- <varlistentry><term><literal>-S</literal></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Don't fork or make threads on connection requests. This is good for
- debugging, but not recommended for real operation: Although the
- server is asynchronous and non-blocking, it can be nice to keep
- a software malfunction (okay then, a crash) from affecting all
- current users.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-T</literal></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Operate the server in threaded mode. The server creates a thread
- for each connection rather than a fork a process. Only available
- on UNIX systems that offers POSIX threads.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-s</literal></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Use the SR protocol (obsolete).
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-z</literal></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Use the Z39.50 protocol (default). These two options complement
- each other. You can use both multiple times on the same command
- line, between listener-specifications (see below). This way, you
- can set up the server to listen for connections in both protocols
- concurrently, on different local ports.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-l </literal>
- <replaceable>file</replaceable></term>
- <listitem><para>The logfile.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-c </literal>
- <replaceable>config</replaceable></term>
- <listitem><para>A user option that serves as a specifier for some
- sort of configuration, e.g. a filename.
- The argument to this option is transferred to member
- <literal>configname</literal>of the
- <literal>statserv_options_block</literal>.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-v </literal>
- <replaceable>level</replaceable></term>
- <listitem><para>
- The log level. Use a comma-separated list of members of the set
- {fatal,debug,warn,log,all,none}.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-u </literal>
- <replaceable>userid</replaceable></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Set user ID. Sets the real UID of the server process to that of the
- given user. It's useful if you aren't comfortable with having the
- server run as root, but you need to start it as such to bind a
- privileged port.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-w </literal>
- <replaceable>dir</replaceable></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Working directory.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-i</literal></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Use this to make the the server run from the
- <application>inetd</application> server (UNIX only).
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-install</literal></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Use this to install the server as an NT service (Windows 2000/NT only).
- Control the server by going to the Services in the Control Panel.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-remove</literal></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Use this to remove the server from the NT services (Windows 2000/NT only).
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-t </literal>
- <replaceable>minutes</replaceable></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Idle session timeout, in minutes.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry><term><literal>-k </literal>
- <replaceable>size</replaceable></term>
- <listitem><para>
- Maximum record size/message size, in kilobytes.
- </para></listitem></varlistentry>
-
- </variablelist>