Fixes reports of printing of garbage (or anything else) other than clearing
the status line to the end of line: the buffer returned by termcap_get
could get moved, and if that happened then these 3 caps pointed to garbage.
setupterm abort()s if it can't initialize the terminal and the last
parameter is NULL; handle setupterm errors and retry with "ansi" if
the TERM env var was unset.
Due to the termcap matching and the hardcoded fallbacks, the ESC keypress
has to be followed by another non-matching keypress (such as another ESC)
for it to be accepted. We drop the second ESC in case it was typed twice.
If the first character is not a valid UTF-8 start code nor is in termcap,
getch2 would enter an infinite loop. Always walk 1 byte in the UTF-8 case
unless it's a valid start code.
If we still haven't read the full key from the input but it's regardless a
unique match in the database, we could receive a NULL keycode from
keys_search (it's not a full match after all) and proceed to use it.
Don't disable the keycode matching code if we don't have termcap as we can
still match against the hardcoded sequences.
Still uses termcap, but uses terminfo for loading the termcap database if
possible. Adds configure test to find terminfo; skips the termcap test
if terminfo is found since terminfo provides termcap.
Use termcap completely for special keys; if we can't get it from termcap
and it isn't one of the known fallbacks, we ignore its specialness and
treat as a sequence of UTF-8 codes.
Further hardcoded fallbacks can be added by calling keys_push_once in
load_termcap; there is no limit to the amount of keys pushed.
Uses the "ke" and "ks" capabilities to start / exit application mode, which
is necessary on vt100 emulators (including screen, xterm and all terminals
that emulate either of those) to correctly receive arrow keys.
It's now possible to compile getch2 even without termcap, though it won't
be of much use since it'll be unable to detect special keys.
Converted to 4 spaces per tab, prettified some statements.
Do this to reduce conflicts with <linux/input.h>, which contains some
conflicting defines.
This changes the meaning of MP_KEY_DOWN:
KEY_DOWN is renamed to MP_KEY_DOWN (cursor down key)
MP_KEY_DOWN is renamed to MP_KEY_STATE_DOWN (modifier for key down state)
Now, when backgrounded, mpv plays and outputs messages to stdout, but
statusline is not output.
Background<->foreground transitions are detected by signals and polling
the process groups.
Finish renaming directories and moving files. Adjust all include
statements to make the previous commit compile.
The two commits are separate, because git is bad at tracking renames
and content changes at the same time.
Also take this as an opportunity to remove the separation between
"common" and "mplayer" sources in the Makefile. ("common" used to be
shared between mplayer and mencoder.)
fixes issue with | less, where mplayer broke less's terminal
expectations and made less quit
Note this means that read() will be blocking again. Should be ok, as we
always check via select() before reading.
This was intended for translating filenames from filesystem charset to
the terminal charset. Modern sane platforms use UTF-8 for everything,
and on Windows we use unicode APIs, so this is not needed anymore.
Remove filename_recode, all uses of it, options and configure checks
related to terminal output charset, and code that tries to determine
the same.
Stop trying to read terminal input if a read attempt returns EOF. The
most important case where this matters is when someone runs the player
with stdin redirected from /dev/null and without specifying
--no-consolecontrols. This used to cause 100% CPU load while paused,
as select() would continuously trigger on stdin (the need for
--no-consolecontrols was not apparent to people with older mplayer
versions, as input reading was less efficient and latencies like
hardcoded sleeps kept CPU use well below 100%). Now this will only
cause a "Dead key input" error message.
This assumes the terminal uses UTF-8. If invalid UTF-8 is encountered (for
example because the terminal uses a legacy encoding), the code falls back
to the old method and feeds each byte as key code to the input code.
In theory, UTF-8 input could randomly fail, because the code in getch2.c
doesn't try to fill the input buffer correctly with input sequences
longer than a byte. This is a problem with the design of the existing
code.
This moves all key codes above the highest valid unicode code point
(which is 0x10FFFF). All key codes below MP_KEY_BASE now directly map
to unicode (KEY_ENTER is 13, carriage return). Configuration files
(input.conf) can contain unicode characters in UTF-8 to map non-ASCII
characters/keys.
This shouldn't change anything user visible, except that "direct key
codes" (as used in input.conf) will change their meaning.
Parts of the bstr functions taken from libavutil's GET_UTF8 and
slightly modified.
Install a signal handler on SIGCONT, and restore the terminal
attributes with tcsetattr() if it happens. This is needed with some
shells (such as tcsh) that don't restore the terminal attributes set
by mplayer. Without this, terminal I/O doesn't work as intended after
resume with these shells.
Fixes#155.
The commit "input: handle UTF-8 terminal input" accidentally messed up
the handling of certain special keys. Apparently only KEY_ENTER was
affected by this, because the code was valid UTF-8, but didn't directly
map to the keycode.
This assumes the terminal uses UTF-8. If invalid UTF-8 is encountered (for
example because the terminal uses a legacy encoding), the code falls back
to the old method and feeds each byte as key code to the input code.
In theory, UTF-8 input could randomly fail, because the code in getch2.c
doesn't try to fill the input buffer correctly with input sequences
longer than a byte. This is a problem with the design of the existing
code.
This moves all key codes above the highest valid unicode code point (which
is 0x10FFFF). All key codes below MP_KEY_BASE now directly map to unicode.
Configuration files (input.conf) can contain unicode characters in UTF-8
to map non-ASCII characters/keys.
This shouldn't change anything user visible, except that "direct key codes"
(as used in input.conf) will change their meaning.
getch2.c read data into a "char" array, and returned values other than
escape sequences directly from there. This meant that it could return
negative values (except on platforms where "char" is unsigned) if the
input contained bytes >= 128. This would break later parsing in
input.c as the values would be interpreted as having the MP_KEY_DOWN
flag set, which would make the key binding code think a key is held
down (and never released). Fix by changing the buffer type to unsigned
char.
The bug itself was very old, but started triggering visible breakage
more easily after commit 82b8f89bae ("input: rework event reading and
command queuing"). Before that the key values would be passed through
the input.c "key read function" interface, which (mis)interpreted the
negative values as errors from the function, and in most cases
discarded them without much visible effect.
Setting O_NONBLOCK on a file descriptor also affects all other fds
that share the same underlying open file description, and in case of
stdin such sharing is likely. Making stdin nonblocking can also make
stdout nonblocking (they may be the same connection to a terminal),
and it can also affect other processes (in "program1 | program2", the
shell may give the same terminal connection to program1 as stdin and
to program2 as stdout, thus program1 making its stdin nonblocking also
turns program2's stdout nonblocking).
To avoid these problems stop making fd 0 nonblocking. After the
previous commit this should no longer cause problems as long as
select() does not spuriously report the fd as readable.
Move the definitions of all special key codes (those not passed by
ASCII value) to input/keycodes.h. Before they were spread between
osdep/keycodes.h, input/joystick.h, input/mouse.h and input/ar.h, plus
some special values in input.h. This was especially inconvenient as
the codes had to be coordinated to not conflict between the files.
The change requires a bit of ugliness as appleir.c includes
<linux/input.h> which contains various conflicting KEY_* definitions.
Work around this by adding a special preprocessor variable which can
be used to avoid defining these in keycodes.h.
getch2.c did not make stdin non-blocking, and relied on only being
called after select() had shown readability. Stop relying on that
assumption and set stdin to non-blocking mode. Hopefully no relevant
platform has problems with this...
This is necessary at least on POSIX systems since the buffer returned by
nl_langinfo may change its contents with e.g. each setlocale call.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@29332 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
The "erase_to_end_of_line" string used to clear the terminal status
line was initialized with the termcap id "cd", which means to clear
all lines below the cursor. Change it to the correct "ce" to clear the
current line.
Usually the status line is on the bottommost line of the terminal so
the behaviour wouldn't differ much. However it did make a difference
when I tested starting MPlayer at the top of a huge gnome-terminal
window so the status line was not at the bottom; in that case clearing
just the current line used less CPU than clearing the part of the huge
window below the status line.
Replace all USE_ prefixes by CONFIG_ prefixes to indicate
options which are configurable.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@27373 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Keycode length wasn't checked in one case because of missing
parentheses. This was accidentally broken in my previous commit to the
file. Most likely the error had no practical effect; the length checks
are unreliable in any case as they can be satisfied by unrelated
data corresponding to other keypresses.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@24535 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2