Move (sometimes duplicate) the required bits into new shared files
tools-common.(c|h) that are compiled into the internal tools library. Rename the
test_foo() functions to tools_foo() and in one case just copy the code of the
keymap compile function to the tool.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This is currently identical to the internal test library, but it's a start to
disentangle the two.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Most of this is currently hidden in the commit message for ca033a29d2, let's
make it a bit more public so we have a link to point users to.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Useful to have this as part of the documentation. The rendering isn't great but
at least not any worse than pure text. Markdown escapes % so explaining our use
of %S and %H would require a double % - not idea. Let's just wrap it as a code
block and done.
Includes two typo fixes too, yay.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Link libxkbcommon_x11_internal with libxkbcommon_test_internal, rather
than libxkbcommon.
This avoids some tests linking with both libxkbcommon_test_internal and
libxkbcommon, which causes duplicate symbol problems on PE targets (e.g.
Cygwin) (as all the symbols from libxkbcommon are pulled in at link
time, which clash with libxkbcommon_test_internal)
The program takes a unicode codepoint and an RMLVO and prints out all
key + modifier combinations that would result in that codepoint.
The program was written to exercise the new
xkb_keymap_key_get_mods_for_level() function. It's handy and can be
extended in several ways, but enough for now.
Example:
$ ./build/how-to-type -l us,il,ru 0x41 | column -ts $'\t'
keysym: A (0x41)
KEYCODE KEY NAME LAYOUT# LAYOUT NAME LEVEL# MODIFIERS
38 AC01 1 English (US) 2 [ Shift ]
38 AC01 1 English (US) 2 [ Lock ]
38 AC01 2 Hebrew 2 [ Shift ]
38 AC01 2 Hebrew 2 [ Lock ]
$ ./build/how-to-type -l de -v neo 0x3b6 | column -ts $'\t'
keysym: Greek_zeta (0x7e6)
KEYCODE KEY NAME LAYOUT# LAYOUT NAME LEVEL# MODIFIERS
56 AB05 1 German (Neo 2) 4 [ Shift Mod5 ]
56 AB05 1 German (Neo 2) 4 [ Shift Mod2 Mod3 Mod5 ]
56 AB05 1 German (Neo 2) 4 [ Shift Lock Mod5 ]
56 AB05 1 German (Neo 2) 4 [ Lock Mod2 Mod3 Mod5 ]
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
We apparently broke byacc support in the switch to meson.
byacc only supports short option names. And to make things fun, bison
only supports long option for `--defines`.
Fixes: https://github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcommon/issues/133
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
This is a stopgap measure to quickly get tests building with MSVC for
now, at some point the tests could be rewritten to avoid using getopt()
and mkdtemp() or to ship an implementation.
Previously we included it with an `-include` compiler directive. But
that's not portable. And it's better to be explicit anyway.
Every .c file should have `include "config.h"` first thing.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
Some environments (e.g. Windows + MSVC) do not provide asprintf() or
vasprintf(). This tries to detect their presence, and provides suitable
fallback implementations when not available.
Some environments (e.g. Windows + MSVC) do not provide strndup(), this
tries to detect its presence and provide a fallback implementation when
not available.
[ran: some tweaks]
The majority use-case for extending XKB on a machine is to override one or a
few keys with custom keycodes, not to define whole layouts.
Previously, we relied on the rules file to be a single file, making it hard to
extend. libxkbcommon parses $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/xkb/ but that only works as long
as there is a rule that matches the user-specified RMLVO. This works for MLV
but not for options which don't have a wildcard defined. Users have to copy
the whole rules file and then work from there - not something easy to extend
and maintain.
This patch adds a new ! include directive to rules files that allows including
another file. The file path must be without quotes and may not start with the
literal "include". Two directives are supported, %H to $HOME and %S for the
system-installed rules directory (usually /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules).
A user would typically use a custom rules file like this:
! option = symbols
custom:foo = +custom(foo)
custom:bar = +custom(baz)
! include %S/evdev
Where the above defines the two options and then includes the system-installed
evdev rule. Since most current implementations default to loading the "evdev"
ruleset, it's best to name this $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/xkb/rules/evdev, but any
valid name is allowed.
The include functionally replaces the line with the content of the included
file which means the behavior of rules files is maintained. Specifically,
custom options must be defined before including another file because the first
match usually wins. In other words, the following ruleset will not assign
my_model as one would expect:
! include %S/evdev
! model = symbols
my_model = +custom(foo)
The default evdev ruleset has wildcards for model and those match before the
my_model is hit.
The actual resolved components need only be in one of the XKB lookup
directories, e.g. for the example above:
$ cat $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/xkb/symbols/custom
partial alphanumeric_keys
xkb_symbols "foo" {
key <TLDE> { [ VoidSymbol ] };
};
partial alphanumeric_keys
xkb_symbols "baz" {
key <AB01> { [ k, K ] };
};
This can then be loaded with the XKB option "custom:foo,custom:bar".
The use of "custom" is just as an example, there are no naming requirements
beyond avoiding already-used ones. Also note the bar/baz above - the option
names don't have to match the component names.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Fix meson build on Solaris by using __EXTENSIONS__ where Linux & other
platforms use _GNU_SOURCE. Without this the build fails due to missing
prototypes for functions like strdup & getopt not defined in the C99
standard. (In autoconf, this was handled by AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS.)
Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith <alan.coopersmith@oracle.com>
xdg_shell v6 was pretty close to the finalised stable version of
xdg-shell. We can now just use the stable version, which is supported
everywhere (Enlightenment, KWin, Mutter, Weston, wlroots).
This requires bumping the wayland-protocols dependency.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniels@collabora.com>
We don't need to determine the total number of bits set to determine if
exactly one is set.
Additionally, on x86_64 without any -march=* flag, __builtin_popcount
will get compiled to a function call to the compiler runtime (on gcc),
or a long sequence of bit operations (on clang).
Signed-off-by: Michael Forney <mforney@mforney.org>
Similar to 75ce741ab9, just for the -x11
sublibrary.
This works around meson bug 3937, 'link_whole' arguments don't get added into
the final static library and we end up with a virtually empty 8-byte
libxkbcommon-x11.a file, see https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/3937
The internal lib is still built for the one test case that requires it.
Fixes#86
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This works around meson bug 3937, 'link_whole' arguments don't get added into
the final static library and we end up with a virtually empty 8-byte
libxkbcommon.a file, see https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/3937
Workaround is simply to add all sources to both libraries we need them in.
This obviously compiles them twice but this year's winter was cold and
bit of extra warmth will be appreciated.
Fixes#84
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This test contains of two parts:
- a simple program to convert RMLVO commandline arguments into a keymap (and
print that keymap if requested).
- a python script that runs through rules/evdev.xml, and tries to compile a
keymap for sort-of every layout/variant/option combination. Sort-of, because
we can have multiple options and it really only does one per layout(variant)
combination.
Same thing can be done using xkbcomp, but right now it doesn't take that as
argument, it's hard-coded.
This takes quite a while, installing python-tqdm is recommended to see fancy
progress bars instead of just miles of dumps.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
The benchmarks don't show any effect, so turn it off to have one less
thing to worry about. The parser does a lot of casting between AST
nodes.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
Left shift of a negative integer. For some reason the protocol
representation here got really botched (in the spec it is just a nice
and simple INT16).
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
Though text formats aren't exactly fuzzer's strong suit, fuzzers can
catch many surface-level bugs.
The fuzz/ directory contains target programs, testcases and dictionaries
to drive the afl fuzzer.
This commit adds a fuzzer for the XKB keymap text format and the Compose
text format. On my slow machine, using a single core, a full cycle of
the XKB fuzzer takes 5 hours. For Compose, it takes a few minutes.
Fuzzing for the other file formats (rules files mostly) will be added
later.
To do some fuzzing, run `./fuzz/fuzz.sh`.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
Old meson expects an array with one dependency per element. Providing a
string containing multiple deps results in only the first dep getting
its whitespace properly applied. As a result, the output was:
Requires.private: xcb >= 1.10 xcb-xkb>=1.10
And downstream projects failed to find a package named 'xcb-xkb>=1.10'.
Specifying an array of versioned deps results in correct output:
Requires.private: xcb >= 1.10, xcb-xkb >= 1.10
Fixes#64.
Signed-off-by: Jan Alexander Steffens (heftig) <jan.steffens@gmail.com>
The meson-generated pkgconfig file was missing Requires and
Requires.private.
[ran: adjust for older Meson versions.]
Signed-off-by: Jan Alexander Steffens (heftig) <jan.steffens@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
Trim the API a bit.
Also, just always use gettimeofday(), which is portable. Hopefully the
system clock doesn't change while a benchmark is running.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
The x11 tests/demos did not depend on xcb and xcb-xkb directly, only
indirectly through link_with: libxkbcommon_x11_internal. So linking
worked, but the xcb and xcb-xkb cflags were *not* included when
compiling them. So when using xcb installed in a non-standard location,
what would happen is:
- Library will link with custom xcb and compile with custom xcb headers.
- Test will link with custom xcb and compile with system xcb headers (if
exist, otherwise fail).
Fixes: https://github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcommon/issues/57
Reported-by: @remexre
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
We will never remove the deprecated functions and there is no real
reason to annoy users into stop using them.
If there *will* be a reason, *then* we will add the attribute.
Fixes: https://github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcommon/issues/56
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
Meson is easier to maintain, much faster, encourages better practices,
and is not built on a pile of shell scripts.
The autotools build system is kept intact for now, in order to ease the
migration. The intention is to remove it sooner rather than later, if
all goes well.
Run `meson build && mesonconf build` to see the configuration options
for the new system. Conversion should be straightforward. Environment
variables like CFLAGS work the same.
If meson is used, xorg-util-macros is not required.
In terms of functionality the two systems have about the same
capabilities. Here are some differences I noticed:
- Meson uses `-g` by default, autotools uses `-g -O2`.
- In autotools the default behavior is to install both static and shared
versions of the libraries. In meson the user must choose exactly one
(using -Ddefault_library=static/shared).
It is possible to workaround if needed (install twice...), but
hopefully meson will add the option in the future.
- Autotools has builtin ctags/cscope targets, meson doesn't.
Easy to run the tools directly.
- Meson has builtin benchmarks target. Handy.
- Meson has builtin support for sanitizers/clang-analyzer/lto/pgo/
coverage etc. Also handy.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>