Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ed Schouten
3a8a07eadd Allow Syscons terminal emulators to provide function key strings.
xterm and cons25 have some incompatibilities when it comes to escape
sequences for special keys, such as F1 to F12, home, end, etc. Add a new
te_fkeystr() that can be used to override the strings.

scterm-sck won't do anything with this, but scterm-teken will use
teken_get_sequences() to obtain the proper sequence.
2009-11-11 08:20:19 +00:00
Ed Schouten
0475bba7f5 Always home the cursor when changing the scrolling region.
I thought this only had to be done when in origin mode, to ensure that
the cursor is not placed outside the origin, but it seems this is also
done when not in origin mode.

This fixes some artifacts when pressing ^L while running irssi in tmux.
(Almost) nobody noticed this, because cons25 doesn't have scrolling
regions.
2009-11-11 08:11:21 +00:00
Ed Schouten
4a11e7f142 Discard Device Control Strings and Operating System Commands.
These strings often contain things like:

- Window titles.
- Extended key map functionality.
- Color palette switching.

We could look at these features in the future (if people consider them
to be important enough), but we'd better discard them now. This fixes
some artifacts people reported when using TERM=xterm.

Reported by:	des@, Paul B. Mahol
2009-10-08 10:26:49 +00:00
Ed Schouten
53e69c0c2a Add support for VT200-style mouse input.
Right now if applications want to use the mouse on the command line,
they use sysmouse(4) and install a signal handler in the kernel to
deliver signals when mouse events arrive. This conflicts with my plan to
change to TERM=xterm, so implement proper VT200-style mouse input.

Because mouse input is now streamed through the TTY, it means you can
now SSH to another system on the console and use the mouse there as
well. The disadvantage of the VT200 mouse protocol, is that it doesn't
seem to generate events when moving the cursor. Only when pressing and
releasing mouse buttons.

There are different protocols as well, but this one seems to be most
commonly supported.

Reported by:	Paul B. Mahol <onemda gmail com>
Tested with:	vim(1)
2009-09-27 18:19:41 +00:00
Ed Schouten
56a4365bde Add 256 color support.
It is quite inconvenient that if an application for xterm uses 256 color
mode, text suddenly starts to blink (because of ;5; in the middle).
We'd better just implement 256 color mode and add a conversion routine
from 256 to 8 color mode, which doesn't seem to be too bad in practice.

Remapping colors is done quite simple. If one of the channels is most
actively represented, primary colors are used. If two channels are most
actively represented, secondary colors are used. If all three channels
are equal (gray), it picks between black and white.

Reported by:	Paul B. Mahol <onemda gmail com>
2009-09-26 15:26:32 +00:00
Ed Schouten
f311d56014 Properly get out of origin mode if the cursor has to move outside of it.
In some cases events may occur that move the cursor outside the
scrolling region while in origin mode, which is normally not possible.
Events like these include:

- Alignment test.
- Restore cursor.

Properly switch off origin mode in these cases.

MFC after:	1 month
2009-09-26 15:07:11 +00:00
Ed Schouten
cd531e74e9 Get rid of now deprecated SCS wrappers.
We always build SCS, even when processing 8-bit data. There is no reason
why we should be able to disable it now.
2009-09-26 15:03:42 +00:00
Ed Schouten
c56bcdbb96 Conformance: ignore {delete,insert} line while outside the scrolling region.
I noticed a small inconsistency in delete and insert line between xterm
and libteken. libteken allows these actions to happen while the cursor
is placed outside the scrolling region, while xterm does not.

This behaviour seems to be VT100-like. Confirmation:

	http://www.vt100.net/docs/vt102-ug/chapter5.html
	"This sequence is ignored when cursor is outside scrolling region."

MFC after:	1 month
2009-09-25 11:58:51 +00:00
Ed Schouten
fbcd1b6eac Make SCS work in 8-bit mode.
This means we can finally do things like VT100 box drawing when using
Syscons (8-bit characters). As far as I know, the only remaining issue
is the absense of proper escape sequences for special keyboard
characters (cursor, F1 to F12, etc) and xterm emulation should be ready
for general use.

Enabling xterm would have the following advantages:

- Easier possible migration to Unicode. cons25 termcap entries are very
  8-bit centric. They use things like CP437 characters for box drawing,
  etc.

- Better support for SSH'ing to other operating systems/devices. Most
  switches use VT100-style admin interfaces.

- Reduced bandwidth, because applications can now use things like
  scrolling regions.

- You can finally use applications like dtach(1) on both the console and
  inside an xterm.
2009-09-24 20:33:14 +00:00
Ed Schouten
eba77f5c40 Commit all local modifications I have to libteken:
- Make xterm/cons25 support runtime configurable. This allows me to
  share libteken between syscons and my new vt driver.
- Add a fix to print blanks after printing a double width character to
  prevent rendering artifacts.
- Add some more utility functions that I use in the vt driver.
2009-09-12 12:44:21 +00:00
Ed Schouten
e06d84fc49 Make 8-bit support run-time configurable.
Now to do the same for xterm support. This means people can eventually
toy around with xterm+UTF-8 without recompiling their kernel.
2009-09-12 10:34:34 +00:00
Ed Schouten
b03552b5e2 Make resizing of teken terminals a bit more safe.
Just perform a full reset when resizing the terminal. This means the
cursor, scrolling region, etc. are never positioned outside the
terminal.
2009-09-12 08:19:24 +00:00
Ed Schouten
9b934d0930 Move libteken out of the syscons directory.
I initially committed libteken to sys/dev/syscons/teken, but now that
I'm working on a console driver myself, I noticed this was not a good
decision. Move it to sys/teken to make it easier for other drivers to
use a terminal emulator.

Also list teken.c in sys/conf/files, instead of listing it in all the
files.arch files separately.
2009-09-03 09:33:57 +00:00