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Follow the steps detailed below. If you don't want to get and compile
the bdfresize package yourself, you can skip to step 3 and download a
magnified font instead of creating it.
- get cursor.bdf, the source of the cursor font, from some X
distribution, e. g. from
ftp://ftp.x.org/pub/R6.3/xc/fonts/bdf/misc/cursor.bdf (if you don't
find it there try an archie search or get it from
my copy).
- get, compile and install the bdfresize package from
ftp://ftp.cs.titech.ac.jp/X11/contrib/Local/bdfresize-1.4.tar.Z
(or from
my copy):
zcat bdfresize-1.4.tar.Z | tar xf -
cd bdfresize-1.4
xmkmf
make
On Linux you probably have to use:
make CCOPTIONS='-include /usr/include/bsd/bsd.h' clean all
- create a directory and install a magnified cursor font in it
(magnification factor 2 in this example):
mkdir $HOME/fonts
bdfresize -f 2 cursor.bdf | bdftopcf >$HOME/fonts/cursor2.pcf
mkfontdir $HOME/fonts
I have prepared some
cursor fonts
with the following magnification factors: 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 4, 5,
6, 7, 8 and 16. You can download one of them an copy it to
$HOME/fonts if you don't want to use bdfresize.
- modify your
.xinitrc or .xsession file: before
any X client (that uses cursors) is started the following
commands must be executed:
xset +fp $HOME/fonts
xsetroot -cursor_name X_cursor
- leave your X session and restart.
That's it—now all mouse cursors should have doubled in size.
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