barrier/doc/barrier.conf.example-advanced

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# sample barrier configuration file
#
# comments begin with the # character and continue to the end of
# line. comments may appear anywhere the syntax permits.
# This example uses 3 computers. A laptop and two desktops (one a mac)
# They are arranged in the following configuration with Desktop1 acting as the server
# Desktop 2 has 3 screens arranged around desktop1
#
# +--------+ +---------+
# |Desktop2| |Desktop2 |
# | | | |
# +--------+ +---------+
# +-------+ +--------+ +---------+
# |Laptop | |Desktop1| |Desktop2 |
# | | | | | |
# +-------+ +--------+ +---------+
#
# The laptop comes and goes but that doesn't really affect this configuration
# The screens section is for the logical or short name of the computers
section: screens
# three computers that are logically named: desktop1, desktop2, and laptop
desktop1:
desktop2:
laptop:
end
section: links
# larry is to the right of moe and curly is above moe
moe:
right = larry
up = curly
# moe is to the left of larry and curly is above larry.
# note that curly is above both moe and larry and moe
# and larry have a symmetric connection (they're in
# opposite directions of each other).
larry:
left = moe
up = curly
# larry is below curly. if you move up from moe and then
# down, you'll end up on larry.
curly:
down = larry
end
# The aliases section is to map the full names of the computers to their logical names used in the screens section
# One way to find the actual name of a computer is to run hostname from a command window
section: aliases
# Laptop is actually known as John-Smiths-MacBook-3.local
John-Smiths-MacBook-3.local:
desktop2
end