console. If this doesn't mean anything +to you, you almost certainly don't need to worry about it. + + + + +SessionNew Midnight +Commander +Open a new session with the + Midnight +Commander file browser. +This menu entry will only be visible if Midnight Commander +(mc) is installed on your system. + + + + + + +Session +New Root Midnight Commander + + +Open a new session with the Midnight +Commander file browser, as the root user. + +After being prompted for the root password, the # +prompt appears under the browser window, indicating that the user is +working with root +privileges. Again, working as root is frequently necessary but care +should be taken to avoid accidental damage. + +This menu entry will only be visible if Midnight Commander +(mc) is installed on your system. + + + + + + +Session +New Root Shell + + +Open a new session with a terminal shell, as the +root user. + +After being prompted for the root password, the # +prompt appears, indicating that the user is working with root privileges. This is frequently +necessary for installing new software and other system maintenance, but +care should be taken to avoid accidental damage. + + + + +SessionNew +Screen Session +Open a new session with the + Screen virtual terminal manager. +See man +for more information. +This menu entry will only be visible if Screen +(screen) is installed on your system. + + + + +Session +New Shell at Bookmark +Start a new terminal shell, in a folder +chosen from the bookmark list. + + + +Session +Print Screen... +Print the current screen. + + + + +Session +Close Session +Close the current session. + + + + +Session +Quit +Quit &konsole;, closing all sessions and any +applications launched from them. + + + + +You can also open a new session with a key shortcut. By default, +&Alt;&Ctrl;N +is used. You can also define your own key shortcuts through the +Settings +Configure Shortcuts... menu command. + +The list of available sessions will reflect what programs are +installed along with any user defined sessions. +The session list will be alphabetized for quick viewing. + +Finally, note that the session types can be modified, and new +types created, by using the configuration dialog, reached from the +Settings +Configure Konsole... +menu entry. + + + +<guimenu>Edit</guimenu> Menu + + + +Edit +Copy +Copy the selected text to the clipboard. + + + + +&Shift;Insert +EditPaste + +Paste text from the clipboard at the cursor +location. + + + +Edit +Send Signal +Send Signal - Send the specified signal to the shell +process, or other process, that was launched when the new session was +started.Currently available signals are: + + + + + +STOP +to stop process + + +CONT +continue if stopped + + +HUP +hangup detected on controlling terminal, or death of controlling +process + + +INT +interrupt from keyboard + + +TERM +termination signal + + +KILL +kill signal + + +USR1 +user signal 1 + + +USR2 +user signal 2 + + + + + +Refer to your system manual pages for further details by giving the +command man . + + + + +&Alt;&Ctrl;U +EditZModem Upload... +Send a file via ZModem. + + + +EditClear Terminal +Clear all text from the session window. + + + + +EditReset & Clear Terminal +Reset and clear the session window. + + + + +EditFind +in History... +Find a word or string of text in the current +history. Options allow case sensitive or backwards searches, and the use of regular +expressions in searches. Press the Edit button to use the &kde; +graphical editor to create a regular expression. + + + + +EditFind +Next +Move to the next instance of the +text for which you are searching. + + + + +EditFind +Previous +Move to the previous instance of the +text for which you are searching. + + + + +EditSave +History As... +Save the current history as a text + file. + + + + +EditClear + History + +Clear the history for the current + session. + + + +EditClear All + Histories + +Clear the history +for all sessions. + + + + + + +<guimenu>View</guimenu> Menu + + + +ViewDetach +Session +Open the current session in a +separate window. The name of the session is +displayed on the titlebar of the new window. + + + + +&Alt;&Ctrl;S +ViewRename +Session... +Open a dialog box allowing you to change +the name of the current session. The name is displayed +on the session tab. &Alt;&Ctrl;S + can also be used. + + + +ViewMonitor for +Activity +Flag the current session so it will show +an alert if activity occurs. An icon of a lit light bulb will +appear in the session's tab. Use this to alert you if something +happens while you are working in another session. The time before an alert can be +modified in the &konsole; preferences. + + + +ViewMonitor for +Silence +Flag the current session so it will show an alert +if no activity occurs for 10 seconds. An icon of a dark light bulb will +appear in the session's tab. Use this to alert you if a task stops +while you are working in another session. The time before an alert can be +modified in the &konsole; preferences. + + + +ViewSend +Input to All Sessions +Flag the current session so any commands entered +into it will be sent to all sessions. The session will have a small +icon in its tab to remind you to be careful of what you enter! +rm -rf *, +for instance, is probably not a good idea. + + + + + +&Ctrl;&Shift;Left +ViewMove +Session Left +Move the tab of the current session one tab to the +left. + + + + +&Ctrl;&Shift;Right +ViewMove +Session Right +Move the tab of the current session one tab to the +right. +&Shift; Left and &Shift; Right can be also +be used to move between sessions. + + + +View +Session icons... +At the bottom of the menu is a list of the available +sessions. Selecting one makes that session active.You can also use + the &Shift;Left/&Shift;Right keys to +cycle through the available sessions. + + + + + + + +<guimenu>Bookmarks</guimenu> Menu + + + + +BookmarksAdd Bookmark +Add the current location to the bookmark list. + + + +BookmarksEdit Bookmarks +Edit the bookmark list. + + + +BookmarksNew Bookmark Folder... +Add a new folder to the bookmark list. + + + + +The bookmark list is displayed at the bottom of the menu. Select a bookmark to change to +that location. + +You can use the bookmark editor to manually add URLs +like ssh://user@host or telnet://host to open remote connections. + + + + + + + +<guimenu>Settings</guimenu> Menu + + + + +SettingsHide +Menubar +Hide the menubar. + + + +Settings +Tab Bar +Control visibility/location of tabbar: +Hide, Top, or +Bottom. + + + +Settings +Scrollbar +Control visibility/location of scrollbar: +Hide, Left, or +Right. + + + + +&Ctrl;&Shift;F +Settings +Full Screen Mode +Toggle window between full-screen and normal +size. + + + +Settings +Bell +Set the bell: +System Bell, +System Notification, +Visible Bell, or +None. + + + + +Settings +Font +Set font size: +Enlarge Font or +Shrink Font. + +Use the Select... option to pick any +combination of font, size and style. + + + + +Settings +Encoding +Select character encoding. + + + +Settings +Keyboard +Choose desired keymapping. +The list of these keymappings is taken from +$KDEDIR/share/apps/konsole/*.keytab. The file +$KDEDIR/share/apps/konsole/README.KeyTab +describes the *.keytab format in more detail. +Add to or modify these files to match your needs. The default keytab is taken from +$KDEDIR/share/apps/konsole/README.default.Keytab. + + + + +Settings +Schema +Set colors of text and background. +The list is taken from +$KDEDIR/share/apps/konsole/*.schema. The file +$KDEDIR/share/apps/konsole/README.Schema +describes the *.schema format in more detail. +Add to or modify these files to match your needs. You can also create custom +schemas through the preferences dialog at Settings +Configure &konsole;.... + + + + +Settings +Size +Set size of text area (given in columns x +rows). + + + +Settings +History... +Open a dialog +where you can configure the history. The +Enable check box toggles saving of lines that have +scrolled off the top of the window. You can enter the Number +of lines to remember in the text field, or use the spinner +buttons to increase or decrease the number in steps of 100 lines. The +Defaults button will reset the history to 1000 +lines. Selecting Set Unlimited will cause all history to be saved. +Press OK to save your changes, or +Cancel to close the dialog without saving your +settings. + + + +SettingsSave +as Default +Save the current settings as the new +default. + + + +SettingsSave Sessions Profile... +Save the current set of sessions under a name you choose. +The profile can then be used by starting &konsole; from the command-line with the +--profile and the name of the profile. + + + + +SettingsConfigure +Notifications... +Customize notifications for &konsole;. + + + + +SettingsConfigure +Shortcuts... +Customize keyboard shortcuts for &konsole; commands. + + + + +SettingsConfigure +&konsole;... +Open the &kcontrolcenter; module, allowing +many additional changes to &konsole;'s interface and behavior, including the creation +of custom schemas and modification of the available sessions. + + + + + + + +<guimenu>Help</guimenu> Menu + + + +HelpKonsole +Handbook +Open the table of contents of this +document. + + + +Help +Tip of the Day +Display a helpful tip about the use of &konsole;. +Check the Show on start box to display a tip +each time &konsole; is started. + + +HelpReport +Bug... +Submit a bug report or a feature request for +&konsole;. + + + +HelpAbout +Konsole +Information about &konsole;'s +author + + + +HelpAbout +KDE +Information about the &kde; +project + + + + + + + + +Tab Bar + +The tabbar allows multiple terminal sessions to be attached to a single &konsole; window. + + +Tabbar Image + + + + + +Tabbar Image + +&konsole; with 4 terminal sessions open with the tabbar on the bottom. + + + +The SettingsTab +Bar menu item allows the tabbar to be moved to +the Top or Bottom. +The tabbar can also be hidden by selecting Hide. + +On the left side of the tabbar is a button which allows for a multitude of actions. + +Click on the button to start a new +standard session. +Clicking and holding on the button will popup +a list of sessions to select. +Right-clicking on the button (or any empty +space on the tabbar) will popup up a menu to set certain options: + + Tab Bar: + Hide, + Top, + Bottom. + + + Tab Options: + Text & Icons, + Text Only, + Icons Only. + + + Dynamic Hide + will hide the tabbar when there is only one session opened. + + + + Auto Resize Tabs + will automatically resize the tabs to the width of the tabbar. + + + + + + +On the right side of the tabbar is a button that closes +the current session. This button will be disabled when there +is only one session running. + +Right-clicking on any tab will popup another menu: + +Detach Session +Rename Session... +Monitor for Activity +Monitor for Silence +Send Input to All Sessions +Select Tab Color... +Switch to Tab... +Close Session + + + + + +Command-line Options + +When &konsole; is started from the command-line, various options +can be specified to modify its behavior. + + + + +List the various options. + + + + command +Execute +command instead of the normal shell. +Any arguments after command will be passed to +command, not &konsole;. + + + + + file +Start &konsole; using a specified .keytab +file to customize key bindings. + + + + +List all of the available keytabs. + + + + + +Start with a login shell environment. +What that does varies depending on your system, but generally it +means that files such as ~/.profile or +~/.bash_profile will be read. (If that doesn't mean +anything to you, don't worry about it, but keep in the back of your mind +for when you realize you need it.) + + + + name +Set the name that appears in the +titlebar. + + + + +Prevent &konsole; from closing when an +exit +command is issued in the only session window. + + + + +Start &konsole; without a + frame. + + + + +Disable the saving of lines + that scroll off the top of the window. + + + + +Start &konsole; with +the menubar hidden. + + + + +Disable the resizing + of the terminal window. + + + + +Start &konsole; with +the scrollbar hidden. + + + + +Start &konsole; +with the tabbar hidden. + + + + +Start &konsole; without Xft antialiasing. +Antialiasing of a small font may be difficult to read. + + + + file +Start &konsole; using a saved set of sessions. + + + + +List all of the available profiles. + + + + + name | file +Start &konsole; using schema 'name' or specified in 'file' to customize appearance. + + + + +List all of the available schemata. + + + + + +Enable extended &DCOP; &Qt; functions. + + + + + title +Set the window title. + + + + terminal +Sets the environment variable TERM to the specified +value. Read man + for more information on TERM. + + + + type +Start a session of the given type + rather than the default. + + + + +List all of the available session types. + + + + + CCxLL +Start a terminal window of CC Columns and LL +lines. + + + + dir +Open with +dir as the working folder. + + + + + +Examples: +% konsole 90x25 + +Starts a &konsole; window with 90 columns and 25 rows, with no +history + +% konsole echo_args Hello, thanks for using &konsole;! + +Starts a &konsole; window with the text printed 'Hello, thanks for using &konsole;!' + +The echo_args is a simple Bash script: +#!/bin/bash +echo $* + + + +&konsole; also accepts generic &Qt; and &kde; options: + + + + +List &Qt;-specific options + + + +The following &Qt; options have no effect on &konsole;: + + + + +, +fontname +Defines the application font + + + +, +color +Sets the default background color + + + +, +color +Sets the default foreground color + + + +, +color +Sets the default button color + + + + + + + + + + +List &kde;-specific options + + + +List all options + + + +Show the authors' names + + + +Show the version number + + + +Show license information + + + + + + +&DCOP; + +For an introduction to +&DCOP; and using dcop please look at +the User Guide entry on &DCOP;. + + + + + + + +Credits and Copyright + +As of &kde; 3.4, &konsole; is maintained by &Kurt.Hindenburg; &Kurt.Hindenburg.mail; + +Previously, &konsole; was maintained by &Waldo.Bastian; &Waldo.Bastian.mail; + +The application &konsole; Copyright © 1997-2005 +&Lars.Doelle; &Lars.Doelle.mail; + +This document was written by &Jonathan.Singer; +&Jonathan.Singer.mail; + +This document was updated for &kde; 3.4 by +&Kurt.Hindenburg; &Kurt.Hindenburg.mail; + +Originally converted to DocBook SGML by +&Mike.McBride; and &Lauri.Watts; + + + +&underFDL; +&underGPL; + + + +&konsole; on non-&Linux; platforms + +Information on building &konsole; on platforms other than &Linux; +is available in the README.ports file in the +&konsole; source package. It provides a list of experts for certain +platforms (Tru64, &Solaris;, OpenBSD) and requests volunteers from other +&UNIX; platforms. + +For more infomation please visit these websites: + +&kde; on +FreeBSD +&kde; on &Solaris; + + + + +&documentation.index; + + + + + + diff --git a/doc/konsole/konsole.png b/doc/konsole/konsole.png new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8ec9a1b4e Binary files /dev/null and b/doc/konsole/konsole.png differ diff --git a/doc/konsole/tabbar.png b/doc/konsole/tabbar.png new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fb0fb0dbe Binary files /dev/null and b/doc/konsole/tabbar.png differ -- cgit v1.2.1