147 lines
4.5 KiB
Go
147 lines
4.5 KiB
Go
/*
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Package XGB provides the X Go Binding, which is a low-level API to communicate
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with the core X protocol and many of the X extensions.
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It is *very* closely modeled on XCB, so that experience with XCB (or xpyb) is
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easily translatable to XGB. That is, it uses the same cookie/reply model
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and is thread safe. There are otherwise no major differences (in the API).
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Most uses of XGB typically fall under the realm of window manager and GUI kit
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development, but other applications (like pagers, panels, tilers, etc.) may
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also require XGB. Moreover, it is a near certainty that if you need to work
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with X, xgbutil will be of great use to you as well:
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https://github.com/jezek/xgbutil
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Example
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This is an extremely terse example that demonstrates how to connect to X,
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create a window, listen to StructureNotify events and Key{Press,Release}
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events, map the window, and print out all events received. An example with
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accompanying documentation can be found in examples/create-window.
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package main
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import (
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"fmt"
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"github.com/jezek/xgb"
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"github.com/jezek/xgb/xproto"
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)
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func main() {
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X, err := xgb.NewConn()
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if err != nil {
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fmt.Println(err)
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return
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}
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wid, _ := xproto.NewWindowId(X)
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screen := xproto.Setup(X).DefaultScreen(X)
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xproto.CreateWindow(X, screen.RootDepth, wid, screen.Root,
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0, 0, 500, 500, 0,
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xproto.WindowClassInputOutput, screen.RootVisual,
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xproto.CwBackPixel | xproto.CwEventMask,
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[]uint32{ // values must be in the order defined by the protocol
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0xffffffff,
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xproto.EventMaskStructureNotify |
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xproto.EventMaskKeyPress |
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xproto.EventMaskKeyRelease})
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xproto.MapWindow(X, wid)
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for {
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ev, xerr := X.WaitForEvent()
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if ev == nil && xerr == nil {
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fmt.Println("Both event and error are nil. Exiting...")
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return
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}
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if ev != nil {
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fmt.Printf("Event: %s\n", ev)
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}
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if xerr != nil {
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fmt.Printf("Error: %s\n", xerr)
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}
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}
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}
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Xinerama Example
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This is another small example that shows how to query Xinerama for geometry
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information of each active head. Accompanying documentation for this example
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can be found in examples/xinerama.
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package main
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import (
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"fmt"
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"log"
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"github.com/jezek/xgb"
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"github.com/jezek/xgb/xinerama"
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)
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func main() {
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X, err := xgb.NewConn()
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if err != nil {
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log.Fatal(err)
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}
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// Initialize the Xinerama extension.
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// The appropriate 'Init' function must be run for *every*
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// extension before any of its requests can be used.
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err = xinerama.Init(X)
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if err != nil {
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log.Fatal(err)
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}
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reply, err := xinerama.QueryScreens(X).Reply()
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if err != nil {
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log.Fatal(err)
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}
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fmt.Printf("Number of heads: %d\n", reply.Number)
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for i, screen := range reply.ScreenInfo {
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fmt.Printf("%d :: X: %d, Y: %d, Width: %d, Height: %d\n",
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i, screen.XOrg, screen.YOrg, screen.Width, screen.Height)
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}
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}
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Parallelism
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XGB can benefit greatly from parallelism due to its concurrent design. For
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evidence of this claim, please see the benchmarks in xproto/xproto_test.go.
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Tests
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xproto/xproto_test.go contains a number of contrived tests that stress
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particular corners of XGB that I presume could be problem areas. Namely:
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requests with no replies, requests with replies, checked errors, unchecked
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errors, sequence number wrapping, cookie buffer flushing (i.e., forcing a round
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trip every N requests made that don't have a reply), getting/setting properties
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and creating a window and listening to StructureNotify events.
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Code Generator
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Both XCB and xpyb use the same Python module (xcbgen) for a code generator. XGB
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(before this fork) used the same code generator as well, but in my attempt to
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add support for more extensions, I found the code generator extremely difficult
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to work with. Therefore, I re-wrote the code generator in Go. It can be found
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in its own sub-package, xgbgen, of xgb. My design of xgbgen includes a rough
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consideration that it could be used for other languages.
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What works
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I am reasonably confident that the core X protocol is in full working form. I've
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also tested the Xinerama and RandR extensions sparingly. Many of the other
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existing extensions have Go source generated (and are compilable) and are
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included in this package, but I am currently unsure of their status. They
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*should* work.
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What does not work
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XKB is the only extension that intentionally does not work, although I suspect
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that GLX also does not work (however, there is Go source code for GLX that
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compiles, unlike XKB). I don't currently have any intention of getting XKB
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working, due to its complexity and my current mental incapacity to test it.
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*/
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package xgb
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