Amit Daniel Kachhap | e6a01f5 | 2011-07-20 11:45:59 +0530 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | .\"*************************************************************************** |
Steve Kondik | ae271bc | 2015-11-15 02:50:53 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 2 | .\" Copyright (c) 1998-2010,2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc. * |
Amit Daniel Kachhap | e6a01f5 | 2011-07-20 11:45:59 +0530 | [diff] [blame] | 3 | .\" * |
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Steve Kondik | ae271bc | 2015-11-15 02:50:53 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 29 | .\" $Id: term.5,v 1.22 2015/04/26 14:50:23 tom Exp $ |
Amit Daniel Kachhap | e6a01f5 | 2011-07-20 11:45:59 +0530 | [diff] [blame] | 30 | .TH term 5 |
| 31 | .ds n 5 |
| 32 | .ds d @TERMINFO@ |
| 33 | .SH NAME |
| 34 | term \- format of compiled term file. |
| 35 | .SH SYNOPSIS |
| 36 | .B term |
| 37 | .SH DESCRIPTION |
| 38 | .SS STORAGE LOCATION |
| 39 | Compiled terminfo descriptions are placed under the directory \fB\*d\fP. |
| 40 | Two configurations are supported (when building the ncurses libraries): |
| 41 | .TP 5 |
| 42 | .B directory tree |
| 43 | A two-level scheme is used to avoid a linear search |
| 44 | of a huge \s-1UNIX\s+1 system directory: \fB\*d/c/name\fP where |
| 45 | .I name |
| 46 | is the name of the terminal, and |
| 47 | .I c |
| 48 | is the first character of |
| 49 | .IR name . |
| 50 | Thus, |
| 51 | .I act4 |
| 52 | can be found in the file \fB\*d/a/act4\fP. |
| 53 | Synonyms for the same terminal are implemented by multiple |
| 54 | links to the same compiled file. |
| 55 | .TP 5 |
| 56 | .B hashed database |
| 57 | Using Berkeley database, two types of records are stored: |
| 58 | the terminfo data in the same format as stored in a directory tree with |
| 59 | the terminfo's primary name as a key, |
| 60 | and records containing only aliases pointing to the primary name. |
| 61 | .IP |
| 62 | If built to write hashed databases, |
| 63 | ncurses can still read terminfo databases organized as a directory tree, |
| 64 | but cannot write entries into the directory tree. |
| 65 | It can write (or rewrite) entries in the hashed database. |
| 66 | .IP |
| 67 | ncurses distinguishes the two cases in the TERMINFO and TERMINFO_DIRS |
| 68 | environment variable by assuming a directory tree for entries that |
| 69 | correspond to an existing directory, |
| 70 | and hashed database otherwise. |
| 71 | .SS STORAGE FORMAT |
| 72 | The format has been chosen so that it will be the same on all hardware. |
| 73 | An 8 or more bit byte is assumed, but no assumptions about byte ordering |
| 74 | or sign extension are made. |
| 75 | .PP |
| 76 | The compiled file is created with the |
| 77 | .B @TIC@ |
| 78 | program, and read by the routine |
| 79 | .IR setupterm . |
| 80 | The file is divided into six parts: |
| 81 | the header, |
| 82 | terminal names, |
| 83 | boolean flags, |
| 84 | numbers, |
| 85 | strings, |
| 86 | and |
| 87 | string table. |
| 88 | .PP |
| 89 | The header section begins the file. |
| 90 | This section contains six short integers in the format |
| 91 | described below. |
| 92 | These integers are |
| 93 | .RS 5 |
| 94 | .TP 5 |
| 95 | (1) the magic number (octal 0432); |
| 96 | .TP 5 |
| 97 | (2) the size, in bytes, of the names section; |
| 98 | .TP 5 |
| 99 | (3) the number of bytes in the boolean section; |
| 100 | .TP 5 |
| 101 | (4) the number of short integers in the numbers section; |
| 102 | .TP 5 |
| 103 | (5) the number of offsets (short integers) in the strings section; |
| 104 | .TP 5 |
| 105 | (6) the size, in bytes, of the string table. |
| 106 | .RE |
| 107 | .PP |
| 108 | Short integers are stored in two 8-bit bytes. |
| 109 | The first byte contains the least significant 8 bits of the value, |
| 110 | and the second byte contains the most significant 8 bits. |
| 111 | (Thus, the value represented is 256*second+first.) |
Steve Kondik | ae271bc | 2015-11-15 02:50:53 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 112 | The value \-1 is represented by the two bytes 0377, 0377; other negative |
Amit Daniel Kachhap | e6a01f5 | 2011-07-20 11:45:59 +0530 | [diff] [blame] | 113 | values are illegal. This value generally |
| 114 | means that the corresponding capability is missing from this terminal. |
| 115 | Note that this format corresponds to the hardware of the \s-1VAX\s+1 |
| 116 | and \s-1PDP\s+1-11 (that is, little-endian machines). |
| 117 | Machines where this does not correspond to the hardware must read the |
| 118 | integers as two bytes and compute the little-endian value. |
| 119 | .PP |
| 120 | The terminal names section comes next. |
| 121 | It contains the first line of the terminfo description, |
| 122 | listing the various names for the terminal, |
| 123 | separated by the `|' character. |
| 124 | The section is terminated with an \s-1ASCII NUL\s+1 character. |
| 125 | .PP |
| 126 | The boolean flags have one byte for each flag. |
| 127 | This byte is either 0 or 1 as the flag is present or absent. |
| 128 | The capabilities are in the same order as the file <term.h>. |
| 129 | .PP |
| 130 | Between the boolean section and the number section, |
| 131 | a null byte will be inserted, if necessary, |
| 132 | to ensure that the number section begins on an even byte (this is a |
Steve Kondik | ae271bc | 2015-11-15 02:50:53 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 133 | relic of the PDP\-11's word-addressed architecture, originally |
Amit Daniel Kachhap | e6a01f5 | 2011-07-20 11:45:59 +0530 | [diff] [blame] | 134 | designed in to avoid IOT traps induced by addressing a word on an |
| 135 | odd byte boundary). |
| 136 | All short integers are aligned on a short word boundary. |
| 137 | .PP |
| 138 | The numbers section is similar to the flags section. |
| 139 | Each capability takes up two bytes, |
| 140 | and is stored as a little-endian short integer. |
Steve Kondik | ae271bc | 2015-11-15 02:50:53 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 141 | If the value represented is \-1, the capability is taken to be missing. |
Amit Daniel Kachhap | e6a01f5 | 2011-07-20 11:45:59 +0530 | [diff] [blame] | 142 | .PP |
| 143 | The strings section is also similar. |
| 144 | Each capability is stored as a short integer, in the format above. |
Steve Kondik | ae271bc | 2015-11-15 02:50:53 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 145 | A value of \-1 means the capability is missing. |
Amit Daniel Kachhap | e6a01f5 | 2011-07-20 11:45:59 +0530 | [diff] [blame] | 146 | Otherwise, the value is taken as an offset from the beginning |
| 147 | of the string table. |
| 148 | Special characters in ^X or \ec notation are stored in their |
| 149 | interpreted form, not the printing representation. |
| 150 | Padding information $<nn> and parameter information %x are |
| 151 | stored intact in uninterpreted form. |
| 152 | .PP |
| 153 | The final section is the string table. |
| 154 | It contains all the values of string capabilities referenced in |
| 155 | the string section. |
| 156 | Each string is null terminated. |
| 157 | .SS EXTENDED STORAGE FORMAT |
| 158 | The previous section describes the conventional terminfo binary format. |
| 159 | With some minor variations of the offsets (see PORTABILITY), |
| 160 | the same binary format is used in all modern UNIX systems. |
| 161 | Each system uses a predefined set of boolean, number or string capabilities. |
| 162 | .PP |
| 163 | The ncurses libraries and applications support extended terminfo binary format, |
| 164 | allowing users to define capabilities which are loaded at runtime. This |
| 165 | extension is made possible by using the fact that the other implementations |
| 166 | stop reading the terminfo data when they have reached the end of the size given |
| 167 | in the header. |
| 168 | ncurses checks the size, and if it exceeds that due to the predefined data, |
| 169 | continues to parse according to its own scheme. |
| 170 | .PP |
| 171 | First, it reads the extended header (5 short integers): |
| 172 | .RS 5 |
| 173 | .TP 5 |
| 174 | (1) |
| 175 | count of extended boolean capabilities |
| 176 | .TP 5 |
| 177 | (2) |
| 178 | count of extended numeric capabilities |
| 179 | .TP 5 |
| 180 | (3) |
| 181 | count of extended string capabilities |
| 182 | .TP 5 |
| 183 | (4) |
| 184 | size of the extended string table in bytes. |
| 185 | .TP 5 |
| 186 | (5) |
| 187 | last offset of the extended string table in bytes. |
| 188 | .RE |
| 189 | .PP |
| 190 | Using the counts and sizes, ncurses allocates arrays and reads data |
Steve Kondik | ae271bc | 2015-11-15 02:50:53 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 191 | for the extended capabilities in the same order as the header information. |
Amit Daniel Kachhap | e6a01f5 | 2011-07-20 11:45:59 +0530 | [diff] [blame] | 192 | .PP |
| 193 | The extended string table contains values for string capabilities. |
| 194 | After the end of these values, it contains the names for each of |
| 195 | the extended capabilities in order, e.g., booleans, then numbers and |
| 196 | finally strings. |
| 197 | . |
| 198 | .SH PORTABILITY |
| 199 | Note that it is possible for |
| 200 | .I setupterm |
| 201 | to expect a different set of capabilities |
| 202 | than are actually present in the file. |
| 203 | Either the database may have been updated since |
| 204 | .I setupterm |
| 205 | has been recompiled |
| 206 | (resulting in extra unrecognized entries in the file) |
| 207 | or the program may have been recompiled more recently |
| 208 | than the database was updated |
| 209 | (resulting in missing entries). |
| 210 | The routine |
| 211 | .I setupterm |
| 212 | must be prepared for both possibilities \- |
| 213 | this is why the numbers and sizes are included. |
| 214 | Also, new capabilities must always be added at the end of the lists |
| 215 | of boolean, number, and string capabilities. |
| 216 | .PP |
| 217 | Despite the consistent use of little-endian for numbers and the otherwise |
| 218 | self-describing format, it is not wise to count on portability of binary |
| 219 | terminfo entries between commercial UNIX versions. The problem is that there |
Steve Kondik | ae271bc | 2015-11-15 02:50:53 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 220 | are at least three versions of terminfo (under HP\-UX, AIX, and OSF/1) which |
Amit Daniel Kachhap | e6a01f5 | 2011-07-20 11:45:59 +0530 | [diff] [blame] | 221 | diverged from System V terminfo after SVr1, and have added extension |
| 222 | capabilities to the string table that (in the binary format) collide with |
| 223 | System V and XSI Curses extensions. See \fBterminfo\fR(\*n) for detailed |
| 224 | discussion of terminfo source compatibility issues. |
| 225 | .SH EXAMPLE |
| 226 | As an example, here is a hex dump of the description for the Lear-Siegler |
Steve Kondik | ae271bc | 2015-11-15 02:50:53 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 227 | ADM\-3, a popular though rather stupid early terminal: |
Amit Daniel Kachhap | e6a01f5 | 2011-07-20 11:45:59 +0530 | [diff] [blame] | 228 | .nf |
| 229 | .sp |
| 230 | adm3a|lsi adm3a, |
| 231 | am, |
| 232 | cols#80, lines#24, |
| 233 | bel=^G, clear=\032$<1>, cr=^M, cub1=^H, cud1=^J, |
| 234 | cuf1=^L, cup=\\E=%p1%{32}%+%c%p2%{32}%+%c, cuu1=^K, |
| 235 | home=^^, ind=^J, |
| 236 | .sp |
| 237 | .ft CW |
| 238 | \s-20000 1a 01 10 00 02 00 03 00 82 00 31 00 61 64 6d 33 ........ ..1.adm3 |
| 239 | 0010 61 7c 6c 73 69 20 61 64 6d 33 61 00 00 01 50 00 a|lsi ad m3a...P. |
| 240 | 0020 ff ff 18 00 ff ff 00 00 02 00 ff ff ff ff 04 00 ........ ........ |
| 241 | 0030 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff 0a 00 25 00 27 00 ff ff ........ ..%.'... |
| 242 | 0040 29 00 ff ff ff ff 2b 00 ff ff 2d 00 ff ff ff ff ).....+. ..-..... |
| 243 | 0050 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 244 | 0060 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 245 | 0070 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 246 | 0080 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 247 | 0090 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 248 | 00a0 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 249 | 00b0 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 250 | 00c0 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 251 | 00d0 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 252 | 00e0 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 253 | 00f0 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 254 | 0100 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 255 | 0110 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ........ ........ |
| 256 | 0120 ff ff ff ff ff ff 2f 00 07 00 0d 00 1a 24 3c 31 ....../. .....$<1 |
| 257 | 0130 3e 00 1b 3d 25 70 31 25 7b 33 32 7d 25 2b 25 63 >..=%p1% {32}%+%c |
| 258 | 0140 25 70 32 25 7b 33 32 7d 25 2b 25 63 00 0a 00 1e %p2%{32} %+%c.... |
| 259 | 0150 00 08 00 0c 00 0b 00 0a 00 ........ .\s+2 |
| 260 | .ft R |
| 261 | .fi |
| 262 | .sp |
| 263 | .SH LIMITS |
| 264 | Some limitations: total compiled entries cannot exceed 4096 bytes. |
| 265 | The name field cannot exceed 128 bytes. |
| 266 | .SH FILES |
| 267 | \*d/*/* compiled terminal capability data base |
| 268 | .SH SEE ALSO |
| 269 | \fBcurses\fR(3X), \fBterminfo\fR(\*n). |
| 270 | .SH AUTHORS |
| 271 | Thomas E. Dickey |
| 272 | .br |
| 273 | extended terminfo format for ncurses 5.0 |
| 274 | .br |
| 275 | hashed database support for ncurses 5.6 |
| 276 | .sp |
| 277 | Eric S. Raymond |