-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 6
/
lynxrc
344 lines (311 loc) · 14 KB
/
lynxrc
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
# Lynx User Defaults File
#
# This file contains options saved from the Lynx Options Screen (normally
# with the 'o' key). To save options with that screen, you must select the
# checkbox:
# Save options to disk
#
# You must then save the settings using the link on the line above the
# checkbox:
# Accept Changes
#
# You may also use the command-line option "-forms_options", which displays
# the simpler Options Menu instead. Save options with that using the '>' key.
#
# There is normally no need to edit this file manually, since the defaults
# here can be controlled from the Options Screen, and the next time options
# are saved from the Options Screen this file will be completely rewritten.
# You have been warned...
#
# If you are looking for the general configuration file - it is normally
# called "lynx.cfg". It has different content and a different format.
# It is not this file.
# accept_all_cookies allows the user to tell Lynx to automatically
# accept all cookies if desired. The default is "FALSE" which will
# prompt for each cookie. Set accept_all_cookies to "TRUE" to accept
# all cookies.
accept_all_cookies=on
# anonftp_password allows the user to tell Lynx to use the personal
# email address as the password for anonymous ftp. If no value is given,
# Lynx will use the personal email address. Set anonftp_password
# to a different value if you choose.
anonftp_password=
# bookmark_file specifies the name and location of the default bookmark
# file into which the user can paste links for easy access at a later
# date.
bookmark_file=lynx_bookmarks.html
# If case_sensitive_searching is "on" then when the user invokes a search
# using the 's' or '/' keys, the search performed will be case sensitive
# instead of case INsensitive. The default is usually "off".
case_sensitive_searching=off
# The character_set definition controls the representation of 8 bit
# characters for your terminal. If 8 bit characters do not show up
# correctly on your screen you may try changing to a different 8 bit
# set or using the 7 bit character approximations.
# Current valid characters sets are:
# Western (ISO-8859-1)
# 7 bit approximations (US-ASCII)
# Western (ISO-8859-15)
# Western (cp850)
# Western (windows-1252)
# IBM PC US codepage (cp437)
# DEC Multinational
# Macintosh (8 bit)
# NeXT character set
# HP Roman8
# Chinese
# Japanese (EUC-JP)
# Japanese (Shift_JIS)
# Korean
# Taipei (Big5)
# Vietnamese (VISCII)
# Transparent
# Eastern European (ISO-8859-2)
# Eastern European (cp852)
# Eastern European (windows-1250)
# Latin 3 (ISO-8859-3)
# Latin 4 (ISO-8859-4)
# Baltic Rim (ISO-8859-13)
# Baltic Rim (cp775)
# Baltic Rim (windows-1257)
# Cyrillic (ISO-8859-5)
# Cyrillic (cp866)
# Cyrillic (windows-1251)
# Cyrillic (KOI8-R)
# Arabic (ISO-8859-6)
# Arabic (cp864)
# Arabic (windows-1256)
# Celtic (ISO-8859-14)
# Greek (ISO-8859-7)
# Greek (cp737)
# Greek2 (cp869)
# Greek (windows-1253)
# Hebrew (ISO-8859-8)
# Hebrew (cp862)
# Hebrew (windows-1255)
# Turkish (ISO-8859-9)
# Turkish (cp857)
# North European (ISO-8859-10)
# UNICODE (UTF-8)
# RFC 1345 w/o Intro
# RFC 1345 Mnemonic
# Ukrainian Cyrillic (cp866u)
# Ukrainian Cyrillic (KOI8-U)
# Cyrillic-Asian (PT154)
character_set=UNICODE (UTF-8)
# cookie_accept_domains and cookie_reject_domains are comma-delimited
# lists of domains from which Lynx should automatically accept or reject
# all cookies. If a domain is specified in both options, rejection will
# take precedence. The accept_all_cookies parameter will override any
# settings made here.
cookie_accept_domains=
# cookie_file specifies the file from which to read persistent cookies.
# The default is ~/.lynx_cookies.
cookie_file=
# cookie_loose_invalid_domains, cookie_strict_invalid_domains, and
# cookie_query_invalid_domains are comma-delimited lists of which domains
# should be subjected to varying degrees of validity checking. If a
# domain is set to strict checking, strict conformance to RFC2109 will
# be applied. A domain with loose checking will be allowed to set cookies
# with an invalid path or domain attribute. All domains will default to
# querying the user for an invalid path or domain.
cookie_loose_invalid_domains=
cookie_query_invalid_domains=
cookie_reject_domains=
cookie_strict_invalid_domains=
# dir_list_order specifies the directory list order under DIRED_SUPPORT
# (if implemented). The default is "ORDER_BY_NAME"
dir_list_order=ORDER_BY_NAME
# dir_list_styles specifies the directory list style under DIRED_SUPPORT
# (if implemented). The default is "MIXED_STYLE", which sorts both
# files and directories together. "FILES_FIRST" lists files first and
# "DIRECTORIES_FIRST" lists directories first.
dir_list_style=MIXED_STYLE
# If emacs_keys is to "on" then the normal EMACS movement keys:
# ^N = down ^P = up
# ^B = left ^F = right
# will be enabled.
emacs_keys=off
# file_editor specifies the editor to be invoked when editing local files
# or sending mail. If no editor is specified, then file editing is disabled
# unless it is activated from the command line, and the built-in line editor
# will be used for sending mail.
file_editor=vi
# The file_sorting_method specifies which value to sort on when viewing
# file lists such as FTP directories. The options are:
# BY_FILENAME -- sorts on the name of the file
# BY_TYPE -- sorts on the type of the file
# BY_SIZE -- sorts on the size of the file
# BY_DATE -- sorts on the date of the file
file_sorting_method=BY_FILENAME
# If keypad_mode is set to "NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS", then the numbers on
# your keypad when the numlock is on will act as arrow keys:
# 8 = Up Arrow
# 4 = Left Arrow 6 = Right Arrow
# 2 = Down Arrow
# and the corresponding keyboard numbers will act as arrow keys,
# regardless of whether numlock is on.
# If keypad_mode is set to "LINKS_ARE_NUMBERED", then numbers will
# appear next to each link and numbers are used to select links.
# If keypad_mode is set to "LINKS_AND_FORM_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED", then
# numbers will appear next to each link and visible form input field.
# Numbers are used to select links, or to move the "current link" to a
# form input field or button. In addition, options in popup menus are
# indexed so that the user may type an option number to select an option in
# a popup menu, even if the option isn't visible on the screen. Reference
# lists and output from the list command also enumerate form inputs.
# NOTE: Some fixed format documents may look disfigured when
# "LINKS_ARE_NUMBERED" or "LINKS_AND_FORM_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED" are
# enabled.
keypad_mode=NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS
# lineedit_mode specifies the key binding used for inputting strings in
# prompts and forms. If lineedit_mode is set to "Default Binding" then
# the following control characters are used for moving and deleting:
#
# Prev Next Enter = Accept input
# Move char: <- -> ^G = Cancel input
# Move word: ^P ^N ^U = Erase line
# Delete char: ^H ^R ^A = Beginning of line
# Delete word: ^B ^F ^E = End of line
#
# Current lineedit modes are:
# Default Binding
# Alternate Bindings
# Bash-like Bindings
lineedit_mode=Default Binding
# The following allow you to define sub-bookmark files and descriptions.
# The format is multi_bookmark<capital_letter>=<filename>,<description>
# Up to 26 bookmark files (for the English capital letters) are allowed.
# We start with "multi_bookmarkB" since 'A' is the default (see above).
multi_bookmarkB=
multi_bookmarkC=
multi_bookmarkD=
multi_bookmarkE=
multi_bookmarkF=
multi_bookmarkG=
multi_bookmarkH=
multi_bookmarkI=
multi_bookmarkJ=
multi_bookmarkK=
multi_bookmarkL=
multi_bookmarkM=
multi_bookmarkN=
multi_bookmarkO=
multi_bookmarkP=
multi_bookmarkQ=
multi_bookmarkR=
multi_bookmarkS=
multi_bookmarkT=
multi_bookmarkU=
multi_bookmarkV=
multi_bookmarkW=
multi_bookmarkX=
multi_bookmarkY=
multi_bookmarkZ=
# personal_mail_address specifies your personal mail address. The
# address will be sent during HTTP file transfers for authorization and
# logging purposes, and for mailed comments.
# If you do not want this information given out, set the NO_FROM_HEADER
# to TRUE in lynx.cfg, or use the -nofrom command line switch. You also
# could leave this field blank, but then you won't have it included in
# your mailed comments.
personal_mail_address=
# personal_mail_name specifies your personal name, for mail. The
# name is sent for mailed comments. Lynx will prompt for this,
# showing the configured value as a default when sending mail.
# This is not necessarily the same as a name provided as part of the
# personal_mail_address.
# Lynx does not save your changes to that default value as a side-effect
# of sending email. To update the default value, you must use the options
# menu, or modify this file directly.
personal_mail_name=
# preferred_charset specifies the character set in MIME notation (e.g.,
# ISO-8859-2, ISO-8859-5) which Lynx will indicate you prefer in requests
# to http servers using an Accept-Charset header. The value should NOT
# include ISO-8859-1 or US-ASCII, since those values are always assumed
# by default. May be a comma-separated list.
# If a file in that character set is available, the server will send it.
# If no Accept-Charset header is present, the default is that any
# character set is acceptable. If an Accept-Charset header is present,
# and if the server cannot send a response which is acceptable
# according to the Accept-Charset header, then the server SHOULD send
# an error response, though the sending of an unacceptable response
# is also allowed.
preferred_charset=
# preferred_language specifies the language in MIME notation (e.g., en,
# fr, may be a comma-separated list in decreasing preference)
# which Lynx will indicate you prefer in requests to http servers.
# If a file in that language is available, the server will send it.
# Otherwise, the server will send the file in its default language.
preferred_language=en
# select_popups specifies whether the OPTIONs in a SELECT block which
# lacks a MULTIPLE attribute are presented as a vertical list of radio
# buttons or via a popup menu. Note that if the MULTIPLE attribute is
# present in the SELECT start tag, Lynx always will create a vertical list
# of checkboxes for the OPTIONs. A value of "on" will set popup menus
# as the default while a value of "off" will set use of radio boxes.
# The default can be overridden via the -popup command line toggle.
select_popups=on
# show_color specifies how to set the color mode at startup. A value of
# "never" will force color mode off (treat the terminal as monochrome)
# at startup even if the terminal appears to be color capable. A value of
# "always" will force color mode on even if the terminal appears to be
# monochrome, if this is supported by the library used to build lynx.
# A value of "default" will yield the behavior of assuming
# a monochrome terminal unless color capability is inferred at startup
# based on the terminal type, or the -color command line switch is used, or
# the COLORTERM environment variable is set. The default behavior always is
# used in anonymous accounts or if the "option_save" restriction is set.
# The effect of the saved value can be overridden via
# the -color and -nocolor command line switches.
# The mode set at startup can be changed via the "show color" option in
# the 'o'ptions menu. If the option settings are saved, the "on" and
# "off" "show color" settings will be treated as "default".
show_color=default
# show_cursor specifies whether to 'hide' the cursor to the right (and
# bottom, if possible) of the screen, or to place it to the left of the
# current link in documents, or current option in select popup windows.
# Positioning the cursor to the left of the current link or option is
# helpful for speech or braille interfaces, and when the terminal is
# one which does not distinguish the current link based on highlighting
# or color. A value of "on" will set positioning to the left as the
# default while a value of "off" will set 'hiding' of the cursor.
# The default can be overridden via the -show_cursor command line toggle.
show_cursor=on
# show_dotfiles specifies that the directory listing should include
# "hidden" (dot) files/directories. If set "on", this will be
# honored only if enabled via userdefs.h and/or lynx.cfg, and not
# restricted via a command line switch. If display of hidden files
# is disabled, creation of such files via Lynx also is disabled.
show_dotfiles=off
# If sub_bookmarks is not turned "off", and multiple bookmarks have
# been defined (see below), then all bookmark operations will first
# prompt the user to select an active sub-bookmark file. If the default
# Lynx bookmark_file is defined (see above), it will be used as the
# default selection. When this option is set to "advanced", and the
# user mode is advanced, the 'v'iew bookmark command will invoke a
# statusline prompt instead of the menu seen in novice and intermediate
# user modes. When this option is set to "standard", the menu will be
# presented regardless of user mode.
sub_bookmarks=OFF
# user_mode specifies the users level of knowledge with Lynx. The
# default is "NOVICE" which displays two extra lines of help at the
# bottom of the screen to aid the user in learning the basic Lynx
# commands. Set user_mode to "INTERMEDIATE" to turn off the extra info.
# Use "ADVANCED" to see the URL of the currently selected link at the
# bottom of the screen.
user_mode=ADVANCED
# If verbose_images is "on", lynx will print the name of the image
# source file in place of [INLINE], [LINK] or [IMAGE]
# See also VERBOSE_IMAGES in lynx.cfg
verbose_images=on
# If vi_keys is set to "on", then the normal VI movement keys:
# j = down k = up
# h = left l = right
# will be enabled. These keys are only lower case.
# Capital 'H', 'J' and 'K will still activate help, jump shortcuts,
# and the keymap display, respectively.
vi_keys=on
# The visited_links setting controls how Lynx organizes the information
# in the Visited Links Page.
visited_links=LAST_REVERSED