The patch 53105cf modified how control codes were detected, because
it tried to handle also C1 control codes (0x80-0x9f), that have
upper bit to 1, so they are multi byte character in utf8.
Code was checking the value of width in order to known that after
decoding the unicode point had a width of 1 byte, but it as incorrect
because this width is the columnb width.
Once a sequence is completed term.esc must return to 0, so
instead of repeating this expression in all the cases is
better put it at the end of the block.
From http://www.vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/chapter4:
*The VT510 ignores all following characters until it receives a
SUB, ST, or any other C1 control character.
So OSC, PM and APC sequence ends with a SUB (it cancels the sequence
and show a question mark as error), ST or any another C1 (8 bits)
code, or their C0 (7 bits) equivalent sequences (at this moment we
do not handle C1 codes, but we should). But it is also said that:
Cancel CAN
1/8 Immediately cancels an escape sequence, control sequence,
or device control string in progress. In this case, the
VT510 does not display any error character.
Escape ESC
1/11 Introduces an escape sequence. ESC also cancels any escape
sequence, control sequence, or device control string in
progress.
Currently tputc handles the case of too long control string waiting for
the end of control string.
Another case is when there is ESC character is encountered but is not
followed by '\\'. In this case st stops processing control string,
but ESC character is ignored.
After this patch st processes ESC characters in control strings properly.
Test case:
printf '\e]0;abc\e[1mBOLD\e[0m'
Also ^[\ is actually processed in the code that handles ST.
According to ECMA-048 ST stands for STRING TERMINATOR and is used to
close control strings.
Thanks to Yuri Karaban for suggesting this!
These changes make -g correspond to <cols>x<rows> and honor it so non-tiling
window managers can work with the size hints afterwards. It also adds a -i
flag to force the window size. This is needed so -g keeps being useful in dwm.
The large and repeated expression used in memmove to indirect
the line can be simplified using a pointer, that makes more
clear where begins and where ends the movement.
Current CSI parsing code uses strtol to parse arguments and allows them
to be negative. Negative argument is not properly handled in tdeletechar
and tinsertblank and results in memory corruption in memmove.
Reproduce with printf '\e[-500@'
Patch also removes special handling for corner case and simplifies
the code.
Removed
term.dirty[term.c.y] = 1
because tclearregion sets dirty flag.
tscrollup and tscrolldown do not use tsetdirt, but their code is
equivalent to
tsetdirt(orig, term.bot-n);
tsetdirt(orig+n, term.bot);
tclearregion also marks cleared lines as dirty.
In tscrolldown it sets lines from term.bot-n+1 to term.bot dirty, and in
tscrollup it sets lines from orig to orig+n-1 dirty.
In both functions all lines from orig to term.bot are effectively set
dirty, but in tscrolldown lines from orig+n to term.bot are set dirty
twice, and in tscrollup lines from orig to term.bot-n are set dirty
twice.
These patches make it clear which lines are set dirty and sets them
dirty once in each funciton.
techo compares signed char to '\x20'. Any character with code less then
'\x20' is treated as control character. This way characters with MSB
set to 1 are considered control characters too.
Also this patch makes techo display DEL character as ^?.
To reprocuce the bug, enable echo mode using printf '\e[12l',
then type DEL character or any non-ASCII character.
I found the SERRNO Macro slightly confusing, since you have to look
it up, if you don't know it already. A web search showed it does
not seem to be any kind of standard. Also there was no reason in
the commit log when it was introduced in 2009. As you can see it
also leads to new patches, which don't use this macro (probably the
author did not know about it).
I don't like this alt screen thing, but when
allowaltscreen == 0, the cursor is still saved
and restored after calling 'less' (or 'man').
This patch makes allowaltscreen == 0 usable.
This patch replaces current utf decoder with a new one, which is ~50
lines shorter and should be easier to understand. Parsing 5 and 6
sequences, if necessary, requires trivial modification of UTF_SIZ
constant and utfbyte, utfmask, utfmin, utfmax arrays.
This sequence print the current line. It is different to the
'printer on' sequence, where all the characters that arrive to the
terminal are printer. Here only the ascii characters are printed.
The patch to add w3img support destroys our way to handle fps and so stop
wasting resources on fast scrolling. Due to w3img being a hack to display
images in an ugly way, is there no need to support this. Use some real way to
display images.
Before this patch draw() calls drawregion which calls xdraws and then
updates whole window in one call thus overdrawing anything drawn by
w3mimgdisplay. After moving XCopyArea to xdraws it only updates the
regions which are being updated by XftDraw* functions. It may do a few
more calls to XCopyArea with this patch.
Signed-off-by: Amadeusz Sławiński <amade@asmblr.net>
for example
echo -e "\e[48;2;255;0;0m\e[38;2;0;0;255m test "
should render on red bg with blue fg
also now elinks works correctly when using 'truecolor' option
in preferences
Signed-off-by: Amadeusz Sławiński <amade@asmblr.net>
Sorry for another duplicated mail. I found the patch is malformed
significantly. I've been away from my laptop for a while, so I'm quite
unfamiliar with the settings on this system...
This fixes a bug that the parent tty gets resized whenever you launch
st through command line.
The problem was that ioctl was resizing cmdfd before it gets
initialized in ttynew. Since cmdfd is a global variable, its initial
value is 0, and consequently stdin was being resized.
Since st is using now int32_t and uint32_t the inclusion of
stdint or inttype is mandatory, because in other case the
definition of these new types will not be known by the
compiler.
vt100 has support for two defined charset, G0 and G1. Each charset
can be defined, but in each moment is selected only one of both
charset. This is usually used selecting a national charset in G0
and graphic charset in G1, so you can switch between graphic
charset and text charset without losing the national charset
already defined.
st hasn't support for national charsets, because it is an utf8
based terminal emulator, but it has support for graphic
charset because it is heavily used, but it only supports G0,
without understanding G1 selection sequences, which causes some
programs in some moments can print some garbage in the screen.
This patch adds a fake support for multiple charset definitions,
where we only support graphic charset and us-ascii charset, but
we allow more of one charset definition.
This patch allow define G0 until G3 charsets, but only accepts
select G0 or G1, and it accepts some national charset definitions
but all of them are mapped to us-ascii.
st was assuming that save/restore cursor position was independent
of the screen that was shown in each moment, but it is not true,
because each screen has a different save/restore buffer. This
patch fixes it.
OpenBSD 5.3 amd64 release version with the most current st
version from git, crash and dump core when selecting multiple
lines whith the cursor. This happens, because on line 964
of st.c (gp-1)->mode is accessed, although gp is still
pointing at the beginning of the array term.line[y] (see
line 939 for initialization of gp).
This patch enables bracketed paste mode (
http://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html#Bracketed%20Paste%20Mode
).
It's mainly useful for text editors to disable line wrapping and auto
indentation when text is being pasted, rather than typed from keyboard.
On the emulator side, it is supported by at least xterm, urxvt,
gnome-terminal, putty, iterm2; and I have a patch for konsole.
On the application side, vim can be configured easily to handle this, and
I have pending patches for mcedit and joe. Probably many others also
support it.
* Button number in X10 mode:
I believe the button - 1 came from "C b is button - 1" from [0].
However, above this section, it states
"Normally, parameters (such as pointer poisition and button number)
for all mouse tracking escape sequences generated by xterm encode
numeric parameters in a single character as value+32. For example, !
specifies the value 1."
Also, from the description of SGR,
"The encoded button value in this case does not add 32 since that
was useful only in the X10 scheme for ensuring that the byte
containing the button value is a printable code."
This suggests that we should still add 32 to the button value when in
MODE_MOUSEX10.
* No button release reporting in X10 mode:
"X10 compatibility mode sends an escape sequence only on button press,
encoding the location and the mouse button pressed."
* Fix MODE_MOUSEMOTION:
Currently, motion reporting is skipped when oldbutton == 3
(corresponding to no button being pressed). However, oldbutton is
only set on a button press, which will never be 3.
[0]: http://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html
\a is the character for bell, and st is only marking the window as urgent
if it is not active. This patch adds an audible bell which can be disable
with bellvolume variable.
Signed-off-by: Christoph Lohmann <20h@r-36.net>
The alternate screen is not properly initialized when st starts. To see
this, set defaultbg in config.h to anything other than 0 (for example, swap
defaultfg and defaultbg), and run:
./st -e sh -c 'tput smcup; read'
You should see that the top-left 80x24 rectangle is black (or whatever
colorname[0] is), while the rest of the screen (if any) has the desired
colorname[defaultbg] color.
The attached patch fixes this by initializing term.c.attr in tnew() before
calling tresize(). It also removes the unnecessary xcalloc() calls, which
misled me on this bug hunt since it is really tclearregion() which
initializes term.lines and term.alt in tresize().
Hello.
I reviewed and tested commit 7e3cff3, and made a patch that fixes some
problems in it.
1. There's a semicolon after an if statement, which is obviously a
typo.
2. The current way of calculating text position in "xdraws" yields
inconsistent results in some cases. This is due to the use of
"font->width", which varies. Instead, "xw.cw" has to be used as the
character width.
Sincerely,
Eon
tdefcolor() returns -1 on error, while its return type is
unsigned long. At the same time, line 1724 and 1731 are checking the
positivity of its unsigned return value.
Colors definition can be changed using a OSC sequence, so
we have to reload them if we want be sure all the colors
are the correct.
Could be desirable free the colors allocated due to rgb
colors and inverse colors (XftColorAllocValues in xdraws),
but it is impossible due we use the same structure for all
of them.
This patch uses the bit 24 in the color descriptor as an indicator
of RGB color, so we can take the values and generating the XftColour
directly in xdraws.
I made a patch that improves the performance of font caching mechanism.
This is based on a funny behaviour of FontConfig: it was handling
FcCharSet in a somewhat unexpected way.
So, we are currently adding "a character" to a new FcCharSet, and then
add it to a FcPattern. However, if we toss the FcPattern to FontConfig,
it loads the entire language(charset) that contains the character we
gave. That is, we don't always have to load a new font for each unknown
character. Instead, we can reused cached fonts, and this significantly
reduces the number of calls to extremely slow FontConfig matching
functions.
One more thing. I found that, in libXft, there's a function called
XftCharExists. XftCharIndex internally calls this function, and
does more stuffs if the character does exist. Since the returned index
is never used in st, we should call XftCharExists instead of
XftCharIndex. Please note that I already made this change in the patch.