Commit Graph

801 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bruce Evans
36e19a0f8c Fix setting of defaults for the text cursor.
There was already a per-vty defaults field, but it was useless since it was
only initialized when propagating the global settings and thus no different
from the current global settings and not per-vty.  The global defaults field
was also invariant after boot time, but not quite so useless.

Fix this by adding a second selection bit the the control flags of the
relevant ioctl().  vidcontrol doesn't support this yet.  Setting either
default propagates the change to the current setting for the same level
and then to all lower levels.

Improve the 3-way escape sequence used by termcap to control the cursor.
The "normal" (ve) case has always used reset, so the user could set
it to anything, but since the reset is to a global value this is not
very useful, especially since the "very visible" (vs) case doesn't
reset but inconsistently forces to a blinking block.  Change vs to
first reset and then XOR the blinking bit so that it is predictably
different from ve.
2017-08-19 23:13:33 +00:00
Bruce Evans
4ea1f4f5ea Rename curr_curs_attr to base_curr_attr. The actual current cursor
attribute field is curs_attr.  The base field holds user data translated
in a reversible way and is needed because current field holds this in
an irreversible way for efficiency.

Factor out some common code for the reversible translation.  This is
slightly simpler now, and much easier to expand.

Translate the magic flags value -1 to a single control flag internally
up front so other flags can be trusted later.  This can be used for the
relevant ioctl() too.

Remove CONS_CURSOR_FLAGS which contained all the control flags.  It was
unused and not useful.  After adding more flags, there will be tests on
a couple at a time but never on them all.  This API should have used this
to disallow unknown flags.
2017-08-19 21:40:42 +00:00
Bruce Evans
7692d200c1 Use better hard-coded defaults for the cursor shape, and remove nearby
redundant initializations.

Hard-code base = 0, height = (approx. 1/8 of the boot-time font height)
in all cases, and remove the BIOS/MD support for setting these values.
This asks for an underline cursor sized for the boot-time font instead
of various less hard-coded but worse values.  I used that think that
the x86 BIOS always gave the same values as the above hard-coding, but
on 1 of my systems it gives the wrong value of base = 1.

The remaining BIOS fields are shift_state and bell_pitch.  These are now
consistently not explicitly reinitialized to 0.  All sc_get_bios_value()
functions except x86's are now empty, and the only useful thing that x86
returns is shift_state.  This really belongs in atkbdc, but heavier
use of the BIOS to read the more useful typematic rate has been removed
there.  fb still makes much heavier use of the BIOS.
2017-08-19 19:33:16 +00:00
Bruce Evans
15e0c6511a Fix syscons escape sequence for setting the local cursor type. This sequence
was aliased to a vt sequence, causing and fixing various bugs.

For syscons, this restores support for arg 2 which sets blinking block
too forcefully, and restores bugs for arg 0 and 1.  Arg 2 is used for
vs in the cons25 entry in termcap, but I've never noticed an application
that uses this.  The bugs involve replacing local settings by global
ones and need better handling of defaults to fix.

For vt, this requires moving the aliasing code from teken to vt where
it belongs.  This sequences is very important for cons25 compatibility
in vt since it is used by the cons25 termcap entries for ve, vi and
vs.  vt can't properly support vs for either cons25 or xterm since it
doesn't support blinking.  For xterm, the termcap entry for vs asks
for something different using 12;25h instead of 25h.

Rename C25CURS for this to C25LCT and change its description to be closer
to echoing the old comment about it.  CURS is too generic.

Fix missing syscons escape sequence for setting the global cursor shape
(and type).  Only support this in syscons since vt can't emulate anything
in it.
2017-08-18 15:40:40 +00:00
Bruce Evans
e4501d816b Fix vt100 escape sequence for showing and hiding the cursor in syscons.
It should toggle between 2 states, but it used a cut-down version of
support for a related 3-state syscons escape sequence and inherited
bugs from that.  The usual misbehaviour was that hiding and showing
the cursor reset it to a global default.

Support for the 3-state sequence remains broken by aliasing to the 2-state
sequence.  This works better but incompatibly for the 2 cases that it
supports.
2017-08-18 12:45:00 +00:00
Bruce Evans
dd833891de Fix missing syscons escape sequence for setting the border color. 2017-08-18 10:38:49 +00:00
Bruce Evans
60e47915b4 Undeprecate the CONS_CURSORTYPE ioctl. It was "deprecated" in 2001,
but it was actually extended then and it is still used (just once) in
/usr/src by its primary user (vidcontrol), while its replacement is
still not used in /usr/src.

yokota became inactive soon after deprecating CONS_CURSORTYPE (this
was part of a large change to make cursor attributes per-vty).

vidcontrol has incomplete support even for the old ioctl.  I will
update it soon.  Then there are many broken escape sequences to fix.
This is just to prepare for setting cursor colors using vidcontrol.
2017-08-16 10:59:37 +00:00
Bruce Evans
16d02c733f Fix attribute flipping for cut marking in pixel mode. The text-mode
code was used, so the lightness bit was not flipped, so the flipping
was unnecessarily null in some cases.  E.g., the unusal color scheme
of lightwhite on white (white = lightgrey in kernelspeak) is not
completely unusable, except null flipping of it gave no visible marks
for cut marking.  Now flipping it works in pixel mode only.

Fix text cursor attribute adjustment over cut marking in text mode for
the usual cursor type (non-blinking full block).  Apply the flipping
for cut marking first and adjust that instead of vice versa.  This
gives a uniform color scheme for the usual text cursor type in text
mode: a white block background with no change to the character
foreground except for variations to avoid collisions.  The old order
gave a white character fg with no change in the bg in non-colliding
cases.  Versions before r316636 changed the bg to the non-cut-marked
one about half the time using a saveunder bug; this accidentally gave
something resembling a block cursor half the time.
2017-07-10 09:00:35 +00:00
Bruce Evans
9cb3ac3bef Move open coding of construction of attributes for cut regions and
text cursors to functions so that it is easier to fix and improve.
This commit doesn't fix anything except for removing unnecessary
complications and adding comments.
2017-07-09 12:13:37 +00:00
Bruce Evans
28bbe30cce Add many bitmaps (now there are 13) for mouse cursors and logic to try
to choose the best one.

The old 9x13 cursor was was sort of correct for CGA 640x200 text mode,
but distorted for all other modes.  This mode is still available on
all systems with VGA, but stopped being useful in ~1985.  It has very
unsquare pixels with an aspect ratio of 240:100 on 4:3 monitors.  On
16:9 monitors, the unsquareness in this mode is reduced to only 180:100
iff the monitor stretches the pixels to the full screen.

Newer modes and systems have smaller distortions, but with many more
variations.  Square pixels first became common with VGA 640x480 mode
on 4:3 monitors.  However, standard VGA text mode also has 9-bit wide
characters and only 25 lines, so it has 720x400 pixels.  This has
unsquare pixels with an aspect ratio of 135:100 on 4:3 monitors.  On
16:9 monitors, it gives almost-square pixels with an aspect ration of
101:100 iff the monitor stretches, but in modes that were square on
4:3 monitors square similar monitor stretching breaks the squareness.

Guess the physical aspect ratio using heuristics.  The old version of
X that I use is further from doing this using info from PnP monitors
that is unavailable in syscons (X doesn't understand if the monitor
is doing stretching and doesn't even understand how its its own mode
changes affect the pixel size).  Monitors with aspect ratio control
should be configured to _not_ stretch 4:3 modes to 16:9.  Otherwise,
use the machdep.vga_aspect_scale sysctl to compensate.  Only 1 of my
4 monitors/laptops requires this.  It always stretches to 16:9.

The mouse data has new aspect ratio fields for selecting the best
cursor and a new name field for display in debugging messages.

Selecting the mouse cursor is now a slow operation so it is not done
for every drawing of the cursor.  To avoid a new initialization method,
it is done whenever the text cursor is set or changed.  Also remove
dead code in settings of text cursors.

Use larger mouse cursors (sometimes the full 10x16 one) for 8x8 fonts
in cases where this works better (mostly in graphics mode).
2017-07-08 17:30:33 +00:00
Bruce Evans
aa24f48b36 Add files to help manage the (vga) syscons mouse cursor.
To mostly fix distortion of mouse cursors by non-square pixels, I
needed 8 variants of the same cursor shape for large fonts and
another 7 variants for small fonts.  Some variants are shared,
leaving only 13 variants in 26 glyphs altogether.  Keep these in
the BDF source file cursor.bdf.  cursor.bdf has another 5 unused
experimental cursors in 10 glyphs.  cursor.awk is a simple awk
script for converting this and similar bdf files into C declarations
for copying into scvgarndr.c.  syscons doesn't use any of this yet.
2017-07-08 15:01:55 +00:00
Bruce Evans
bfbcb15f76 Change the drawing method for the mouse cursor in planar mode to support
colors.

Colors are still hard-coded as 15 (normally lightwhite) for the interior
and 0 (normally black) for the border, but these are now values used in
2 expressions instead of built in to the algorithm.  The algorithm used
a fancy and/or method, but this gives no control over the colors except
and'ing all color planes off gives black and or'ing all color planes on
gives lightwhite.  Just draw the border and interior in separate colors
using the same method as for characters, including its complications to
optimize for VGA adaptors.  Optimization is not really needed here, but
for the VGA case it avoids being slower than the and/or method.  The
optimization is worth about 30%.
2017-04-23 08:59:35 +00:00
Bruce Evans
6284ff8398 Optimize setting of the foreground color in the main planar method much
like for the background color.

This is a about 5% faster for output that actually reaches the screen.
2017-04-21 17:57:23 +00:00
Bruce Evans
3df57f416b Merge the main ega drawing method into the main vga planar method and
remove the former.

All other EGA/VGA methods were already shared, with VGA-only features
mostly not used and no decisions in inner loops to optimize fof VGA,
but this method was split up because it is the only important one and
using VGA methods if possible is about twice as fast.  The speed is
mostly not from splitting to reduce branches but from doing half as
many bus accesses, so make this easier to maintain by not splitting.
There is now 1 extra branch in an inner loop where it costs less than
1% of the bus access overhead on Haswell even if the compiler schedules
it poorly.
2017-04-21 15:12:43 +00:00
Bruce Evans
56e7a784ac Oops, the previous commit swapped the main ega method with the main
vga planar method (for testing that was supposed to be local that the
former still works).  The ega method works on vga but is about twice
as slow.  The vga method doesn't work on ega.

Optimize the main vga planar method a little.  For changing the
background color (which was otherwise optimized better than most
things), don't switch the write mode from 3 to 0 just to select
the pixel mask of 0xff obscurely by writing 0.  Just write 0xff
directly.
2017-04-21 06:55:17 +00:00
Bruce Evans
2d445fb18c Eliminate the ega renderer switch. It did nothing useful except hold
a pointer to the main ega drawing method which is misoptimized be in
a different function than the main vga planar mode drawing method.
Vga initialization handles everything with no extra code except for
selecting the different function.
2017-04-20 17:22:03 +00:00
Bruce Evans
55d26fc07c When the character width is 9, remove vertical lines in the mouse cursor
corresponding to the gaps between characters.  This fixes distortion
of the cursor due to expanding it across the gaps.

Again for character width 9, when the cursor characters are not in the
graphics range (0xb0-0xdf), the gaps were always there (filled in the
background color for the previous char).  They still look strange, but
don't cause distortion.  When the cursor characters are in the graphics
range, the gaps are filled by repeating the previous line.  This gives
distortion with cilia.  Removing vertical lines reduces the distortion
to vertical cilia.

Move the default for the cursor characters out of the graphics range.
With character width 9, this gives gaps instead of distortion and
other problems.  With character width 8, it just fixes a smaller set
of other problems.  Some distortion and other problems can be recovered
using vidcontrol -M.  Presumably the default was to fill the gaps
intentionally, but it is much better to leave gaps.  The gaps can even
be considered as a feature for text processing -- they give sub-pointers
to character boundaries.  The other problems are: (1) with character
width 9, characters near the cursor are moved into the graphics range
and thus distorted if any of their 8th bits is set; (2) conflicts with
national characters in the graphics range.

The default range for the graphics cursor characters is now 8-11.  This
doesn't conflict with anything, since the glyphs for the characters in
this range are unreachable.

Use the 10x16 mouse cursor in text mode too (if the font size is >= 14).

When the character width is 9, removal of 1 or 2 vertical lines makes
10x16 cursor no wider than the 9x13 one usually was.  We could even
handle cursors 1 pixel wider in 2 character cells and gaps without
more clipping than given by the gaps (the worst case is 1 pixel in the
left cell, 1 removed in the middle gap, 8 in the right cell and 1
removed in the right gap.  The pixel in the right gap is removed so
it doesn't matter if it is in the font).

When the character width is 8, we now clip the 10-wide cursor by 1
pixel in the worst case.  This clipping is usually invisible since it
is of the border and and the border usually merges with the background
so is invisible.  There should be an option to use reverse video to
highlight the border and its tip instead of the interior (graphics
mode can do better using separate colors).  This needs the 9x13 cursor
again.

Ideas from: ache (especially about the bad default character range)
2017-04-20 16:34:09 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
69db34c309 Fix build without SC_PIXEL_MODE defined. 2017-04-19 22:48:27 +00:00
Bruce Evans
35ffedf6bc Fix missing support for drawing the mouse cursor in depth 24 of direct
mode.

Use the general DRAWPIXEL() macro with its bigger case statement
(twice) instead of our big case statement (once).  DRAWPIXEL() is more
complicated since it is not missing support for depth 24 or
complications for colors in depth 16 (we currently hard-code black and
white so the complications for colors are not needed).  DRAWPIXEL()
also does the bpp calculation in the inner loop.  Compilers optimize
DRAWPIXEL() well enough, and the main text drawing method always
depended on this.  In direct mode, mouse cursor drawing is now similar
to normal text drawing except it draws in 2 hard-coded colors instead
of 1 variable color.

This also fixes a nested hard-coding of colors.  DRAWPIXEL() uses the
palette in all cases, but the direct code didn't use the palette for
its hard-coded black.  This only had an effect in depth 8, since
changing the palette is not supported in other depths.
2017-04-19 18:35:34 +00:00
Bruce Evans
38862a5553 Stop using a saveunder method for mouse cursor drawing in the vga
direct mode renderer.  I thought that reads were not much slower than
writes, so that the method only tripled the time for the whole function,
but I recently measured that video memory reads can be up to 53 times
slower than writes in tighter loops than here.  Loop overheap here
reduces the multiplier to only 16-20 on Haswell.

Start cleaning up and fixing larger bugs in this function.  Only replace
the 22-line removal loop by a 3-line one for now, since adjusting the
old loop would have required many palette calculations which are better
done in the DRAW_PIXEL() macro.  This also fixes missing support for
depth 24, but only for removal.

Removal is currently sloppy at the right bottom corner.  It sometimes
leaks border color into the text window.  This is soon cleaned up by the
caller.  The planar renderer has complications to clip at the corner.
2017-04-19 16:24:51 +00:00
Bruce Evans
f027ee38b7 Add a 10x16 mouse cursor and use it in all graphics (strictly, pixel)
modes if the font size is >= 14.

This is the X cursor XC_left_ptr (#68) (glyph #45 in an X cursor font).
Also found in vt.  The old 9x13 cursor is the 10x16 one trimmed not very
well.

8x8 fonts need a smaller cursor instead of a larger one, except when
the pixel size is small.  Text mode is still limited to width and height
1 more than the font (so the 9x13 is already 4 pixels too high for it).
2017-04-15 20:03:50 +00:00
Bruce Evans
e560b71d3b Structure the mouse cursor data so that it is easier to switch, and
access it via pointers (still to only 1 instance, now with a less
generic name).

Restructure the "and" and "or" masks as border and interior masks
(where the "and" mask was for the union of the border and the interior).
"and" and "or" were only a detail in a not very good implementation,
and after fixing that the union was only used to calculate the border
at runtime.

Use the metric data in more places to clip to active pixels earlier.
2017-04-15 19:27:39 +00:00
Bruce Evans
42106dcc4b Oops, the previous revision was missing the update of the shift variable. 2017-04-14 17:38:43 +00:00
Bruce Evans
b95fde5020 Adjust shifting so that cursor widths up to 17 (was 9) work in vga planar
mode.

Direct mode always supported widths up to 32, except for its hard-coded
16s matching the pixmap size.  Text mode is still limited to 9 its 2x2
character cell method and missing adjustments for the gap between
characters, if any.

Cursor heights can be almost anything in graphics modes.
2017-04-14 17:02:24 +00:00
Bruce Evans
a5126f539e Optimize drawing of the mouse cursor in vga planar mode almost as
much as possible, by avoiding null ANDs and ORs to the frame buffer.

Mouse cursors are fairly sparse, especially for their frame.  Pixels
are written in groups of 8 in planar mode and the per-group sparseness
is not as large, but it still averages about 40% with the current
9x13 mouse cursor.  The average drawing time is reduced by about this
amount (from 22 usec constant to 12.5 usec average on Haswell).

This optimization is relatively larger with larger cursors.  Width 10
requires 6 frame buffer accesses per line instead of 4 if not done
sparsely, but rarely more than 4 if done sparsely.
2017-04-14 14:00:13 +00:00
Bruce Evans
ddac85e5a0 Further unobfuscate the method of drawing the mouse cursor in vga planar
mode.

Don't manually unroll the 2 inner loops.  On Haswell, doing so gave a
speedup of about 0.5% (about 4 cycles per iteration out of 1400), but
hard-coded a limit of width 9 and made better better optimizations
harder to see.  gcc-4.2.1 -O does the unrolling anyway, unless tricked
with a volatile hack.  gcc's unrolling is not very good and gives a
a speedup of about half as much (about 2 cycles per iteration).  (All
timing on i386.)

Manual unrolling was only feasible because the inner loop only iterates
once or twice.  Usually twice, but a dynamic check is needed to decide,
and was not moved from the second-innermost loop manually or by gcc.
This commit basically adds another dynamic check in the inner loop.

Cursor widths of 10-17 require 3 iterations in the inner loop and this
is not so easy to unroll -- even gcc stops at 2.
2017-04-14 12:03:34 +00:00
Bruce Evans
1b986d6aea Improve drawing of the vga planar mode mouse image a little. Unobfuscate
the method a lot.

Reduce the AND mask to the complement of the cursor's frame, so that area
inside the frame is not drawn first in black and then in lightwhite.  The
AND-OR method is only directly suitable for the text mouse image, since
it doesn't go to the hardware there.  Planar mode Mouse cursor drawing
takes 10-20 usec on my Haswell system (approx. 100 graphics accesses
at 130 nsec each), so the transient was not visible.

The method used the fancy read mode 1 and its color compare and color
don't care registers with value 0 in them so that all colors matched.
All that this did was make byte reads of frame buffer memory return 0xff,
so that the x86 case could obfuscate read+write as "and".  The read must
be done for its side effect on the graphics controller but is not used,
except it must return 0xff to avoid affecting the write when the write
is obfuscated as a read-modify-write "and".  Perhaps that was a good
optimization for 8088 CPUs where each extra instruction byte took as
long as a byte memory access.

Just use read+write after removing the fancy read mode.  Remove x86
ifdefs that did the "and".  After removing the "and" in the non-x86
part of the ifdefs, fix 4 of 6 cases where the shift was wrong.
2017-04-12 20:18:38 +00:00
Bruce Evans
8bae6e480d Fix removal of mouse image by the vga planar renderer in the right border
in unusual cases.  Optimize and significantly clean up removal in this
renderer.  Optimize removal in the vga direct renderer.

Removal only needs to be done in the border (the part with pixels) in
both cases.  The planar renderer used the condition scp->xoff > 0 to
test whether a right border exists.  This actually tests for a left
border, and when the total horizontal border is 8 pixels, rounding gives
only a right border.  This was the unusual broken case.  An example
is easy to configure using something like "vidcontrol -f 8x16 iso-8x16
-g 79x25 MODE_27".

Optimize the planar case a little by only removing 9x13 active pixels
out of 16x16.  Optimize it a lot by not doing anything if there is no
overlap with the border.  Don't unroll the main loop or hard-code so
many assumptions about font sizes in it.  On my Haswell system, graphics
memory and i/o accesses takes about 520 cycles each so optimizations from
unrolling are in the noise.

Optimize the direct case to not do anything if there is no overlap with
the border.  Do a sanity check on the saveunder's coordinates.  This
requires a previous change to pass non-rounded coordinates.
2017-04-12 18:52:06 +00:00
Bruce Evans
ac07ac7c74 Trival style fix to previous commit to add this detail.
The previous commit also fixed the coordinates passed to the mouse
removal renderer.  The coordinates were rounded down to a character
boundary, and thus essentially unusable.  The renderer had to keep
track of the previous position, or clear a larger area.  The latter
is only safe in the border, which is all that needs special handling
anyway.

I think no renderer depends on the bug.  They have the following
handling:
- gfb sparc64: this seems to assume non-rounded coordinates
- gfb other: does nothing (seems to be missing border handling)
- vga text: does nothing (doesn't need border handling)
- vga planar: clears extras in the border, with some bugs.  The fixes
  will use the precise coordinates to optimize.
- vga direct: clears at the previous position with no check that it
  is active, and clears everything.  Checking finds this bug.
- others: are there any?
2017-04-12 17:38:00 +00:00
Bruce Evans
accdee8d46 Fix removing of the mouse image in vga planar mode with 8x8 fonts, and
reduce hard-coded assumptions on font sizes so that the cursor size
can be more independent of the font size.  Moving the mouse in the
buggy mode left trails of garbage.

The mouse cursor currently has size 9x13 in all modes.  This can occupy
2x3 character cells with 8x8 fonts, but the algorithm was hard-coded
for only 2x2 character cells.  Rearrange to hard-code only a maximum
cursor size (now 10x16) and to not hard-code in the logic.  The number
of cells needed is now over-estimated in some cases.

2x3 character cells should also be used in text mode with 8x8 fonts
(except with large pixels, the cursor size should be reduced), but
hard-coding for 2x2 in the implementation makes it not very easy to
expand, and it practice it shifts out bits to reduce to 2x2.

In graphics modes, expansion is easier and there is no shifting out
for 9x13 cursors (but 9 is a limit for hard-coding for 2 8-bit VGA
cells wide).  A previous commit removed the same buggy hard-coding for
removal at a lower level in planar mode.  Another previous commit fixed
the much larger code for lower-level removal in direct mode; this is
independent of the font size so worked for 8x8 fonts.  Text mode always
depended on the higher-level removal here, and always worked since
everything was hard-coded consistently for 2x2 character cells.
2017-04-12 17:06:24 +00:00
Bruce Evans
af032a9dec Fix clobbering of the default attribute and the screen position in
scteken_init().  Move the internals of scteken_sync() into a local
function to help do this.

scteken_init() reset or adjusted the default attribute and screen
position at least 3 and 5 times, respectively.  Warm init shouldn't
do any more than reset the "input" state.
  (scterm-sc.c (which still works after minor editing), only resets
  the escape state and the saved cursor position, and then does a
  nearly-null sync of the current color.)

This mainly broke mode changes, and was most noticeable when the
background color is not teken's default (usually black).  Then the
screen gets cleared in the wrong color.  vidcontrol restores the
default normal attribute and tries to restore the default reverse
attribute.  vidcontrol doesn't clear the screen again after restoring
the attribute(s), and it is too late to do it there without flicker.
Now the default normal attribute is restored before the change affects
the rendering.

When the foreground color is not teken's default, clearing with the
wrong attributes gave strange cursor colors for some cursor types.

The default reverse attribute is not restored since it is unsupported.

2/3 of the clobbering was from 2 resetting window resizing calls.  The
second one is needed to restore the size, but must not reset.  Window
resizing also sanitizes the cursor position, and after the main reset
resets the window size, the cursor row would often be adjusted from
24 to 23 if it were not already reset to 0.  scteken_sync() is good
for restoring the window size and the cursor position in the correct
order, but was unusable at init time since scp->ts is not always
initialized then.  Adjust to use its internals.

I didn't notice any problems from the cursor reset.  The cursor should
be reset, and a previous fix was to reset it consistently a little
later.

Doing nothing for warm init works almost as well, if not better.  It
is not very useful to reset the escape state for mode changes, since
the reset is especially likely to be null then.  The escape state is
most likely to be non-initial and corrupted by its most normal uses
-- sloppy non-atomic output where a context switch or just mixing
stdout with stderr splits up escape sequences.
2017-04-12 16:21:55 +00:00
Bruce Evans
f3ac3a6e6f Special rendering methods for removing mouse cursors cannot be removed
like I hoped, since they are needed for removing parts over the border.
Continue fixing bugs in them.

In the vga planar mode renderer, remove removal of the part of the
image over the text window.  This was hard-coded for nearly 8x16 fonts
and in practice didn't remove enough for 8x8 fonts.  This used the
wrong attribute over cutmarked regions.  The caller refreshes with the
correct attribute later, so the attribute bug only caused flicker.
The caller uses the same hard-coding, so the refreshes fix up all the
spots with the wrong attribute, but keep missing the missed spots.
This still gives trails of bits of cursors for cursor motions in the
affected configurations (mainly depth 4 modes with 8x8) fonts.  8x14
fonts barely escape the problem since although the cursor is drawn
as 16x16, its active part is only 9x13 and the active part fits in
the hard-coded 2x2 character cell window for 8x14 fonts.  8x8 fonts
need a 2x3 window.

In the fb non-sparc64 renderer, the buggy image removal was buggier
and was already avoided by returning before it.  Remove it completely
and fix nearby style bugs.  It was essentially the same as for the vga
planar mode renderer (obfuscated by swapping x and y).  This was buggier
since fb should handle more types of hardware so the hard-coding is
wronger.

The remaining fb image removal is also buggier.  It never supported
software cursors drawn into the border, and the hardware cursor is
probably broken by other bugs to be fixed soon.
2017-04-10 06:19:09 +00:00
Bruce Evans
eeab8fcc4b Quick fix for removal of the mouse cursor in vga direct graphics modes
(that is, in all supported 8, 15, 16 and 24-color modes).  Moving the
mouse cursor while holding down a button (giving cut marking) left a
trail of garbage from misremoved mouse cursors (usually colored
rectangles and not cursor shapes).  Cases with a button not held down
worked better and may even have worked.

No renderer support for removing (software) mouse cursors is needed
(and many renderers don't have any), since sc_remove_mouse_image()
marks for update the region containing the image and usually much
more.  The mouse cursor can be (partially) over as many as 4 character
cells, and removing it in only the 1-4 cells occupied by it would be
best for efficiency and for avoiding flicker.  However,
sc_remove_mouse_image() can only mark a single linear region and
usually marks a full row of cells and 1 more to be sure to cover the
4 cells.  It always does this, so using the special rendering method
just wastes even more time and gives even more flicker.  The special
methods will be removed soon.

The general method always works.  vga_pxlmouse_direct() appeared to
defer to it by returning immediately if !on.  However,
vga_pxlmouse_direct() actually did foot-shooting using a disguised
saveunder method.  Normal order near a mouse move is:
  (1) remove the mouse cursor in the renderer (optional)
  (2) remove the mouse cursor again and refresh the screen over the
      mouse cursor and much more from the vtb.  When the mouse has
      actually moved and a button is down, many attributes in this
      region are changed to be up to date with the new cut marking
  (3) draw the keyboard cursor again if it was clobbered by the update
  (4) draw the mouse cursor image in its new position.
The bug was to remove the mouse cursor again in step (4), before the
drawing it again in (4), using a saveunder that was valid in step (1)
at best.  The quick fix is to use the saveunder in step (1) and not
in step (4).  Using it in step (4) also used it before it was
initialized, initially and after  mode and screen switches.
2017-04-08 10:00:39 +00:00
Bruce Evans
e53fbbe661 Fix removal of the keyboard cursor image in text mode, especially
in the vga renderer.  Removal used stale attributes and didn't try to
merge with the current attribute for cut marking, so special rendering
of cut marking was lost in many cases.  The gfb renderer is too broken
to support special rendering of cut marking at all, so this change is
supposed to be just a style fix for it.  Remove all traces of the
saveunder method which was used to implement this bug.

Fix drawing of the cursor image in text mode, only in the vga
renderer.  This used a stale attribute from the frame buffer instead
of from the saveunder, but did merge with the current attribute for
cut marking so it caused less obvious bugs (subtle misrendering for
the character under the cursor).

The saveunder method may be good in simpler drivers, but in syscons
the 'under' is already saved in a better way in the vtb.  Just redraw
it from there, with visible complications for cut marking and
invisible complications for mouse cursors.  Almost all drawing
requests are passed a flag 'flip' which currently means to flip to
reverse video for characters in the cut marking region, but should
mean that the the characters are in the cut marking regions so should
be rendered specially, preferably using something better than reverse
video.  The gfb renderer always ignores this flag.  The vga renderer
ignored it for removal of the text cursor -- the saveunder gave the
stale rendering at the time the cursor was drawn.  Mouse cursors need
even more complicated methods.  They are handled by drawing them last
and removing them first.  Removing them usually redraws many other
characters with the correct cut marking (but transiently loses the
keyboard cursor, which is redrawn soon).  This tended to hide the
saveunder bug for forward motions of the keyboard cursor.  But slow
backward motions of the keyboard cursor always lost the cut marking,
and fast backwards motions lost in for about 4 in every 5 characters,
depending on races with the scrn_update() timeout handler.  This is
because the forward motions are usually into the region redrawn for
the mouse cursor, while backwards motions rarely are.

Text cursor drawing in the vga renderer used also used a
possibly-stale copy of the character and its attribute.  The vga
render has the "optimization" of sometimes reading characters from the
screen instead of from the vtb (this was not so good even in 1990 when
main memory was only a few times faster than video RAM).  Due to care
in update orders, the character is never stale, but its attribute
might be (just the cut marking part, again due to care in order).

gfb doesn't have the scp->scr pointer used for the "optimization", and
vga only uses this pointer for text mode.  So most cases have to
refresh from the vtb, and we can be sure that the ordering of vtb
updates and drawing is as required for this to work.
2017-04-08 08:24:25 +00:00
Bruce Evans
912da69951 The switch to kernel terminal context needs to update more than the cursor
position.  Especially the screen size, and potentially everything except
the input state and attributes.  Do this by changing the cursor position
setting method to a general syncing method.

Use proper constructors instead of copying to create kernel terminal
contexts.  We really want clones and not new instances, but there is
no method for cloning and there is nothing in the active instance that
needs to be cloned exactly.

Add proper destructors for kernel terminal contexts.  I doubt that the
destructor code has every been reached, but if it was then it leaked the
memory of the clones.

Remove freeing of statically allocated memory for the non-kernel terminal
context for the same terminal as the kernel.  This is in the nearly
unreachable code.  This used to not happen because delicate context
swapping made the user context use the dynamic memory and kernel
context the static memory.  I didn't restore this swapping since it
would have been unnatural to have all kernel contexts except 1 dynamic.

The constructor for terminal context has bad layering for reasons
related to the bug.  It has to return static memory early before
malloc() works.  Callers also can't allocate memory until after the
first constructor selects an emulator and tells upper layers the size
of its context.  After that, the cloning hack required the cloning
code to allocate the memory, but for all other constructors it would
be better for the terminal layer to allocate and deallocate the
memory in all cases.

Zero the memory when allocating terminal contexts dynamically.
2017-03-29 14:46:26 +00:00
Bruce Evans
d91400bf98 Restore switching to a separate kernel terminal "input" state and extend
it to a separate state for each CPU.

Terminal "input" is user or kernel output.  Its state includes the current
parser state for escape sequences and multi-byte characters, and some
results of previous parsing (mainly attributes), and in teken the cursor
position, but not completed output.  This state must be switched for kernel
output since the kernel can preempt anything, including itself, and this
must not affect the preempted state more than necessary.  Since vty0 is
shared, it is necessary to affect the frame buffer and cursor position and
history, but escape sequences must not be affected and attributes for
further output must not be affected.

This used to work.  The syscons terminal state contained mainly the parser
state for escape sequences and attributes, but not the cursor position,
and was switched.  This was first broken by SMP and/or preemptive kernels.
Then there should really be a separate state for each thread, and one more
for ddb, or locking to prevent preemption.  Serialization of printf() helps.
But it is arcane that full syscons escape sequences mostly work in kernel
printf(), and I have never seen them used except by me to test this fix.
They worked perfectly except for the races, since "input" from the kernel
was not special in any way.

This was broken to use teken.  The general switch was removed, and the
kernel normal attribute was switched specially.  The kernel reverse
attribute (config option SC_CONS_REVERSE_ATTR) became unused, and is
still unusable because teken doesn't support default reverse attributes
(it used to only be used via the ANSI escape sequence to set reverse
video).

The only new difficulty for using teken seems to be that the cursor
position is in the "input" state, so it must be updated in the active
input state for each half of the switch.  Do this to complete the
restoration.

The per-CPU state is mainly to make per-CPU coloring work cleanly, at
a cost of some space.  Each CPU gets its own full set of attribute
(not just the current attribute) maintained in the usual way.  This
also reduces races from unserialized printf()s.  However, this gives
races for serialized printf()s that otherwise have none.  Nothing
prevents the CPU doing the a printf() changing in the middle of an
escape sequence.
2017-03-26 13:03:16 +00:00
Bruce Evans
4eb235fb4f Fix bright colors for syscons, and make them work for the first time
for vt.  Restore syscons' rendering of background (bg) brightness as
foreground (fg) blinking and vice versa, and add rendering of blinking
as background brightness to vt.

Bright/saturated is conflated with light/white in the implementation
and in this description.

Bright colors were broken in all cases, but appeared to work in the
only case shown by "vidcontrol show".  A boldness hack was applied
only in 1 layering-violation place (for some syscons sequences) where
it made some cases seem to work but was undone by clearing bold using
ANSI sequences, and more seriously was not undone when setting
ANSI/xterm dark colors so left them bright.  Move this hack to drivers.

The boldness hack is only for fg brightness.  Restore/add a similar hack
for bg brightness rendered as fg blinking and vice versa.  This works
even better for vt, since vt changes the default text mode to give the
more useful bg brightness instead of fg blinking.

The brightness bit in colors was unnecessarily removed by the boldness
hack.  In other cases, it was lost later by teken_256to8().  Use
teken_256to16() to not lose it.  teken_256to8() was intended to be
used for bg colors to allow finer or bg-specific control for the more
difficult reduction to 8; however, since 16 bg colors actually work
on VGA except in syscons text mode and the conversion isn't subtle
enough to significantly in that mode, teken_256to8() is not used now.

There are still bugs, especially in vidcontrol, if bright/blinking
background colors are set.

Restore XOR logic for bold/bright fg in syscons (don't change OR
logic for vt).  Remove broken ifdef on FG_UNDERLINE and its wrong
or missing bit and restore the correct hard-coded bit.  FG_UNDERLINE
is only for mono mode which is not really supported.

Restore XOR logic for blinking/bright bg in syscons (in vt, add
OR logic and render as bright bg).  Remove related broken ifdef
on BG_BLINKING and its missing bit and restore the correct
hard-coded bit.  The same bit means blinking or bright bg depending
on the mode, and we want to ignore the difference everywhere.

Simplify conversions of attributes in syscons.  Don't pretend to
support bold fonts.  Don't support unusual encodings of brightness.
It is as good as possible to map 16 VGA colors to 16 xterm-16
colors.  E.g., VGA brown -> xterm-16 Olive will be converted back
to VGA brown, so we don't need to convert to xterm-256 Brown.  Teken
cons25 compatibility code already does the same, and duplicates some
small tables.  This is mostly for the sc -> te direction.  The other
direction uses teken_256to16() which is too generic.
2017-03-18 11:13:54 +00:00
Bruce Evans
4ca582c4f2 The previous fix didn't ifdef out enough for sparc64 to actually work.
Fix this by using more dynamic initialization with simpler ifdefs for
the machine dependencies.  Find a frame buffer address in a more
portable way that at least compiles on sparc64.
2017-03-16 07:40:33 +00:00
Bruce Evans
b8188f52eb Fix the attribute for scteken_clear() (change it back from the user
user default normal attribute to the current attribute).

This change only fixes a logic error.  scterm_clear() used to be
used for terminal reset, but teken uses a general fill function for
that, leaving scterm_clear() only used for initialization and mode
change, when using the user default attribute is correct.  It is not
really a terminal function, but needs to sync its changes with the
terminal layer.  Syncing of the attribute is currently broken for
terminal reset, but works for initialization and mode change.
2017-03-11 13:56:06 +00:00
Bruce Evans
ad530aa98b Add a scteken_set_cursor() (sc to teken) method and use it to fix
some cases of initialization and resetting of the teken cursor position.
(This bad name is consistent with others, but it is too easy to confuse
with scteken_cursor() which goes in the opposite direction.)

The following cases were broken:
- for booting without a syscons console, the teken and sc positions for
  ttyv0 were (0, 0), but are supposed to be somewhere in the middle of
  the screen (after carefully preserved BIOS and loader messages) (at
  least if there is no mode switch that loses the messages).
- after mode switches, the screen is cleared and the cursor is supposed to
  be moved to (0, 0), but it was only moved there for sc.

The following case was hacked to work:
- for booting with a syscons console, it was arranged that scteken_init()
  for the console could see a nonzero cursor position and adjust, although
  this broke the sc seeing it in the non-console case above.
2017-03-11 11:31:06 +00:00
Bruce Evans
eeb7d30e06 Rename scteken_revattr() to scteken_sc_to_te_attr(). scteken_revattr()
looked like it might handle reverse attributes, but it actually handles
conversion of attributes in the direction indicated by the new name.
Reverse attributes are just broken.

Rename scteken_attr() to scteken_te_to_sc_attr().  scteken_attr() looked
like it might give teken attributes, but it actually gives sc attributes.

Change scteken_te_to_sc_attr() to return int instead of unsigned int.
u_char would be enough, and it promotes to int, and syscons uses int
or u_short for its attributes everywhere else (u_short holds a shifted
form and it promotes to int too).
2017-03-10 14:25:38 +00:00
Bruce Evans
8f2cc27067 Start fixing some bugs in attribute handling.
This change just does cleanups missed in r56043 17 years ago.  The
default attributes were still stored in structs for the purpose of
changing them and passing around pointers to the defaults, but r56043
added another layer that made the defaults invariant and only used for
initialization and reset.  Just use the defaults directly.  This was
already done for the kernel defaults.  The defaults for reverse
attributes aren't actually used, but are ignored in layers that no
longer support them.
2017-03-10 11:44:09 +00:00
Bruce Evans
1b835e81ca Fix compilation on sparc64. The frame buffer address is in a field that
is unavailable on sparc64 only.  This makes the new ec_putc() a non-op
on sparc64 but still calls it.  On other non-x86 arches, it should
compile but might not work.

Reported by:	gjb
2017-03-10 10:25:48 +00:00
Bruce Evans
53f40ddc8e Implement ec_putc() (emergency kernel [syscons] console putc()) and use
it in emergency in sc_cnputc().

Locking fixes in sc_cnputc() previously turned off normal output in
near-deadlock conditions and added deferred output which might never
be completed.  Emergency output goes to the frame buffer using
sufficiently atomic non-blocking writes if the console is in text
mode (in graphics mode, nothing is done, modulo races setting the
graphics mode bit).  Screen updates overwrite the emergency output
if the emergency condition clears enough to reach them.

ec_putc() also works for "early" console output in normal x86 text
mode as soon as this mode is initialized (if ever).  This uses a
hard-coded x86 frame buffer address before cninit() and a hopefully
MI address after cninit().  But non-x86 is more likely to not support
text mode, when ec_putc() will be null.  ec_putc() has no dependencies
of syscons before cninit(), and only has them later to track syscons'
mode changes.  This commit doesn't attach ec_putc() for early use.

To test emergency use, put a breakpoint in central syscons output code
like sc_puts() and do some user output.  The system used to race or
deadlock in ddb output soon after entry to ddb.  The locking fixes
deferred the output until after leaving ddb, so ddb was unusable and
you had to try typing c[ontinue] blindly until it exited, or better use
a serial console in parallel.  Now the output goes to a window in the
middle 2/3 of the screen.  Scrolling is circular and there is no cursor,
but otherwise ec_putc() provides full dumb terminal functionality and
very fast output that hides artificates from dumb overwrites.
2017-03-04 08:47:31 +00:00
Bruce Evans
0a743c0957 Colorize syscons kernel console output according to a table indexed
by the CPU number.

This was originally for debugging near-deadlock conditions where
multiple CPUs either deadlock or scramble each other's output trying
to report the problem, but I found it interesting and sometimes
useful for ordinary kernel messages.  Ordinary kernel messages
shouldn't be interleaved, but if they are then the colorization
makes them readable even if the interleaving is for every character
(provided the CPU printing each message doesn't change).

The default colors are 8-15 starting at 15 (bright white on black)
for CPU 0 and repeating every 8 CPUs.  This works best with 8 CPUs.
Non-bright colors and nonzero background colors need special
configuration to avoid unreadable and ugly combinations so are not
configured by default.  The next bright color after 15 is 8 (bright
black = dark gray) is not very readable but is the only other color
used with 2 CPUs.  After that the next bright color is 9 (bright
blue) which is not much brighter than bright black, but is used with
3+ CPUs.  Other bright colors are brighter.

Colorization is configured by default so that it gets tested.  It can
only be turned off by configuring SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTR to anything other
than FG_WHITE.  After booting, all colors can be changed using the
syscons.kattr sysctl.  This is a SYSCTL_OPAQUE, and no utility is
provided to change it (sysctl only displays it).

The default colors work in all VGA modes that I could test.  In 2-color
graphics modes, all 8 bright colors are displayed as bright white, so
the colorization has no effect, but anything with a nonzero background
gives white on white unless the foreground is zero.  I don't have an
mono or VGA grayscale hardware to test on.  Support for mono mode seems
to have never worked right in syscons (I think bright white gives white
underline with either bold or bright), but VGA grayscale should work
better than 2-color graphics.
2017-03-04 06:19:12 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
2b375b4edd Remove pc98 support completely.
I thank all developers and contributors for pc98.

Relnotes:	yes
2017-01-28 02:22:15 +00:00
Oleksandr Tymoshenko
4af79d4f2b [evdev] Adds evdev support to sysmouse(4) driver
For horizontal (T-axis) wheel reporting which is not supported by
sysmouse protocol kern.evdev.sysmouse_t_axis sysctl is introduced.
It can take following values:

0 - no T-axis events (default)
1 - T-axis events are originated in ums(4) driver.
2 - T-axis events are originated in psm(4) driver.

Submitted by:	Vladimir Kondratiev <wulf@cicgroup.ru>
MFC after:	1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8597
2016-12-10 18:07:16 +00:00
Bruce Evans
90adad104b The log message for the previous commit didn't mention the most the
important detail that sc_cngetc() now opens and closes the keyboard
on every call again.  This was moved from sc_cngetc() to scn_cngrab/
ungrab() in r228644, but the change wasn't quite complete.  After
fixes for nesting in kbdd_poll() in ukbd and kbdmux, these opens
and closes should have no significant effect if done while grabbed.
They fix unusual cases when cngetc() is called while not grabbed.

This commit is the main fix for screen locking in sc_cnputc():
detect deadlock or likely-deadlock and handle it by buffering the
output atomically and printing it later if the deadlock condition
clears (and sc_cnputc() is called).

The most common deadlock is when the screen lock is held by ourself.
Then it would be safe to acquire the lock recursively if the console
driver is calling printf() in a safe context, but we don't know when
that is.  It is not safe to ignore the lock even in kdb or panic mode.
But ignore it in panic mode.  The only other known case of deadlock
is when another thread holds the lock but is running on a stopped CPU.
Detect that case approximately by using trylock and retrying for 1000
usec.  On a 4 GHz CPU, 100 usec is almost long enough -- screen switches
take slightly longer than that.  Not retrying at all is good enough
except for stress tests, and planned future versions will extend the
timeout so that the stress tests work better.

To see the behaviour when deadlock is detected, single step through
sctty_outwakeup() (or sc_puts() to start with deadlock).  Another
(serial) console is needed to the buffered-only output, but the
keyboard works in this context to continue or step out of the
deadlocked region.  The buffer is not large enough to hold all the
output for this.
2016-09-01 19:18:26 +00:00
Bruce Evans
a95582c6fd Add some locking to sc_cngetc().
Keyboard input needs Giant locking, and that is not possible to do
correctly here.  Use mtx_trylock() and proceed unlocked as before if
we can't acquire Giant (non-recursively), except in kdb mode don't
even try to acquire Giant.  Everything here is a hack, but it often
works.  Even if mtx_trylock() succeeds, this might be a LOR.

Keyboard input also needs screen locking, to handle screen updates
and switches.  Add this, using the same simplistic screen locking
as for sc_cnputc().

Giant must be acquired before the screen lock, and the screen lock
must be dropped when calling the keyboard driver (else it would get a
harmless LOR if it tries to acquire Giant).  It was intended that sc
cn open/close hide the locking calls, and they do for i/o functions
functions except for this complication.

Non-console keyboard input is still only Giant-locked, with screen
locking in some called functions.  This is correct for the keyboard
parts only.

When Giant cannot be acquired properly, atkbd and kbdmux tend to race
and work (they assume that the caller acquired Giant properly and don't
try to acquire it again or check that it has been acquired, and the
races rarely matter), while ukbd tends to deadlock or panic (since it
does the opposite, and has other usb threads to deadlock with).

The keyboard (Giant) locking here does very little, but the screen
locking completes screen locking for console mode except for not
detecting or handling deadlock.
2016-08-31 11:10:39 +00:00
Bruce Evans
81306e463e Start adding locking to sc_cngetc().
Restore an splx() lost in r228644.  We aren't nearly ready to remove
spl's.  They give hints about missing locking.  This lost one was
misplaced.  Dropping it early for convenience gave race windows for
accesses to the fkey buffer.  Giant locking accidentally fixed this
for non-console cases.

Put the spl's around the whole function.  Since there are many returns
that would need splx() just before them for a direct fix, split the
function into a wrapper that does the spl's and a "locked" function
that does the work.

Return earlier when no keyboard is attached to match the ordering in a
planned version.  This breaks the dubious feature of returning keys
from the fkey buffer after the keyboard has gone away.  Losing the keys
wouldn't matter, but we keep them too long now.
2016-08-30 10:57:19 +00:00