The names of the available emulators are:
x64
, the C64 emulator
x128
, the C128 emulator
xpet
, the PET emulator
xvic
, the VIC20 emulator
You can run each of them by simply typing the name from a shell. If you
want to run them from another application (e.g. a window manager or some
other sort of program launcher) you should always run them from a
terminal window such as xterm
or rxvt
, as a lot of
debugging information is printed and the built-in monitor will be run in
there. For example, you could do
xterm -e x64
There are several options you can specify on the command line. Some of them are used to specify emulation settings; they will be described in detail later (see section 6 Settings and resources for a complete list). The other ones, instead, are used only to initialize the emulator:
-help
-?
-default
-autostart IMAGE
-1 NAME
-8 NAME
-9 NAME
-10 NAME
-11 NAME
It is possible to let the emulator autostart a disk or tape image file, by simply specifying its name as the last argument on the command line; for example
x64 lovelygame.x64.gz
will start the C64 emulator, attaching `lovelygame.x64.gz' as a disk image and running the first program on it. You can also specify the name of the program on the fisk image by appending a colon (`:') the name itself to the argument; for example
x64 "lovelygame.x64.gz:run me"
will run the program named `run me' on `lovelygame.x64.gz' instead of the first one.
Using the command-line option -autostart
is equivalent; so the same
result can be obtained with
x64 -autostart "lovelygame.x64.gz:run me"
See section 5.5 Using disk and tape images for more information about images and autostart.
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