xorg.xsm
A session is a group of X applications, each of which has a particular state. xsm allows you to create arbitrary sessions - for example, you might have a "light" session, a "development" session, or an "xterminal" session. Each session can have its own set of applications. Within a session, you can perform a "checkpoint" to save application state, or a "shutdown" to save state and exit the session. When you log back in to the system, you can load a specific session, and you can delete sessions you no longer want to keep.
- Name
- xsm
- Main Program
xsm- Homepage
- Version
- 1.0.6
- License
- Platforms
- i686-cygwin
- x86_64-cygwin
- x86_64-darwin
- aarch64-darwin
- i686-freebsd
- x86_64-freebsd
- aarch64-freebsd
- x86_64-solaris
- aarch64-linux
- armv5tel-linux
- armv6l-linux
- armv7a-linux
- armv7l-linux
- i686-linux
- loongarch64-linux
- m68k-linux
- microblaze-linux
- microblazeel-linux
- mips-linux
- mips64-linux
- mips64el-linux
- mipsel-linux
- powerpc-linux
- powerpc64-linux
- powerpc64le-linux
- riscv32-linux
- riscv64-linux
- s390-linux
- s390x-linux
- x86_64-linux
- aarch64-netbsd
- armv6l-netbsd
- armv7a-netbsd
- armv7l-netbsd
- i686-netbsd
- m68k-netbsd
- mipsel-netbsd
- powerpc-netbsd
- riscv32-netbsd
- riscv64-netbsd
- x86_64-netbsd
- i686-openbsd
- x86_64-openbsd
- x86_64-redox
- Defined
- Source