freebsd-skq/sys/dev/syscons/scterm-teken.c

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Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
/*-
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD
*
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
* Copyright (c) 1999 Kazutaka YOKOTA <yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp>
* All rights reserved.
*
* Copyright (c) 2008-2009 Ed Schouten <ed@FreeBSD.org>
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer as
* the first lines of this file unmodified.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHORS ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
* OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
* INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
* NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
* THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include "opt_syscons.h"
#include "opt_teken.h"
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/module.h>
#include <sys/consio.h>
#include <sys/kbio.h>
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
#if defined(__arm__) || defined(__mips__) || defined(__powerpc__)
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
#include <machine/sc_machdep.h>
#else
#include <machine/pc/display.h>
#endif
#include <dev/syscons/syscons.h>
#include <teken/teken.h>
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
static void scteken_sc_to_te_attr(unsigned char, teken_attr_t *);
static int scteken_te_to_sc_attr(const teken_attr_t *);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
static sc_term_init_t scteken_init;
static sc_term_term_t scteken_term;
static sc_term_puts_t scteken_puts;
static sc_term_ioctl_t scteken_ioctl;
static sc_term_default_attr_t scteken_default_attr;
static sc_term_clear_t scteken_clear;
static sc_term_input_t scteken_input;
static sc_term_fkeystr_t scteken_fkeystr;
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
static sc_term_sync_t scteken_sync;
static void scteken_nop(void);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
typedef struct {
teken_t ts_teken;
int ts_busy;
} teken_stat;
static teken_stat reserved_teken_stat;
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
static void scteken_sync_internal(scr_stat *, teken_stat *);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
static sc_term_sw_t sc_term_scteken = {
{ NULL, NULL },
"scteken", /* emulator name */
"teken terminal", /* description */
"*", /* matching renderer */
sizeof(teken_stat), /* softc size */
0,
scteken_init,
scteken_term,
scteken_puts,
scteken_ioctl,
(sc_term_reset_t *)scteken_nop,
scteken_default_attr,
scteken_clear,
(sc_term_notify_t *)scteken_nop,
scteken_input,
scteken_fkeystr,
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
scteken_sync,
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
};
SCTERM_MODULE(scteken, sc_term_scteken);
static tf_bell_t scteken_bell;
static tf_cursor_t scteken_cursor;
static tf_putchar_t scteken_putchar;
static tf_fill_t scteken_fill;
static tf_copy_t scteken_copy;
static tf_param_t scteken_param;
static tf_respond_t scteken_respond;
static const teken_funcs_t scteken_funcs = {
.tf_bell = scteken_bell,
.tf_cursor = scteken_cursor,
.tf_putchar = scteken_putchar,
.tf_fill = scteken_fill,
.tf_copy = scteken_copy,
.tf_param = scteken_param,
.tf_respond = scteken_respond,
};
static int
scteken_init(scr_stat *scp, void **softc, int code)
{
teken_stat *ts;
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
teken_attr_t ta;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
if (*softc == NULL) {
if (reserved_teken_stat.ts_busy)
return (EINVAL);
*softc = &reserved_teken_stat;
}
ts = *softc;
switch (code) {
case SC_TE_COLD_INIT:
++sc_term_scteken.te_refcount;
ts->ts_busy = 1;
/* FALLTHROUGH */
case SC_TE_WARM_INIT:
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
ta = *teken_get_defattr(&ts->ts_teken);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
teken_init(&ts->ts_teken, &scteken_funcs, scp);
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
teken_set_defattr(&ts->ts_teken, &ta);
#ifndef TEKEN_UTF8
teken_set_8bit(&ts->ts_teken);
#endif /* !TEKEN_UTF8 */
#ifdef TEKEN_CONS25
teken_set_cons25(&ts->ts_teken);
#endif /* TEKEN_CONS25 */
teken_set_cons25keys(&ts->ts_teken);
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
scteken_sync_internal(scp, ts);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
break;
}
return (0);
}
static int
scteken_term(scr_stat *scp, void **softc)
{
if (*softc == &reserved_teken_stat) {
*softc = NULL;
reserved_teken_stat.ts_busy = 0;
}
--sc_term_scteken.te_refcount;
return (0);
}
static void
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
scteken_puts(scr_stat *scp, u_char *buf, int len)
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
{
teken_stat *ts = scp->ts;
scp->sc->write_in_progress++;
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
teken_input(&ts->ts_teken, buf, len);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
scp->sc->write_in_progress--;
}
static int
scteken_ioctl(scr_stat *scp, struct tty *tp, u_long cmd, caddr_t data,
struct thread *td)
{
teken_stat *ts = scp->ts;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
vid_info_t *vi;
int attr;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
switch (cmd) {
case GIO_ATTR: /* get current attributes */
*(int*)data =
scteken_te_to_sc_attr(teken_get_curattr(&ts->ts_teken));
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
return (0);
case CONS_GETINFO: /* get current (virtual) console info */
vi = (vid_info_t *)data;
if (vi->size != sizeof(struct vid_info))
return EINVAL;
attr = scteken_te_to_sc_attr(teken_get_defattr(&ts->ts_teken));
vi->mv_norm.fore = attr & 0x0f;
vi->mv_norm.back = (attr >> 4) & 0x0f;
vi->mv_rev.fore = vi->mv_norm.back;
vi->mv_rev.back = vi->mv_norm.fore;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
/*
* The other fields are filled by the upper routine. XXX
*/
return (ENOIOCTL);
}
return (ENOIOCTL);
}
static void
scteken_default_attr(scr_stat *scp, int color, int rev_color)
{
teken_stat *ts = scp->ts;
teken_attr_t ta;
scteken_sc_to_te_attr(color, &ta);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
teken_set_defattr(&ts->ts_teken, &ta);
}
static void
scteken_clear(scr_stat *scp)
{
teken_stat *ts = scp->ts;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
sc_move_cursor(scp, 0, 0);
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
scteken_sync_internal(scp, ts);
sc_vtb_clear(&scp->vtb, scp->sc->scr_map[0x20],
scteken_te_to_sc_attr(teken_get_curattr(&ts->ts_teken))
<< 8);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
mark_all(scp);
}
static int
scteken_input(scr_stat *scp, int c, struct tty *tp)
{
return FALSE;
}
static const char *
scteken_fkeystr(scr_stat *scp, int c)
{
teken_stat *ts = scp->ts;
unsigned int k;
switch (c) {
case FKEY | F(1): case FKEY | F(2): case FKEY | F(3):
case FKEY | F(4): case FKEY | F(5): case FKEY | F(6):
case FKEY | F(7): case FKEY | F(8): case FKEY | F(9):
case FKEY | F(10): case FKEY | F(11): case FKEY | F(12):
k = TKEY_F1 + c - (FKEY | F(1));
break;
case FKEY | F(49):
k = TKEY_HOME;
break;
case FKEY | F(50):
k = TKEY_UP;
break;
case FKEY | F(51):
k = TKEY_PAGE_UP;
break;
case FKEY | F(53):
k = TKEY_LEFT;
break;
case FKEY | F(55):
k = TKEY_RIGHT;
break;
case FKEY | F(57):
k = TKEY_END;
break;
case FKEY | F(58):
k = TKEY_DOWN;
break;
case FKEY | F(59):
k = TKEY_PAGE_DOWN;
break;
case FKEY | F(60):
k = TKEY_INSERT;
break;
case FKEY | F(61):
k = TKEY_DELETE;
break;
default:
return (NULL);
}
return (teken_get_sequence(&ts->ts_teken, k));
}
static void
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
scteken_sync_internal(scr_stat *scp, teken_stat *ts)
{
teken_pos_t tp;
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
tp.tp_col = scp->xsize;
tp.tp_row = scp->ysize;
teken_set_winsize_noreset(&ts->ts_teken, &tp);
tp.tp_col = scp->xpos;
tp.tp_row = scp->ypos;
teken_set_cursor(&ts->ts_teken, &tp);
}
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
static void
scteken_sync(scr_stat *scp)
{
scteken_sync_internal(scp, scp->ts);
}
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
static void
scteken_nop(void)
{
}
/*
* libteken routines.
*/
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
static const teken_color_t sc_to_te_color[] = {
TC_BLACK, TC_BLUE, TC_GREEN, TC_CYAN,
TC_RED, TC_MAGENTA, TC_BROWN, TC_WHITE,
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
};
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
static const unsigned char te_to_sc_color[] = {
FG_BLACK, FG_RED, FG_GREEN, FG_BROWN,
FG_BLUE, FG_MAGENTA, FG_CYAN, FG_LIGHTGREY,
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
};
static void
scteken_sc_to_te_attr(unsigned char color, teken_attr_t *a)
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
{
/*
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
* Conversions of attrs are not reversible. Since sc attrs are
* pure colors in the simplest mode (16-color graphics) and the
* API is too deficient to tell us the mode, always convert to
* pure colors. The conversion is essentially the identity except
* for reordering the non-brightness bits in the 2 color numbers.
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
*/
a->ta_format = 0;
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
a->ta_fgcolor = sc_to_te_color[color & 7] | (color & 8);
a->ta_bgcolor = sc_to_te_color[(color >> 4) & 7] | ((color >> 4) & 8);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
}
static int
scteken_te_to_sc_attr(const teken_attr_t *a)
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
{
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
int attr;
teken_color_t fg, bg;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
if (a->ta_format & TF_REVERSE) {
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
fg = a->ta_bgcolor;
bg = a->ta_fgcolor;
} else {
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
fg = a->ta_fgcolor;
bg = a->ta_bgcolor;
}
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
if (fg >= 16)
fg = teken_256to16(fg);
if (bg >= 16)
bg = teken_256to16(bg);
attr = te_to_sc_color[fg & 7] | (fg & 8) |
((te_to_sc_color[bg & 7] | (bg & 8)) << 4);
/* XXX: underline mapping for Hercules adapter can be better. */
if (a->ta_format & (TF_BOLD | TF_UNDERLINE))
attr ^= 8;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
if (a->ta_format & TF_BLINK)
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
attr ^= 0x80;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
return (attr);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
}
static void
scteken_bell(void *arg)
{
scr_stat *scp = arg;
sc_bell(scp, scp->bell_pitch, scp->bell_duration);
}
static void
scteken_cursor(void *arg, const teken_pos_t *p)
{
scr_stat *scp = arg;
sc_move_cursor(scp, p->tp_col, p->tp_row);
}
#ifdef TEKEN_UTF8
struct unicp437 {
uint16_t unicode_base;
uint8_t cp437_base;
uint8_t length;
};
static const struct unicp437 cp437table[] = {
{ 0x0020, 0x20, 0x5e }, { 0x00a0, 0x20, 0x00 },
{ 0x00a1, 0xad, 0x00 }, { 0x00a2, 0x9b, 0x00 },
{ 0x00a3, 0x9c, 0x00 }, { 0x00a5, 0x9d, 0x00 },
{ 0x00a7, 0x15, 0x00 }, { 0x00aa, 0xa6, 0x00 },
{ 0x00ab, 0xae, 0x00 }, { 0x00ac, 0xaa, 0x00 },
{ 0x00b0, 0xf8, 0x00 }, { 0x00b1, 0xf1, 0x00 },
{ 0x00b2, 0xfd, 0x00 }, { 0x00b5, 0xe6, 0x00 },
{ 0x00b6, 0x14, 0x00 }, { 0x00b7, 0xfa, 0x00 },
{ 0x00ba, 0xa7, 0x00 }, { 0x00bb, 0xaf, 0x00 },
{ 0x00bc, 0xac, 0x00 }, { 0x00bd, 0xab, 0x00 },
{ 0x00bf, 0xa8, 0x00 }, { 0x00c0, 0x41, 0x00 },
{ 0x00c1, 0x41, 0x00 }, { 0x00c2, 0x41, 0x00 },
{ 0x00c4, 0x8e, 0x01 }, { 0x00c6, 0x92, 0x00 },
{ 0x00c7, 0x80, 0x00 }, { 0x00c8, 0x45, 0x00 },
{ 0x00c9, 0x90, 0x00 }, { 0x00ca, 0x45, 0x00 },
{ 0x00cb, 0x45, 0x00 }, { 0x00cc, 0x49, 0x00 },
{ 0x00cd, 0x49, 0x00 }, { 0x00ce, 0x49, 0x00 },
{ 0x00cf, 0x49, 0x00 }, { 0x00d1, 0xa5, 0x00 },
{ 0x00d2, 0x4f, 0x00 }, { 0x00d3, 0x4f, 0x00 },
{ 0x00d4, 0x4f, 0x00 }, { 0x00d6, 0x99, 0x00 },
{ 0x00d9, 0x55, 0x00 }, { 0x00da, 0x55, 0x00 },
{ 0x00db, 0x55, 0x00 }, { 0x00dc, 0x9a, 0x00 },
{ 0x00df, 0xe1, 0x00 }, { 0x00e0, 0x85, 0x00 },
{ 0x00e1, 0xa0, 0x00 }, { 0x00e2, 0x83, 0x00 },
{ 0x00e4, 0x84, 0x00 }, { 0x00e5, 0x86, 0x00 },
{ 0x00e6, 0x91, 0x00 }, { 0x00e7, 0x87, 0x00 },
{ 0x00e8, 0x8a, 0x00 }, { 0x00e9, 0x82, 0x00 },
{ 0x00ea, 0x88, 0x01 }, { 0x00ec, 0x8d, 0x00 },
{ 0x00ed, 0xa1, 0x00 }, { 0x00ee, 0x8c, 0x00 },
{ 0x00ef, 0x8b, 0x00 }, { 0x00f0, 0xeb, 0x00 },
{ 0x00f1, 0xa4, 0x00 }, { 0x00f2, 0x95, 0x00 },
{ 0x00f3, 0xa2, 0x00 }, { 0x00f4, 0x93, 0x00 },
{ 0x00f6, 0x94, 0x00 }, { 0x00f7, 0xf6, 0x00 },
{ 0x00f8, 0xed, 0x00 }, { 0x00f9, 0x97, 0x00 },
{ 0x00fa, 0xa3, 0x00 }, { 0x00fb, 0x96, 0x00 },
{ 0x00fc, 0x81, 0x00 }, { 0x00ff, 0x98, 0x00 },
{ 0x013f, 0x4c, 0x00 }, { 0x0140, 0x6c, 0x00 },
{ 0x0192, 0x9f, 0x00 }, { 0x0393, 0xe2, 0x00 },
{ 0x0398, 0xe9, 0x00 }, { 0x03a3, 0xe4, 0x00 },
{ 0x03a6, 0xe8, 0x00 }, { 0x03a9, 0xea, 0x00 },
{ 0x03b1, 0xe0, 0x01 }, { 0x03b4, 0xeb, 0x00 },
{ 0x03b5, 0xee, 0x00 }, { 0x03bc, 0xe6, 0x00 },
{ 0x03c0, 0xe3, 0x00 }, { 0x03c3, 0xe5, 0x00 },
{ 0x03c4, 0xe7, 0x00 }, { 0x03c6, 0xed, 0x00 },
{ 0x03d5, 0xed, 0x00 }, { 0x2010, 0x2d, 0x00 },
{ 0x2014, 0x2d, 0x00 }, { 0x2018, 0x60, 0x00 },
{ 0x2019, 0x27, 0x00 }, { 0x201c, 0x22, 0x00 },
{ 0x201d, 0x22, 0x00 }, { 0x2022, 0x07, 0x00 },
{ 0x203c, 0x13, 0x00 }, { 0x207f, 0xfc, 0x00 },
{ 0x20a7, 0x9e, 0x00 }, { 0x20ac, 0xee, 0x00 },
{ 0x2126, 0xea, 0x00 }, { 0x2190, 0x1b, 0x00 },
{ 0x2191, 0x18, 0x00 }, { 0x2192, 0x1a, 0x00 },
{ 0x2193, 0x19, 0x00 }, { 0x2194, 0x1d, 0x00 },
{ 0x2195, 0x12, 0x00 }, { 0x21a8, 0x17, 0x00 },
{ 0x2202, 0xeb, 0x00 }, { 0x2208, 0xee, 0x00 },
{ 0x2211, 0xe4, 0x00 }, { 0x2212, 0x2d, 0x00 },
{ 0x2219, 0xf9, 0x00 }, { 0x221a, 0xfb, 0x00 },
{ 0x221e, 0xec, 0x00 }, { 0x221f, 0x1c, 0x00 },
{ 0x2229, 0xef, 0x00 }, { 0x2248, 0xf7, 0x00 },
{ 0x2261, 0xf0, 0x00 }, { 0x2264, 0xf3, 0x00 },
{ 0x2265, 0xf2, 0x00 }, { 0x2302, 0x7f, 0x00 },
{ 0x2310, 0xa9, 0x00 }, { 0x2320, 0xf4, 0x00 },
{ 0x2321, 0xf5, 0x00 }, { 0x2500, 0xc4, 0x00 },
{ 0x2502, 0xb3, 0x00 }, { 0x250c, 0xda, 0x00 },
{ 0x2510, 0xbf, 0x00 }, { 0x2514, 0xc0, 0x00 },
{ 0x2518, 0xd9, 0x00 }, { 0x251c, 0xc3, 0x00 },
{ 0x2524, 0xb4, 0x00 }, { 0x252c, 0xc2, 0x00 },
{ 0x2534, 0xc1, 0x00 }, { 0x253c, 0xc5, 0x00 },
{ 0x2550, 0xcd, 0x00 }, { 0x2551, 0xba, 0x00 },
{ 0x2552, 0xd5, 0x00 }, { 0x2553, 0xd6, 0x00 },
{ 0x2554, 0xc9, 0x00 }, { 0x2555, 0xb8, 0x00 },
{ 0x2556, 0xb7, 0x00 }, { 0x2557, 0xbb, 0x00 },
{ 0x2558, 0xd4, 0x00 }, { 0x2559, 0xd3, 0x00 },
{ 0x255a, 0xc8, 0x00 }, { 0x255b, 0xbe, 0x00 },
{ 0x255c, 0xbd, 0x00 }, { 0x255d, 0xbc, 0x00 },
{ 0x255e, 0xc6, 0x01 }, { 0x2560, 0xcc, 0x00 },
{ 0x2561, 0xb5, 0x00 }, { 0x2562, 0xb6, 0x00 },
{ 0x2563, 0xb9, 0x00 }, { 0x2564, 0xd1, 0x01 },
{ 0x2566, 0xcb, 0x00 }, { 0x2567, 0xcf, 0x00 },
{ 0x2568, 0xd0, 0x00 }, { 0x2569, 0xca, 0x00 },
{ 0x256a, 0xd8, 0x00 }, { 0x256b, 0xd7, 0x00 },
{ 0x256c, 0xce, 0x00 }, { 0x2580, 0xdf, 0x00 },
{ 0x2584, 0xdc, 0x00 }, { 0x2588, 0xdb, 0x00 },
{ 0x258c, 0xdd, 0x00 }, { 0x2590, 0xde, 0x00 },
{ 0x2591, 0xb0, 0x02 }, { 0x25a0, 0xfe, 0x00 },
{ 0x25ac, 0x16, 0x00 },
{ 0x25ae, 0xdb, 0x00 }, { 0x25b2, 0x1e, 0x00 },
{ 0x25ba, 0x10, 0x00 }, { 0x25bc, 0x1f, 0x00 },
{ 0x25c4, 0x11, 0x00 }, { 0x25cb, 0x09, 0x00 },
{ 0x25d8, 0x08, 0x00 }, { 0x25d9, 0x0a, 0x00 },
{ 0x263a, 0x01, 0x01 }, { 0x263c, 0x0f, 0x00 },
{ 0x2640, 0x0c, 0x00 }, { 0x2642, 0x0b, 0x00 },
{ 0x2660, 0x06, 0x00 }, { 0x2663, 0x05, 0x00 },
{ 0x2665, 0x03, 0x01 }, { 0x266a, 0x0d, 0x01 },
};
static void
scteken_get_cp437(teken_char_t *c, int *attr)
{
int min, mid, max;
min = 0;
max = (sizeof(cp437table) / sizeof(struct unicp437)) - 1;
if (*c < cp437table[0].unicode_base ||
*c > cp437table[max].unicode_base + cp437table[max].length)
goto bad;
while (max >= min) {
mid = (min + max) / 2;
if (*c < cp437table[mid].unicode_base) {
max = mid - 1;
} else if (*c > cp437table[mid].unicode_base +
cp437table[mid].length) {
min = mid + 1;
} else {
*c -= cp437table[mid].unicode_base;
*c += cp437table[mid].cp437_base;
return;
}
}
bad:
/* Character not present in CP437. */
*attr = (FG_RED|BG_BLACK) << 8;
*c = '?';
}
#endif /* TEKEN_UTF8 */
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
static void
scteken_putchar(void *arg, const teken_pos_t *tp, teken_char_t c,
const teken_attr_t *a)
{
scr_stat *scp = arg;
u_char *map;
u_char ch;
vm_offset_t p;
int cursor, attr;
/*
* No support for printing right hand sides for CJK fullwidth
* characters. Simply print a space and assume that the left
* hand side describes the entire character.
*/
attr = scteken_te_to_sc_attr(a) << 8;
if (a->ta_format & TF_CJK_RIGHT)
c = ' ';
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
#ifdef TEKEN_UTF8
scteken_get_cp437(&c, &attr);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
#endif /* TEKEN_UTF8 */
ch = c;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
map = scp->sc->scr_map;
cursor = tp->tp_row * scp->xsize + tp->tp_col;
p = sc_vtb_pointer(&scp->vtb, cursor);
sc_vtb_putchar(&scp->vtb, p, map[ch], attr);
mark_for_update(scp, cursor);
/*
* XXX: Why do we need this? Only marking `cursor' should be
* enough. Without this line, we get artifacts.
*/
mark_for_update(scp, imin(cursor + 1, scp->xsize * scp->ysize - 1));
}
static void
scteken_fill(void *arg, const teken_rect_t *r, teken_char_t c,
const teken_attr_t *a)
{
scr_stat *scp = arg;
u_char *map;
u_char ch;
unsigned int width;
int attr, row;
attr = scteken_te_to_sc_attr(a) << 8;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
#ifdef TEKEN_UTF8
scteken_get_cp437(&c, &attr);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
#endif /* TEKEN_UTF8 */
ch = c;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
map = scp->sc->scr_map;
if (r->tr_begin.tp_col == 0 && r->tr_end.tp_col == scp->xsize) {
/* Single contiguous region to fill. */
sc_vtb_erase(&scp->vtb, r->tr_begin.tp_row * scp->xsize,
(r->tr_end.tp_row - r->tr_begin.tp_row) * scp->xsize,
map[ch], attr);
} else {
/* Fill display line by line. */
width = r->tr_end.tp_col - r->tr_begin.tp_col;
for (row = r->tr_begin.tp_row; row < r->tr_end.tp_row; row++) {
sc_vtb_erase(&scp->vtb, r->tr_begin.tp_row *
scp->xsize + r->tr_begin.tp_col,
width, map[ch], attr);
}
}
/* Mark begin and end positions to be refreshed. */
mark_for_update(scp,
r->tr_begin.tp_row * scp->xsize + r->tr_begin.tp_col);
mark_for_update(scp,
(r->tr_end.tp_row - 1) * scp->xsize + (r->tr_end.tp_col - 1));
sc_remove_cutmarking(scp);
}
static void
scteken_copy(void *arg, const teken_rect_t *r, const teken_pos_t *p)
{
scr_stat *scp = arg;
unsigned int width;
int src, dst, end;
#ifndef SC_NO_HISTORY
/*
* We count a line of input as history if we perform a copy of
* one whole line upward. In other words: if a line of text gets
* overwritten by a rectangle that's right below it.
*/
if (scp->history != NULL &&
r->tr_begin.tp_col == 0 && r->tr_end.tp_col == scp->xsize &&
r->tr_begin.tp_row == p->tp_row + 1) {
sc_hist_save_one_line(scp, p->tp_row);
}
#endif
if (r->tr_begin.tp_col == 0 && r->tr_end.tp_col == scp->xsize) {
/* Single contiguous region to copy. */
sc_vtb_move(&scp->vtb, r->tr_begin.tp_row * scp->xsize,
p->tp_row * scp->xsize,
(r->tr_end.tp_row - r->tr_begin.tp_row) * scp->xsize);
} else {
/* Copy line by line. */
width = r->tr_end.tp_col - r->tr_begin.tp_col;
if (p->tp_row < r->tr_begin.tp_row) {
/* Copy from top to bottom. */
src = r->tr_begin.tp_row * scp->xsize +
r->tr_begin.tp_col;
end = r->tr_end.tp_row * scp->xsize +
r->tr_end.tp_col;
dst = p->tp_row * scp->xsize + p->tp_col;
while (src < end) {
sc_vtb_move(&scp->vtb, src, dst, width);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
src += scp->xsize;
dst += scp->xsize;
}
} else {
/* Copy from bottom to top. */
src = (r->tr_end.tp_row - 1) * scp->xsize +
r->tr_begin.tp_col;
end = r->tr_begin.tp_row * scp->xsize +
r->tr_begin.tp_col;
dst = (p->tp_row + r->tr_end.tp_row -
r->tr_begin.tp_row - 1) * scp->xsize + p->tp_col;
while (src >= end) {
sc_vtb_move(&scp->vtb, src, dst, width);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
src -= scp->xsize;
dst -= scp->xsize;
}
}
}
/* Mark begin and end positions to be refreshed. */
mark_for_update(scp,
p->tp_row * scp->xsize + p->tp_col);
mark_for_update(scp,
(p->tp_row + r->tr_end.tp_row - r->tr_begin.tp_row - 1) *
scp->xsize +
(p->tp_col + r->tr_end.tp_col - r->tr_begin.tp_col - 1));
sc_remove_cutmarking(scp);
}
static void
scteken_param(void *arg, int cmd, unsigned int value)
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
{
static int cattrs[] = {
0, /* block */
CONS_BLINK_CURSOR, /* blinking block */
CONS_CHAR_CURSOR, /* underline */
CONS_CHAR_CURSOR | CONS_BLINK_CURSOR, /* blinking underline */
CONS_RESET_CURSOR, /* reset to default */
CONS_HIDDEN_CURSOR, /* hide cursor */
};
static int tcattrs[] = {
CONS_RESET_CURSOR | CONS_LOCAL_CURSOR, /* normal */
CONS_HIDDEN_CURSOR | CONS_LOCAL_CURSOR, /* invisible */
};
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
scr_stat *scp = arg;
int flags, n, v0, v1, v2;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
switch (cmd) {
case TP_SETBORDER:
scp->border = value & 0xff;
if (scp == scp->sc->cur_scp)
sc_set_border(scp, scp->border);
break;
case TP_SETGLOBALCURSOR:
n = value & 0xff;
v0 = (value >> 8) & 0xff;
v1 = (value >> 16) & 0xff;
v2 = (value >> 24) & 0xff;
switch (n) {
case 1: /* flags only */
if (v0 < sizeof(cattrs) / sizeof(cattrs[0]))
v0 = cattrs[v0];
else /* backward compatibility */
v0 = cattrs[v0 & 0x3];
sc_change_cursor_shape(scp, v0, -1, -1);
break;
case 2:
v2 = 0;
v0 &= 0x1f; /* backward compatibility */
v1 &= 0x1f;
/* FALL THROUGH */
case 3: /* base and height */
if (v2 == 0) /* count from top */
sc_change_cursor_shape(scp, -1,
scp->font_size - v1 - 1,
v1 - v0 + 1);
else if (v2 == 1) /* count from bottom */
sc_change_cursor_shape(scp, -1,
v0, v1 - v0 + 1);
break;
}
break;
case TP_SETLOCALCURSOR:
if (value < sizeof(tcattrs) / sizeof(tcattrs[0]))
sc_change_cursor_shape(scp, tcattrs[value], -1, -1);
else if (value == 2) {
sc_change_cursor_shape(scp,
CONS_RESET_CURSOR | CONS_LOCAL_CURSOR, -1, -1);
flags = scp->base_curs_attr.flags ^ CONS_BLINK_CURSOR;
sc_change_cursor_shape(scp,
flags | CONS_LOCAL_CURSOR, -1, -1);
}
break;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
case TP_SHOWCURSOR:
if (value != 0)
flags = scp->base_curs_attr.flags & ~CONS_HIDDEN_CURSOR;
else
flags = scp->base_curs_attr.flags | CONS_HIDDEN_CURSOR;
sc_change_cursor_shape(scp, flags | CONS_LOCAL_CURSOR, -1, -1);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
break;
case TP_SWITCHVT:
sc_switch_scr(scp->sc, value);
break;
case TP_SETBELLPD:
scp->bell_pitch = TP_SETBELLPD_PITCH(value);
scp->bell_duration = TP_SETBELLPD_DURATION(value);
break;
case TP_MOUSE:
scp->mouse_level = value;
break;
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
}
}
static void
scteken_respond(void *arg, const void *buf, size_t len)
{
scr_stat *scp = arg;
sc_respond(scp, buf, len, 0);
Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken. Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are present in VT100 and xterm. A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers: - Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features: - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM) - Character sets (SCS) - libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful when debugging the code: - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can be very useful to debug any rendering issues. - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes of random input. - libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application, you can hold some nice experiments. - I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8? - I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread' conversion. - To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken: unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'. - Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them. Discussed on: current@, hackers@ Discussed with: philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
}