How do I find out my screen resolution from a shell script?
xdpyinfo | grep dimensions | sed -r 's/^[^0-9]*([0-9]+x[0-9]+).*$/\1/'
Command xdpyinfo
displays various information about your X server. It writes a lot of things to the standard output but we only need the line starting with the word dimensions
, thus we use grep
. Finally we use sed
to clean the result.
xdpyinfo | grep dimensions
will give you the total resolution, if you have multiple monitors it will be the sum of all of them. xrandr --current
will give you the resolution for each monitor.
I use this snippet to find the maximum possible resolution for rDesktop without going to full screen:
Xaxis=$(xrandr --current | grep '*' | uniq | awk '{print $1}' | cut -d 'x' -f1)
Yaxis=$(xrandr --current | grep '*' | uniq | awk '{print $1}' | cut -d 'x' -f2)
Output:
Xaxis = 1280
Yaxis = 1024
Minus windows decoration (more or less):
MaxRes=$(($Xaxis-5))"x"$(($Yaxis-25))
Output:
MaxRes = 1275x999
Which is the max resolution for rDesktop without going full screen.
End command:
rdesktop -u $User -P -z -5 -g $MaxRes $Host &
It works fine so far but I haven't tested thoroughly though.
Another example is for screencast with avconv
:
avconv -f x11grab -r 15 -s `xrandr --current | grep '*' | uniq | awk '{print $1}'` -i :0.0 -c:v libx264 ./output.mp4
You could use the xrandr -q
command. From that you can create a shell script if needed.
For more information on the command go here or type man xrandr