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punktfunk/docs-site/content/docs/virtual-displays.md
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enricobuehler 349d16382e fix(stats): decode stage measures GPU completion; Alt+Enter fullscreen alias
The Vulkan path's receive_frame returns at SUBMISSION (~0.1 ms) — the
hardware decodes asynchronously, so the decode stat was truthful but
measured the wrong boundary. The pump now ships the frame to the
presenter FIRST, then waits the frame's timeline fence (vkWaitSemaphores
resolved through the shared device's proc chain) and stamps
received→decode-COMPLETE — true NVDEC time at zero pipeline cost, since
the presenter's own GPU wait is what actually gates sampling. Software/
VAAPI keep their synchronous stamps.

Also: Alt+Enter joins F11 as the fullscreen toggle (some keyboards' Fn
layer sends a media key for plain F11 — observed on glass as
'F11 only works with shift'); the shell's shortcuts panel lists both.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Fable 5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-07-07 23:14:08 +02:00

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Markdown

---
title: Virtual displays
description: Control how punktfunk creates, keeps alive, and arranges the virtual displays it streams — presets, keep-alive, exclusive vs. extend, and persistent per-client scaling.
---
When a client connects, punktfunk creates a **virtual display** sized to exactly that client's
resolution and refresh, renders your desktop or game onto it, and streams it. This page is about the
**policy** for that display: how long it survives a disconnect, whether it takes over your physical
monitors, what happens when a second client connects, and how desktop environments remember
per-client settings like scaling.
You set this policy in the **web console** (Host → *Virtual displays*), or by editing
`~/.config/punktfunk/display-settings.json` directly (`%ProgramData%\punktfunk\display-settings.json`
on Windows). A change applies to the **next** connection — a running session keeps the display it
opened on.
> **You rarely need to touch this.** The default behavior matches how punktfunk has always worked.
> Reach for a preset when you want a specific experience — a dedicated couch/gaming box, a desktop
> you also use in person, or a multi-monitor workstation.
> **What's live today:** **keep-alive** (linger, or **forever**), **topology** (extend / primary /
> exclusive), **conflict handling**, **per-client identity + persistent scaling** (Windows *and*
> KDE/KWin), and **multi-monitor layout** (several clients as monitors of one desktop) are all
> enforced. A reconnect always resumes the kept display — even a fast one — instead of spawning a
> second. The remaining gaps are noted inline: the Linux `primary` physical-keep *effect*, Sway
> `exclusive`, and multi-display for a *single* client (that last is the next stage).
## Pick a preset
A preset is the easy way in — select one in the console and you're done. Each expands to a bundle of
the individual options documented further down.
| Preset | What it's for |
|---|---|
| **Default** | Today's behavior. A short linger absorbs reconnects, the streamed output becomes the sole desktop, and extra clients each get their own view. |
| **Gaming rig** | A dedicated couch/headless box. The game and its display survive disconnects indefinitely (keep-alive **forever**), and whoever connects takes the box over. Release it from the console when you're done. |
| **Shared desktop** | A desktop you also use in person. punktfunk never blanks your real monitors and never leaves a ghost display behind; concurrent viewers each get a view. |
| **Hot-desk** | One user at a time with fast reattach — roaming between your own devices. A second user is told the box is busy, and each device+resolution keeps its own scaling. |
| **Workstation** | The multi-monitor daily driver. Your displays come back exactly where you arranged them, with per-client identity and an exclusive desktop. |
## Save your own preset
The five above are curated starting points. When you've dialed in a setup you like — whether by
picking a preset and tweaking it or by setting every option under **Custom** — you can **save it as
your own named preset** and switch back to it in one click later.
- **Save as preset** — names the settings currently in force (all of the options below **plus**
*Dedicated game sessions*) and adds it to the picker alongside the built-ins.
- **Apply** — selecting a saved preset writes exactly those settings, the same as picking a built-in.
- **Edit / delete** — rename a saved preset, update it to your current settings, or remove it. Deleting
a preset never changes what's running — it only takes the card out of the picker.
Unlike the built-in presets (which deliberately leave *Dedicated game sessions* alone so switching
presets never changes your game-launch routing), a **custom preset captures your full setup**,
including that axis — because it's *your* saved configuration, not a curated behavior bundle. Custom
presets live on the host in `display-presets.json` (next to `display-settings.json`); the catalog and
the active policy are independent, so editing a preset never disturbs a running session.
## Options reference
Choose **Custom** in the console to set these directly.
### Keep alive
How long the virtual display survives after your last session disconnects. On a gamescope game host,
this also keeps the **game itself running** so you can reconnect straight back into it.
- **Off** — tear the display down at session end (nothing lingers).
- **A duration** (seconds) — keep it for that long; a reconnect inside the window drops you straight
back in, with no re-negotiation and no desktop reshuffle.
- **Forever** — keep it until you stop the host or **release it** from the console (Host → *Virtual
displays* → *Release*). This is the gaming-rig model.
Default: **10 seconds**. Windows has always lingered 10 s; the Linux backends previously tore down
immediately — a short linger makes reconnects smoother on both.
**A reconnect always resumes the kept display** — the host recognises your device and hands back the
same display, even if you reconnect a second or two after dropping (before it has noticed you left).
**Deliberately quitting** (closing the client, not a network drop) tears the display down at once,
skipping the linger, so you don't leave a ghost behind. How quickly a *dropped* client is noticed is
the QUIC idle timeout — 8 s by default, tunable with `PUNKTFUNK_IDLE_TIMEOUT_MS` (see
[Legacy environment knobs](#legacy-environment-knobs)) if you want kept displays freed sooner.
> **Keep-alive + Exclusive keeps your physical monitors dark after you disconnect**, until the
> linger expires or you release the display. That's intentional for a dedicated gaming box, but
> don't set a long/forever keep-alive together with Exclusive on a machine whose monitors you also
> use in person — use **Shared desktop** there instead.
### Topology
What punktfunk does with your monitor layout while it streams.
- **Extend** — add the virtual display alongside your real monitors; touch nothing else.
- **Primary** — make the virtual display your primary output; your physical monitors stay on.
- **Exclusive** — the virtual display becomes your **only** enabled output (physical monitors are
disabled, then restored when streaming ends). This is what makes the streamed surface *be* the
desktop, so panels and windows land on it.
- **Automatic** *(default)* — Exclusive on Windows and on an auto-detected KDE/GNOME desktop
("stream this desktop" means the streamed output *is* the desktop); Extend when you've pinned a
specific compositor with `PUNKTFUNK_COMPOSITOR` (a test/CI posture).
Per-backend support:
| | KWin | Mutter/GNOME | Sway/wlroots · Hyprland | Windows |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Extend | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Primary | ✅ | ✅ | ⚠️ treated as Extend | ✅ |
| Exclusive | ✅ | ✅ | ⏳ following release | ✅ |
### Conflict handling · identity · layout
- **Conflict handling** — what happens when a *different* client connects while one is already
streaming and asks for a different resolution: give it its own display (**separate**), take the
box over (**steal**), share the existing display at its current mode (**join**), or refuse it
(**reject**). On Linux, `separate` gives each client its own display on the shared desktop. On
**Windows** a second client is **rejected** (a clean "host busy") even under `separate` — two
clients can't yet share one virtual display's capture there (that's a later stage), so the live
session is protected instead. A same-client *reconnect* never conflicts — it resumes.
- **Identity** — whether each client gets a **stable display identity** so your desktop environment
remembers its settings (see [Persistent scaling](#persistent-scaling)): one shared identity, one
**per client**, or one **per client + resolution**.
- **Layout / max displays** — when several clients each become a monitor of one desktop, this places
them side by side (**auto**) or exactly where you arrange them in the console (**manual**, keyed to
each client), up to **max displays**. Arrange them under Host → *Virtual displays* once two or more
are streaming.
### Dedicated game sessions
**Dedicated game sessions** control how a session that *launches a game from your library* is served
(Linux hosts):
- **Auto** (default) — the launch rides whatever session the box is in: the managed Steam session on a
Steam Deck / Bazzite couch box, a bare gamescope on a plain distro, or spawned into your live KDE /
GNOME / Sway desktop.
- **Dedicated** — every library launch gets its **own headless gamescope at your exact resolution and
refresh**, with just the game inside. The game boots straight in — no Steam Big Picture to navigate,
no game-mode desktop. Steam titles launch with the client hidden (`steam -silent`); non-Steam titles
start almost instantly (gamescope up in ~1 s, then the game's own boot). Combined with **keep alive**,
the game keeps running when you disconnect and you re-attach straight back into it; when you quit the
game, the session ends cleanly and your client returns to its library.
Dedicated needs `gamescope` installed on the host; if it isn't, a launch falls back to **Auto**
routing. This axis is independent of the preset — pick it under Host → *Virtual displays*. On a box
that's already in Steam game mode, a dedicated Steam launch frees game mode's Steam first and restores
it when the session ends. (GameStream / Moonlight launches follow the same routing.)
## Persistent scaling
Set your display **scaling** once and have it stick across reconnects. This works by giving each
client a *stable display identity*, so your desktop environment keys its per-monitor settings to it.
| Host | Supported | How |
|---|---|---|
| **Windows** | ✅ today | Connect, set scaling in Settings while streaming — Windows remembers it per client. |
| **KDE / KWin** | ✅ today | Set scaling in System Settings while streaming; KWin keys it to a stable per-client output name and reapplies it on reconnect. Validated live (150 %/125 % survive a full disconnect + reconnect). |
| **GNOME / Mutter** | ❌ | GNOME's virtual-monitor API exposes no stable identity to key config on. |
| **Sway / wlroots** | ❌ | Headless outputs can't carry a stable identity; pin scale in your sway config instead. |
## Legacy environment knobs
These `PUNKTFUNK_*` variables still work, but the console (and `display-settings.json`) supersede
them — when a settings file exists, it wins.
| Legacy knob | Now expressed as |
|---|---|
| `PUNKTFUNK_MONITOR_LINGER_MS` | **Keep alive** → duration *(Windows)* |
| `PUNKTFUNK_NO_ISOLATE` | **Topology** → Extend *(Windows)* |
| `PUNKTFUNK_KWIN_VIRTUAL_PRIMARY` / `PUNKTFUNK_MUTTER_VIRTUAL_PRIMARY` | **Topology** → Exclusive (when set) / Extend (when `0`) |
One knob has no console equivalent — it's a transport tuning, not display policy:
- **`PUNKTFUNK_IDLE_TIMEOUT_MS`** (host, default `8000`) — how long the host waits before declaring a
*dropped* client gone, which is when a kept display starts its linger (or is freed). Lower it (e.g.
`3000`) to reclaim kept displays sooner after an ungraceful drop; it's clamped to ≥1 s and its
keep-alive ping scales with it, so a live session never false-disconnects. A deliberate quit is
instant regardless. Also `--idle-timeout-ms` on `punktfunk1-host`.
## Troubleshooting
**My physical monitors stayed off after I disconnected.** You have keep-alive set together with
Exclusive topology — the display (and your isolated desktop) is being kept for the linger window.
Release it from the console (Host → *Virtual displays*), or switch to the **Shared desktop** preset
so streaming never disables your real monitors.
**The virtual output shows only my wallpaper.** Your topology is Extend, so the streamed display is
an empty extension. Use **Primary** or **Exclusive** so your desktop actually lands on it.
**KWin virtual outputs need KWin ≥ 6.5.6.** Older KWin can't create the virtual output at all —
see [requirements](/docs/requirements).
**Reconnecting into game mode reconnects cleanly now.** On a Steam Deck / Bazzite box, disconnecting
and reconnecting within game mode reuses the still-warm session (or cleanly recreates it) instead of
landing on a dead stream — and switching between game mode and the KDE / GNOME desktop mid-stream
follows the switch. If a launched game **exits**, a dedicated session ends and returns you to your
library; a game mode / desktop session keeps streaming.
**My couch box's TV stayed on the streamed session after I disconnected.** With the **gaming-rig**
preset (keep alive = *forever*), a managed Steam session is held indefinitely so a reconnect resumes
instantly — return to game mode on the box (or restart the host) to hand the TV back.