summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/src/libsystemd-terminal
AgeCommit message (Collapse)Author
2014-07-18terminal: suppress warning in subtermDavid Herrmann
Empty format-strings are just fine if format-functions do more than printing. This is the case here, so suppress the "empty format-string" warning by using "%s" with an empty argument.
2014-07-18terminal: add unifont font-handlingDavid Herrmann
The unifont layer of libsystemd-terminal provides a fallback font for situations where no system-fonts are available, or if you don't want to deal with traditional font-formats for some reasons. The unifont API mmaps a pre-compiled bitmap font that was generated out of GNU-Unifont font-data. This guarantees, that all users of the font will share the pages in memory. Furthermore, the layout of the binary file allows accessing glyph data in O(1) without pre-rendering glyphs etc. That is, the OS can skip loading pages for glyphs that we never access. Note that this is currently a test-run and we want to include the binary file in the GNU-Unifont package. However, until it was considered stable and accepted by the maintainers, we will ship it as part of systemd. So far it's only enabled with the experimental --enable-terminal, anyway.
2014-07-18terminal: add format attributesThomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
2014-07-18terminal: silence warningThomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen
2014-07-18terminal: add systemd-subterm exampleDavid Herrmann
The systemd-subterm example is a stacked terminal that shows how to use sd-term. Instead of rendering images and displaying it via X11/etc., it uses its parent terminal to display the page (terminal-emulator inside a terminal-emulator) (like GNU-screen and friends do). This is only for testing and not installed system-wide!
2014-07-18terminal: add screen-handlingDavid Herrmann
The screen-layer represents the terminal-side (compared to the host-side). It connects term_parser with term_page and implements all the required control sequences. We do not implement all available control sequences. Even though our parser recognizes them, there is no need to handle them. Most of them are legacy or unused. We try to be as compatible to xterm, so if we missed something, we can implement it later. However, all the VT510 / VT440 stuff can safely be skipped (who needs terminal macros? WTF?). The keyboard-handling is still missing. It will be added once systemd-console is available and we pulled in the key-definitions.
2014-07-18terminal: add parser state-machineDavid Herrmann
The term-parser is used to parse any input from TTY-clients. It reads CSI, DCS, OSC and ST control sequences and normal escape sequences. It doesn't do anything with the parsed data besides detecting the sequence and returning it. The caller has to react to them. The parser also comes with its own UTF-8 helpers. The reason for that is that we don't want to assert() or hard-fail on parsing errors. Instead, we treat any invalid UTF-8 sequences as ISO-8859-1. This allows pasting invalid data into a terminal (which cannot be controlled through the TTY, anyway) and we still deal with it in a proper manner. This is _required_ for 8-bit and 7-bit DEC modes (including the g0-g3 mappings), so it's not just an ugly fallback because we can (it's still horribly ugly but at least we have an excuse).
2014-07-18terminal: add page handling for terminalsDavid Herrmann
The page-layer is a one-dimensional array of lines. Combined with the one-dimensional lines, you get a two-dimensional page. However, both implementations, lines and pages only deal with their own dimension. That means, lines don't know anything about other lines, and pages don't know anything about cells. Apart from pages, this also introduces history objects. A history object is a scroll-back buffer. As some pages like alt-buffers don't have histories, we keep them separate. Pages itself forward all cell-related operations to the related line. Only line-related operations are directly handled by the page. This is mostly scrolling and history. To support proper resizing, we also keep a fill-state just like lines do for cells.
2014-07-18terminal: extend RGB attributesDavid Herrmann
There're 3 supported color-modes: term-color-codes, 256-color-code and rgb-color. We now use the term-color as default so zero(attr) will do what you'd expect. Furthermore, we split rgb and 256color so users can forward them properly without requiring an internal RGB converter. Furthermore, a "hidden" field according to VT510rm manual is added.
2014-07-17ui/term: add line/cell/char handling for terminal pagesDavid Herrmann
This commit introduces libsystemd-ui, a systemd-internal helper library that will contain all the UI related functionality. It is going to be used by systemd-welcomed, systemd-consoled, systemd-greeter and systemd-er. Further use-cases may follow. For now, this commit only adds terminal-page handling based on lines only. Follow-up commits will add more functionality.