xwd
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the X Window System, xwd is a program for capturing the content of the screen or of a window and saving it into a file. Its name stands for X Window Dump. The same name is also used for referring to the image format it uses to save the dump.
xwd can be run in two ways: if user specifies the whole screen or the name or identifier of a window as an argument, the program captures the content of the window; otherwise, it changes the shape of the cursor and waits for the user to click in a window, whose content is then captured.
At the X Window core protocol level, xwd uses the fact that any X client can request the content of an arbitrary window, including ones it did not create, using the GetImage
request (this is done by the XGetImage
function in the Xlib library). The content of the whole screen is obtained by requesting the content of the root window.
The file generated by xwd can then be read by various other X utilities such as xwud, xv, and the GIMP, or converted to other formats; the netpbm suite allows a useful pipeline to be constructed:
$ xwd | xwdtopnm | pnmtopng > Screenshot.png
[edit] External links
- xwd manual page
- xwud manual page
- xwd is part of X11's standard distribution, but its source can also be downloaded separately as tar.bz2 or tar.gz
- Image::XWD Perl package at CPAN