Allow users to iterate the entries in a compose table. This is useful
for other projects which want programmable access to the sequences,
without having to write their own parser.
- New API:
- `xkb_compose_table_entry_sequence`;
- `xkb_compose_table_entry_keysym`;
- `xkb_compose_table_entry_utf8`;
- `xkb_compose_table_iterator_new`;
- `xkb_compose_table_iterator_free`;
- `xkb_compose_table_iterator_next`.
- Add tests in `test/compose.c`.
- Add benchmark for compose traversal.
- `tools/compose.c`:
- Print entries instead of just validating them.
- Add `--file` option.
- TODO: make this tool part of the xkbcli commands.
Co-authored-by: Pierre Le Marre <dev@wismill.eu>
Co-authored-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
Usually it is better to use the corresponding human-friendly keysym
names. If there is none, then the keysym is most probably not
supported in the ecosystem. The only use case I see is similar to the
PUA in Unicode (see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_Use_Areas).
I am not aware of examples of this kind of use.
This tool checks whether messages codes are supported.
This is useful e.g. for CI, where one may want to grep for some XKB
error codes and ensure that these are still supported.
Add an option to print modmap and vmodmap of relevant keys, as well as
virtual modifiers mapping to real modifier. This is useful for debugging.
It uses private API, so we compile it separately in the fashion of
`xkbcli-compile-keymap/compile-keymap`.
Currently the interactive tools print the string result of key strokes
as it is, without any escape. This is especially annoying for trivial
keysyms such as: Return, BackSpace and Escape.
Fix this by displaying the Unicode code point notation (e.g U+000D for
Return) for single control characters from the C0 set and DEL.
This is a hack: ideally we would like to escape any non-printable
character in the utf-8 string.
Currently there is no interactive tool allowing to set the include
paths of the context, such as in "compile-keymap". Note that only
"interactive-evdev" makes sense, because it does not rely on a
compositor.
Add --include and --include-defaults to "interactive-evdev" tool.
The code is adapted from "compile-keymap".
`_MSC_VER` is specific to MSVC, but there can be other compilers targeting
windows. Hopefully they do define `_WIN32`, so let's use that.
Refs: https://github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcommon/issues/305
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
We need to request the lower version of the interface versions we
support and the server supports, not the higher version.
Using the higher version caused crashes due to unbound callbacks on
GNOME, which supports a higher version of `xdg_wm_base`.
Because otherwise the 'no' layout is treated as disagreement with whatever is to
be disagreed with. Fixed in YAML 1.2 but that's not universally supported.
Fixes#268
Previously, could only check how to type a Unicode codepoint, but
searching for a keysym directly is also occasionally useful.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
Don't assume that keycode 9 means Escape. Instead, use the keymap
to check for Esc.
Logic copied from the Wayland version.
Signed-off-by: Simon Ser <contact@emersion.fr>
We have a lot of keyboard layouts and the current output format is virtually
useless at searching for a specific one to debug any issues with either the
layout list or the output from libxkbregistry.
Let's use YAML instead because that can easily be post-processed to extract the
specific layouts wanted, e.g. to get the list of all layouts:
xkbcli-list | yq -r ".layouts[].layout"
to get the list of all variants of the "us" layout:
xkbcli-list | yq -r '.layouts[] | select(.layout == "us") | .variant
and the number of option groups:
xkbcli-list | yq -r '.option_groups[] | length'
Note that the top-level nodes have been de-capitalized, so where it was "Models"
before it is now "models" and the "Options" node is now "option_groups".
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Fallback to ftruncate() if the underlying filesystem does not
support posix_fallocate().
Idea by: Jan Beich <jbeich@FreeBSD.org>, Niclas Zeising <zeising@FreeBSD.org>
Inspired by: Wayland cursor/os-compatibility.c
[ran: small adjustments]
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
Turns out FreeBSD supports evdev, so this toll can work on it; however
it does not support epoll, so switch to poll, which is portable.
Reported-by: Evgeniy Khramtsov <evgeniy@khramtsov.org>
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
While this tool is useful for users starting with a new keyboard layout, it is a
somewhat bad fit for libxkbcommon. It's the only python tool, we don't even
install it yet (because we're not sure yet what it's supposed to do) and there's
a potential for it to expand into more corner cases.
The only tie it has to libxkbcommon is that it templates the data files that
libxkbcommon reads, but those files are effectively public API.
Let's remove this tool from there and instead move it to a separate git
repository where it can go its own way.
This reverts commit d00cf64dbc
PATH_MAX is not POSIX and can be missing on some systems, notably Windows (which
provides MAX_PATH instead tough) and Hurd. Let's define it to a sane value where
missing, i.e. the one it's defined to in limits.h. Except on Windows where
we're limited to 260.
Fixes https://github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcommon/issues/180
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This tool set ups the required directory structure and template files to add new
keyboard layouts or options. For example, run like this:
xkbcli-scaffold-new-layout --layout 'us(myvariant)' --option 'custom:foo'
This will up the evdev rules file, the evdev.xml file, the symbols/us file and
symbols/custom file in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME so that the user has everything in place
and can start filling in the actual key mappings.
This tool is currently uninstalled until we figure out whether it's useful.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
The tools previously linked against a static version (by simply recompiling
everythiong). This isn't necessary, we can link them against libxkbcommon.so.
Only exception: The xbkcli-compile-keymap tool needs a private API for the
--kccgst flag. Avoid this by disabling this flag in the installed tool and
building the same tool, statically linked but not-installed.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This is merely to fill in some NULL pointers anyway, we can just use
the #defines we have available at build time.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Drop the ronn source files, check in the generated files instead. This gets rid
of the ruby+gem+ronn toolchain requirement at the cost of having to edit raw man
pages.
ronn files are as-generated but with the preamble and generation date removed.
The latter isn't important enough to keep, it'll just go stale for manually
maintained files and it's not worth setting up a configure_file() just for that
date.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
A pytest wrapper around our xkbcli tool - copied from libinput.
This calls our various xkbcli tools with varying options and check that they
either succeed or return the right error code. The coverage is limited, it
does not (and cannot) test for all possible combinations but it should provide a
good red flag if we have inconsistent behavior or accidentally break some
combination of flags.
Meanwhile, we can at least assume that all our commandline arguments are parsed
without segfaulting or worse.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
On all platforms we build on where getopt.h is available, getopt_long is also
available. Only Windows doesn't have either but that's no reason for us to
differentiate between the two.
If we need to special-case getopt vs getopt_long, it's probably better to
implement our own cross-platform version of it and use that.
Fixes#161
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This provides consistency with the other tools that now all take long options.
Plus, it's more obvious to have the arguments spelled out.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Requiring long options for this tool means it's immediately obvious what an
invocation does, compare e.g.
xkbcli interactive-evdev -gcd
to the equivalent:
xkbcli interactive-evdev --consumed-mode=gtk --enalbe-compose --report-state-changes
This drops the evdev offset argument - that offset should never be anything
other than 8, having this as argument here is more likely to confuse or
produce misleading debugging logs.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
The xkbcli tool usage help is ifdef'd out where the tool isn't built but the
man page always includes all tools. Easier that way.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This is the base tool, no subtools are currently connected so you only get help
and version for now. The goal here is to have a git-like infrastructure where
/usr/bin/xkbcli is the main tool, anything else will hide in libexec.
The infrastructure for this is copied from libinput. Tools themselves will
will be installed in $prefix/libexec/xkbcommon and the xkbcli tool forks
off whatever argv[1] is after modifying the PATH to include the libexec dir.
libinput has additional code for checking whether we're running this from the
builddir but it's a bit iffy and it's usefulness is limited - if you're in the
builddir anyway you can just run ./builddir/xkbcli-<toolname> directly.
So for this code here, running ./builddir/xkbcli <toolname> will execute the
one in the prefix/libexecdir.
Since we want that tool available everywhere even where some of the subtools
aren't present, we need to ifdef the getopt handling.
man page generation is handled via ronn which is a ruby program but allows
markdown for the sources. It's hidden behind a meson option to disable where
downloading ronn isn't an option. The setup is generic enough that we can add
other man-pages by just appending to the array.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>