Commit Graph

20 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bde
711105c7ed My recent fix for programmable function keys in syscons only worked
when TEKEN_CONS25 is configured.  Fix this by adding a function to
set the flag that enables the fix and always calling this function
for syscons.

Expand the man page for teken_set_cons25().  This function is not
very useful since it can only set but not clear 1 flag.  In practice,
it is only used when TEKEN_CONS25 is configured and all that does is
choose the the default emulation for syscons at compile time.
2019-02-05 16:59:29 +00:00
phk
6908453ded Implement ECMA-48 "REP", some Linuxen have started emitting them recently.
Approved by:	ed
2018-10-21 08:29:36 +00:00
dumbbell
b9337da075 teken, vt(4): New callbacks to lock the terminal once
... to process input, instead of inside each smaller operations such as
appending a character or moving the cursor forward.

In other words, before we were doing (oversimplified):

  teken_input()
    <for each input character>
      vtterm_putchar()
        VTBUF_LOCK()
        VTBUF_UNLOCK()
      vtterm_cursor_position()
        VTBUF_LOCK()
        VTBUF_UNLOCK()

Now, we are doing:

  vtterm_pre_input()
    VTBUF_LOCK()
  teken_input()
    <for each input character>
      vtterm_putchar()
      vtterm_cursor_position()
  vtterm_post_input()
    VTBUF_UNLOCK()

The situation was even worse when the vtterm_copy() and vtterm_fill()
callbacks were involved.

The new callbacks are:
  * struct terminal_class->tc_pre_input()
  * struct terminal_class->tc_post_input()

They are called in teken_input(), surrounding the while() loop.

The goal is to improve input processing speed of vt(4). As a benchmark,
here is the time taken to write a text file of 360 000 lines (26 MiB) on
`ttyv0`:

  * vt(4), unmodified:      1500 ms
  * vt(4), with this patch: 1200 ms
  * syscons(4):              700 ms

This is on a Haswell laptop with a GENERIC-NODEBUG kernel.

At the same time, the locking is changed in the vt_flush() function
which is responsible to draw the text on screen. So instead of
(indirectly) using VTBUF_LOCK() just to read and reset the dirty area
of the internal buffer, the lock is held for about the entire function,
including the drawing part.

The change is mostly visible while content is scrolling fast: before,
lines could appear garbled while scrolling because the internal buffer
was accessed without locks (once the scrolling was finished, the output
was correct). Now, the scrolling appears correct.

In the end, the locking model is closer to what syscons(4) does.

Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15302
2018-05-16 09:01:02 +00:00
phk
3b3f681810 Pedantic polishing of code to please FlexeLint.
Approved by:	ed
2018-04-08 19:23:50 +00:00
pfg
78a6b08618 sys: general adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 2-Clause license, however the tool I
was using misidentified many licenses so this was mostly a manual - error
prone - task.

The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.

No functional change intended.
2017-11-27 15:23:17 +00:00
bde
9a96357487 Fix syscons escape sequence for setting the local cursor type. This sequence
was aliased to a vt sequence, causing and fixing various bugs.

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

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

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

Fix missing syscons escape sequence for setting the global cursor shape
(and type).  Only support this in syscons since vt can't emulate anything
in it.
2017-08-18 15:40:40 +00:00
bde
7962e7e7dc Fix missing syscons escape sequence for setting the border color. 2017-08-18 10:38:49 +00:00
bde
4402e6b59b Add teken_256to16() to convert xterm-256 256-color codes to xterm 16-color
codes.  This will be used to fix bright colors.

Improve teken_256to8().  Use a lookup table instead of calculations.  The
calculations were inaccurate since they used indexes into the xterm-256
6x6x6 color map instead of actual xterm colors.  Also, change the threshold
for converting to a primary color: require the primary's component to be
2 or more higher instead of just higher.  This affects about 1/5 of the
table entries and gives uniformly distributed colors in the 6x6x6 submap
except for greys (35 entries each for red, green, blue, cyan, brown and
magenta, instead of approx. only 15 each for the mixed colors).  Even
more mixed colors would be better for matching colors, but uniform
distribution is best for preserving contrast.

For teken_256to16(), bright colors are just the ones with luminosity >=
60%.  These are actually light colors (more white instead of more
saturation), while xterm bright colors except for white itself are
actually saturated with no white, so have luminosity only 50%.

These functions are layering violations.  teken cannot do correct
conversions since it shouldn't know the color maps of anything except
xterm.  Translating through xterm-16 colors loses information.  This
gives bugs like xterm-256 near-brown -> xterm-16 red -> VGA red.
2017-03-16 16:40:54 +00:00
ed
4d1897863f Extend libteken to support CJK fullwidth characters.
Introduce a new formatting bit (TF_CJK_RIGHT) that is set when putting a
cell that is the right part of a CJK fullwidth character. This will
allow drivers like vt(9) to support fullwidth characters properly.

emaste@ has a patch to extend vt(9)'s font handling to increase the
number of Unicode -> glyph maps from 2 ({normal,bold)} to 4
({normal,bold} x {left,right}). This will need to use this formatting
bit to determine whether to draw the left or right glyph.

Reviewed by:	emaste
2013-12-20 21:31:50 +00:00
ray
a2f43a3339 Add teken_subr_do_resize new method, to update taken sizes w/o reset positions
and use it in case we update terminal size not touching existing data.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-10-31 09:44:48 +00:00
ed
a42bf7d6cd Add proper build infrastructure for teken.
I'm not sure whether we should install teken as a library on any stock
FreeBSD installation, but I can imagine people want to tinker around
with it now and then. Create a /sys/teken/libteken, which holds a
Makefile to install a shared library version of the terminal emulator,
complete with a manpage.

Also add Makefiles for the demo/stress applications, to build it against
the shared library.
2011-05-09 16:27:39 +00:00
ed
8b7fe57057 Place home and end before insert and delete.
These keys have different sequences when using cursorkeys, while insert
and delete stay the same. If they are placed like this, libteken will
return NULL instead of a proper sequence for these characters.
2009-11-11 09:43:26 +00:00
ed
fcc8740e5f 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
9ed9beeb2c 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
b69a48a63f 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
50a507dd22 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
6047d14a18 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
5e016d1124 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
d8165e0019 Expose the TF_REVERSE flag to the console driver.
Right now libteken processes TF_REVERSE internally and returns the
toggled colors to the console driver. This isn't entirely correct. This
means that the bold flag is always processed by the foreground color,
while reversing should be done after the foreground color has been set
to a brighter version by the bold flag.

This is no problem with the syscons driver, because with VGA it only
supports 16 foreground and 8 background colors. My WIP console driver
reconfigures the graphics hardware to disable the blink functionality
and uses 16 foreground and 16 background colors. This means that this
driver will handle the TF_REVERSE flag a little different from what
syscons does right now.
2009-09-03 16:31:11 +00:00
ed
8dfe0837b7 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