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Revision: 1.214
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# Content
1 =encoding utf8
2
3 =head1 NAME
4
5 @@RXVT_NAME@@perl - rxvt-unicode's embedded perl interpreter
6
7 =head1 SYNOPSIS
8
9 # create a file grab_test in $HOME:
10
11 sub on_sel_grab {
12 warn "you selected ", $_[0]->selection;
13 ()
14 }
15
16 # start a @@RXVT_NAME@@ using it:
17
18 @@RXVT_NAME@@ --perl-lib $HOME -pe grab_test
19
20 =head1 DESCRIPTION
21
22 Every time a terminal object gets created, extension scripts specified via
23 the C<perl> resource are loaded and associated with it.
24
25 Scripts are compiled in a 'use strict' and 'use utf8' environment, and
26 thus must be encoded as UTF-8.
27
28 Each script will only ever be loaded once, even in @@RXVT_NAME@@d, where
29 scripts will be shared (but not enabled) for all terminals.
30
31 You can disable the embedded perl interpreter by setting both "perl-ext"
32 and "perl-ext-common" resources to the empty string.
33
34 =head1 PREPACKAGED EXTENSIONS
35
36 This section describes the extensions delivered with this release. You can
37 find them in F<@@RXVT_LIBDIR@@/urxvt/perl/>.
38
39 You can activate them like this:
40
41 @@RXVT_NAME@@ -pe <extensionname>
42
43 Or by adding them to the resource for extensions loaded by default:
44
45 URxvt.perl-ext-common: default,selection-autotransform
46
47 =over 4
48
49 =item selection (enabled by default)
50
51 (More) intelligent selection. This extension tries to be more intelligent
52 when the user extends selections (double-click and further clicks). Right
53 now, it tries to select words, urls and complete shell-quoted
54 arguments, which is very convenient, too, if your F<ls> supports
55 C<--quoting-style=shell>.
56
57 A double-click usually selects the word under the cursor, further clicks
58 will enlarge the selection.
59
60 The selection works by trying to match a number of regexes and displaying
61 them in increasing order of length. You can add your own regexes by
62 specifying resources of the form:
63
64 URxvt.selection.pattern-0: perl-regex
65 URxvt.selection.pattern-1: perl-regex
66 ...
67
68 The index number (0, 1...) must not have any holes, and each regex must
69 contain at least one pair of capturing parentheses, which will be used for
70 the match. For example, the following adds a regex that matches everything
71 between two vertical bars:
72
73 URxvt.selection.pattern-0: \\|([^|]+)\\|
74
75 Another example: Programs I use often output "absolute path: " at the
76 beginning of a line when they process multiple files. The following
77 pattern matches the filename (note, there is a single space at the very
78 end):
79
80 URxvt.selection.pattern-0: ^(/[^:]+):\
81
82 You can look at the source of the selection extension to see more
83 interesting uses, such as parsing a line from beginning to end.
84
85 This extension also offers following bindable keyboard commands:
86
87 =over 4
88
89 =item rot13
90
91 Rot-13 the selection when activated. Used via keyboard trigger:
92
93 URxvt.keysym.C-M-r: perl:selection:rot13
94
95 =back
96
97 =item option-popup (enabled by default)
98
99 Binds a popup menu to Ctrl-Button2 that lets you toggle (some) options at
100 runtime.
101
102 Other extensions can extend this popup menu by pushing a code reference
103 onto C<@{ $term->{option_popup_hook} }>, which gets called whenever the
104 popup is being displayed.
105
106 Its sole argument is the popup menu, which can be modified. It should
107 either return nothing or a string, the initial boolean value and a code
108 reference. The string will be used as button text and the code reference
109 will be called when the toggle changes, with the new boolean value as
110 first argument.
111
112 The following will add an entry C<myoption> that changes
113 C<< $self->{myoption} >>:
114
115 push @{ $self->{term}{option_popup_hook} }, sub {
116 ("my option" => $myoption, sub { $self->{myoption} = $_[0] })
117 };
118
119 =item selection-popup (enabled by default)
120
121 Binds a popup menu to Ctrl-Button3 that lets you convert the selection
122 text into various other formats/action (such as uri unescaping, perl
123 evaluation, web-browser starting etc.), depending on content.
124
125 Other extensions can extend this popup menu by pushing a code reference
126 onto C<@{ $term->{selection_popup_hook} }>, which gets called whenever the
127 popup is being displayed.
128
129 Its sole argument is the popup menu, which can be modified. The selection
130 is in C<$_>, which can be used to decide whether to add something or not.
131 It should either return nothing or a string and a code reference. The
132 string will be used as button text and the code reference will be called
133 when the button gets activated and should transform C<$_>.
134
135 The following will add an entry C<a to b> that transforms all C<a>s in
136 the selection to C<b>s, but only if the selection currently contains any
137 C<a>s:
138
139 push @{ $self->{term}{selection_popup_hook} }, sub {
140 /a/ ? ("a to b" => sub { s/a/b/g }
141 : ()
142 };
143
144 =item searchable-scrollback<hotkey> (enabled by default)
145
146 Adds regex search functionality to the scrollback buffer, triggered
147 by a hotkey (default: C<M-s>). While in search mode, normal terminal
148 input/output is suspended and a regex is displayed at the bottom of the
149 screen.
150
151 Inputting characters appends them to the regex and continues incremental
152 search. C<BackSpace> removes a character from the regex, C<Up> and C<Down>
153 search upwards/downwards in the scrollback buffer, C<End> jumps to the
154 bottom. C<Escape> leaves search mode and returns to the point where search
155 was started, while C<Enter> or C<Return> stay at the current position and
156 additionally stores the first match in the current line into the primary
157 selection if the C<Shift> modifier is active.
158
159 The regex defaults to "(?i)", resulting in a case-insensitive search. To
160 get a case-sensitive search you can delete this prefix using C<BackSpace>
161 or simply use an uppercase character which removes the "(?i)" prefix.
162
163 See L<perlre> for more info about perl regular expression syntax.
164
165 =item readline (enabled by default)
166
167 A support package that tries to make editing with readline easier. At
168 the moment, it reacts to clicking shift-left mouse button by trying to
169 move the text cursor to this position. It does so by generating as many
170 cursor-left or cursor-right keypresses as required (this only works
171 for programs that correctly support wide characters).
172
173 To avoid too many false positives, this is only done when:
174
175 =over 4
176
177 =item - the tty is in ICANON state.
178
179 =item - the text cursor is visible.
180
181 =item - the primary screen is currently being displayed.
182
183 =item - the mouse is on the same (multi-row-) line as the text cursor.
184
185 =back
186
187 The normal selection mechanism isn't disabled, so quick successive clicks
188 might interfere with selection creation in harmless ways.
189
190 =item selection-autotransform
191
192 This selection allows you to do automatic transforms on a selection
193 whenever a selection is made.
194
195 It works by specifying perl snippets (most useful is a single C<s///>
196 operator) that modify C<$_> as resources:
197
198 URxvt.selection-autotransform.0: transform
199 URxvt.selection-autotransform.1: transform
200 ...
201
202 For example, the following will transform selections of the form
203 C<filename:number>, often seen in compiler messages, into C<vi +$filename
204 $word>:
205
206 URxvt.selection-autotransform.0: s/^([^:[:space:]]+):(\\d+):?$/vi +$2 \\Q$1\\E\\x0d/
207
208 And this example matches the same,but replaces it with vi-commands you can
209 paste directly into your (vi :) editor:
210
211 URxvt.selection-autotransform.0: s/^([^:[:space:]]+(\\d+):?$/:e \\Q$1\\E\\x0d:$2\\x0d/
212
213 Of course, this can be modified to suit your needs and your editor :)
214
215 To expand the example above to typical perl error messages ("XXX at
216 FILENAME line YYY."), you need a slightly more elaborate solution:
217
218 URxvt.selection.pattern-0: ( at .*? line \\d+[,.])
219 URxvt.selection-autotransform.0: s/^ at (.*?) line (\\d+)[,.]$/:e \\Q$1\E\\x0d:$2\\x0d/
220
221 The first line tells the selection code to treat the unchanging part of
222 every error message as a selection pattern, and the second line transforms
223 the message into vi commands to load the file.
224
225 =item tabbed
226
227 This transforms the terminal into a tabbar with additional terminals, that
228 is, it implements what is commonly referred to as "tabbed terminal". The topmost line
229 displays a "[NEW]" button, which, when clicked, will add a new tab, followed by one
230 button per tab.
231
232 Clicking a button will activate that tab. Pressing B<Shift-Left> and
233 B<Shift-Right> will switch to the tab left or right of the current one,
234 while B<Shift-Down> creates a new tab.
235
236 The tabbar itself can be configured similarly to a normal terminal, but
237 with a resource class of C<URxvt.tabbed>. In addition, it supports the
238 following four resources (shown with defaults):
239
240 URxvt.tabbed.tabbar-fg: <colour-index, default 3>
241 URxvt.tabbed.tabbar-bg: <colour-index, default 0>
242 URxvt.tabbed.tab-fg: <colour-index, default 0>
243 URxvt.tabbed.tab-bg: <colour-index, default 1>
244
245 See I<COLOR AND GRAPHICS> in the @@RXVT_NAME@@(1) manpage for valid
246 indices.
247
248 =item matcher
249
250 Uses per-line display filtering (C<on_line_update>) to underline text
251 matching a certain pattern and make it clickable. When clicked with the
252 mouse button specified in the C<matcher.button> resource (default 2, or
253 middle), the program specified in the C<matcher.launcher> resource
254 (default, the C<urlLauncher> resource, C<sensible-browser>) will be started
255 with the matched text as first argument. The default configuration is
256 suitable for matching URLs and launching a web browser, like the
257 former "mark-urls" extension.
258
259 The default pattern to match URLs can be overridden with the
260 C<matcher.pattern.0> resource, and additional patterns can be specified
261 with numbered patterns, in a manner similar to the "selection" extension.
262 The launcher can also be overridden on a per-pattern basis.
263
264 It is possible to activate the most recently seen match or a list of matches
265 from the keyboard. Simply bind a keysym to "perl:matcher:last" or
266 "perl:matcher:list" as seen in the example below.
267
268 Example configuration:
269
270 URxvt.perl-ext: default,matcher
271 URxvt.urlLauncher: sensible-browser
272 URxvt.keysym.C-Delete: perl:matcher:last
273 URxvt.keysym.M-Delete: perl:matcher:list
274 URxvt.matcher.button: 1
275 URxvt.matcher.pattern.1: \\bwww\\.[\\w-]+\\.[\\w./?&@#-]*[\\w/-]
276 URxvt.matcher.pattern.2: \\B(/\\S+?):(\\d+)(?=:|$)
277 URxvt.matcher.launcher.2: gvim +$2 $1
278
279 =item xim-onthespot
280
281 This (experimental) perl extension implements OnTheSpot editing. It does
282 not work perfectly, and some input methods don't seem to work well with
283 OnTheSpot editing in general, but it seems to work at least for SCIM and
284 kinput2.
285
286 You enable it by specifying this extension and a preedit style of
287 C<OnTheSpot>, i.e.:
288
289 @@RXVT_NAME@@ -pt OnTheSpot -pe xim-onthespot
290
291 =item kuake<hotkey>
292
293 A very primitive quake-console-like extension. It was inspired by a
294 description of how the programs C<kuake> and C<yakuake> work: Whenever the
295 user presses a global accelerator key (by default C<F10>), the terminal
296 will show or hide itself. Another press of the accelerator key will hide
297 or show it again.
298
299 Initially, the window will not be shown when using this extension.
300
301 This is useful if you need a single terminal that is not using any desktop
302 space most of the time but is quickly available at the press of a key.
303
304 The accelerator key is grabbed regardless of any modifiers, so this
305 extension will actually grab a physical key just for this function.
306
307 If you want a quake-like animation, tell your window manager to do so
308 (fvwm can do it).
309
310 =item overlay-osc
311
312 This extension implements some OSC commands to display timed popups on the
313 screen - useful for status displays from within scripts. You have to read
314 the sources for more info.
315
316 =item block-graphics-to-ascii
317
318 A not very useful example of filtering all text output to the terminal
319 by replacing all line-drawing characters (U+2500 .. U+259F) by a
320 similar-looking ascii character.
321
322 =item digital-clock
323
324 Displays a digital clock using the built-in overlay.
325
326 =item remote-clipboard
327
328 Somewhat of a misnomer, this extension adds two menu entries to the
329 selection popup that allows one to run external commands to store the
330 selection somewhere and fetch it again.
331
332 We use it to implement a "distributed selection mechanism", which just
333 means that one command uploads the file to a remote server, and another
334 reads it.
335
336 The commands can be set using the C<URxvt.remote-selection.store> and
337 C<URxvt.remote-selection.fetch> resources. The first should read the
338 selection to store from STDIN (always in UTF-8), the second should provide
339 the selection data on STDOUT (also in UTF-8).
340
341 The defaults (which are likely useless to you) use rsh and cat:
342
343 URxvt.remote-selection.store: rsh ruth 'cat >/tmp/distributed-selection'
344 URxvt.remote-selection.fetch: rsh ruth 'cat /tmp/distributed-selection'
345
346 =item selection-pastebin
347
348 This is a little rarely useful extension that uploads the selection as
349 textfile to a remote site (or does other things). (The implementation is
350 not currently secure for use in a multiuser environment as it writes to
351 F</tmp> directly.).
352
353 It listens to the C<selection-pastebin:remote-pastebin> keyboard command,
354 i.e.
355
356 URxvt.keysym.C-M-e: perl:selection-pastebin:remote-pastebin
357
358 Pressing this combination runs a command with C<%> replaced by the name of
359 the textfile. This command can be set via a resource:
360
361 URxvt.selection-pastebin.cmd: rsync -apP % ruth:/var/www/www.ta-sa.org/files/txt/.
362
363 And the default is likely not useful to anybody but the few people around
364 here :)
365
366 The name of the textfile is the hex encoded md5 sum of the selection, so
367 the same content should lead to the same filename.
368
369 After a successful upload the selection will be replaced by the text given
370 in the C<selection-pastebin-url> resource (again, the % is the placeholder
371 for the filename):
372
373 URxvt.selection-pastebin.url: http://www.ta-sa.org/files/txt/%
374
375 I<Note to xrdb users:> xrdb uses the C preprocessor, which might interpret
376 the double C</> characters as comment start. Use C<\057\057> instead,
377 which works regardless of whether xrdb is used to parse the resource file
378 or not.
379
380 =item macosx-clipboard and macosx-clipboard-native
381
382 These two modules implement an extended clipboard for Mac OS X. They are
383 used like this:
384
385 URxvt.perl-ext-common: default,macosx-clipboard
386 URxvt.keysym.M-c: perl:macosx-clipboard:copy
387 URxvt.keysym.M-v: perl:macosx-clipboard:paste
388
389 The difference between them is that the native variant requires a
390 perl from apple's devkit or so, and C<macosx-clipboard> requires the
391 C<Mac::Pasteboard> module, works with other perls, has fewer bugs, is
392 simpler etc. etc.
393
394 =item example-refresh-hooks
395
396 Displays a very simple digital clock in the upper right corner of the
397 window. Illustrates overwriting the refresh callbacks to create your own
398 overlays or changes.
399
400 =item confirm-paste
401
402 Displays a confirmation dialog when a paste containing at least a full
403 line is detected.
404
405 =item bell-command
406
407 Runs the command specified by the C<URxvt.bell-command> resource when
408 a bell event occurs. For example, the following pops up a notification
409 bubble with the text "Beep, Beep" using notify-send:
410
411 URxvt.bell-command: notify-send "Beep, Beep"
412
413 =back
414
415 =head1 API DOCUMENTATION
416
417 =head2 General API Considerations
418
419 All objects (such as terminals, time watchers etc.) are typical
420 reference-to-hash objects. The hash can be used to store anything you
421 like. All members starting with an underscore (such as C<_ptr> or
422 C<_hook>) are reserved for internal uses and B<MUST NOT> be accessed or
423 modified).
424
425 When objects are destroyed on the C++ side, the perl object hashes are
426 emptied, so its best to store related objects such as time watchers and
427 the like inside the terminal object so they get destroyed as soon as the
428 terminal is destroyed.
429
430 Argument names also often indicate the type of a parameter. Here are some
431 hints on what they mean:
432
433 =over 4
434
435 =item $text
436
437 Rxvt-unicode's special way of encoding text, where one "unicode" character
438 always represents one screen cell. See L<ROW_t> for a discussion of this format.
439
440 =item $string
441
442 A perl text string, with an emphasis on I<text>. It can store all unicode
443 characters and is to be distinguished with text encoded in a specific
444 encoding (often locale-specific) and binary data.
445
446 =item $octets
447
448 Either binary data or - more common - a text string encoded in a
449 locale-specific way.
450
451 =item $keysym
452
453 an integer that is a valid X11 keysym code. You can convert a string
454 into a keysym and viceversa by using C<XStringToKeysym> and
455 C<XKeysymToString>.
456
457 =back
458
459 =head2 Extension Objects
460
461 Every perl extension is a perl class. A separate perl object is created
462 for each terminal, and each terminal has its own set of extension objects,
463 which are passed as the first parameter to hooks. So extensions can use
464 their C<$self> object without having to think about clashes with other
465 extensions or other terminals, with the exception of methods and members
466 that begin with an underscore character C<_>: these are reserved for
467 internal use.
468
469 Although it isn't a C<urxvt::term> object, you can call all methods of the
470 C<urxvt::term> class on this object.
471
472 It has the following methods and data members:
473
474 =over 4
475
476 =item $urxvt_term = $self->{term}
477
478 Returns the C<urxvt::term> object associated with this instance of the
479 extension. This member I<must not> be changed in any way.
480
481 =item $self->enable ($hook_name => $cb, [$hook_name => $cb..])
482
483 Dynamically enable the given hooks (named without the C<on_> prefix) for
484 this extension, replacing any previous hook. This is useful when you want
485 to overwrite time-critical hooks only temporarily.
486
487 =item $self->disable ($hook_name[, $hook_name..])
488
489 Dynamically disable the given hooks.
490
491 =back
492
493 =head2 Hooks
494
495 The following subroutines can be declared in extension files, and will be
496 called whenever the relevant event happens.
497
498 The first argument passed to them is an extension object as described in
499 the in the C<Extension Objects> section.
500
501 B<All> of these hooks must return a boolean value. If any of the called
502 hooks returns true, then the event counts as being I<consumed>, and the
503 relevant action might not be carried out by the C++ code.
504
505 I<< When in doubt, return a false value (preferably C<()>). >>
506
507 =over 4
508
509 =item on_init $term
510
511 Called after a new terminal object has been initialized, but before
512 windows are created or the command gets run. Most methods are unsafe to
513 call or deliver senseless data, as terminal size and other characteristics
514 have not yet been determined. You can safely query and change resources
515 and options, though. For many purposes the C<on_start> hook is a better
516 place.
517
518 =item on_start $term
519
520 Called at the very end of initialisation of a new terminal, just before
521 trying to map (display) the toplevel and returning to the main loop.
522
523 =item on_destroy $term
524
525 Called whenever something tries to destroy terminal, when the terminal is
526 still fully functional (not for long, though).
527
528 =item on_reset $term
529
530 Called after the screen is "reset" for any reason, such as resizing or
531 control sequences. Here is where you can react on changes to size-related
532 variables.
533
534 =item on_child_start $term, $pid
535
536 Called just after the child process has been C<fork>ed.
537
538 =item on_child_exit $term, $status
539
540 Called just after the child process has exited. C<$status> is the status
541 from C<waitpid>.
542
543 =item on_sel_make $term, $eventtime
544
545 Called whenever a selection has been made by the user, but before the
546 selection text is copied, so changes to the beginning, end or type of the
547 selection will be honored.
548
549 Returning a true value aborts selection making by urxvt, in which case you
550 have to make a selection yourself by calling C<< $term->selection_grab >>.
551
552 =item on_sel_grab $term, $eventtime
553
554 Called whenever a selection has been copied, but before the selection is
555 requested from the server. The selection text can be queried and changed
556 by calling C<< $term->selection >>.
557
558 Returning a true value aborts selection grabbing. It will still be highlighted.
559
560 =item on_sel_extend $term
561
562 Called whenever the user tries to extend the selection (e.g. with a double
563 click) and is either supposed to return false (normal operation), or
564 should extend the selection itself and return true to suppress the built-in
565 processing. This can happen multiple times, as long as the callback
566 returns true, it will be called on every further click by the user and is
567 supposed to enlarge the selection more and more, if possible.
568
569 See the F<selection> example extension.
570
571 =item on_view_change $term, $offset
572
573 Called whenever the view offset changes, i.e. the user or program
574 scrolls. Offset C<0> means display the normal terminal, positive values
575 show this many lines of scrollback.
576
577 =item on_scroll_back $term, $lines, $saved
578
579 Called whenever lines scroll out of the terminal area into the scrollback
580 buffer. C<$lines> is the number of lines scrolled out and may be larger
581 than the scroll back buffer or the terminal.
582
583 It is called before lines are scrolled out (so rows 0 .. min ($lines - 1,
584 $nrow - 1) represent the lines to be scrolled out). C<$saved> is the total
585 number of lines that will be in the scrollback buffer.
586
587 =item on_osc_seq $term, $op, $args, $resp
588
589 Called on every OSC sequence and can be used to suppress it or modify its
590 behaviour. The default should be to return an empty list. A true value
591 suppresses execution of the request completely. Make sure you don't get
592 confused by recursive invocations when you output an OSC sequence within
593 this callback.
594
595 C<on_osc_seq_perl> should be used for new behaviour.
596
597 =item on_osc_seq_perl $term, $args, $resp
598
599 Called whenever the B<ESC ] 777 ; string ST> command sequence (OSC =
600 operating system command) is processed. Cursor position and other state
601 information is up-to-date when this happens. For interoperability, the
602 string should start with the extension name (sans -osc) and a semicolon,
603 to distinguish it from commands for other extensions, and this might be
604 enforced in the future.
605
606 For example, C<overlay-osc> uses this:
607
608 sub on_osc_seq_perl {
609 my ($self, $osc, $resp) = @_;
610
611 return unless $osc =~ s/^overlay;//;
612
613 ... process remaining $osc string
614 }
615
616 Be careful not ever to trust (in a security sense) the data you receive,
617 as its source can not easily be controlled (e-mail content, messages from
618 other users on the same system etc.).
619
620 For responses, C<$resp> contains the end-of-args separator used by the
621 sender.
622
623 =item on_add_lines $term, $string
624
625 Called whenever text is about to be output, with the text as argument. You
626 can filter/change and output the text yourself by returning a true value
627 and calling C<< $term->scr_add_lines >> yourself. Please note that this
628 might be very slow, however, as your hook is called for B<all> text being
629 output.
630
631 =item on_tt_write $term, $octets
632
633 Called whenever some data is written to the tty/pty and can be used to
634 suppress or filter tty input.
635
636 =item on_tt_paste $term, $octets
637
638 Called whenever text is about to be pasted, with the text as argument. You
639 can filter/change and paste the text yourself by returning a true value
640 and calling C<< $term->tt_paste >> yourself. C<$octets> is
641 locale-encoded.
642
643 =item on_line_update $term, $row
644
645 Called whenever a line was updated or changed. Can be used to filter
646 screen output (e.g. underline urls or other useless stuff). Only lines
647 that are being shown will be filtered, and, due to performance reasons,
648 not always immediately.
649
650 The row number is always the topmost row of the line if the line spans
651 multiple rows.
652
653 Please note that, if you change the line, then the hook might get called
654 later with the already-modified line (e.g. if unrelated parts change), so
655 you cannot just toggle rendition bits, but only set them.
656
657 =item on_refresh_begin $term
658
659 Called just before the screen gets redrawn. Can be used for overlay or
660 similar effects by modifying the terminal contents in refresh_begin, and
661 restoring them in refresh_end. The built-in overlay and selection display
662 code is run after this hook, and takes precedence.
663
664 =item on_refresh_end $term
665
666 Called just after the screen gets redrawn. See C<on_refresh_begin>.
667
668 =item on_user_command $term, $string
669
670 Called whenever a user-configured event is being activated (e.g. via
671 a C<perl:string> action bound to a key, see description of the B<keysym>
672 resource in the @@RXVT_NAME@@(1) manpage).
673
674 The event is simply the action string. This interface is assumed to change
675 slightly in the future.
676
677 =item on_register_command $term, $keysym, $modifiermask, $string
678
679 Called after parsing a keysym resource but before registering the
680 associated binding. If this hook returns TRUE the binding is not
681 registered. It can be used to modify a binding by calling
682 C<register_command>.
683
684 =item on_resize_all_windows $term, $new_width, $new_height
685
686 Called just after the new window size has been calculated, but before
687 windows are actually being resized or hints are being set. If this hook
688 returns TRUE, setting of the window hints is being skipped.
689
690 =item on_x_event $term, $event
691
692 Called on every X event received on the vt window (and possibly other
693 windows). Should only be used as a last resort. Most event structure
694 members are not passed.
695
696 =item on_root_event $term, $event
697
698 Like C<on_x_event>, but is called for events on the root window.
699
700 =item on_focus_in $term
701
702 Called whenever the window gets the keyboard focus, before rxvt-unicode
703 does focus in processing.
704
705 =item on_focus_out $term
706
707 Called whenever the window loses keyboard focus, before rxvt-unicode does
708 focus out processing.
709
710 =item on_configure_notify $term, $event
711
712 =item on_property_notify $term, $event
713
714 =item on_key_press $term, $event, $keysym, $octets
715
716 =item on_key_release $term, $event, $keysym
717
718 =item on_button_press $term, $event
719
720 =item on_button_release $term, $event
721
722 =item on_motion_notify $term, $event
723
724 =item on_map_notify $term, $event
725
726 =item on_unmap_notify $term, $event
727
728 Called whenever the corresponding X event is received for the terminal. If
729 the hook returns true, then the event will be ignored by rxvt-unicode.
730
731 The event is a hash with most values as named by Xlib (see the XEvent
732 manpage), with the additional members C<row> and C<col>, which are the
733 (real, not screen-based) row and column under the mouse cursor.
734
735 C<on_key_press> additionally receives the string rxvt-unicode would
736 output, if any, in locale-specific encoding.
737
738 subwindow.
739
740 =item on_client_message $term, $event
741
742 =item on_wm_protocols $term, $event
743
744 =item on_wm_delete_window $term, $event
745
746 Called when various types of ClientMessage events are received (all with
747 format=32, WM_PROTOCOLS or WM_PROTOCOLS:WM_DELETE_WINDOW).
748
749 =item on_bell $term
750
751 Called on receipt of a bell character.
752
753 =back
754
755 =cut
756
757 package urxvt;
758
759 use utf8;
760 use strict;
761 use Carp ();
762 use Scalar::Util ();
763 use List::Util ();
764
765 our $VERSION = 1;
766 our $TERM;
767 our @TERM_INIT; # should go, prevents async I/O etc.
768 our @TERM_EXT; # should go, prevents async I/O etc.
769 our @HOOKNAME;
770 our %HOOKTYPE = map +($HOOKNAME[$_] => $_), 0..$#HOOKNAME;
771 our %OPTION;
772
773 our $LIBDIR;
774 our $RESNAME;
775 our $RESCLASS;
776 our $RXVTNAME;
777
778 our $NOCHAR = chr 0xffff;
779
780 =head2 Variables in the C<urxvt> Package
781
782 =over 4
783
784 =item $urxvt::LIBDIR
785
786 The rxvt-unicode library directory, where, among other things, the perl
787 modules and scripts are stored.
788
789 =item $urxvt::RESCLASS, $urxvt::RESCLASS
790
791 The resource class and name rxvt-unicode uses to look up X resources.
792
793 =item $urxvt::RXVTNAME
794
795 The basename of the installed binaries, usually C<urxvt>.
796
797 =item $urxvt::TERM
798
799 The current terminal. This variable stores the current C<urxvt::term>
800 object, whenever a callback/hook is executing.
801
802 =item @urxvt::TERM_INIT
803
804 All code references in this array will be called as methods of the next newly
805 created C<urxvt::term> object (during the C<on_init> phase). The array
806 gets cleared before the code references that were in it are being executed,
807 so references can push themselves onto it again if they so desire.
808
809 This complements to the perl-eval command line option, but gets executed
810 first.
811
812 =item @urxvt::TERM_EXT
813
814 Works similar to C<@TERM_INIT>, but contains perl package/class names, which
815 get registered as normal extensions after calling the hooks in C<@TERM_INIT>
816 but before other extensions. Gets cleared just like C<@TERM_INIT>.
817
818 =back
819
820 =head2 Functions in the C<urxvt> Package
821
822 =over 4
823
824 =item urxvt::fatal $errormessage
825
826 Fatally aborts execution with the given error message (which should
827 include a trailing newline). Avoid at all costs! The only time this
828 is acceptable (and useful) is in the init hook, where it prevents the
829 terminal from starting up.
830
831 =item urxvt::warn $string
832
833 Calls C<rxvt_warn> with the given string which should include a trailing
834 newline. The module also overwrites the C<warn> builtin with a function
835 that calls this function.
836
837 Using this function has the advantage that its output ends up in the
838 correct place, e.g. on stderr of the connecting urxvtc client.
839
840 Messages have a size limit of 1023 bytes currently.
841
842 =item @terms = urxvt::termlist
843
844 Returns all urxvt::term objects that exist in this process, regardless of
845 whether they are started, being destroyed etc., so be careful. Only term
846 objects that have perl extensions attached will be returned (because there
847 is no urxvt::term object associated with others).
848
849 =item $time = urxvt::NOW
850
851 Returns the "current time" (as per the event loop).
852
853 =item urxvt::CurrentTime
854
855 =item urxvt::ShiftMask, LockMask, ControlMask, Mod1Mask, Mod2Mask,
856 Mod3Mask, Mod4Mask, Mod5Mask, Button1Mask, Button2Mask, Button3Mask,
857 Button4Mask, Button5Mask, AnyModifier
858
859 =item urxvt::NoEventMask, KeyPressMask, KeyReleaseMask,
860 ButtonPressMask, ButtonReleaseMask, EnterWindowMask, LeaveWindowMask,
861 PointerMotionMask, PointerMotionHintMask, Button1MotionMask, Button2MotionMask,
862 Button3MotionMask, Button4MotionMask, Button5MotionMask, ButtonMotionMask,
863 KeymapStateMask, ExposureMask, VisibilityChangeMask, StructureNotifyMask,
864 ResizeRedirectMask, SubstructureNotifyMask, SubstructureRedirectMask,
865 FocusChangeMask, PropertyChangeMask, ColormapChangeMask, OwnerGrabButtonMask
866
867 =item urxvt::KeyPress, KeyRelease, ButtonPress, ButtonRelease, MotionNotify,
868 EnterNotify, LeaveNotify, FocusIn, FocusOut, KeymapNotify, Expose,
869 GraphicsExpose, NoExpose, VisibilityNotify, CreateNotify, DestroyNotify,
870 UnmapNotify, MapNotify, MapRequest, ReparentNotify, ConfigureNotify,
871 ConfigureRequest, GravityNotify, ResizeRequest, CirculateNotify,
872 CirculateRequest, PropertyNotify, SelectionClear, SelectionRequest,
873 SelectionNotify, ColormapNotify, ClientMessage, MappingNotify
874
875 Various constants for use in X calls and event processing.
876
877 =back
878
879 =head2 RENDITION
880
881 Rendition bitsets contain information about colour, font, font styles and
882 similar information for each screen cell.
883
884 The following "macros" deal with changes in rendition sets. You should
885 never just create a bitset, you should always modify an existing one,
886 as they contain important information required for correct operation of
887 rxvt-unicode.
888
889 =over 4
890
891 =item $rend = urxvt::DEFAULT_RSTYLE
892
893 Returns the default rendition, as used when the terminal is starting up or
894 being reset. Useful as a base to start when creating renditions.
895
896 =item $rend = urxvt::OVERLAY_RSTYLE
897
898 Return the rendition mask used for overlays by default.
899
900 =item $rendbit = urxvt::RS_Bold, urxvt::RS_Italic, urxvt::RS_Blink,
901 urxvt::RS_RVid, urxvt::RS_Uline
902
903 Return the bit that enabled bold, italic, blink, reverse-video and
904 underline, respectively. To enable such a style, just logically OR it into
905 the bitset.
906
907 =item $foreground = urxvt::GET_BASEFG $rend
908
909 =item $background = urxvt::GET_BASEBG $rend
910
911 Return the foreground/background colour index, respectively.
912
913 =item $rend = urxvt::SET_FGCOLOR $rend, $new_colour
914
915 =item $rend = urxvt::SET_BGCOLOR $rend, $new_colour
916
917 =item $rend = urxvt::SET_COLOR $rend, $new_fg, $new_bg
918
919 Replace the foreground/background colour in the rendition mask with the
920 specified one.
921
922 =item $value = urxvt::GET_CUSTOM $rend
923
924 Return the "custom" value: Every rendition has 5 bits for use by
925 extensions. They can be set and changed as you like and are initially
926 zero.
927
928 =item $rend = urxvt::SET_CUSTOM $rend, $new_value
929
930 Change the custom value.
931
932 =back
933
934 =cut
935
936 BEGIN {
937 # overwrite perl's warn
938 *CORE::GLOBAL::warn = sub {
939 my $msg = join "", @_;
940 $msg .= "\n"
941 unless $msg =~ /\n$/;
942 urxvt::warn ($msg);
943 };
944 }
945
946 no warnings 'utf8';
947
948 sub parse_resource {
949 my ($term, $name, $isarg, $longopt, $flag, $value) = @_;
950
951 $term->scan_meta;
952
953 my $r = $term->{meta}{resource};
954 while (my ($pattern, $v) = each %$r) {
955 $name =~ y/-/./ if $isarg;
956
957 if (
958 $pattern =~ /\.$/
959 ? $pattern eq substr $name, 0, length $pattern
960 : $pattern eq $name
961 ) {
962 $name = "$urxvt::RESCLASS.$name";
963
964 push @TERM_EXT, $v->[0];
965
966 if ($v->[1] eq "boolean") {
967 $term->put_option_db ($name, $flag ? "true" : "false");
968 return 1;
969 } else {
970 $term->put_option_db ($name, $value);
971 return 1 + 2;
972 }
973 }
974 }
975
976 0
977 }
978
979 sub usage {
980 my ($term, $usage_type) = @_;
981
982 $term->scan_meta;
983
984 my $r = $term->{meta}{resource};
985
986 for my $pattern (sort keys %$r) {
987 my ($ext, $type, $desc) = @{ $r->{$pattern} };
988
989 $desc .= " (-pe $ext)";
990
991 if ($usage_type == 1) {
992 $pattern =~ y/./-/;
993 $pattern =~ s/-$/-.../g;
994
995 if ($type eq "boolean") {
996 urxvt::log sprintf " -%-30s %s\n", "/+$pattern", $desc;
997 } else {
998 urxvt::log sprintf " -%-30s %s\n", "$pattern $type", $desc;
999 }
1000 } else {
1001 $pattern =~ s/\.$/.*/g;
1002 urxvt::log sprintf " %-31s %s\n", "$pattern:", $type;
1003 }
1004 }
1005 }
1006
1007 my $verbosity = $ENV{URXVT_PERL_VERBOSITY};
1008
1009 sub verbose {
1010 my ($level, $msg) = @_;
1011 warn "$msg\n" if $level <= $verbosity;
1012 }
1013
1014 my %extension_pkg;
1015
1016 # load a single script into its own package, once only
1017 sub extension_package($) {
1018 my ($path) = @_;
1019
1020 $extension_pkg{$path} ||= do {
1021 $path =~ /([^\/\\]+)$/;
1022 my $pkg = $1;
1023 $pkg =~ s/[^[:word:]]/_/g;
1024 $pkg = "urxvt::ext::$pkg";
1025
1026 verbose 3, "loading extension '$path' into package '$pkg'";
1027
1028 open my $fh, "<:raw", $path
1029 or die "$path: $!";
1030
1031 my $source =
1032 "package $pkg; use strict; use utf8; no warnings 'utf8';\n"
1033 . "#line 1 \"$path\"\n{\n"
1034 . (do { local $/; <$fh> })
1035 . "\n};\n1";
1036
1037 eval $source
1038 or die "$path: $@";
1039
1040 $pkg
1041 }
1042 }
1043
1044 our $retval; # return value for urxvt
1045
1046 # called by the rxvt core
1047 sub invoke {
1048 local $TERM = shift;
1049 my $htype = shift;
1050
1051 if ($htype == 0) { # INIT
1052 my @dirs = $TERM->perl_libdirs;
1053
1054 my %ext_arg;
1055
1056 {
1057 my @init = @TERM_INIT;
1058 @TERM_INIT = ();
1059 $_->($TERM) for @init;
1060 my @pkg = @TERM_EXT;
1061 @TERM_EXT = ();
1062 $TERM->register_package ($_) for @pkg;
1063 }
1064
1065 for (grep $_, map { split /,/, $TERM->resource ("perl_ext_$_") } 1, 2) {
1066 if ($_ eq "default") {
1067 $ext_arg{$_} ||= [] for qw(selection option-popup selection-popup searchable-scrollback readline);
1068 } elsif (/^-(.*)$/) {
1069 delete $ext_arg{$1};
1070 } elsif (/^([^<]+)<(.*)>$/) {
1071 push @{ $ext_arg{$1} }, $2;
1072 } else {
1073 $ext_arg{$_} ||= [];
1074 }
1075 }
1076
1077 for my $ext (sort keys %ext_arg) {
1078 my @files = grep -f $_, map "$_/$ext", @dirs;
1079
1080 if (@files) {
1081 $TERM->register_package (extension_package $files[0], $ext_arg{$ext});
1082 } else {
1083 warn "perl extension '$ext' not found in perl library search path\n";
1084 }
1085 }
1086
1087 eval "#line 1 \"--perl-eval resource/argument\"\n" . $TERM->resource ("perl_eval");
1088 warn $@ if $@;
1089 }
1090
1091 $retval = undef;
1092
1093 if (my $cb = $TERM->{_hook}[$htype]) {
1094 verbose 10, "$HOOKNAME[$htype] (" . (join ", ", $TERM, @_) . ")"
1095 if $verbosity >= 10;
1096
1097 for my $pkg (keys %$cb) {
1098 my $retval_ = eval { $cb->{$pkg}->($TERM->{_pkg}{$pkg}, @_) };
1099 $retval ||= $retval_;
1100
1101 if ($@) {
1102 $TERM->ungrab; # better to lose the grab than the session
1103 warn $@;
1104 }
1105 }
1106
1107 verbose 11, "$HOOKNAME[$htype] returning <$retval>"
1108 if $verbosity >= 11;
1109 }
1110
1111 if ($htype == 1) { # DESTROY
1112 # clear package objects
1113 %$_ = () for values %{ $TERM->{_pkg} };
1114
1115 # clear package
1116 %$TERM = ();
1117 }
1118
1119 $retval
1120 }
1121
1122 sub SET_COLOR($$$) {
1123 SET_BGCOLOR (SET_FGCOLOR ($_[0], $_[1]), $_[2])
1124 }
1125
1126 sub rend2mask {
1127 no strict 'refs';
1128 my ($str, $mask) = (@_, 0);
1129 my %color = ( fg => undef, bg => undef );
1130 my @failed;
1131 for my $spec ( split /\s+/, $str ) {
1132 if ( $spec =~ /^([fb]g)[_:-]?(\d+)/i ) {
1133 $color{lc($1)} = $2;
1134 } else {
1135 my $neg = $spec =~ s/^[-^]//;
1136 unless ( exists &{"RS_$spec"} ) {
1137 push @failed, $spec;
1138 next;
1139 }
1140 my $cur = &{"RS_$spec"};
1141 if ( $neg ) {
1142 $mask &= ~$cur;
1143 } else {
1144 $mask |= $cur;
1145 }
1146 }
1147 }
1148 ($mask, @color{qw(fg bg)}, \@failed)
1149 }
1150
1151 # urxvt::term::extension
1152
1153 package urxvt::term::extension;
1154
1155 sub enable {
1156 my ($self, %hook) = @_;
1157 my $pkg = $self->{_pkg};
1158
1159 while (my ($name, $cb) = each %hook) {
1160 my $htype = $HOOKTYPE{uc $name};
1161 defined $htype
1162 or Carp::croak "unsupported hook type '$name'";
1163
1164 $self->set_should_invoke ($htype, +1)
1165 unless exists $self->{term}{_hook}[$htype]{$pkg};
1166
1167 $self->{term}{_hook}[$htype]{$pkg} = $cb;
1168 }
1169 }
1170
1171 sub disable {
1172 my ($self, @hook) = @_;
1173 my $pkg = $self->{_pkg};
1174
1175 for my $name (@hook) {
1176 my $htype = $HOOKTYPE{uc $name};
1177 defined $htype
1178 or Carp::croak "unsupported hook type '$name'";
1179
1180 $self->set_should_invoke ($htype, -1)
1181 if delete $self->{term}{_hook}[$htype]{$pkg};
1182 }
1183 }
1184
1185 our $AUTOLOAD;
1186
1187 sub AUTOLOAD {
1188 $AUTOLOAD =~ /:([^:]+)$/
1189 or die "FATAL: \$AUTOLOAD '$AUTOLOAD' unparsable";
1190
1191 eval qq{
1192 sub $AUTOLOAD {
1193 my \$proxy = shift;
1194 \$proxy->{term}->$1 (\@_)
1195 }
1196 1
1197 } or die "FATAL: unable to compile method forwarder: $@";
1198
1199 goto &$AUTOLOAD;
1200 }
1201
1202 sub DESTROY {
1203 # nop
1204 }
1205
1206 # urxvt::destroy_hook
1207
1208 sub urxvt::destroy_hook::DESTROY {
1209 ${$_[0]}->();
1210 }
1211
1212 sub urxvt::destroy_hook(&) {
1213 bless \shift, urxvt::destroy_hook::
1214 }
1215
1216 package urxvt::anyevent;
1217
1218 =head2 The C<urxvt::anyevent> Class
1219
1220 The sole purpose of this class is to deliver an interface to the
1221 C<AnyEvent> module - any module using it will work inside urxvt without
1222 further programming. The only exception is that you cannot wait on
1223 condition variables, but non-blocking condvar use is ok.
1224
1225 In practical terms this means is that you cannot use blocking APIs, but
1226 the non-blocking variant should work.
1227
1228 =cut
1229
1230 our $VERSION = '5.23';
1231
1232 $INC{"urxvt/anyevent.pm"} = 1; # mark us as there
1233 push @AnyEvent::REGISTRY, [urxvt => urxvt::anyevent::];
1234
1235 sub timer {
1236 my ($class, %arg) = @_;
1237
1238 my $cb = $arg{cb};
1239
1240 urxvt::timer
1241 ->new
1242 ->after ($arg{after}, $arg{interval})
1243 ->cb ($arg{interval} ? $cb : sub {
1244 $_[0]->stop; # need to cancel manually
1245 $cb->();
1246 })
1247 }
1248
1249 sub io {
1250 my ($class, %arg) = @_;
1251
1252 my $cb = $arg{cb};
1253 my $fd = fileno $arg{fh};
1254 defined $fd or $fd = $arg{fh};
1255
1256 bless [$arg{fh}, urxvt::iow
1257 ->new
1258 ->fd ($fd)
1259 ->events (($arg{poll} =~ /r/ ? 1 : 0)
1260 | ($arg{poll} =~ /w/ ? 2 : 0))
1261 ->start
1262 ->cb ($cb)
1263 ], urxvt::anyevent::
1264 }
1265
1266 sub idle {
1267 my ($class, %arg) = @_;
1268
1269 my $cb = $arg{cb};
1270
1271 urxvt::iw
1272 ->new
1273 ->start
1274 ->cb ($cb)
1275 }
1276
1277 sub child {
1278 my ($class, %arg) = @_;
1279
1280 my $cb = $arg{cb};
1281
1282 urxvt::pw
1283 ->new
1284 ->start ($arg{pid})
1285 ->cb (sub {
1286 $_[0]->stop; # need to cancel manually
1287 $cb->($_[0]->rpid, $_[0]->rstatus);
1288 })
1289 }
1290
1291 sub DESTROY {
1292 $_[0][1]->stop;
1293 }
1294
1295 # only needed for AnyEvent < 6 compatibility
1296 sub one_event {
1297 Carp::croak "AnyEvent->one_event blocking wait unsupported in urxvt, use a non-blocking API";
1298 }
1299
1300 package urxvt::term;
1301
1302 =head2 The C<urxvt::term> Class
1303
1304 =over 4
1305
1306 =cut
1307
1308 # find on_xxx subs in the package and register them
1309 # as hooks
1310 sub register_package {
1311 my ($self, $pkg, $argv) = @_;
1312
1313 no strict 'refs';
1314
1315 urxvt::verbose 6, "register package $pkg to $self";
1316
1317 @{"$pkg\::ISA"} = urxvt::term::extension::;
1318
1319 my $proxy = bless {
1320 _pkg => $pkg,
1321 argv => $argv,
1322 }, $pkg;
1323 Scalar::Util::weaken ($proxy->{term} = $self);
1324
1325 $self->{_pkg}{$pkg} = $proxy;
1326
1327 for my $name (@HOOKNAME) {
1328 if (my $ref = $pkg->can ("on_" . lc $name)) {
1329 $proxy->enable ($name => $ref);
1330 }
1331 }
1332 }
1333
1334 sub perl_libdirs {
1335 map { split /:/ }
1336 $_[0]->resource ("perl_lib"),
1337 $ENV{URXVT_PERL_LIB},
1338 "$ENV{HOME}/.urxvt/ext",
1339 "$LIBDIR/perl"
1340 }
1341
1342 sub scan_meta {
1343 my ($self) = @_;
1344 my @libdirs = perl_libdirs $self;
1345
1346 return if $self->{meta_libdirs} eq join "\x00", @libdirs;
1347
1348 my %meta;
1349
1350 $self->{meta_libdirs} = join "\x00", @libdirs;
1351 $self->{meta} = \%meta;
1352
1353 for my $dir (reverse @libdirs) {
1354 opendir my $fh, $dir
1355 or next;
1356 for my $ext (readdir $fh) {
1357 $ext ne "."
1358 and $ext ne ".."
1359 and open my $fh, "<", "$dir/$ext"
1360 or next;
1361
1362 while (<$fh>) {
1363 if (/^#:META:X_RESOURCE:(.*)/) {
1364 my ($pattern, $type, $desc) = split /:/, $1;
1365 $pattern =~ s/^%(\.|$)/$ext$1/g; # % in pattern == extension name
1366 if ($pattern =~ /[^a-zA-Z0-9\-\.]/) {
1367 warn "$dir/$ext: meta resource '$pattern' contains illegal characters (not alphanumeric nor . nor *)\n";
1368 } else {
1369 $meta{resource}{$pattern} = [$ext, $type, $desc];
1370 }
1371 } elsif (/^\s*(?:#|$)/) {
1372 # skip other comments and empty lines
1373 } else {
1374 last; # stop parsing on first non-empty non-comment line
1375 }
1376 }
1377 }
1378 }
1379 }
1380
1381 =item $term = new urxvt::term $envhashref, $rxvtname, [arg...]
1382
1383 Creates a new terminal, very similar as if you had started it with system
1384 C<$rxvtname, arg...>. C<$envhashref> must be a reference to a C<%ENV>-like
1385 hash which defines the environment of the new terminal.
1386
1387 Croaks (and probably outputs an error message) if the new instance
1388 couldn't be created. Returns C<undef> if the new instance didn't
1389 initialise perl, and the terminal object otherwise. The C<init> and
1390 C<start> hooks will be called before this call returns, and are free to
1391 refer to global data (which is race free).
1392
1393 =cut
1394
1395 sub new {
1396 my ($class, $env, @args) = @_;
1397
1398 $env or Carp::croak "environment hash missing in call to urxvt::term->new";
1399 @args or Carp::croak "name argument missing in call to urxvt::term->new";
1400
1401 _new ([ map "$_=$env->{$_}", keys %$env ], \@args);
1402 }
1403
1404 =item $term->destroy
1405
1406 Destroy the terminal object (close the window, free resources
1407 etc.). Please note that @@RXVT_NAME@@ will not exit as long as any event
1408 watchers (timers, io watchers) are still active.
1409
1410 =item $term->exec_async ($cmd[, @args])
1411
1412 Works like the combination of the C<fork>/C<exec> builtins, which executes
1413 ("starts") programs in the background. This function takes care of setting
1414 the user environment before exec'ing the command (e.g. C<PATH>) and should
1415 be preferred over explicit calls to C<exec> or C<system>.
1416
1417 Returns the pid of the subprocess or C<undef> on error.
1418
1419 =cut
1420
1421 sub exec_async {
1422 my $self = shift;
1423
1424 my $pid = fork;
1425
1426 return $pid
1427 if !defined $pid or $pid;
1428
1429 %ENV = %{ $self->env };
1430
1431 exec @_;
1432 urxvt::_exit 255;
1433 }
1434
1435 =item $isset = $term->option ($optval[, $set])
1436
1437 Returns true if the option specified by C<$optval> is enabled, and
1438 optionally change it. All option values are stored by name in the hash
1439 C<%urxvt::OPTION>. Options not enabled in this binary are not in the hash.
1440
1441 Here is a likely non-exhaustive list of option names, please see the
1442 source file F</src/optinc.h> to see the actual list:
1443
1444 borderLess buffered console cursorBlink cursorUnderline hold iconic
1445 insecure intensityStyles iso14755 iso14755_52 jumpScroll loginShell
1446 mapAlert meta8 mouseWheelScrollPage override_redirect pastableTabs
1447 pointerBlank reverseVideo scrollBar scrollBar_floating scrollBar_right
1448 scrollTtyKeypress scrollTtyOutput scrollWithBuffer secondaryScreen
1449 secondaryScroll skipBuiltinGlyphs skipScroll transparent tripleclickwords
1450 urgentOnBell utmpInhibit visualBell
1451
1452 =item $value = $term->resource ($name[, $newval])
1453
1454 Returns the current resource value associated with a given name and
1455 optionally sets a new value. Setting values is most useful in the C<init>
1456 hook. Unset resources are returned and accepted as C<undef>.
1457
1458 The new value must be properly encoded to a suitable character encoding
1459 before passing it to this method. Similarly, the returned value may need
1460 to be converted from the used encoding to text.
1461
1462 Resource names are as defined in F<src/rsinc.h>. Colours can be specified
1463 as resource names of the form C<< color+<index> >>, e.g. C<color+5>. (will
1464 likely change).
1465
1466 Please note that resource strings will currently only be freed when the
1467 terminal is destroyed, so changing options frequently will eat memory.
1468
1469 Here is a likely non-exhaustive list of resource names, not all of which
1470 are supported in every build, please see the source file F</src/rsinc.h>
1471 to see the actual list:
1472
1473 answerbackstring backgroundPixmap backspace_key blendtype blurradius
1474 boldFont boldItalicFont borderLess buffered chdir color cursorBlink
1475 cursorUnderline cutchars delete_key depth display_name embed ext_bwidth
1476 fade font geometry hold iconName iconfile imFont imLocale inputMethod
1477 insecure int_bwidth intensityStyles iso14755 iso14755_52 italicFont
1478 jumpScroll letterSpace lineSpace loginShell mapAlert meta8 modifier
1479 mouseWheelScrollPage name override_redirect pastableTabs path perl_eval
1480 perl_ext_1 perl_ext_2 perl_lib pointerBlank pointerBlankDelay
1481 preeditType print_pipe pty_fd reverseVideo saveLines scrollBar
1482 scrollBar_align scrollBar_floating scrollBar_right scrollBar_thickness
1483 scrollTtyKeypress scrollTtyOutput scrollWithBuffer scrollstyle
1484 secondaryScreen secondaryScroll shade skipBuiltinGlyphs skipScroll
1485 term_name title transient_for transparent tripleclickwords urgentOnBell
1486 utmpInhibit visualBell
1487
1488 =cut
1489
1490 sub resource($$;$) {
1491 my ($self, $name) = (shift, shift);
1492 unshift @_, $self, $name, ($name =~ s/\s*\+\s*(\d+)$// ? $1 : 0);
1493 goto &urxvt::term::_resource
1494 }
1495
1496 =item $value = $term->x_resource ($pattern)
1497
1498 Returns the X-Resource for the given pattern, excluding the program or
1499 class name, i.e. C<< $term->x_resource ("boldFont") >> should return the
1500 same value as used by this instance of rxvt-unicode. Returns C<undef> if no
1501 resource with that pattern exists.
1502
1503 This method should only be called during the C<on_start> hook, as there is
1504 only one resource database per display, and later invocations might return
1505 the wrong resources.
1506
1507 =item $value = $term->x_resource_boolean ($pattern)
1508
1509 Like C<x_resource>, above, but interprets the string value as a boolean
1510 and returns C<1> for true values, C<0> for false values and C<undef> if
1511 the resource or option isn't specified.
1512
1513 You should always use this method to parse boolean resources.
1514
1515 =cut
1516
1517 sub x_resource_boolean {
1518 my $res = &x_resource;
1519
1520 $res =~ /^\s*(?:true|yes|on|1)\s*$/i ? 1 : defined $res && 0
1521 }
1522
1523 =item $success = $term->parse_keysym ($key, $octets)
1524
1525 Adds a key binding exactly as specified via a resource. See the
1526 C<keysym> resource in the @@RXVT_NAME@@(1) manpage.
1527
1528 =item $term->register_command ($keysym, $modifiermask, $string)
1529
1530 Adds a key binding. This is a lower level api compared to
1531 C<parse_keysym>, as it expects a parsed key description, and can be
1532 used only inside either the C<on_init> hook, to add a binding, or the
1533 C<on_register_command> hook, to modify a parsed binding.
1534
1535 =item $rend = $term->rstyle ([$new_rstyle])
1536
1537 Return and optionally change the current rendition. Text that is output by
1538 the terminal application will use this style.
1539
1540 =item ($row, $col) = $term->screen_cur ([$row, $col])
1541
1542 Return the current coordinates of the text cursor position and optionally
1543 set it (which is usually bad as applications don't expect that).
1544
1545 =item ($row, $col) = $term->selection_mark ([$row, $col])
1546
1547 =item ($row, $col) = $term->selection_beg ([$row, $col])
1548
1549 =item ($row, $col) = $term->selection_end ([$row, $col])
1550
1551 Return the current values of the selection mark, begin or end positions.
1552
1553 When arguments are given, then the selection coordinates are set to
1554 C<$row> and C<$col>, and the selection screen is set to the current
1555 screen.
1556
1557 =item $screen = $term->selection_screen ([$screen])
1558
1559 Returns the current selection screen, and then optionally sets it.
1560
1561 =item $term->selection_make ($eventtime[, $rectangular])
1562
1563 Tries to make a selection as set by C<selection_beg> and
1564 C<selection_end>. If C<$rectangular> is true (default: false), a
1565 rectangular selection will be made. This is the preferred function to make
1566 a selection.
1567
1568 =item $success = $term->selection_grab ($eventtime[, $clipboard])
1569
1570 Try to acquire ownership of the primary (clipboard if C<$clipboard> is
1571 true) selection from the server. The corresponding text can be set
1572 with the next method. No visual feedback will be given. This function
1573 is mostly useful from within C<on_sel_grab> hooks.
1574
1575 =item $oldtext = $term->selection ([$newtext, $clipboard])
1576
1577 Return the current selection (clipboard if C<$clipboard> is true) text
1578 and optionally replace it by C<$newtext>.
1579
1580 =item $term->selection_clear ([$clipboard])
1581
1582 Revoke ownership of the primary (clipboard if C<$clipboard> is true) selection.
1583
1584 =item $term->overlay_simple ($x, $y, $text)
1585
1586 Create a simple multi-line overlay box. See the next method for details.
1587
1588 =cut
1589
1590 sub overlay_simple {
1591 my ($self, $x, $y, $text) = @_;
1592
1593 my @lines = split /\n/, $text;
1594
1595 my $w = List::Util::max map $self->strwidth ($_), @lines;
1596
1597 my $overlay = $self->overlay ($x, $y, $w, scalar @lines);
1598 $overlay->set (0, $_, $lines[$_]) for 0.. $#lines;
1599
1600 $overlay
1601 }
1602
1603 =item $term->overlay ($x, $y, $width, $height[, $rstyle[, $border]])
1604
1605 Create a new (empty) overlay at the given position with the given
1606 width/height. C<$rstyle> defines the initial rendition style
1607 (default: C<OVERLAY_RSTYLE>).
1608
1609 If C<$border> is C<2> (default), then a decorative border will be put
1610 around the box.
1611
1612 If either C<$x> or C<$y> is negative, then this is counted from the
1613 right/bottom side, respectively.
1614
1615 This method returns an urxvt::overlay object. The overlay will be visible
1616 as long as the perl object is referenced.
1617
1618 The methods currently supported on C<urxvt::overlay> objects are:
1619
1620 =over 4
1621
1622 =item $overlay->set ($x, $y, $text[, $rend])
1623
1624 Similar to C<< $term->ROW_t >> and C<< $term->ROW_r >> in that it puts
1625 text in rxvt-unicode's special encoding and an array of rendition values
1626 at a specific position inside the overlay.
1627
1628 If C<$rend> is missing, then the rendition will not be changed.
1629
1630 =item $overlay->hide
1631
1632 If visible, hide the overlay, but do not destroy it.
1633
1634 =item $overlay->show
1635
1636 If hidden, display the overlay again.
1637
1638 =back
1639
1640 =item $popup = $term->popup ($event)
1641
1642 Creates a new C<urxvt::popup> object that implements a popup menu. The
1643 C<$event> I<must> be the event causing the menu to pop up (a button event,
1644 currently).
1645
1646 =cut
1647
1648 sub popup {
1649 my ($self, $event) = @_;
1650
1651 $self->grab ($event->{time}, 1)
1652 or return;
1653
1654 my $popup = bless {
1655 term => $self,
1656 event => $event,
1657 }, urxvt::popup::;
1658
1659 Scalar::Util::weaken $popup->{term};
1660
1661 $self->{_destroy}{$popup} = urxvt::destroy_hook { $popup->{popup}->destroy };
1662 Scalar::Util::weaken $self->{_destroy}{$popup};
1663
1664 $popup
1665 }
1666
1667 =item $cellwidth = $term->strwidth ($string)
1668
1669 Returns the number of screen-cells this string would need. Correctly
1670 accounts for wide and combining characters.
1671
1672 =item $octets = $term->locale_encode ($string)
1673
1674 Convert the given text string into the corresponding locale encoding.
1675
1676 =item $string = $term->locale_decode ($octets)
1677
1678 Convert the given locale-encoded octets into a perl string.
1679
1680 =item $term->scr_xor_span ($beg_row, $beg_col, $end_row, $end_col[, $rstyle])
1681
1682 XORs the rendition values in the given span with the provided value
1683 (default: C<RS_RVid>), which I<MUST NOT> contain font styles. Useful in
1684 refresh hooks to provide effects similar to the selection.
1685
1686 =item $term->scr_xor_rect ($beg_row, $beg_col, $end_row, $end_col[, $rstyle1[, $rstyle2]])
1687
1688 Similar to C<scr_xor_span>, but xors a rectangle instead. Trailing
1689 whitespace will additionally be xored with the C<$rstyle2>, which defaults
1690 to C<RS_RVid | RS_Uline>, which removes reverse video again and underlines
1691 it instead. Both styles I<MUST NOT> contain font styles.
1692
1693 =item $term->scr_bell
1694
1695 Ring the bell!
1696
1697 =item $term->scr_add_lines ($string)
1698
1699 Write the given text string to the screen, as if output by the application
1700 running inside the terminal. It may not contain command sequences (escape
1701 codes), but is free to use line feeds, carriage returns and tabs. The
1702 string is a normal text string, not in locale-dependent encoding.
1703
1704 Normally its not a good idea to use this function, as programs might be
1705 confused by changes in cursor position or scrolling. Its useful inside a
1706 C<on_add_lines> hook, though.
1707
1708 =item $term->scr_change_screen ($screen)
1709
1710 Switch to given screen - 0 primary, 1 secondary.
1711
1712 =item $term->cmd_parse ($octets)
1713
1714 Similar to C<scr_add_lines>, but the argument must be in the
1715 locale-specific encoding of the terminal and can contain command sequences
1716 (escape codes) that will be interpreted.
1717
1718 =item $term->tt_write ($octets)
1719
1720 Write the octets given in C<$octets> to the tty (i.e. as program input). To
1721 pass characters instead of octets, you should convert your strings first
1722 to the locale-specific encoding using C<< $term->locale_encode >>.
1723
1724 =item $term->tt_paste ($octets)
1725
1726 Write the octets given in C<$octets> to the tty as a paste, converting NL to
1727 CR and bracketing the data with control sequences if bracketed paste mode
1728 is set.
1729
1730 =item $old_events = $term->pty_ev_events ([$new_events])
1731
1732 Replaces the event mask of the pty watcher by the given event mask. Can
1733 be used to suppress input and output handling to the pty/tty. See the
1734 description of C<< urxvt::timer->events >>. Make sure to always restore
1735 the previous value.
1736
1737 =item $fd = $term->pty_fd
1738
1739 Returns the master file descriptor for the pty in use, or C<-1> if no pty
1740 is used.
1741
1742 =item $windowid = $term->parent
1743
1744 Return the window id of the toplevel window.
1745
1746 =item $windowid = $term->vt
1747
1748 Return the window id of the terminal window.
1749
1750 =item $term->vt_emask_add ($x_event_mask)
1751
1752 Adds the specified events to the vt event mask. Useful e.g. when you want
1753 to receive pointer events all the times:
1754
1755 $term->vt_emask_add (urxvt::PointerMotionMask);
1756
1757 =item $term->set_urgency ($set)
1758
1759 Enable/disable the urgency hint on the toplevel window.
1760
1761 =item $term->focus_in
1762
1763 =item $term->focus_out
1764
1765 =item $term->key_press ($state, $keycode[, $time])
1766
1767 =item $term->key_release ($state, $keycode[, $time])
1768
1769 Deliver various fake events to to terminal.
1770
1771 =item $window_width = $term->width
1772
1773 =item $window_height = $term->height
1774
1775 =item $font_width = $term->fwidth
1776
1777 =item $font_height = $term->fheight
1778
1779 =item $font_ascent = $term->fbase
1780
1781 =item $terminal_rows = $term->nrow
1782
1783 =item $terminal_columns = $term->ncol
1784
1785 =item $has_focus = $term->focus
1786
1787 =item $is_mapped = $term->mapped
1788
1789 =item $max_scrollback = $term->saveLines
1790
1791 =item $nrow_plus_saveLines = $term->total_rows
1792
1793 =item $topmost_scrollback_row = $term->top_row
1794
1795 Return various integers describing terminal characteristics.
1796
1797 =item $x_display = $term->display_id
1798
1799 Return the DISPLAY used by rxvt-unicode.
1800
1801 =item $lc_ctype = $term->locale
1802
1803 Returns the LC_CTYPE category string used by this rxvt-unicode.
1804
1805 =item $env = $term->env
1806
1807 Returns a copy of the environment in effect for the terminal as a hashref
1808 similar to C<\%ENV>.
1809
1810 =item @envv = $term->envv
1811
1812 Returns the environment as array of strings of the form C<VAR=VALUE>.
1813
1814 =item @argv = $term->argv
1815
1816 Return the argument vector as this terminal, similar to @ARGV, but
1817 includes the program name as first element.
1818
1819 =cut
1820
1821 sub env {
1822 +{ map /^([^=]+)(?:=(.*))?$/s && ($1 => $2), $_[0]->envv }
1823 }
1824
1825 =item $modifiermask = $term->ModLevel3Mask
1826
1827 =item $modifiermask = $term->ModMetaMask
1828
1829 =item $modifiermask = $term->ModNumLockMask
1830
1831 Return the modifier masks corresponding to the "ISO Level 3 Shift" (often
1832 AltGr), the meta key (often Alt) and the num lock key, if applicable.
1833
1834 =item $screen = $term->current_screen
1835
1836 Returns the currently displayed screen (0 primary, 1 secondary).
1837
1838 =item $cursor_is_hidden = $term->hidden_cursor
1839
1840 Returns whether the cursor is currently hidden or not.
1841
1842 =item $view_start = $term->view_start ([$newvalue])
1843
1844 Returns the row number of the topmost displayed line. Maximum value is
1845 C<0>, which displays the normal terminal contents. Lower values scroll
1846 this many lines into the scrollback buffer.
1847
1848 =item $term->want_refresh
1849
1850 Requests a screen refresh. At the next opportunity, rxvt-unicode will
1851 compare the on-screen display with its stored representation. If they
1852 differ, it redraws the differences.
1853
1854 Used after changing terminal contents to display them.
1855
1856 =item $text = $term->ROW_t ($row_number[, $new_text[, $start_col]])
1857
1858 Returns the text of the entire row with number C<$row_number>. Row C<< $term->top_row >>
1859 is the topmost terminal line, row C<< $term->nrow-1 >> is the bottommost
1860 terminal line. Nothing will be returned if a nonexistent line
1861 is requested.
1862
1863 If C<$new_text> is specified, it will replace characters in the current
1864 line, starting at column C<$start_col> (default C<0>), which is useful
1865 to replace only parts of a line. The font index in the rendition will
1866 automatically be updated.
1867
1868 C<$text> is in a special encoding: tabs and wide characters that use more
1869 than one cell when displayed are padded with C<$urxvt::NOCHAR> (chr 65535)
1870 characters. Characters with combining characters and other characters that
1871 do not fit into the normal text encoding will be replaced with characters
1872 in the private use area.
1873
1874 You have to obey this encoding when changing text. The advantage is
1875 that C<substr> and similar functions work on screen cells and not on
1876 characters.
1877
1878 The methods C<< $term->special_encode >> and C<< $term->special_decode >>
1879 can be used to convert normal strings into this encoding and vice versa.
1880
1881 =item $rend = $term->ROW_r ($row_number[, $new_rend[, $start_col]])
1882
1883 Like C<< $term->ROW_t >>, but returns an arrayref with rendition
1884 bitsets. Rendition bitsets contain information about colour, font, font
1885 styles and similar information. See also C<< $term->ROW_t >>.
1886
1887 When setting rendition, the font mask will be ignored.
1888
1889 See the section on RENDITION, above.
1890
1891 =item $length = $term->ROW_l ($row_number[, $new_length])
1892
1893 Returns the number of screen cells that are in use ("the line
1894 length"). Unlike the urxvt core, this returns C<< $term->ncol >> if the
1895 line is joined with the following one.
1896
1897 =item $bool = $term->is_longer ($row_number)
1898
1899 Returns true if the row is part of a multiple-row logical "line" (i.e.
1900 joined with the following row), which means all characters are in use
1901 and it is continued on the next row (and possibly a continuation of the
1902 previous row(s)).
1903
1904 =item $line = $term->line ($row_number)
1905
1906 Create and return a new C<urxvt::line> object that stores information
1907 about the logical line that row C<$row_number> is part of. It supports the
1908 following methods:
1909
1910 =over 4
1911
1912 =item $text = $line->t ([$new_text])
1913
1914 Returns or replaces the full text of the line, similar to C<ROW_t>
1915
1916 =item $rend = $line->r ([$new_rend])
1917
1918 Returns or replaces the full rendition array of the line, similar to C<ROW_r>
1919
1920 =item $length = $line->l
1921
1922 Returns the length of the line in cells, similar to C<ROW_l>.
1923
1924 =item $rownum = $line->beg
1925
1926 =item $rownum = $line->end
1927
1928 Return the row number of the first/last row of the line, respectively.
1929
1930 =item $offset = $line->offset_of ($row, $col)
1931
1932 Returns the character offset of the given row|col pair within the logical
1933 line. Works for rows outside the line, too, and returns corresponding
1934 offsets outside the string.
1935
1936 =item ($row, $col) = $line->coord_of ($offset)
1937
1938 Translates a string offset into terminal coordinates again.
1939
1940 =back
1941
1942 =cut
1943
1944 sub line {
1945 my ($self, $row) = @_;
1946
1947 my $maxrow = $self->nrow - 1;
1948
1949 my ($beg, $end) = ($row, $row);
1950
1951 --$beg while $self->ROW_is_longer ($beg - 1);
1952 ++$end while $self->ROW_is_longer ($end) && $end < $maxrow;
1953
1954 bless {
1955 term => $self,
1956 beg => $beg,
1957 end => $end,
1958 ncol => $self->ncol,
1959 len => ($end - $beg) * $self->ncol + $self->ROW_l ($end),
1960 }, urxvt::line::
1961 }
1962
1963 sub urxvt::line::t {
1964 my ($self) = @_;
1965
1966 if (@_ > 1)
1967 {
1968 $self->{term}->ROW_t ($_, $_[1], 0, ($_ - $self->{beg}) * $self->{ncol}, $self->{ncol})
1969 for $self->{beg} .. $self->{end};
1970 }
1971
1972 defined wantarray &&
1973 substr +(join "", map $self->{term}->ROW_t ($_), $self->{beg} .. $self->{end}),
1974 0, $self->{len}
1975 }
1976
1977 sub urxvt::line::r {
1978 my ($self) = @_;
1979
1980 if (@_ > 1)
1981 {
1982 $self->{term}->ROW_r ($_, $_[1], 0, ($_ - $self->{beg}) * $self->{ncol}, $self->{ncol})
1983 for $self->{beg} .. $self->{end};
1984 }
1985
1986 if (defined wantarray) {
1987 my $rend = [
1988 map @{ $self->{term}->ROW_r ($_) }, $self->{beg} .. $self->{end}
1989 ];
1990 $#$rend = $self->{len} - 1;
1991 return $rend;
1992 }
1993
1994 ()
1995 }
1996
1997 sub urxvt::line::beg { $_[0]{beg} }
1998 sub urxvt::line::end { $_[0]{end} }
1999 sub urxvt::line::l { $_[0]{len} }
2000
2001 sub urxvt::line::offset_of {
2002 my ($self, $row, $col) = @_;
2003
2004 ($row - $self->{beg}) * $self->{ncol} + $col
2005 }
2006
2007 sub urxvt::line::coord_of {
2008 my ($self, $offset) = @_;
2009
2010 use integer;
2011
2012 (
2013 $offset / $self->{ncol} + $self->{beg},
2014 $offset % $self->{ncol}
2015 )
2016 }
2017
2018 =item $text = $term->special_encode $string
2019
2020 Converts a perl string into the special encoding used by rxvt-unicode,
2021 where one character corresponds to one screen cell. See
2022 C<< $term->ROW_t >> for details.
2023
2024 =item $string = $term->special_decode $text
2025
2026 Converts rxvt-unicodes text representation into a perl string. See
2027 C<< $term->ROW_t >> for details.
2028
2029 =item $success = $term->grab_button ($button, $modifiermask[, $window = $term->vt])
2030
2031 =item $term->ungrab_button ($button, $modifiermask[, $window = $term->vt])
2032
2033 Register/unregister a synchronous button grab. See the XGrabButton
2034 manpage.
2035
2036 =item $success = $term->grab ($eventtime[, $sync])
2037
2038 Calls XGrabPointer and XGrabKeyboard in asynchronous (default) or
2039 synchronous (C<$sync> is true). Also remembers the grab timestamp.
2040
2041 =item $term->allow_events_async
2042
2043 Calls XAllowEvents with AsyncBoth for the most recent grab.
2044
2045 =item $term->allow_events_sync
2046
2047 Calls XAllowEvents with SyncBoth for the most recent grab.
2048
2049 =item $term->allow_events_replay
2050
2051 Calls XAllowEvents with both ReplayPointer and ReplayKeyboard for the most
2052 recent grab.
2053
2054 =item $term->ungrab
2055
2056 Calls XUngrabPointer and XUngrabKeyboard for the most recent grab. Is called automatically on
2057 evaluation errors, as it is better to lose the grab in the error case as
2058 the session.
2059
2060 =item $atom = $term->XInternAtom ($atom_name[, $only_if_exists])
2061
2062 =item $atom_name = $term->XGetAtomName ($atom)
2063
2064 =item @atoms = $term->XListProperties ($window)
2065
2066 =item ($type,$format,$octets) = $term->XGetWindowProperty ($window, $property)
2067
2068 =item $term->XChangeProperty ($window, $property, $type, $format, $octets)
2069
2070 =item $term->XDeleteProperty ($window, $property)
2071
2072 =item $window = $term->DefaultRootWindow
2073
2074 =item $term->XReparentWindow ($window, $parent, [$x, $y])
2075
2076 =item $term->XMapWindow ($window)
2077
2078 =item $term->XUnmapWindow ($window)
2079
2080 =item $term->XMoveResizeWindow ($window, $x, $y, $width, $height)
2081
2082 =item ($x, $y, $child_window) = $term->XTranslateCoordinates ($src, $dst, $x, $y)
2083
2084 =item $term->XChangeInput ($window, $add_events[, $del_events])
2085
2086 =item $keysym = $term->XStringToKeysym ($string)
2087
2088 =item $string = $term->XKeysymToString ($keysym)
2089
2090 Various X or X-related functions. The C<$term> object only serves as
2091 the source of the display, otherwise those functions map more-or-less
2092 directly onto the X functions of the same name.
2093
2094 =back
2095
2096 =cut
2097
2098 package urxvt::popup;
2099
2100 =head2 The C<urxvt::popup> Class
2101
2102 =over 4
2103
2104 =cut
2105
2106 sub add_item {
2107 my ($self, $item) = @_;
2108
2109 $item->{rend}{normal} = "\x1b[0;30;47m" unless exists $item->{rend}{normal};
2110 $item->{rend}{hover} = "\x1b[0;30;46m" unless exists $item->{rend}{hover};
2111 $item->{rend}{active} = "\x1b[m" unless exists $item->{rend}{active};
2112
2113 $item->{render} ||= sub { $_[0]{text} };
2114
2115 push @{ $self->{item} }, $item;
2116 }
2117
2118 =item $popup->add_title ($title)
2119
2120 Adds a non-clickable title to the popup.
2121
2122 =cut
2123
2124 sub add_title {
2125 my ($self, $title) = @_;
2126
2127 $self->add_item ({
2128 rend => { normal => "\x1b[38;5;11;44m", hover => "\x1b[38;5;11;44m", active => "\x1b[38;5;11;44m" },
2129 text => $title,
2130 activate => sub { },
2131 });
2132 }
2133
2134 =item $popup->add_separator ([$sepchr])
2135
2136 Creates a separator, optionally using the character given as C<$sepchr>.
2137
2138 =cut
2139
2140 sub add_separator {
2141 my ($self, $sep) = @_;
2142
2143 $sep ||= "=";
2144
2145 $self->add_item ({
2146 rend => { normal => "\x1b[0;30;47m", hover => "\x1b[0;30;47m", active => "\x1b[0;30;47m" },
2147 text => "",
2148 render => sub { $sep x $self->{term}->ncol },
2149 activate => sub { },
2150 });
2151 }
2152
2153 =item $popup->add_button ($text, $cb)
2154
2155 Adds a clickable button to the popup. C<$cb> is called whenever it is
2156 selected.
2157
2158 =cut
2159
2160 sub add_button {
2161 my ($self, $text, $cb) = @_;
2162
2163 $self->add_item ({ type => "button", text => $text, activate => $cb});
2164 }
2165
2166 =item $popup->add_toggle ($text, $initial_value, $cb)
2167
2168 Adds a toggle/checkbox item to the popup. The callback gets called
2169 whenever it gets toggled, with a boolean indicating its new value as its
2170 first argument.
2171
2172 =cut
2173
2174 sub add_toggle {
2175 my ($self, $text, $value, $cb) = @_;
2176
2177 my $item; $item = {
2178 type => "button",
2179 text => " $text",
2180 value => $value,
2181 render => sub { ($_[0]{value} ? "* " : " ") . $text },
2182 activate => sub { $cb->($_[1]{value} = !$_[1]{value}); },
2183 };
2184
2185 $self->add_item ($item);
2186 }
2187
2188 =item $popup->show
2189
2190 Displays the popup (which is initially hidden).
2191
2192 =cut
2193
2194 sub show {
2195 my ($self) = @_;
2196
2197 local $urxvt::popup::self = $self;
2198
2199 my $env = $self->{term}->env;
2200 # we can't hope to reproduce the locale algorithm, so nuke LC_ALL and set LC_CTYPE.
2201 delete $env->{LC_ALL};
2202 $env->{LC_CTYPE} = $self->{term}->locale;
2203
2204 my $term = urxvt::term->new (
2205 $env, "popup",
2206 "--perl-lib" => "", "--perl-ext-common" => "",
2207 "-pty-fd" => -1, "-sl" => 0,
2208 "-b" => 1, "-bd" => "grey80", "-bl", "-override-redirect",
2209 "--transient-for" => $self->{term}->parent,
2210 "-display" => $self->{term}->display_id,
2211 "-pe" => "urxvt-popup",
2212 ) or die "unable to create popup window\n";
2213
2214 unless (delete $term->{urxvt_popup_init_done}) {
2215 $term->ungrab;
2216 $term->destroy;
2217 die "unable to initialise popup window\n";
2218 }
2219 }
2220
2221 sub DESTROY {
2222 my ($self) = @_;
2223
2224 delete $self->{term}{_destroy}{$self};
2225 $self->{term}->ungrab;
2226 }
2227
2228 =back
2229
2230 =cut
2231
2232 package urxvt::watcher;
2233
2234 =head2 The C<urxvt::timer> Class
2235
2236 This class implements timer watchers/events. Time is represented as a
2237 fractional number of seconds since the epoch. Example:
2238
2239 $term->{overlay} = $term->overlay (-1, 0, 8, 1, urxvt::OVERLAY_RSTYLE, 0);
2240 $term->{timer} = urxvt::timer
2241 ->new
2242 ->interval (1)
2243 ->cb (sub {
2244 $term->{overlay}->set (0, 0,
2245 sprintf "%2d:%02d:%02d", (localtime urxvt::NOW)[2,1,0]);
2246 });
2247
2248 =over 4
2249
2250 =item $timer = new urxvt::timer
2251
2252 Create a new timer object in started state. It is scheduled to fire
2253 immediately.
2254
2255 =item $timer = $timer->cb (sub { my ($timer) = @_; ... })
2256
2257 Set the callback to be called when the timer triggers.
2258
2259 =item $timer = $timer->set ($tstamp[, $interval])
2260
2261 Set the time the event is generated to $tstamp (and optionally specifies a
2262 new $interval).
2263
2264 =item $timer = $timer->interval ($interval)
2265
2266 By default (and when C<$interval> is C<0>), the timer will automatically
2267 stop after it has fired once. If C<$interval> is non-zero, then the timer
2268 is automatically rescheduled at the given intervals.
2269
2270 =item $timer = $timer->start
2271
2272 Start the timer.
2273
2274 =item $timer = $timer->start ($tstamp[, $interval])
2275
2276 Set the event trigger time to C<$tstamp> and start the timer. Optionally
2277 also replaces the interval.
2278
2279 =item $timer = $timer->after ($delay[, $interval])
2280
2281 Like C<start>, but sets the expiry timer to c<urxvt::NOW + $delay>.
2282
2283 =item $timer = $timer->stop
2284
2285 Stop the timer.
2286
2287 =back
2288
2289 =head2 The C<urxvt::iow> Class
2290
2291 This class implements io watchers/events. Example:
2292
2293 $term->{socket} = ...
2294 $term->{iow} = urxvt::iow
2295 ->new
2296 ->fd (fileno $term->{socket})
2297 ->events (urxvt::EV_READ)
2298 ->start
2299 ->cb (sub {
2300 my ($iow, $revents) = @_;
2301 # $revents must be 1 here, no need to check
2302 sysread $term->{socket}, my $buf, 8192
2303 or end-of-file;
2304 });
2305
2306
2307 =over 4
2308
2309 =item $iow = new urxvt::iow
2310
2311 Create a new io watcher object in stopped state.
2312
2313 =item $iow = $iow->cb (sub { my ($iow, $reventmask) = @_; ... })
2314
2315 Set the callback to be called when io events are triggered. C<$reventmask>
2316 is a bitset as described in the C<events> method.
2317
2318 =item $iow = $iow->fd ($fd)
2319
2320 Set the file descriptor (not handle) to watch.
2321
2322 =item $iow = $iow->events ($eventmask)
2323
2324 Set the event mask to watch. The only allowed values are
2325 C<urxvt::EV_READ> and C<urxvt::EV_WRITE>, which might be ORed
2326 together, or C<urxvt::EV_NONE>.
2327
2328 =item $iow = $iow->start
2329
2330 Start watching for requested events on the given handle.
2331
2332 =item $iow = $iow->stop
2333
2334 Stop watching for events on the given file handle.
2335
2336 =back
2337
2338 =head2 The C<urxvt::iw> Class
2339
2340 This class implements idle watchers, that get called automatically when
2341 the process is idle. They should return as fast as possible, after doing
2342 some useful work.
2343
2344 =over 4
2345
2346 =item $iw = new urxvt::iw
2347
2348 Create a new idle watcher object in stopped state.
2349
2350 =item $iw = $iw->cb (sub { my ($iw) = @_; ... })
2351
2352 Set the callback to be called when the watcher triggers.
2353
2354 =item $timer = $timer->start
2355
2356 Start the watcher.
2357
2358 =item $timer = $timer->stop
2359
2360 Stop the watcher.
2361
2362 =back
2363
2364 =head2 The C<urxvt::pw> Class
2365
2366 This class implements process watchers. They create an event whenever a
2367 process exits, after which they stop automatically.
2368
2369 my $pid = fork;
2370 ...
2371 $term->{pw} = urxvt::pw
2372 ->new
2373 ->start ($pid)
2374 ->cb (sub {
2375 my ($pw, $exit_status) = @_;
2376 ...
2377 });
2378
2379 =over 4
2380
2381 =item $pw = new urxvt::pw
2382
2383 Create a new process watcher in stopped state.
2384
2385 =item $pw = $pw->cb (sub { my ($pw, $exit_status) = @_; ... })
2386
2387 Set the callback to be called when the timer triggers.
2388
2389 =item $pw = $timer->start ($pid)
2390
2391 Tells the watcher to start watching for process C<$pid>.
2392
2393 =item $pw = $pw->stop
2394
2395 Stop the watcher.
2396
2397 =back
2398
2399 =head1 ENVIRONMENT
2400
2401 =head2 URXVT_PERL_VERBOSITY
2402
2403 This variable controls the verbosity level of the perl extension. Higher
2404 numbers indicate more verbose output.
2405
2406 =over 4
2407
2408 =item == 0 - fatal messages
2409
2410 =item >= 3 - script loading and management
2411
2412 =item >=10 - all called hooks
2413
2414 =item >=11 - hook return values
2415
2416 =back
2417
2418 =head1 AUTHOR
2419
2420 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
2421 http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/rxvt-unicode
2422
2423 =cut
2424
2425 1
2426
2427 # vim: sw=3: