Branch :
| Author | Commit | Date | CI | Message |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| b0d9a790 | 2025-01-15 12:03:10 | vmods: Fix explicit vmods not dumped | ||
| dfa286b2 | 2025-01-15 13:56:36 | compat: Fix Interp & LED merge modes | ||
| 7036e46c | 2025-01-13 15:20:47 | symbols: Add tests for key merge modes (keysyms/actions) This commit adds tests for merging various key configurations: - With/without keysyms/actions - Single/multiple keysyms/actions per level We test all the merge modes for including a map (global) as well as directly on the keys (local): - default (global: include, local: implicit) - augment - override - replace The tests data are generated with: - A Python script `scripts/update-merge-modes-tests.py` for keycodes and symbols data. Use `--debug` for extra comments to help debugging. The script can optionally generate C headers for alternative key sequence tests, that were used before implementing golden tests. The latter tests are not used anymore (duplicate with golden tests) but their generator is kept for now, as they can still be useful for debugging or writing similar tests. - The `merge-modes` test generates its own keymap files for golden tests, using: `build/test-merge-modes update`. It can also replace them with the obtained output rather than the expected one using `build/test-merge-modes update-obtained`, which is very useful for debugging. | ||
| 93b75c63 | 2024-12-22 17:49:24 | x11: Keep level when the keysym is undefined but not the action When getting the keymap from X11, the following: ``` key <AD01> { actions=[SetGroup(2)] }; ``` is currently converted to: ``` key <AD01> { }; ``` This commit fixes dropping a defined action when the keysym is undefined | ||
| 71d64df3 | 2024-10-08 18:45:18 | symbols: Add tests for multiple actions per level | ||
| fdf2c525 | 2024-10-08 19:43:30 | actions: Add support for multiple actions per level This makes 1 keysym == 1 action holds also for multiple keysyms per level. The motivation of this new feature are: - Make multiple keysyms per level more intuitive. - Explore how to fix the issue with shortcuts in multi-layout settings (see the xkeyboard-config issue[^1]). The idea is to use e.g.: ```c key <LCTL> { symbols[1] = [ {Control_L, ISO_First_Group } ], actions[1] = [ {SetMods(modifiers=Control), SetGroup(group=-4) } ] }; ``` in order to switch temporarily to a reference layout in order to get the same shortcuts on every layout. When no action is specified, `interpret` statements are used to find an action corresponding for *each* keysym, as expected. For an interpretation matching Any keysym, we may get the same interpretation for multiple keysyms. This may result in unwanted duplicate actions. So set this interpretation only if no previous keysym was matched with this interpret at this level, else set the default interpretation. For now, at most one action of each following categories is allowed per level: - modifier actions: `SetMods`, `LatchMods`, `LockMods`; - group actions: `SetGroup`, `LatchGroup`, `LockGroup`. Some examples: - `SetMods` + `SetGroup`: ok - `SetMods` + `SetMods`: error - `SetMods` + `LockMods`: error - `SetMods` + `LockGroup`: ok [^1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xkeyboard-config/xkeyboard-config/-/issues/416 | ||
| 948f7a59 | 2024-10-09 08:34:27 | symbols: Skip interprets only for groups with explicit actions Previously setting explicit actions for a group in symbols files made the parser skip compatibility interpretations for the corresponding *whole* key, so the other groups with *no* explicit actions could result broken on some levels. In the following example, `<RALT>` would have an action on group 2, because it is explicit, but none on group 1 because interpretation are also skipped there as a side effect: ```c key <RALT> { symbols[1]= [ ISO_Level3_Shift ], symbols[2]= [ ISO_Level3_Shift ], actions[2]= [ SetMods(modifiers=LevelThree) ] }; ``` Fixed by skipping interpretations *only* for groups with explicit actions. We still set `key->explicit |= EXPLICIT_INTERP` if at least one group has explicit actions. In such case, when dumping a keymap, we will write explicit actions for *all* groups, in order to ensure that X11 and previous versions of libxkbcommon can parse the keymap as intended. One side effect is that no interpretation will be run on this key anymore, so we may have to set some extra fields explicitly: repeat, virtualMods. Thus the previous example would be bumped as: ```c key <RALT> { repeat= No, symbols[1]= [ ISO_Level3_Shift ], actions[1]= [ SetMods(modifiers=LevelThree,clearLocks) ], symbols[2]= [ ISO_Level3_Shift ], actions[2]= [ SetMods(modifiers=LevelThree) ] }; ``` | ||
| ba76ec16 | 2024-03-01 15:02:42 | Global default statement: Fix types Do not accept statements like garbage.level_name in types files Fix parser accepting clearly nonsensical type definitions like type "ONE_LEVEL" { garbage.modifiers = None; garbage.map[None] = Level1; garbage.level_name[Level1] = "Any"; }; and ignoring the garbage part. Co-authored-by: Mikhail Gusarov <dottedmag@dottedmag.net> Co-authored-by: Pierre Le Marre <dev@wismill.eu> | ||
| 24f69645 | 2024-03-01 15:02:42 | Global default statement: Fix symbols | ||
| 382f6d2d | 2024-02-05 08:57:35 | Keysyms: Update using latest xorgproto For the sake of compatibility, this reintroduce some deleted keysyms and postpone the effective deprecation of others. xorgproto commit: fe12c5102762afcbf852e50dcbbdea2ef625570c Also added tests for some canonical names. | ||
| efdb05d1 | 2024-01-27 23:00:28 | parser: Do now allow the empty symbol declaration An empty element is allowed in SymbolsBody definition, so the following keymap is gramatically correct. ``` xkb_keymap { ... xkb_symbols "sym" { key <SPC> {, [Space] }; }; }; ``` However, the current parser crashes with the keymap due to null pointer access. This change fixes it by changing the parser not to allow it. | ||
| 0d454115 | 2023-09-28 07:18:56 | Keysyms: Fix failing tests - Update keymap to use reference keysym names. - Fix x11comp test by handling old x11proto. We need xkbcomp to be compiled with at least x11proto-dev 2023.2. So we replace the unsupported keysyms with supported ones not already in the keymap. This is kind of ugly, but it works. If we ever want to restore the original keysyms with their supported names, the substitute keysyms will be easy to spot. | ||
| 0038c866 | 2023-09-26 17:05:14 | Prevent overflow of octal escape sequences The octal parser accepts the range `\1..\777`. The result is cast to `char` which will silently overflow. This commit prevents overlow and will treat `\400..\777` as invalid escape sequences. | ||
| ca7aa69c | 2023-09-26 17:05:05 | Disallow producing NULL character with escape sequences NULL usually terminates the strings; allowing to produce it via escape sequences may lead to undefined behaviour. - Make NULL escape sequences (e.g. `\0` and `\x0`) invalid. - Add corresponding test. - Introduce the new message: XKB_WARNING_INVALID_ESCAPE_SEQUENCE. | ||
| 5b5b67f2 | 2023-05-01 22:30:41 | Add support for modmap None (#291) Unlike current xkbcommon, X11’s xkbcomp allows to remove entries in the modifiers’ map using “modifier_map None { … }”. “None” is translated to the special value “XkbNoModifier” defined in “X11/extensions/XKB.h”. Then it relies on the fact that in "CopyModMapDef", the following code: 1U << entry->modifier ends up being zero when “entry->modifier” is “XkbNoModifier” (i.e. 0xFF). Indeed, it relies on the overflow behaviour of the left shift, which in practice resolves to use only the 5 low bits of the shift amount, i.e. 0x1F here. Then the result of “1U << 0xFF” is cast to “char”, i.e. 0. This is a good trick but too magical, so in libxkbcommon we will use an explicit test against our new constant XKB_MOD_NONE. | ||
| fbf087ea | 2020-11-23 19:51:04 | keymap-dump: follow xkbcomp in printing affect=both in pointer actions It is equivalent to nothing but good to match up. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com> | ||
| 95f8ff83 | 2020-11-23 18:35:27 | test/data: update host.xkb to match keymap-dump style This is needed for fixing the x11comp test. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com> | ||
| 461d7278 | 2020-09-07 11:15:43 | test/data: change quartz.xkb from CRLF to LF Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com> | ||
| 076047b2 | 2019-10-16 10:32:19 | keymap-dump: use consistent capitalization for "Group<N>" It's used capitalized everywhere except a couple places. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com> | ||
| a6ed0304 | 2019-10-16 10:27:12 | keymap-dump: fix invalid names used for levels above 8 xkbcomp only accepts the "Level" prefix for a level name for levels 1 to 8, but the keymap dumping code added it always, e.g. "Level15". The plain integer, e.g. "8", "15" is always accepted, so just use that. Fixes https://github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcommon/issues/113 Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com> Reported-by: progandy | ||
| 74f85d05 | 2015-08-23 23:02:10 | test/x11comp: remove duplicate FOUR_LEVEL_KEYPAD from test keymap The `test/data/keymaps/host.xkb` file contains a duplicate definition of this type. On my computer (linux, xkbcomp 1.3.0, xserver 1.17.2), the test passes as is, but if I remove the duplicate definition, the roundtrip brings it back and the test fails. I can also reproduce it without relation to the test, by loading `test/data/keymaps/host.xkb` (without the duplicate) using xkbcomp -I $(pwd)/test/data/keymaps/host.xkb $DISPLAY and downloading it again using xkbcomp $DISPLAY out.xkb the duplicate is added. On Mac OS X however, the duplicate is removed (correctly), so the test fails there. xkbcommon itself, which was forked from xkbcomp, doesn't have this bug; in fact, doing ./test/print-compiled-keymap -k keymaps/host.xkb removes the duplicate if it is present. This is (probably) a regression in xkbcomp or xserver compared to the versions used in Mac OS X. Since getting a patch for any of these two is hopeless from my experience, I did not try to investigate further. I am not sure why, but if I also add a `PC_SUPER_LEVEL2` type, the duplicate of `FOUR_LEVEL_KEYPAD` doesn't show up. Hopefully the test will work on all platforms now. https://github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcommon/issues/26 Reported-by: @nuko8 Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 68962aa1 | 2014-09-21 23:54:34 | keymap-dump: combine modifier_map's with the same modifier A bit less efficient, but makes for shorter, nicer output. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| a931740c | 2014-09-10 13:29:52 | keycodes: fix keymap compilation with no aliases and malloc(0)==NULL If the keymap doesn't have any key-aliases (which is certainly possible), the calloc(num_key_aliases, ...) is allowed to return NULL according to the C standard, but this is not an error. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 4df720b4 | 2014-08-09 22:14:34 | test/x11-keyseq: new test It is like test/stringcomp, only instead of using xkb_keymap_new_from_string(), it uses xkbcomp to upload the keymap to a dummy Xvfb X server and then xkb_x11_keymap_new_from_device(). If any of these components are not present or fails, the test is shown as skipped. The test is messy, fragile, limited and depends on external tools, but I will improve on that later -- it's better to have a test. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 40f109af | 2014-07-27 14:24:20 | ast-build: make sure InterpDef is freeable With the following two rules: InterpretDecl : INTERPRET InterpretMatch OBRACE VarDeclList CBRACE SEMI { $2->def = $4; $$ = $2; } ; InterpretMatch : KeySym PLUS Expr { $$ = InterpCreate($1, $3); } | KeySym { $$ = InterpCreate($1, NULL); } ; And the fact that InterpCreate doesn't initialize ->def, if the VarDeclList fails, the %destructor tries to recursively free the uninitialized ->def VarDef. So always initialize it. That was the only problematic code in the parser for %destructor (I'm pretty sure). Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| f5182bbd | 2014-07-26 22:29:22 | test: add file with a syntax error We didn't really have any. It also a exposes a memory leak, since the parser doesn't clean up the AST nodes of the discarded symbols. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 11a9f76b | 2014-02-15 23:27:23 | keymap-dump: don't print "affect=lock" in PtrLock It's the same as no flags, so might as well not print it. (In fact it is slightly harmful, because it actively *clears* the affect flags, which might have been set in some other manner. But in practice this cannot happen). Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| ba7530fa | 2013-11-27 13:43:57 | scanner: restore lost DIVIDE token I don't know how this could have happened. Luckily this token is completely useless. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| e91d2653 | 2013-08-01 23:09:46 | scanner: allow empty key name literals Some keymaps actually have this, like the quartz.xkb which is tested. We need to support these. https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67654 Reported-By: Gatis Paeglis <gatis.paeglis@digia.com> Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 17a956d8 | 2013-05-09 14:47:09 | Widen keycode range to 8/255 if possible (bug #63390) If the keycode range is smaller than 8 → 255, artifically widen it when dumping the keymap as not to displease X. Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org> | ||
| e95dac76 | 2013-02-25 12:03:06 | keymap-dump: don't indent after xkb_keymap { xkbcomp doesn't indent there, so it's easier to diff. Also saves some horizontal space which is sorely needed when looking at these files (especially the xkb_symbols). Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 4a59c84e | 2013-02-25 12:09:17 | keymap-dump: remove some ugly empty lines xkbcomp prints them too, but that's just annoying. Also xkb_keycodes doesn't have it already. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| c7aef166 | 2013-02-19 15:57:14 | keysym: print unicode keysyms uppercase and 0-padded Use the same format as XKeysymToString. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 089c3a18 | 2013-02-17 14:59:50 | state: fix unbound virtual modifier bug Recent xkeyboard-config introduced the following line in symbols/level3: vmods = LevelThree, However, the XKM format which xkbcomp produces for the X server can't handle explicit virtual modifiers such as this: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=4927 So by doing the following, for example: setxkbmap -layout de (or another 3-level layouts) xkbcomp $DISPLAY out.xkb xkbcomp out.xkb $DISPLAY The modifier is lost and can't be used for switching to Level3 (see the included test). We, however, are affected worse by this bug when we load the out.xkb keymap. First, the FOUR_LEVEL_ALPHABETIC key type has these entries: map[None] = Level1; map[Shift] = Level2; map[Lock] = Level2; map[LevelThree] = Level3; [...] Now, because the LevelThree virtual modifier is not bound to anything, the effective mask of the "map[LevelThree]" entry is just 0. So when the modifier state is empty (initial state), this entry is chosen, and we get Level3, instead of failing to match any entry and getting the default Level1. The difference in behavior from the xserver stems from this commit: acdad6058d52dc8a3e724dc95448300850d474f2 Which removed the entry->active field. Without bugs, this would be correct; however, it seems in this case we should just follow the server's behavior. The server sets the entry->active field like so in XKBMisc.c: /* entry is active if vmods are bound */ entry->active = (mask != 0); The xkblib spec explains this field, but does not specify how to initialize it. This commit does the same as above but more directly. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 22684cd1 | 2012-09-30 10:50:38 | parser: remove XkbCompMapList rule This rule allows you to put several xkb_keymaps in one file. This doesn't make any sense: only the default/first can ever be used, yet the others are fully parsed as well. Different keymaps should just be put in different files. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 32c19f4b | 2012-09-27 21:30:29 | keymap-dump: make it look better with long key names Not worth messing around with too much, just make it legible. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 4b69d6f7 | 2012-09-15 02:09:34 | keycodes: ignore explicit minimum/maximum statements These statements are pretty pointless for us; we don't restrict keycodes like X does, and if someone writes e.g. maximum = 255 but only has 100 keys, we currently happily alloc all those empty keys. xkbcomp already handles the case when these statements aren't given, and uses a computed min/max instead. We should just always use that. (Of course since keycodes/evdev currently uses almost all of the keycodes in the range it declares, including 255, this doesn't save any memory for the common user right now). Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| a9fa3739 | 2012-09-12 16:39:54 | keymap-dump: don't write spaces between multiple-syms-per-level This can get a bit unwieldy. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 9de067aa | 2012-08-27 21:31:18 | compat: ignore "group" (compatibility) statements Group compatibility statements are like the following: group 3 = AltGr; This currently results in: keymap->groups[2].mask = <real mod mapped from AltGr vmod> And we don't do any thing with this value later. The reason it exists in XKB is to support non-XKB clients (i.e. XKB support disabled entirely in the server), which do not know the concept of "group", and use some modifier to distinguish between the first and second keyboard layouts (usually with the AltGr key). We don't care about all of that, so we can forget about it. One artifact of this removal is that xkb_map_num_groups no longer works, because it counted through keymap->groups (this wasn't entirely correct BTW). Instead we add a new num_groups member to the keymap, which just hold the maximum among the xkb_key's num_groups. This also means we don't have to compute anything just to get the number of groups. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 16f2de8b | 2012-08-14 16:26:30 | compat: ignore "locking" field in sym interprets This field is used in conjunction with key behaviors, which we don't support since c1ea23da5. This is also unused in xkeyboard-config. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 93f6517c | 2012-08-03 04:07:33 | stringcomp: Make test more punishing Recreate the old test/dump scenario, where we test the following map: - rules: evdev - model: pc104 - layout #1: us - layout #2: ru - layout #3: ca(multix) - layout #4: de(neo) This is ever so slightly altered from the xkbcomp output; running the following: setxkbmap -rules evdev -model pc105 -layout us,ru,ca,de -variant ,,multix,neo -print | xkbcomp -xkb - - will give you a map with RCTL added to the modifier_map for both Control and Mod3. Running the output through xkbcomp -xkb - - again, will give you RCTL only added to Mod3. Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org> | ||
| 39da9274 | 2012-08-03 03:38:46 | stringcomp: Update input file for output changes Bring the input file into line with recent changes to the dump output, so we're as close as we can get to a round trip. Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org> | ||
| e756e9b5 | 2012-08-03 04:02:31 | test/dump: Remove superfluous test No longer necessary now we have stringcomp doing a full round-trip test for us. Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org> | ||
| 6701fb5f | 2012-08-03 03:54:44 | stringcomp: Remove unnecessary Level1 mappings As a map will implicitly go to level one unless explicitly mentioned otherwise, remove all explicit =Level1 mappings, except for those with preserve entries. Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org> | ||
| a681c624 | 2012-08-07 08:17:26 | types: remove DeleteLevel1MapEntries If there is no map entry for some modifier combination, the default is to use level 1. The removed code is an optimization to save some space by removing these entries. But it doesn't actually save any space, and did not in fact remove all level 1 entries (it walks the array while modifying it so there's an off-by-one error). We can instead keep them in the types but just not print them in keymap-dump.c, to get about the same behavior. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| b0b11c4e | 2012-08-02 00:29:07 | types: don't use canonical/required types Xkb required every keymap to have at least the four following canonical types: ONE_LEVEL, TWO_LEVEL, ALPHABETIC, KEYPAD. This is specified in e.g. the kbproto spec and XkbKeyTypesForCoreSymbols(3) man page. If these types are not specified in the keymap, the code specifically checks for them and adds them to the 4 first places in the types array, such that they exist in every keymap. These are also the types (along with some non-required 4-level ones) that are automatically assigned to keys which do not explicitly declare a type (see FindAutomaticType in symbols.c, this commit doesn't touch these heuristics, whcih are also not very nice but necessary). The xkeyboard-config does not rely on the builtin xkbcomp definitions of these types and does specify them explicitly, in types/basic and types/numpad, which are virtually always included. This commit removes the special behavior: - The code is ugly and makes keytypes.c harder to read. - The code practically never gets run - everyone who uses xkeyboard-config or a keymap based upon it (i.e. everyone) doesn't need it. So it doesn't get tested. - It mixes policy with implementation for not very good reasons, it seems mostly for default compatibility with X11 core. - And of course we don't need to remain compatible with Xkb ABI neither. Instead, if we read a keymap with no types specified at all, we simply assign all keys a default one-level type (like ONE_LEVEL), and issue plenty of warnings to make it clear (with verbosity >= 3). Note that this default can actually be changed from within the keymap, by writing something like type.modifier = Shift type.whatever_field = value in the top level of the xkb_types section. (This functionality is completely unused as well today, BTW, but makes some sense). This change means that if someone writes a keymap from scratch and doesn't add say ALPHABETIC, then something like <AE11> = { [ q Q ]; }; will ignore the second level. But as stated above this should never happen. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| c6279b8b | 2012-07-23 21:21:03 | expr: don't divide by zero Calculator parser 101. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 3640e14d | 2012-07-13 00:39:34 | Add multiple-keysyms-per-level to test data Make sure this keeps on working. Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org> | ||
| a77e9a92 | 2012-07-13 00:12:57 | tests: Update dump.data for recent fixes Makes the test pass again. Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org> | ||
| f0599675 | 2012-07-11 16:16:20 | dump: add back kccgst names Readd the component names to the keymap->names struct. This is used when printing the component, e.g. xkb_keymap { xkb_keycodes "evdev+aliases(qwerty)" { instead of xkb_keymap { xkb_keycodes { This makes diffing against xkbcomp $DISPLAY a bit easier and is kind of useful anyway. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| fe5bfdf9 | 2012-07-11 16:35:43 | dump: a few more tweaks to match xkbcomp output Only uppercase / lowercase stuff. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 9e505225 | 2012-07-12 19:28:52 | symbols: fix bug in modifier_map handling The code used to match a keysym to a keycode (see added comment) differed in behavior from xkbcomp, always taking the first key it found. This caused some incorrect interpretation of the xkeyboard-config data, for example the one corrected in dump.data (see the diff): since the de-neo layout sets the both_capslock option, the Left Shift key (LFSH) has the Caps_Lock keysym in group 4 level 2; now since keycode(Left Shift) = 50 < keycode(Caps Lock) = 64 the Left Shift one was picked, instead of the Caps Lock one which is group 1 level 1. The correct behavior is to pick according to group, level, keycode. Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com> | ||
| 62deaeb5 | 2012-07-12 14:42:31 | Import dataset into test/data/ Use a self-contained dataset instead of relying on a globally-installed set. Data taken from xkeyboard-config 2.5.1. Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org> | ||
| 059c1842 | 2012-07-12 12:02:19 | Move test data files to test/data/keymaps Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org> |