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Virtual display

New display

To mirror a new virtual display instead of the device screen:

bash
scrcpy --new-display=1920x1080
scrcpy --new-display=1920x1080/420  # force 420 dpi
scrcpy --new-display         # use the main display size and density
scrcpy --new-display=/240    # use the main display size and 240 dpi

The new virtual display is destroyed on exit.

Start app

On some devices, a launcher is available in the virtual display.

When no launcher is available (or if is explicitly disabled by --no-vd-system-decorations), the virtual display is empty. In that case, you must start an Android app.

For example:

bash
scrcpy --new-display=1920x1080 --start-app=org.videolan.vlc

The app may itself be a launcher. For example, to run the open source Fossify Launcher:

bash
scrcpy --new-display=1920x1080 --no-vd-system-decorations --start-app=org.fossify.home

System decorations

By default, virtual display system decorations are enabled. To disable them, use --no-vd-system-decorations:

scrcpy --new-display --no-vd-system-decorations

This is useful for some devices which might display a broken UI, or to disable any default launcher UI available in virtual displays.

Note that if no app is started, no content will be rendered, so no video frame will be produced at all.

Destroy on close

By default, when the virtual display is closed, the running apps are destroyed.

To move them to the main display instead, use:

scrcpy --new-display --no-vd-destroy-content

Display IME policy

By default, the virtual display IME appears on the default display.

To make it appear on the local display, use --display-ime-policy=local:

bash
scrcpy --display-id=1 --display-ime-policy=local
scrcpy --new-display --display-ime-policy=local

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