💾 Archived View for telescope.omarpolo.com › telescope.1.txt captured on 2022-04-29 at 13:44:58.

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2022-04-28)

➡️ Next capture (2022-06-04)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

TELESCOPE(1)		    General Commands Manual		  TELESCOPE(1)

NAME
     telescope	multi-protocol browser

SYNOPSIS
     telescope [-ChnSv] [-c config] [URL]

DESCRIPTION
     telescope is an interactive browser that supports the Finger, Gemini and
     Gopher protocols.	telescope features tabs, a minibuffer, interactive
     completions, bookmarks and out-of-band TOFU verification.

     The arguments are as follows:

     -C, --colours  Show all available colors and exit.	 This option can also
		    be spelled --colors.

     -c config	    Specify an alternative configuration file.	By default
		    ~/.config/telescope/config is loaded.

     -h, --help	    Display version, usage and exit.

     -n		    Configtest mode.  Only check the configuration file for
		    validity.

     -S, --safe	    Safe (or sandbox) mode.  Prevent telescope from
		    writing files to the disk and to acquire the lock,
		    allowing to run multiple instances at the same time.
		    telescope still loads the session file and the custom
		    about pages.

     -v, --version  Display version and exit.

UI CONCEPTS
     telescope interface is divided into four areas: the tabline, the body,
     the modeline and the echoarea/minibuffer.

     The tabline is always at the top of the screen and displays the tabs
     separated by a vertical line.  When there are more tabs than the size of
     the window allow to display, the characters < or > are shown at the
     start/end of the tabline to indicate that there are more tabs in that
     direction.

     The body occupies the majority of the visible area.  It contains the
     current page and optionally a side window.

     The modeline is the second to last row of the screen.  It shows some
     information about the page: a spinner when the page is loading, the trust
     level, the document type, the scroll offset and the URL.

     The echoarea is usually the last line of the screen.  Messages are often
     showed there, and link addresses too.  The echoarea is also used to
     obtain input from the user.  When commands like swiper or link-select are
     invoked, the minibuffer area grows to show possible completions.

TOFU
     telescope aims to use the Trust, but Verify (where appropriate)
     approach for TOFU (Trust On First Use).  The idea is to define three
     level of verification for a certificate:

     untrusted	   (!) the server fingerprint does NOT match the stored
		   value.

     trusted	   (v) the server fingerprint matches the store one.

     verified	   (V) the fingerprint matches and has been verified out-of-
		   band.

     The trust level of the page is indicated in the modeline with the
     indicated character.

     Most of the time the trusted level is enough, but where is appropriate
     users should be able to verify out-of-band the certificate.

     At the moment, there is no built-in support for an out-of-band
     verification though.

SUPPORTED PROTOCOLS
     The following protocols are supported:

     about:	About pages are telescope internal page.  See about:about for
		a list of all these pages.

     file://	File types know to telescope, such as .gmi, .gemini, .txt,
		.md, .markdown, .diff or .patch, can be viewed inside the
		application.  Types of local files are detected solely based
		on the file extension.	On some systems, such as OpenBSD, only
		files inside special directories (like /tmp or ~/Downloads)
		are available.

     finger://	Finger URLs are interpreted as follows:
		  the host is determined by the host name portion of the URL
		  if the user portion of the URL is provided, it's
		    interpreted as the user to finger, otherwise the path
		    component will be used
		thus finger://user@hostname and finger://hostname/user are
		treated as the same URL.

     gemini://	Gemini is fully supported, with the exception of client-
		certificates.

     gopher://	Gopher support is limited to items type 0, 1 and 7.  All text
		is assumed to be encoded in UTF-8 (or ASCII).

     User-entered URLs, given as argument on the command line or entered with
     load-url, are intepreted with a simple heuristic:
       if it's a proper absolute URL then use it as-is,
       if it starts with ./ or / assume it's a file:// URL,
       otherwise assume it's a Gemini URL.

CONFIGURATION FILE
     During the startup, telescope reads the configuration file at
     ~/.config/telescope/config or ~/.telescope/config.

     It's possible to load a custom configuration file using the -c flag.

     telescope will also load a file called config-TERM, where TERM is the
     name of the terminal type (i.e. the TERM environment variable), if it
     exists.

     The format of the configuration file is fairly flexible.  The current
     line can be extended over multiple ones using a backslash (\).
     Comments can be put anywhere in the file using a hash mark (#), and
     extend to the end of the current line, but backslashes can't be used to
     extend comments over multiple lines.

     The following constructs are available:

     bind map key cmd
	     Bind key to the function cmd in the keymap map.  Valid values for
	     map are global-map (i.e. when the user is viewing a page) and
	     minibuffer-map (i.e. when the minibuffer has the focus.) key
	     follows the same syntax described in DEFAULT KEY BINDINGS and all
	     the possible functions are listed in INTERACTIVE COMMANDS.

     proxy proto via url
	     Use url as proxy for all URLs with protocol proto.	 url must be a
	     Gemini URI without path, query and fragment component.

     set opt = val
	     Set the option opt to the value val.  Valid options are:

	     autosave	    (integer) If greater than zero, save the session
			    after the specified amount of seconds after some
			    events happens (new or closed tabs, visited a link
			    ...) Defaults to 20.
	     dont-wrap-pre  (integer) If nonzero, don't wrap preformatted
			    blocks.  Defaults to 0.
	     download-path  (string) The default download path.	 Defaults to
			    /tmp.
	     emojify-link   (integer) If nonzero, when the text of a link
			    starts with an emoji followed by a space, use that
			    emoji as line prefix.  Defaults to 1.
	     enable-colors  (integer) If nonzero, enable colours.  Defaults to
			    0 if NO_COLORS is set, 1 otherwise.
	     fill-column    (integer) If greater than zero, lines of text will
			    be formatted in a way that don't exceed the given
			    number of columns.	Defaults to 80.
	     fringe-ignore-offset
			    (integer) If nonzero, the fringe doesn't obey to
			    olivetti-mode.  Defaults to 1.
	     hide-pre-blocks
			    (integer) If nonzero, hide by default the body of
			    the preformatted blocks.  Defaults to zero.
			    push-button can be used to toggle the visibility
			    per-block.
	     hide-pre-closing-line
			    (integer) If nonzero, hide the closing line of
			    preformatted blocks.  Defaults to 0.
	     hide-pre-context
			    (integer) If nonzero, hide the start and end line
			    of the preformatted blocks.	 If both hide-pre-
			    context and hide-pre-blocks are nonzero,
			    preformatted blocks are irremediably hidden.
			    Defaults to zero.
	     new-tab-url    (string) URL for the new tab page.	Defaults to
			    about:new.
	     max-killed-tabs
			    (integer) The maximum number of closed tabs to
			    keep track of, defaults to 10.  Must be a positive
			    number; if zero, don't save closed tabs at all.
	     olivetti-mode  (integer) If nonzero, enable olivetti-mode
			    Defaults to 1.
	     tab-bar-show   (integer) If tab-bar-show is -1 hide the tab bar
			    permanently, if 0 show it unconditionally.	If
			    it's 1, show the bar only when there is more than
			    one tab.  Defaults to 1.
	     update-title   (integer) If nonzero, set the terminal title to
			    the page title.  Defaults to 1.

     style name option
	     Change the styling of the element identified by name.  Multiple
	     options may be specified within curly braces.  Valid style
	     identifiers are:
		   line			  the area outside the lines in the
					  body of the page.
		   line.compl		  the completions.
		   line.compl.current	  the current completion.
		   line.help		  text in the *Help* buffer.
		   line.download.ongoing  an ongoing download
		   line.download.done	  a completed download
		   line.download.info	  informational text in the
					  *Downloads* buffer.
		   line.fringe		  (virtual) lines draw after the end
					  of a buffer.
		   line.text		  text lines.
		   line.link		  link lines.
		   line.title1..3	  headings
		   line.item		  item lines.
		   line.quote		  quotes.
		   line.pre.start	  the heading of a preformatted block.
		   line.pre		  the content of a preformatted block.
		   line.pre.end		  the closing line of a preformatted
					  block.
		   download		  the download pane
		   minibuffer		  the minibuffer.
		   modeline		  the modeline.
		   tabline		  the tabline.
		   tabline.tab		  the non-focused tabs.
		   tabline.current	  the focused tab.

	     Valid options are:

	     attr prefix [line [trail]]
		     Sets the text attributes.	If only one value is given,
		     line and trail default to that; if two values are given
		     then trail defaults to prefix.  Each attribute is a
		     comma-separated list of keywords:
			   normal     no attributes.
			   standout   best highlighting mode for the terminal.
			   underline  underlines the text.
			   reverse    reverses background/foreground colors.
			   blink      makes the text blinking.
			   dim	      half bright.
			   bold	      extra bright or bold.

		     Only the style identifiers with the line. prefix accept
		     up to three attributes.  The other will only use the
		     first one given.

	     bg prefix [line [trail]]
		     Sets the background color.	 Follows the same behaviour as
		     attr regarding the optional parameters.  The colour is
		     one of black, red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan and
		     white; colour0 to colour255 (or color0 to color255) from
		     the 256-colour set; default for the default colour.

	     fg prefix [line [trail]]
		     Sets the foreground color.	 It behaves just like bg.

	     prefix prfx [cont]
		     Sets the prefix for the current line type to prfx and
		     cont as the prefix for the continuation lines (i.e. when
		     a long line gets wrapped.) If cont is not given its value
		     will be the same of prfx.

DEFAULT KEY BINDINGS
     The default key bindings are very similar to GNU Emacs, but care has been
     taken to include also bindings familiar for vi(1) and CUA users.  In
     the following examples, C-x means Control-x, M-x means Meta-x, where the
     Meta key may be either a special key on the keyboard or the ALT key;
     otherwise ESC followed by the key X works as well, and C-M-x means to
     press the key X together with both Control and Meta.

     Keys are usually a single character, like p or n, but some special
     keys are accepted as well.

	   <up>		     Up arrow
	   <down>	     Down arrow
	   <left>	     Left arrow
	   <right>	     Right arrow
	   <prior>	     Previous page/Page up
	   <next>	     Next page/Page down
	   <home>	     Home
	   <end>	     End
	   <f0> thru <f63>   Function keys
	   del or backspace  Backspace
	   esc		     Escape
	   space or spc	     Space
	   enter or ret	     Enter
	   tab		     Tab
	   backtab	     Depends on the configuration of the terminal
			     emulator; usually shift tab.

   GNU Emacs-like keys
	   C-p		 previous-line
	   C-n		 next-line
	   C-f		 forward-char
	   C-b		 backward-char
	   M-{		 backward-paragraph
	   M-}		 forward-paragraph
	   C-a		 move-beginning-of-line
	   C-e		 move-end-of-line
	   M-v, M-space	 scroll-up
	   C-v, space	 scroll-down
	   M-<		 beginning-of-buffer
	   M->		 end-of-buffer
	   C-x C-c	 kill-telescope
	   C-g		 clear-minibuf
	   M-x		 execute-extended-command
	   C-c {	 dec-fill-column
	   C-c }	 inc-fill-column
	   C-c p	 previous-heading
	   C-c n	 next-heading
	   >		 load-url
	   <		 load-current-url
	   C-x C-f	 load-url
	   C-x M-f	 load-current-url
	   C-x o	 other-window
	   C-x t 0	 tab-close
	   C-x t 1	 tab-close-other
	   C-x t 2	 tab-new
	   C-x t o	 tab-next
	   C-x t O	 tab-previous
	   C-x t m	 tab-move
	   C-x t M	 tab-move-to
	   B, C-M-b	 previous-page
	   F, C-M-f	 next-page
	   <f7> a	 bookmark-page
	   <f7> <f7>	 list-bookmarks
	   C-z		 suspend-telescope

   vi(1)-like keys
	   k		 previous-line
	   j		 next-line
	   l		 forward-char
	   h		 backward-char
	   {		 backward-paragraph
	   }		 forward-paragraph
	   ^		 move-beginning-of-line
	   $		 move-end-of-line
	   K		 scroll-line-up
	   J		 scroll-line-down
	   g g		 beginning-of-buffer
	   G		 end-of-buffer
	   g D		 tab-close
	   g N		 tab-new
	   g t		 tab-next
	   g T		 tab-previous
	   g M-t	 tab-move
	   g M-T	 tab-move-to
	   H		 previous-page
	   L		 next-page
	   u		 tab-undo-close
	   q		 kill-telescope
	   ESC		 clear-minibuf
	   :		 execute-extended-command

   CUA-like keys
	   <up>		 previous-line
	   <down>	 next-line
	   <right>	 forward-char
	   <left>	 backward-char
	   <home>	 move-beginning-of-line
	   <end>	 move-end-of-line
	   <prior>	 scroll-up
	   <next>	 scroll-down
	   C-w		 tab-close
	   C-t		 tab-new
	   M-<prior>	 tab-previous
	   M-<next>	 tab-next
	   del		 previous-page
	   M-<left>	 previous-page
	   M-<right>	 next-page
	   <f5>		 reload-page
	   r		 reload-page

   Neither Emacs nor vi specific
	   <f1>		 toggle-help
	   enter	 push-button
	   M-enter	 push-button-new-tab
	   M-tab	 previous-button
	   backtab	 previous-button
	   tab		 next-button
	   M-t		 tab-select
	   [		 tab-previous
	   ]		 tab-next
	   M-[		 tab-move-to
	   M-]		 tab-move
	   M-l		 link-select
	   M-/		 swiper
	   M-r		 reply-last-input

   Minibuffer-specific keys
	   enter	 mini-complete-and-exit
	   C-g		 mini-abort
	   ESC		 mini-abort
	   C-d		 mini-delete-char
	   del		 mini-delete-backward-char
	   backspace	 mini-delete-backward-char
	   C-h		 mini-delete-backward-char
	   C-b		 backward-char
	   C-f		 forward-char
	   <left>	 backward-char
	   <right>	 forward-char
	   C-e		 move-end-of-line
	   C-a		 move-beginning-of-line
	   <end>	 move-end-of-line
	   <home>	 move-beginning-of-line
	   C-k		 mini-kill-line
	   M-p		 mini-previous-history-element
	   M-n		 mini-next-history-element
	   C-p		 previous-completion
	   C-n		 next-completion
	   <up>		 previous-completion
	   <down>	 next-completion
	   tab		 insert-current-candidate
	   M-<		 mini-goto-beginning
	   M->		 mini-goto-end

INTERACTIVE COMMANDS
     Follows the documentation for the interactive commands.  These commands
     can be bound to a key or executed with execute-extended-command.

   Movement commands
     backward-char	       Move point one character backward.
     backward-paragraph	       Move point one paragraph backward.
     beginning-of-buffer       Move point to the beginning of the buffer.
     end-of-buffer	       Move point to the end of the buffer.
     forward-char	       Move point one character forward.
     forward-paragraph	       Move point one paragraph forward.
     insert-current-candidate  Copy the current selection text as minibuffer
			       input.
     move-beginning-of-line    Move point at the beginning of the current
			       (visual) line.
     move-end-of-line	       Move point at the end of the current (visual)
			       line.
     next-button	       Move point to the next link.
     next-completion	       Select the next completion.
     next-heading	       Move point to the next heading.
     next-line		       Move point to the next (visual) line, in the
			       same column if possible.
     previous-button	       Move point to the previous link.
     previous-completion       Select the previous completion.
     previous-heading	       Move point to the previous heading.
     previous-line	       Move point to the previous (visual) line.

   Bookmark-related commands
     bookmark-page	       Save a page in the bookmark file.  It preloads
			       the minibuffer with the current URL.
     list-bookmarks	       Load the bookmarks page.

   Tab-related commands
     tab-close		       Close the current tab.
     tab-close-other	       Close all tabs but the current one.
     tab-move		       Move the current tab after the next one,
			       wrapping around if needed.
     tab-move-to	       Move the current tab before the previous one,
			       wrapping around if needed.
     tab-new		       Open a new tab.
     tab-next		       Focus next tab, wrapping around eventually.
     tab-previous	       Focus the previous tab, wrapping around
			       eventually.
     tab-select		       Switch to a tab using the minibuffer.
     tab-undo-close	       Re-open the most recently closed tab, if any.

   Misc commands
     cache-info		       Show cache stats.
     clear-minibuf	       Clear the echo area.
     dec-fill-column	       Decrement fill-column by two.
     execute-extended-command  Execute an internal command.
     kill-telescope	       Quit telescope.
     inc-fill-column	       Increment fill-column by two.
     link-select	       Select and visit a link using the minibuffer.
     load-current-url	       Edit the current URL.
     load-url		       Prompt for an URL.
     next-page		       Go forward in the page history.
     olivetti-mode	       Toggle olivetti mode (i.e. horizontal centering
			       of the lines of the window.)
     other-window	       Select the other window.
     previous-page	       Go backward in the page history.
     push-button	       Follow link at point, or toggle the visibility
			       of the following preformatted block if called
			       when the cursor is on the heading of the block.
     push-button-new-tab       Follow link at point in a new tab.
     redraw		       Redraw the screen, useful if some background
			       program messed up the display.
     reload-page	       Reload the current page.
     reply-last-input	       Reply the last input request.
     scroll-down	       Scroll down by one visual page.
     scroll-line-down	       Scroll down by one line.
     scroll-line-up	       Scroll up by one line.
     scroll-up		       Scroll up by one visual page.
     suspend-telescope	       Suspend the current telescope session.
     swiper		       Jump to a line using the minibuffer.
     toc		       Jump to a heading using the minibuffer.
     toggle-help	       Toggle side window with help about available
			       keys and their associated interactive command.
     toggle-pre-wrap	       Toggle the wrapping of preformatted blocks.

   Minibuffer commands
     mini-abort		       Abort the current minibuffer action.
     mini-complete-and-exit    Complete the current minibuffer action.
     mini-delete-backward-char
			       Delete the character before the point.
     mini-delete-char	       Delete the character after the point.
     mini-goto-beginning       Select the first completion, if any.
     mini-goto-end	       Select the last completion, if any.
     mini-kill-line	       Delete from point until the end of the line.
     mini-next-history-element
			       Load the previous history element.
     mini-previous-history-element
			       Load the next history element.

   Aliases
     The following aliases are available during execute-extended-command:
     open	       load-url
     tabn	       tab-next
     tabnew	       tab-new
     tabp	       tab-previous
     q and wq	       kill-telescope

ENVIRONMENT
     When telescope is started, it inspects the following environment
     variables:

     HOME	The user's login directory.

     NO_COLORS	To decide whether to use colors or not.	 The content of the
		variable doesn't matter.

     TERM	The user's terminal name.

     XDG_CACHE_HOME, XDG_CONFIG_HOME, XDG_DATA_HOME
		If defined can alter the default location of the files used.

FILES
     By default telescope follows the XDG Base Directory Specification.
     However, if ~/.telescope exists, XDG is ignored and all the files are
     stored inside it.	The usage of XDG_CACHE_HOME, XDG_CONFIG_HOME and
     XDG_DATA_HOME can further alter the location of these files.

     ~/.config/telescope/config
	     Default configuration file.
     ~/.local/share/telescope/pages/about_*.gmi
	     Overrides for built-in about: pages.
     ~/.local/share/telescope/bookmarks.gmi
	     Bookmarks file.
     ~/.local/share/telescope/known_hosts
	     Hash of the certificates for all the known hosts.	Each line
	     contains three fields: hostname with optional port number, hash
	     of the certificate and a numeric flag.
     ~/.cache/telescope/lock
	     Lock file used to prevent multiple instance of telescope from
	     running at the same time.
     ~/.cache/telescope/session
	     The list of tabs from the last session.

EXAMPLES
     It's possible to browse the small web (i.e. simple websites) by using
     programs like the duckling-proxy by defining a proxy in
     ~/.config/telescope/config:

	   proxy http via "gemini://127.0.0.1:1965"
	   proxy https via "gemini://127.0.0.1:1965"

     To load telescope without any configuration

	   telescope -c /dev/null

STANDARDS
     XDG Base Directory Specification,
     https://specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/latest/.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
     The Trust, but verify (where appropriate) TOFU scheme was firstly
     suggested by thfr: gemini://thfr.info/gemini/modified-trust-verify.gmi.

AUTHORS
     The telescope program was written by Omar Polo <op@omarpolo.com>.

CAVEATS
     telescope assumes a UTF-8 environment and doesn't try to cope with other
     encodings.	 This can cause strange rendering issues if you're lucky, or
     possibly weird thing happening depending on your locale and terminal
     emulator.

     The algorithm used for text-wrapping is naive and doesn't really work for
     languages that make heavily use of glyphs composed by multiple UNICODE
     codepoints.

BUGS
     There's no UI for out-of-band certificates validation.

OpenBSD 7.1			January 5, 2022			   OpenBSD 7.1