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Revision: 1.54
Committed: Thu Jun 14 16:22:20 2012 UTC (11 years, 11 months ago) by root
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# Content
1 #! perl
2
3 #:META:X_RESOURCE:%.expr:string:background expression
4 #:META:X_RESOURCE:%.border:boolean:respect the terminal border
5 #:META:X_RESOURCE:%.interval:seconds:minimum time between updates
6
7 =head1 NAME
8
9 background - manage terminal background
10
11 =head1 SYNOPSIS
12
13 urxvt --background-expr 'background expression'
14 --background-border
15 --background-interval seconds
16
17 =head1 DESCRIPTION
18
19 This extension manages the terminal background by creating a picture that
20 is behind the text, replacing the normal background colour.
21
22 It does so by evaluating a Perl expression that I<calculates> the image on
23 the fly, for example, by grabbing the root background or loading a file.
24
25 While the full power of Perl is available, the operators have been design
26 to be as simple as possible.
27
28 For example, to load an image and scale it to the window size, you would
29 use:
30
31 urxvt --background-expr 'scale load "/path/to/mybg.png"'
32
33 Or specified as a X resource:
34
35 URxvt.background-expr: scale load "/path/to/mybg.png"
36
37 =head1 THEORY OF OPERATION
38
39 At startup, just before the window is mapped for the first time, the
40 expression is evaluated and must yield an image. The image is then
41 extended as necessary to cover the whole terminal window, and is set as a
42 background pixmap.
43
44 If the image contains an alpha channel, then it will be used as-is in
45 visuals that support alpha channels (for example, for a compositing
46 manager). In other visuals, the terminal background colour will be used to
47 replace any transparency.
48
49 When the expression relies, directly or indirectly, on the window size,
50 position, the root pixmap, or a timer, then it will be remembered. If not,
51 then it will be removed.
52
53 If any of the parameters that the expression relies on changes (when the
54 window is moved or resized, its position or size changes; when the root
55 pixmap is replaced by another one the root background changes; or when the
56 timer elapses), then the expression will be evaluated again.
57
58 For example, an expression such as C<scale load "$HOME/mybg.png"> scales the
59 image to the window size, so it relies on the window size and will
60 be reevaluated each time it is changed, but not when it moves for
61 example. That ensures that the picture always fills the terminal, even
62 after its size changes.
63
64 =head2 EXPRESSIONS
65
66 Expressions are normal Perl expressions, in fact, they are Perl blocks -
67 which means you could use multiple lines and statements:
68
69 again 3600;
70 if (localtime now)[6]) {
71 return scale load "$HOME/weekday.png";
72 } else {
73 return scale load "$HOME/sunday.png";
74 }
75
76 This expression is evaluated once per hour. It will set F<sunday.png> as
77 background on Sundays, and F<weekday.png> on all other days.
78
79 Fortunately, we expect that most expressions will be much simpler, with
80 little Perl knowledge needed.
81
82 Basically, you always start with a function that "generates" an image
83 object, such as C<load>, which loads an image from disk, or C<root>, which
84 returns the root window background image:
85
86 load "$HOME/mypic.png"
87
88 The path is usually specified as a quoted string (the exact rules can be
89 found in the L<perlop> manpage). The F<$HOME> at the beginning of the
90 string is expanded to the home directory.
91
92 Then you prepend one or more modifiers or filtering expressions, such as
93 C<scale>:
94
95 scale load "$HOME/mypic.png"
96
97 Just like a mathematical expression with functions, you should read these
98 expressions from right to left, as the C<load> is evaluated first, and
99 its result becomes the argument to the C<scale> function.
100
101 Many operators also allow some parameters preceding the input image
102 that modify its behaviour. For example, C<scale> without any additional
103 arguments scales the image to size of the terminal window. If you specify
104 an additional argument, it uses it as a scale factor (multiply by 100 to
105 get a percentage):
106
107 scale 2, load "$HOME/mypic.png"
108
109 This enlarges the image by a factor of 2 (200%). As you can see, C<scale>
110 has now two arguments, the C<200> and the C<load> expression, while
111 C<load> only has one argument. Arguments are separated from each other by
112 commas.
113
114 Scale also accepts two arguments, which are then separate factors for both
115 horizontal and vertical dimensions. For example, this halves the image
116 width and doubles the image height:
117
118 scale 0.5, 2, load "$HOME/mypic.png"
119
120 Other effects than scaling are also readily available, for example, you can
121 tile the image to fill the whole window, instead of resizing it:
122
123 tile load "$HOME/mypic.png"
124
125 In fact, images returned by C<load> are in C<tile> mode by default, so the C<tile> operator
126 is kind of superfluous.
127
128 Another common effect is to mirror the image, so that the same edges touch:
129
130 mirror load "$HOME/mypic.png"
131
132 This is also a typical background expression:
133
134 rootalign root
135
136 It first takes a snapshot of the screen background image, and then
137 moves it to the upper left corner of the screen - the result is
138 pseudo-transparency, as the image seems to be static while the window is
139 moved around.
140
141 =head2 CYCLES AND CACHING
142
143 As has been mentioned before, the expression might be evaluated multiple
144 times. Each time the expression is reevaluated, a new cycle is said to
145 have begun. Many operators cache their results till the next cycle.
146
147 For example, the C<load> operator keeps a copy of the image. If it is
148 asked to load the same image on the next cycle it will not load it again,
149 but return the cached copy.
150
151 This only works for one cycle though, so as long as you load the same
152 image every time, it will always be cached, but when you load a different
153 image, it will forget about the first one.
154
155 This allows you to either speed things up by keeping multiple images in
156 memory, or conserve memory by loading images more often.
157
158 For example, you can keep two images in memory and use a random one like
159 this:
160
161 my $img1 = load "img1.png";
162 my $img2 = load "img2.png";
163 (0.5 > rand) ? $img1 : $img2
164
165 Since both images are "loaded" every time the expression is evaluated,
166 they are always kept in memory. Contrast this version:
167
168 my $path1 = "img1.png";
169 my $path2 = "img2.png";
170 load ((0.5 > rand) ? $path1 : $path2)
171
172 Here, a path is selected randomly, and load is only called for one image,
173 so keeps only one image in memory. If, on the next evaluation, luck
174 decides to use the other path, then it will have to load that image again.
175
176 =head1 REFERENCE
177
178 =head2 COMMAND LINE SWITCHES
179
180 =over 4
181
182 =item --background-expr perl-expression
183
184 Specifies the Perl expression to evaluate.
185
186 =item --background-border
187
188 By default, the expression creates an image that fills the full window,
189 overwriting borders and any other areas, such as the scrollbar.
190
191 Specifying this flag changes the behaviour, so that the image only
192 replaces the background of the character area.
193
194 =item --background-interval seconds
195
196 Since some operations in the underlying XRender extension can effectively
197 freeze your X-server for prolonged time, this extension enforces a minimum
198 time between updates, which is normally about 0.1 seconds.
199
200 If you want to do updates more often, you can decrease this safety
201 interval with this switch.
202
203 =back
204
205 =cut
206
207 our %_IMG_CACHE;
208 our %_ONCE_CACHE;
209 our $HOME;
210 our ($self, $old, $new);
211 our ($x, $y, $w, $h);
212
213 # enforce at least this interval between updates
214 our $MIN_INTERVAL = 6/59.951;
215
216 {
217 package urxvt::bgdsl; # background language
218
219 use List::Util qw(min max sum shuffle);
220
221 =head2 PROVIDERS/GENERATORS
222
223 These functions provide an image, by loading it from disk, grabbing it
224 from the root screen or by simply generating it. They are used as starting
225 points to get an image you can play with.
226
227 =over 4
228
229 =item load $path
230
231 Loads the image at the given C<$path>. The image is set to plane tiling
232 mode.
233
234 Loaded images will be cached for one cycle, and shared between temrinals
235 running in the same process (e.g. in C<urxvtd>).
236
237 =item load_uc $path
238
239 Load uncached - same as load, but does not cache the image. This function
240 is most useufl if you want to optimise a background expression in some
241 way.
242
243 =cut
244
245 sub load_uc($) {
246 my ($path) = @_;
247
248 $_IMG_CACHE{$path} || do {
249 my $img = $self->new_img_from_file ($path);
250 Scalar::Util::weaken ($_IMG_CACHE{$path} = $img);
251 $img
252 }
253 }
254
255 sub load($) {
256 my ($path) = @_;
257
258 $new->{load}{$path} = $old->{load}{$path} || load_uc $path;
259 }
260
261 =item root
262
263 Returns the root window pixmap, that is, hopefully, the background image
264 of your screen. The image is set to extend mode.
265
266 This function makes your expression root sensitive, that means it will be
267 reevaluated when the bg image changes.
268
269 =cut
270
271 sub root() {
272 $new->{rootpmap_sensitive} = 1;
273 $self->new_img_from_root
274 }
275
276 =item solid $colour
277
278 =item solid $width, $height, $colour
279
280 Creates a new image and completely fills it with the given colour. The
281 image is set to tiling mode.
282
283 If C<$width> and C<$height> are omitted, it creates a 1x1 image, which is
284 useful for solid backgrounds or for use in filtering effects.
285
286 =cut
287
288 sub solid($;$$) {
289 my $colour = pop;
290
291 my $img = $self->new_img (urxvt::PictStandardARGB32, $_[0] || 1, $_[1] || 1);
292 $img->fill ($colour);
293 $img
294 }
295
296 =item clone $img
297
298 Returns an exact copy of the image. This is useful if you want to have
299 multiple copies of the same image to apply different effects to.
300
301 =cut
302
303 sub clone($) {
304 $_[0]->clone
305 }
306
307 =head2 TILING MODES
308
309 The following operators modify the tiling mode of an image, that is, the
310 way that pixels outside the image area are painted when the image is used.
311
312 =over 4
313
314 =item tile $img
315
316 Tiles the whole plane with the image and returns this new image - or in
317 other words, it returns a copy of the image in plane tiling mode.
318
319 Example: load an image and tile it over the background, without
320 resizing. The C<tile> call is superfluous because C<load> already defaults
321 to tiling mode.
322
323 tile load "mybg.png"
324
325 =item mirror $img
326
327 Similar to tile, but reflects the image each time it uses a new copy, so
328 that top edges always touch top edges, right edges always touch right
329 edges and so on (with normal tiling, left edges always touch right edges
330 and top always touch bottom edges).
331
332 Example: load an image and mirror it over the background, avoiding sharp
333 edges at the image borders at the expense of mirroring the image itself
334
335 mirror load "mybg.png"
336
337 =item pad $img
338
339 Takes an image and modifies it so that all pixels outside the image area
340 become transparent. This mode is most useful when you want to place an
341 image over another image or the background colour while leaving all
342 background pixels outside the image unchanged.
343
344 Example: load an image and display it in the upper left corner. The rest
345 of the space is left "empty" (transparent or whatever your compositor does
346 in alpha mode, else background colour).
347
348 pad load "mybg.png"
349
350 =item extend $img
351
352 Extends the image over the whole plane, using the closest pixel in the
353 area outside the image. This mode is mostly useful when you use more complex
354 filtering operations and want the pixels outside the image to have the
355 same values as the pixels near the edge.
356
357 Example: just for curiosity, how does this pixel extension stuff work?
358
359 extend move 50, 50, load "mybg.png"
360
361 =cut
362
363 sub pad($) {
364 my $img = $_[0]->clone;
365 $img->repeat_mode (urxvt::RepeatNone);
366 $img
367 }
368
369 sub tile($) {
370 my $img = $_[0]->clone;
371 $img->repeat_mode (urxvt::RepeatNormal);
372 $img
373 }
374
375 sub mirror($) {
376 my $img = $_[0]->clone;
377 $img->repeat_mode (urxvt::RepeatReflect);
378 $img
379 }
380
381 sub extend($) {
382 my $img = $_[0]->clone;
383 $img->repeat_mode (urxvt::RepeatPad);
384 $img
385 }
386
387 =back
388
389 =head2 VARIABLE VALUES
390
391 The following functions provide variable data such as the terminal window
392 dimensions. They are not (Perl-) variables, they just return stuff that
393 varies. Most of them make your expression sensitive to some events, for
394 example using C<TW> (terminal width) means your expression is evaluated
395 again when the terminal is resized.
396
397 =over 4
398
399 =item TX
400
401 =item TY
402
403 Return the X and Y coordinates of the terminal window (the terminal
404 window is the full window by default, and the character area only when in
405 border-respect mode).
406
407 Using these functions make your expression sensitive to window moves.
408
409 These functions are mainly useful to align images to the root window.
410
411 Example: load an image and align it so it looks as if anchored to the
412 background.
413
414 move -TX, -TY, load "mybg.png"
415
416 =item TW
417
418 Return the width (C<TW>) and height (C<TH>) of the terminal window (the
419 terminal window is the full window by default, and the character area only
420 when in border-respect mode).
421
422 Using these functions make your expression sensitive to window resizes.
423
424 These functions are mainly useful to scale images, or to clip images to
425 the window size to conserve memory.
426
427 Example: take the screen background, clip it to the window size, blur it a
428 bit, align it to the window position and use it as background.
429
430 clip move -TX, -TY, blur 5, root
431
432 =cut
433
434 sub TX() { $new->{position_sensitive} = 1; $x }
435 sub TY() { $new->{position_sensitive} = 1; $y }
436 sub TW() { $new->{size_sensitive} = 1; $w }
437 sub TH() { $new->{size_sensitive} = 1; $h }
438
439 =item now
440
441 Returns the current time as (fractional) seconds since the epoch.
442
443 Using this expression does I<not> make your expression sensitive to time,
444 but the next two functions do.
445
446 =item again $seconds
447
448 When this function is used the expression will be reevaluated again in
449 C<$seconds> seconds.
450
451 Example: load some image and rotate it according to the time of day (as if it were
452 the hour pointer of a clock). Update this image every minute.
453
454 again 60; rotate 50, 50, (now % 86400) * -720 / 86400, scale load "myclock.png"
455
456 =item counter $seconds
457
458 Like C<again>, but also returns an increasing counter value, starting at
459 0, which might be useful for some simple animation effects.
460
461 =cut
462
463 sub now() { urxvt::NOW }
464
465 sub again($) {
466 $new->{again} = $_[0];
467 }
468
469 sub counter($) {
470 $new->{again} = $_[0];
471 $self->{counter} + 0
472 }
473
474 =back
475
476 =head2 SHAPE CHANGING OPERATORS
477
478 The following operators modify the shape, size or position of the image.
479
480 =over 4
481
482 =item clip $img
483
484 =item clip $width, $height, $img
485
486 =item clip $x, $y, $width, $height, $img
487
488 Clips an image to the given rectangle. If the rectangle is outside the
489 image area (e.g. when C<$x> or C<$y> are negative) or the rectangle is
490 larger than the image, then the tiling mode defines how the extra pixels
491 will be filled.
492
493 If C<$x> an C<$y> are missing, then C<0> is assumed for both.
494
495 If C<$width> and C<$height> are missing, then the window size will be
496 assumed.
497
498 Example: load an image, blur it, and clip it to the window size to save
499 memory.
500
501 clip blur 10, load "mybg.png"
502
503 =cut
504
505 sub clip($;$$;$$) {
506 my $img = pop;
507 my $h = pop || TH;
508 my $w = pop || TW;
509 $img->sub_rect ($_[0], $_[1], $w, $h)
510 }
511
512 =item scale $img
513
514 =item scale $size_factor, $img
515
516 =item scale $width_factor, $height_factor, $img
517
518 Scales the image by the given factors in horizontal
519 (C<$width>) and vertical (C<$height>) direction.
520
521 If only one factor is give, it is used for both directions.
522
523 If no factors are given, scales the image to the window size without
524 keeping aspect.
525
526 =item resize $width, $height, $img
527
528 Resizes the image to exactly C<$width> times C<$height> pixels.
529
530 =item fit $img
531
532 =item fit $width, $height, $img
533
534 Fits the image into the given C<$width> and C<$height> without changing
535 aspect, or the terminal size. That means it will be shrunk or grown until
536 the whole image fits into the given area, possibly leaving borders.
537
538 =item cover $img
539
540 =item cover $width, $height, $img
541
542 Similar to C<fit>, but shrinks or grows until all of the area is covered
543 by the image, so instead of potentially leaving borders, it will cut off
544 image data that doesn't fit.
545
546 =cut
547
548 sub scale($;$;$) {
549 my $img = pop;
550
551 @_ == 2 ? $img->scale ($_[0] * $img->w, $_[1] * $img->h)
552 : @_ ? $img->scale ($_[0] * $img->w, $_[0] * $img->h)
553 : $img->scale (TW, TH)
554 }
555
556 sub resize($$$) {
557 my $img = pop;
558 $img->scale ($_[0], $_[1])
559 }
560
561 sub fit($;$$) {
562 my $img = pop;
563 my $w = ($_[0] || TW) / $img->w;
564 my $h = ($_[1] || TH) / $img->h;
565 scale +(min $w, $h), $img
566 }
567
568 sub cover($;$$) {
569 my $img = pop;
570 my $w = ($_[0] || TW) / $img->w;
571 my $h = ($_[1] || TH) / $img->h;
572 scale +(max $w, $h), $img
573 }
574
575 =item move $dx, $dy, $img
576
577 Moves the image by C<$dx> pixels in the horizontal, and C<$dy> pixels in
578 the vertical.
579
580 Example: move the image right by 20 pixels and down by 30.
581
582 move 20, 30, ...
583
584 =item align $xalign, $yalign, $img
585
586 Aligns the image according to a factor - C<0> means the image is moved to
587 the left or top edge (for C<$xalign> or C<$yalign>), C<0.5> means it is
588 exactly centered and C<1> means it touches the right or bottom edge.
589
590 Example: remove any visible border around an image, center it vertically but move
591 it to the right hand side.
592
593 align 1, 0.5, pad $img
594
595 =item center $img
596
597 =item center $width, $height, $img
598
599 Centers the image, i.e. the center of the image is moved to the center of
600 the terminal window (or the box specified by C<$width> and C<$height> if
601 given).
602
603 Example: load an image and center it.
604
605 center pad load "mybg.png"
606
607 =item rootalign $img
608
609 Moves the image so that it appears glued to the screen as opposed to the
610 window. This gives the illusion of a larger area behind the window. It is
611 exactly equivalent to C<move -TX, -TY>, that is, it moves the image to the
612 top left of the screen.
613
614 Example: load a background image, put it in mirror mode and root align it.
615
616 rootalign mirror load "mybg.png"
617
618 Example: take the screen background and align it, giving the illusion of
619 transparency as long as the window isn't in front of other windows.
620
621 rootalign root
622
623 =cut
624
625 sub move($$;$) {
626 my $img = pop->clone;
627 $img->move ($_[0], $_[1]);
628 $img
629 }
630
631 sub align($;$$) {
632 my $img = pop;
633
634 move $_[0] * (TW - $img->w),
635 $_[1] * (TH - $img->h),
636 $img
637 }
638
639 sub center($;$$) {
640 my $img = pop;
641 my $w = $_[0] || TW;
642 my $h = $_[1] || TH;
643
644 move 0.5 * ($w - $img->w), 0.5 * ($h - $img->h), $img
645 }
646
647 sub rootalign($) {
648 move -TX, -TY, $_[0]
649 }
650
651 =item rotate $center_x, $center_y, $degrees
652
653 Rotates the image by C<$degrees> degrees, counter-clockwise, around the
654 pointer at C<$center_x> and C<$center_y> (specified as factor of image
655 width/height).
656
657 #TODO# new width, height, maybe more operators?
658
659 Example: rotate the image by 90 degrees
660
661 =cut
662
663 sub rotate($$$$) {
664 my $img = pop;
665 $img->rotate (
666 $_[0] * $img->w,
667 $_[1] * $img->h,
668 $_[2] * (3.14159265 / 180),
669 )
670 }
671
672 =back
673
674 =head2 COLOUR MODIFICATIONS
675
676 The following operators change the pixels of the image.
677
678 =over 4
679
680 =item contrast $factor, $img
681
682 =item contrast $r, $g, $b, $img
683
684 =item contrast $r, $g, $b, $a, $img
685
686 Adjusts the I<contrast> of an image.
687
688 The first form applies a single C<$factor> to red, green and blue, the
689 second form applies separate factors to each colour channel, and the last
690 form includes the alpha channel.
691
692 Values from 0 to 1 lower the contrast, values higher than 1 increase the
693 contrast.
694
695 Due to limitations in the underlying XRender extension, lowering contrast
696 also reduces brightness, while increasing contrast currently also
697 increases brightness.
698
699 =item brightness $bias, $img
700
701 =item brightness $r, $g, $b, $img
702
703 =item brightness $r, $g, $b, $a, $img
704
705 Adjusts the brightness of an image.
706
707 The first form applies a single C<$bias> to red, green and blue, the
708 second form applies separate biases to each colour channel, and the last
709 form includes the alpha channel.
710
711 Values less than 0 reduce brightness, while values larger than 0 increase
712 it. Useful range is from -1 to 1 - the former results in a black, the
713 latter in a white picture.
714
715 Due to idiosyncrasies in the underlying XRender extension, biases less
716 than zero can be I<very> slow.
717
718 =cut
719
720 sub contrast($$;$$;$) {
721 my $img = pop;
722 my ($r, $g, $b, $a) = @_;
723
724 ($g, $b) = ($r, $r) if @_ < 3;
725 $a = 1 if @_ < 4;
726
727 $img = $img->clone;
728 $img->contrast ($r, $g, $b, $a);
729 $img
730 }
731
732 sub brightness($$;$$;$) {
733 my $img = pop;
734 my ($r, $g, $b, $a) = @_;
735
736 ($g, $b) = ($r, $r) if @_ < 3;
737 $a = 1 if @_ < 4;
738
739 $img = $img->clone;
740 $img->brightness ($r, $g, $b, $a);
741 $img
742 }
743
744 =item blur $radius, $img
745
746 =item blur $radius_horz, $radius_vert, $img
747
748 Gaussian-blurs the image with (roughly) C<$radius> pixel radius. The radii
749 can also be specified separately.
750
751 Blurring is often I<very> slow, at least compared or other
752 operators. Larger blur radii are slower than smaller ones, too, so if you
753 don't want to freeze your screen for long times, start experimenting with
754 low values for radius (<5).
755
756 =cut
757
758 sub blur($$;$) {
759 my $img = pop;
760 $img->blur ($_[0], @_ >= 2 ? $_[1] : $_[0])
761 }
762
763 =back
764
765 =head2 OTHER STUFF
766
767 Anything that didn't fit any of the other categories, even after appliyng
768 force and closing our eyes.
769
770 =over 4
771
772 =item once { ... }
773
774 This function takes a code block as argument, that is, one or more
775 statements enclosed by braces.
776
777 The trick is that this code block is only evaluated once - future calls
778 will simply return the original image (yes, it should only be used with
779 images).
780
781 This can be extremely useful to avoid redoign the same slow operations
782 again and again- for example, if your background expression takes the root
783 background, blurs it and then root-aligns it it would have to blur the
784 root background on every window move or resize.
785
786 Putting the blur into a C<once> block will make sure the blur is only done
787 once:
788
789 rootlign once { blur 10, root }
790
791 This leaves the question of how to force reevaluation of the block, in
792 case the root background changes: Right now, all once blocks forget that
793 they ahve been executed before each time the root background changes (if
794 the expression is sensitive to that) or when C<once_again> is called.
795
796 =item once_again
797
798 Resets all C<once> block as if they had never been called, i.e. on the
799 next call they will be reevaluated again.
800
801 =cut
802
803 sub once(&) {
804 $_ONCE_CACHE{$_[0]+0} ||= $_[0]()
805 }
806
807 sub once_again() {
808 %_ONCE_CACHE = ();
809 }
810
811 =back
812
813 =cut
814
815 }
816
817 sub parse_expr {
818 my $expr = eval "sub {\npackage urxvt::bgdsl;\n#line 0 'background expression'\n$_[0]\n}";
819 die if $@;
820 $expr
821 }
822
823 # compiles a parsed expression
824 sub set_expr {
825 my ($self, $expr) = @_;
826
827 $self->{expr} = $expr;
828 $self->recalculate;
829 }
830
831 # evaluate the current bg expression
832 sub recalculate {
833 my ($arg_self) = @_;
834
835 # rate limit evaluation
836
837 if ($arg_self->{next_refresh} > urxvt::NOW) {
838 $arg_self->{next_refresh_timer} = urxvt::timer->new->after ($arg_self->{next_refresh} - urxvt::NOW)->cb (sub {
839 $arg_self->recalculate;
840 });
841 return;
842 }
843
844 $arg_self->{next_refresh} = urxvt::NOW + $MIN_INTERVAL;
845
846 # set environment to evaluate user expression
847
848 local $self = $arg_self;
849
850 local $HOME = $ENV{HOME};
851 local $old = $self->{state};
852 local $new = my $state = $self->{state} = {};
853
854 ($x, $y, $w, $h) =
855 $self->background_geometry ($self->{border});
856
857 # evaluate user expression
858
859 my $img = eval { $self->{expr}->() };
860 warn $@ if $@;#d#
861 die "background-expr did not return an image.\n" if !UNIVERSAL::isa $img, "urxvt::img";
862
863 $state->{size_sensitive} = 1
864 if $img->repeat_mode != urxvt::RepeatNormal;
865
866 # if the expression is sensitive to external events, prepare reevaluation then
867
868 my $repeat;
869
870 if (my $again = $state->{again}) {
871 $repeat = 1;
872 my $self = $self;
873 $state->{timer} = $again == $old->{again}
874 ? $old->{timer}
875 : urxvt::timer->new->after ($again)->interval ($again)->cb (sub {
876 ++$self->{counter};
877 $self->recalculate
878 });
879 }
880
881 if (delete $state->{position_sensitive}) {
882 $repeat = 1;
883 $self->enable (position_change => sub { $_[0]->recalculate });
884 } else {
885 $self->disable ("position_change");
886 }
887
888 if (delete $state->{size_sensitive}) {
889 $repeat = 1;
890 $self->enable (size_change => sub { $_[0]->recalculate });
891 } else {
892 $self->disable ("size_change");
893 }
894
895 if (delete $state->{rootpmap_sensitive}) {
896 $repeat = 1;
897 $self->enable (rootpmap_change => sub { $_[0]->recalculate });
898 } else {
899 $self->disable ("rootpmap_change");
900 }
901
902 # clear stuff we no longer need
903
904 %$old = ();
905
906 unless ($repeat) {
907 delete $self->{state};
908 delete $self->{expr};
909 }
910
911 # set background pixmap
912
913 $self->set_background ($img, $self->{border});
914 $self->scr_recolour (0);
915 $self->want_refresh;
916 }
917
918 sub on_start {
919 my ($self) = @_;
920
921 my $expr = $self->x_resource ("%.expr")
922 or return;
923
924 $self->has_render
925 or die "background extension needs RENDER extension 0.10 or higher, ignoring background-expr.\n";
926
927 $self->set_expr (parse_expr $expr);
928 $self->{border} = $self->x_resource_boolean ("%.border");
929
930 $MIN_INTERVAL = $self->x_resource ("%.interval");
931
932 ()
933 }
934