5722 lines
187 KiB
Plaintext
5722 lines
187 KiB
Plaintext
.\" $Xorg: icccm.ms,v 1.3 2000/08/17 19:42:08 cpqbld Exp $
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.\" $XdotOrg: xc/doc/specs/ICCCM/icccm.ms,v 1.2 2004/04/23 18:42:15 eich Exp $
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.\" @(#)icccm.ms 1.50 16 Apr 1994 14:13:55
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.sp 8
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.ce 9999
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.B
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\s+2Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual\s0
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Version 2.0
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X Consortium Standard
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X Version 11, Release 6.8
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.R
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.ce 0
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.sp 6
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.ce 9999
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\s+1David Rosenthal\s0
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.sp 6p
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\s+1Sun Microsystems, Inc.\s0
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.sp 2
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\s+1Version 2 edited by Stuart W. Marks\s0
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.sp 6p
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\s+1SunSoft, Inc.\s0
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.ce 0
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.bp
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\&
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.ps 9
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.nr PS 9
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.sp 8
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.LP
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X Window System is a trademark of The Open Group
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.LP
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.LP
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Copyright \(co 1988, 1991, 1993, 1994
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X Consortium
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.LP
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
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a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
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"Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
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without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
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distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
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permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
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the following conditions:
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.LP
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
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in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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.LP
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
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OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
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MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
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IN NO EVENT SHALL THE X CONSORTIUM BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR
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OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
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ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
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OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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.LP
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Except as contained in this notice, the name of the X Consortium shall
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not be used in advertising or otherwise to promote the sale, use or
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other dealings in this Software without prior written authorization
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from the X Consortium.
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.LP
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.sp 2
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Copyright \(co 1987, 1988, 1989, 1993, 1994
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Sun Microsystems, Inc.
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.LP
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Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this documentation
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for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided
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that the above copyright notice and this permission
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notice appear in all copies.
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Sun Microsystems makes no representations about the
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suitability for any purpose of the information in this document.
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This documentation is provided as is without express or implied warranty.
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.ps 11
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.nr PS 11
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.af PN i
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.EF ''\\\\n(PN''
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.OF ''\\\\n(PN''
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.bp +4 \" the TOC is three pages long
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.\" force preface onto odd page
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.if e \{\
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\&
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.bp
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\}
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.cT "Preface to Version 2.0"
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.LP
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The goal of the ICCCM Version 2.0 effort was to add new facilities, to fix
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problems with earlier drafts, and to improve readability and
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understandability, while maintaining compatibility with the earlier
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versions. This document is the product of over two years of discussion among
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the members of the X Consortium's \fBwmtalk\fP working group. The following
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people deserve thanks for their contributions:
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.LP
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.Ds
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.ta 3i
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Gabe Beged-Dov Bill Janssen
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Chan Benson Vania Joloboff
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Jordan Brown Phil Karlton
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Larry Cable Kaleb Keithley
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Ellis Cohen Mark Manasse
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Donna Converse Ralph Mor
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Brian Cripe Todd Newman
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Susan Dahlberg Bob Scheifler
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Peter Daifuku Keith Taylor
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Andrew deBlois Jim VanGilder
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Clive Feather Mike Wexler
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Stephen Gildea Michael Yee
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Christian Jacobi
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.De
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.LP
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It has been a privilege for me to work with this fine group of people.
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.sp
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Stuart W. Marks
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.br
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December 1993
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.br
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.bp
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.cT "Preface to Version 1.1"
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.LP
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David Rosenthal had overall architectural responsibility
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for the conventions defined in this document;
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he wrote most of the text and edited the document,
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but its development has been a communal effort.
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The details were thrashed out in meetings at the January 1988 MIT X Conference
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and at the 1988 Summer Usenix conference,
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and through months (and megabytes) of argument
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on the
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.PN wmtalk
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mail alias.
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Thanks are due to everyone who contributed,
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and especially to the following people.
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.LP
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For the Selection section:
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.LP
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.Ds
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Jerry Farrell
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Phil Karlton
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Loretta Guarino Reid
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Mark Manasse
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Bob Scheifler
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.De
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.LP
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For the Cut-Buffer section:
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.LP
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.Ds
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Andrew Palay
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.De
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.LP
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For the Window and Session Manager sections:
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.LP
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.Ds
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.ta 3i
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Todd Brunhoff Matt Landau
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Ellis Cohen Mark Manasse
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Jim Fulton Bob Scheifler
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Hania Gajewska Ralph Swick
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Jordan Hubbard Mike Wexler
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Kerry Kimbrough Glenn Widener
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Audrey Ishizaki
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.De
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.LP
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For the Device Color Characterization section:
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.Ds
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Keith Packard
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.De
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.LP
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In addition, thanks are due to those who contributed to the public review:
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.LP
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.Ds
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.ta 3i
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Gary Combs John Irwin
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Errol Crary Vania Joloboff
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Nancy Cyprych John Laporta
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John Diamant Ken Lee
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Clive Feather Stuart Marks
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Burns Fisher Alan Mimms
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Richard Greco Colas Nahaboo
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Tim Greenwood Mark Patrick
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Kee Hinckley Steve Pitschke
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Brian Holt Brad Reed
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John Interrante John Thomas
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.De
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.bp 1
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.af PN 1
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.EH '\fBInter-Client Communication Conventions\fP''\fBX11, Release 6.8\fP'
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.OH '\fBInter-Client Communication Conventions\fP''\fBX11, Release 6.8\fP'
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.EF ''\fB % \fP''
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.OF ''\fB % \fP''
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.nH 1 Introduction
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.LP
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|
It was an explicit design goal of X Version 11 to specify mechanism,
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|
not policy.
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|
As a result,
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|
a client that converses with the server using the protocol defined
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|
by the \fIX Window System Protocol\fP, \fIVersion 11\fP may operate correctly
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in isolation but may not coexist properly with others sharing the same server.
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.LP
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|
Being a good citizen in the X Version 11 world involves adhering to
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conventions that govern inter-client communications in the following areas:
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.bP
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|
Selection mechanism
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.bP
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|
Cut buffers
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.bP
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|
Window manager
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.bP
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|
Session manager
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.bP
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|
Manipulation of shared resources
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.bP
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|
Device color characterization
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.LP
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|
This document proposes suitable conventions without attempting to enforce
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|
any particular user interface.
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|
To permit clients written in different languages to communicate,
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|
these conventions are expressed solely in terms of protocol operations,
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|
not in terms of their associated Xlib interfaces,
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|
which are probably more familiar.
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|
The binding of these operations to the Xlib interface for C
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and to the equivalent interfaces for other languages
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|
is the subject of other documents.
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|
.nH 2 "Evolution of the Conventions"
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.LP
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|
In the interests of timely acceptance,
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the \fIInter-Client Communication Conventions Manual\fP (ICCCM)
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covers only a minimal set of required conventions.
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|
These conventions will be added to and updated as appropriate,
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|
based on the experiences of the X Consortium.
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.LP
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|
As far as possible,
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|
these conventions are upwardly compatible with those in the February 25, 1988,
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|
draft that was distributed with the X Version 11, Release 2, of the software.
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|
In some areas,
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|
semantic problems were discovered with those conventions,
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|
and, thus, complete upward compatibility could not be assured.
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|
These areas are noted in the text and are summarized in Appendix A.
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.LP
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|
In the course of developing these conventions,
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|
a number of minor changes to the protocol were identified as desirable.
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|
They also are identified in the text, are summarized in Appendix B,
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|
and are offered as input to a future protocol revision process.
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|
If and when a protocol revision incorporating these changes is undertaken,
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|
it is anticipated that the ICCCM will need to be revised.
|
|
Because it is difficult to ensure that clients and servers are upgraded
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|
simultaneously,
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|
clients using the revised conventions should examine the minor protocol
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|
revision number and be prepared to use the older conventions
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when communicating with an older server.
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.LP
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It is expected that these revisions will ensure that clients using
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the conventions appropriate to protocol minor revision \fIn\fP
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will interoperate correctly with those that use the conventions
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appropriate to protocol minor revision \fIn\fP + 1 if the server supports both.
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.nH 2 Atoms
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.LP
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Many of the conventions use atoms.
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|
To assist the reader,
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the following sections attempt to amplify the description of atoms
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that is provided in the protocol specification.
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.nH 3 "What Are Atoms?"
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.LP
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At the conceptual level,
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atoms are unique names that clients can use to communicate information
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to each other.
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They can be thought of as a bundle of octets,
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like a string but without an encoding being specified.
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The elements are not necessarily ASCII characters,
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and no case folding happens.\**
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.FS
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The comment in the protocol specification for
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.PN InternAtom
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that ISO Latin-1 encoding should be used is in the nature of a convention;
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the server treats the string as a byte sequence.
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.FE
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.LP
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The protocol designers felt that passing these
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sequences of bytes back and forth across the wire would be too costly.
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Further, they thought it important that events
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as they appear on the wire have a fixed size (in fact, 32 bytes)
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and that because some events contain atoms, a fixed-size representation
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for them was needed.
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.LP
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To allow a fixed-size representation,
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a protocol request
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.Pn ( InternAtom )
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was provided to register a byte sequence with the server,
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which returns a 32-bit value (with the top three bits zero)
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that maps to the byte sequence.
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The inverse operator is also available
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.Pn ( GetAtomName ).
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.nH 3 "Predefined Atoms"
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.LP
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The protocol specifies a number of atoms as being predefined:
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.QP
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Predefined atoms are not strictly necessary
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and may not be useful in all environments,
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but they will eliminate many
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.PN InternAtom
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requests in most applications.
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Note that they are predefined only in the sense of having numeric values,
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not in the sense of having required semantics.
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.LP
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Predefined atoms are an implementation trick to avoid the cost of interning
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many of the atoms that are expected to be used during the startup phase
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of all applications.
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The results of the
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.PN Intern\%Atom
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requests, which require a handshake, can be assumed \fIa priori\fP.
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.LP
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Language interfaces should probably cache the atom-name mappings
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and get them only when required.
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The CLX interface, for instance, makes no distinction between predefined atoms
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and other atoms; all atoms are viewed as symbols at the interface.
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However, a CLX implementation will typically keep a symbol or atom cache
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and will typically initialize this cache with the predefined atoms.
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.nH 3 "Naming Conventions"
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.LP
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The built-in atoms are composed of uppercase ASCII characters with the
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logical words separated by an underscore character (_), for example,
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WM_ICON_NAME.
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The protocol specification recommends that atoms used
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for private vendor-specific reasons should begin with an underscore.
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To prevent conflicts among organizations,
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additional prefixes should be chosen
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(for example, _DEC_WM_DECORATION_GEOMETRY).
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.LP
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The names were chosen in this fashion to make it easy to use them in a
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natural way within LISP.
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Keyword constructors allow the programmer to specify the atoms as LISP atoms.
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If the atoms were not all uppercase,
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special quoting conventions would have to be used.
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.nH 3 Semantics
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.LP
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The core protocol imposes no semantics on atoms except as they are used in
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FONTPROP structures.
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For further information on FONTPROP semantics,
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see the \fIX Logical Font Description Conventions\fP.
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.nH 3 "Name Spaces"
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.LP
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The protocol defines six distinct spaces in which atoms are interpreted.
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Any particular atom may or may not have some valid interpretation
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with respect to each of these name spaces.
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.br
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.ne 6
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.TS H
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l l lw(3.6i).
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_
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.sp 6p
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.B
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Space Briefly Examples
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.sp 6p
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_
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.sp 6p
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.TH
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.R
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Property name Name WM_HINTS, WM_NAME, RGB_BEST_MAP, .\^.\^.
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Property type Type WM_HINTS, CURSOR, RGB_COLOR_MAP, .\^.\^.
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Selection name Selection PRIMARY, SECONDARY, CLIPBOARD
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Selection target Target FILE_NAME, POSTSCRIPT, PIXMAP, .\^.\^.
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Font property QUAD_WIDTH, POINT_SIZE, .\^.\^.
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T{
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.PN ClientMessage
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type
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T} T{
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T} T{
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WM_SAVE_YOURSELF, _DEC_SAVE_EDITS, \&.\^.\^.
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T}
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.sp 6p
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_
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.TE
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.nH 3 "Discriminated Names"
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.LP
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Sometimes a protocol requires an arbitrary number of similar
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objects that need unique names (usually because the objects are created
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dynamically, so that names cannot be invented in advance). For example, a
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colormap-generating program might use the selection mechanism to offer
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colormaps for each screen and so needs a selection name for each screen.
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Such names are called \*Qdiscriminated names\*U and are discriminated by
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some entity. This entity can be:
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.DS
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A screen
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An X resource (a window, a colormap, a visual, etc.)
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A client
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.DE
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.LP
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If it is only necessary to generate a fixed set of names for each value
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of the discriminating entity, then the discriminated names are formed by
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suffixing an ordinary name according to the value of the entity.
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.LP
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If \fIname\fP is a descriptive portion for the name, \fId\fP is a decimal
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number with no leading zeroes, and \fIx\fP is a hexadecimal number with
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exactly 8 digits, and using uppercase letters, then such discriminated names
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shall have the form:
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.br
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.ne 6
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.TS
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lB lB lB
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l l l .
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_
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.sp 6p
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Name Discriminated by Form Example
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.sp 6p
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_
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.sp 6p
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screen number \fIname\fP_S\fId\fP WM_COMMS_S2
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X resource \fIname\fP_R\fIx\fP GROUP_LEADER_R1234ABCD
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.sp 6p
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_
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.TE
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.LP
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To discriminate a name by client, use an X resource ID created by that
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client. This resource can be of any type.
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.LP
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Sometimes it is simply necessary to generate a unique set of names (for
|
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example, for the properties on a window used by a MULTIPLE selection).
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These names should have the form:
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.DS
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.ta 2i
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U\fId\fP (e.g., U0 U1 U2 U3 .\^.\^.)
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.DE
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.LP
|
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if the names stand totally alone, and the form:
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.DS
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.ta 2i
|
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\fIname\fP_U\fId\fP (e.g., FOO_U0 BAR_U0 FOO_U1 BAR_U1 .\^.\^.)
|
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.DE
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.LP
|
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if they come in sets (here there are two sets, named \*QFOO\*U and
|
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\*QBAR\*U). The stand-alone U\fId\fP form should be used only if it is
|
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clear that the module using it has complete control over the relevant
|
|
namespace or has the active cooperation of all other entities that might
|
|
also use these names. (Naming properties on a window created specifically
|
|
for a particular selection is such a use; naming properties on the root
|
|
window is almost certainly not.)
|
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.LP
|
|
In a particularly difficult case, it might be necessary to combine both
|
|
forms of discrimination. If this happens, the U form should come after
|
|
the other form, thus:
|
|
.DS
|
|
FOO_R12345678_U23
|
|
.DE
|
|
.NT Rationale
|
|
Existing protocols will not be changed to use these naming conventions,
|
|
because doing so will cause too much disruption. However, it is expected
|
|
that future protocols \(em both standard and private \(em will use these
|
|
conventions.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 1 "Peer-to-Peer Communication by Means of Selections"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Selections are the primary mechanism that X Version 11 defines
|
|
for the exchange of information between clients,
|
|
for example, by cutting and pasting between windows.
|
|
Note that there can be an arbitrary number of selections
|
|
(each named by an atom) and that they are global to the server.
|
|
Section 2.6 discusses the choice of an atom.
|
|
Each selection is owned by a client and is attached to a window.
|
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.LP
|
|
Selections communicate between an owner and a requestor.
|
|
The owner has the data representing the value of its selection,
|
|
and the requestor receives it.
|
|
A requestor wishing to obtain the value of a selection provides the following:
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.bP
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The name of the selection
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.bP
|
|
The name of a property
|
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.bP
|
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A window
|
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.bP
|
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The atom representing the data type required
|
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.bP
|
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Optionally, some parameters for the request
|
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.LP
|
|
If the selection is currently owned,
|
|
the owner receives an event and is expected to do the following:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Convert the contents of the selection to the requested data type
|
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.bP
|
|
Place this data in the named property on the named window
|
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.bP
|
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Send the requestor an event to let it know the property is available
|
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.LP
|
|
Clients are strongly encouraged to use this mechanism.
|
|
In particular,
|
|
displaying text in a permanent window without providing the ability
|
|
to select and convert it into a string is definitely considered antisocial.
|
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.LP
|
|
Note that all data transferred between an owner and a requestor must usually
|
|
go by means of the server in an X Version 11 environment.
|
|
A client cannot assume that another client can open the same files
|
|
or even communicate directly.
|
|
The other client may be talking to the server by means of
|
|
a completely different networking mechanism (for example, one client might
|
|
be DECnet and the other TCP/IP).
|
|
Thus, passing indirect references to data
|
|
(such as, file names, host names, and port numbers)
|
|
is permitted only if both clients specifically agree.
|
|
.nH 2 "Acquiring Selection Ownership"
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client wishing to acquire ownership of a particular selection
|
|
should call
|
|
.PN SetSelectionOwner,
|
|
which is defined as follows:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.sM
|
|
.IN "SetSelectionOwner" "" "@DEF@"
|
|
.PN SetSelectionOwner
|
|
.IP "" .2i
|
|
\fIselection\fP\^: ATOM
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIowner\fP\^: WINDOW or
|
|
.PN None
|
|
.br
|
|
\fItime\fP\^: TIMESTAMP or
|
|
.PN CurrentTime
|
|
.LP
|
|
.eM
|
|
.LP
|
|
The client should set the specified selection to the atom that represents
|
|
the selection,
|
|
set the specified owner to some window that the client created,
|
|
and set the specified time to some time between the current last-change time
|
|
of the selection concerned and the current server time.
|
|
This time value usually will be obtained from the timestamp of the event
|
|
that triggers the acquisition of the selection.
|
|
Clients should not set the time
|
|
value to
|
|
.PN CurrentTime ,
|
|
because if they do so, they have no way of finding
|
|
when they gained ownership of the selection.
|
|
Clients must use a window they created so that requestors
|
|
can route events to the owner of the selection.\**
|
|
.FS
|
|
At present, no part of the protocol requires requestors
|
|
to send events to the owner of a selection.
|
|
This restriction is imposed to prepare for possible future extensions.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients attempting to acquire a selection must set the time value of the
|
|
.PN Set\%Selection\%Owner
|
|
request to the timestamp of the event triggering the acquisition attempt,
|
|
not to
|
|
.PN CurrentTime .
|
|
A zero-length append to a property is a way to obtain a timestamp for
|
|
this purpose;
|
|
the timestamp is in the corresponding
|
|
.PN Property\%Notify
|
|
event.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the time in the
|
|
.PN SetSelectionOwner
|
|
request is in the future relative to the server's current time
|
|
or is in the past relative to the last time the specified selection
|
|
changed hands, the
|
|
.PN SetSelectionOwner
|
|
request appears to the client to succeed,
|
|
but ownership is not actually transferred.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Because clients cannot name other clients directly,
|
|
the specified owner window is used to refer to the owning client
|
|
in the replies to
|
|
.PN GetSelectionOwner ,
|
|
in
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest
|
|
and
|
|
.PN SelectionClear
|
|
events, and possibly as a place to put properties describing the selection
|
|
in question.
|
|
To discover the owner of a particular selection,
|
|
a client should invoke
|
|
.PN GetSelectionOwner ,
|
|
which is defined as follows:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.sM
|
|
.IN "GetSelectionOwner" "" "@DEF@"
|
|
.PN GetSelectionOwner
|
|
.IP "" .2i
|
|
\fIselection\fP\^: ATOM
|
|
.LP
|
|
\(->
|
|
.IP "" .2i
|
|
owner: WINDOW or
|
|
.PN None
|
|
.LP
|
|
.eM
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients are expected to provide some visible confirmation
|
|
of selection ownership.
|
|
To make this feedback reliable,
|
|
a client must perform a sequence like the following:
|
|
.sp
|
|
.Ds 0
|
|
SetSelectionOwner(selection=PRIMARY, owner=Window, time=timestamp)
|
|
owner = GetSelectionOwner(selection=PRIMARY)
|
|
if (owner != Window) Failure
|
|
.De
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the
|
|
.PN SetSelectionOwner
|
|
request succeeds (not merely appears to succeed),
|
|
the client that issues it is recorded by the server as being the owner
|
|
of the selection for the time period starting at the specified time.
|
|
.nH 2 "Responsibilities of the Selection Owner"
|
|
.LP
|
|
When a requestor wants the value of a selection,
|
|
the owner receives a
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest
|
|
event, which is defined as follows:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.sM
|
|
.IN "SelectionRequest" "" "@DEF@"
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest
|
|
.IP "" .2i
|
|
\fIowner\fP\^: WINDOW
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIselection\fP\^: ATOM
|
|
.br
|
|
\fItarget\fP\^: ATOM
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIproperty\fP\^: ATOM or
|
|
.PN None
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIrequestor\fP\^: WINDOW
|
|
.br
|
|
\fItime\fP\^: TIMESTAMP or
|
|
.PN CurrentTime
|
|
.LP
|
|
.eM
|
|
.LP
|
|
The specified owner and selection will be the values that were specified in
|
|
the
|
|
.PN SetSelection\%Owner
|
|
request.
|
|
The owner should compare the timestamp with the period
|
|
it has owned the selection and, if the time is outside,
|
|
refuse the
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest
|
|
by sending the requestor window a
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
event with the property set to
|
|
.PN None
|
|
(by means of a
|
|
.PN SendEvent
|
|
request with an empty event mask).
|
|
.LP
|
|
More advanced selection owners are free to maintain a history
|
|
of the value of the selection and to respond to requests for the
|
|
value of the selection during periods they owned it
|
|
even though they do not own it now.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the specified property is
|
|
.PN None ,
|
|
the requestor is an obsolete client.
|
|
Owners are encouraged to support these clients by using the specified target
|
|
atom as the property name to be used for the reply.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Otherwise,
|
|
the owner should use the target to decide the form into which the selection
|
|
should be converted.
|
|
Some targets may be defined such that requestors can pass parameters
|
|
along with the request. The owner will find these parameters in the
|
|
property named in the selection request. The type, format, and
|
|
contents of this property are dependent upon the definition of the
|
|
target. If the target is not defined to have parameters, the owner
|
|
should ignore the property if it is present.
|
|
If the selection cannot be converted
|
|
into a form based on the target (and parameters, if any),
|
|
the owner should refuse the
|
|
.PN Selection\%Request
|
|
as previously described.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the specified property is not
|
|
.PN None ,
|
|
the owner should place the data resulting from converting the selection
|
|
into the specified property on the requestor window
|
|
and should set the property's type to some appropriate value,
|
|
which need not be the same as the specified target.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
All properties used to reply to
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest
|
|
events must be placed on the requestor window.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
In either case,
|
|
if the data comprising the selection cannot be stored on the requestor window
|
|
(for example, because the server cannot provide sufficient memory),
|
|
the owner must refuse the
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest ,
|
|
as previously described.
|
|
See also section 2.5.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the property is successfully stored,
|
|
the owner should acknowledge the successful conversion
|
|
by sending the requestor window a
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
event (by means of a
|
|
.PN SendEvent
|
|
request with an empty mask).
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
is defined as follows:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.sM
|
|
.IN "SelectionNotify" "" "@DEF@"
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
.IP "" .2i
|
|
\fIrequestor\fP\^: WINDOW
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIselection\fP, \fItarget\fP\^: ATOM
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIproperty\fP\^: ATOM or
|
|
.PN None
|
|
.br
|
|
\fItime\fP\^: TIMESTAMP or
|
|
.PN CurrentTime
|
|
.LP
|
|
.eM
|
|
.LP
|
|
The owner should set the specified selection, target, time,
|
|
and property arguments to the values received in the
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest
|
|
event.
|
|
(Note that setting the property argument to
|
|
.PN None
|
|
indicates that the conversion requested could not be made.)
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
The selection, target, time, and property arguments in the
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
event should be set to the values received in the
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest
|
|
event.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the owner receives more than one
|
|
.PN Selection\%Request
|
|
event with the same requestor, selection, target, and timestamp it must
|
|
respond to them in the same order in which they were received.
|
|
.NT Rationale
|
|
It is possible for a requestor to have multiple outstanding requests that
|
|
use the same requestor window, selection, target, and timestamp, and that
|
|
differ only in the property. If this occurs, and one of the conversion
|
|
requests fails, the resulting
|
|
.PN Selection\%Notify
|
|
event will have its property argument set to
|
|
.PN None .
|
|
This may make it impossible for the requestor to determine which conversion
|
|
request had failed, unless the requests are responded to in order.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The data stored in the property must eventually be deleted.
|
|
A convention is needed to assign the responsibility for doing so.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Selection requestors are responsible for deleting properties whose
|
|
names they receive in
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
events (see section 2.4) or in properties with type MULTIPLE.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
A selection owner will often need confirmation that the data comprising the
|
|
selection has actually been transferred.
|
|
(For example,
|
|
if the operation has side effects on the owner's internal data structures,
|
|
these should not take place until the requestor has indicated
|
|
that it has successfully received the data.)
|
|
Owners should express interest in
|
|
.PN PropertyNotify
|
|
events for the specified requestor window
|
|
and wait until the property in the
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
event has been deleted before assuming that the selection data has been
|
|
transferred. For the MULTIPLE request, if the different conversions require
|
|
separate confirmation, the selection owner can also watch for the deletion
|
|
of the individual properties named in the property in the
|
|
.PN Selection\%Notify
|
|
event.
|
|
.LP
|
|
When some other client acquires a selection,
|
|
the previous owner receives a
|
|
.PN SelectionClear
|
|
event, which is defined as follows:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.sM
|
|
.IN "SelectionClear" "" "@DEF@"
|
|
.PN SelectionClear
|
|
.IP "" .2i
|
|
\fIowner\fP\^: WINDOW
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIselection\fP\^: ATOM
|
|
.br
|
|
\fItime\fP\^: TIMESTAMP
|
|
.LP
|
|
.eM
|
|
.LP
|
|
The timestamp argument is the time at which the ownership changed hands,
|
|
and the owner argument is the window the previous owner specified in its
|
|
.PN SetSelectionOwner
|
|
request.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If an owner loses ownership while it has a transfer in progress (that is,
|
|
before it receives notification that the requestor has received all the data),
|
|
it must continue to service the ongoing transfer until it is complete.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the selection value completely changes, but the owner happens
|
|
to be the same client (for example, selecting a totally different
|
|
piece of text in the same \fBxterm\fP as before), then the client should
|
|
reacquire the selection ownership as if it were not the owner,
|
|
providing a new timestamp. If the selection value is modified, but
|
|
can still reasonably be viewed as the same selected object,\** the
|
|
owner should take no action.
|
|
.FS
|
|
The division between these two cases is a matter of judgment
|
|
on the part of the software developer.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.nH 2 "Giving Up Selection Ownership"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients may either give up selection ownership voluntarily
|
|
or lose it forcibly as the result of some other client's actions.
|
|
.nH 3 "Voluntarily Giving Up Selection Ownership"
|
|
.LP
|
|
To relinquish ownership of a selection voluntarily,
|
|
a client should execute a
|
|
.PN SetSelection\%Owner
|
|
request for that selection atom, with owner specified as
|
|
.PN None
|
|
and the time specified as the timestamp that was used to acquire the selection.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Alternatively,
|
|
the client may destroy the window used as the owner value of the
|
|
.PN SetSelection\%Owner
|
|
request, or the client may terminate.
|
|
In both cases,
|
|
the ownership of the selection involved will revert to
|
|
.PN None .
|
|
.nH 3 "Forcibly Giving Up Selection Ownership"
|
|
.LP
|
|
If a client gives up ownership of a selection
|
|
or if some other client executes a
|
|
.PN SetSelection\%Owner
|
|
for it and thus reassigns it forcibly,
|
|
the previous owner will receive a
|
|
.PN Selection\%Clear
|
|
event. For the definition of a
|
|
.PN Selection\%Clear
|
|
event, see section 2.2.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The timestamp is the time the selection changed hands.
|
|
The specified owner is the window that was specified by the current owner
|
|
in its
|
|
.PN SetSelectionOwner
|
|
request.
|
|
.nH 2 "Requesting a Selection"
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client that wishes to obtain the value of a selection in a particular
|
|
form (the requestor) issues a
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
request, which is defined as follows:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.sM
|
|
.IN "ConvertSelection" "" "@DEF@"
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
.IP "" .2i
|
|
\fIselection\fP, \fItarget\fP\^: ATOM
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIproperty\fP\^: ATOM or
|
|
.PN None
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIrequestor\fP\^: WINDOW
|
|
.br
|
|
\fItime\fP\^: TIMESTAMP or
|
|
.PN CurrentTime
|
|
.LP
|
|
.eM
|
|
.LP
|
|
The selection argument specifies the particular selection involved,
|
|
and the target argument specifies the required form of the information.
|
|
For information about the choice of suitable atoms to use,
|
|
see section 2.6.
|
|
The requestor should set the requestor argument to a window that it created;
|
|
the owner will place the reply property there.
|
|
The requestor should set the time argument to the timestamp on the event
|
|
that triggered the request for the selection value.
|
|
Note that clients should not specify
|
|
.PN CurrentTime .
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients should not use
|
|
.PN CurrentTime
|
|
for the time argument of a
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
request.
|
|
Instead, they should use the timestamp of the event that caused the request
|
|
to be made.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The requestor should set the property argument to the name of a property
|
|
that the owner can use to report the value of the selection.
|
|
Requestors should ensure that the named property does not exist
|
|
on the window before issuing the
|
|
.PN Convert\%Selection
|
|
request.\** The exception to this rule is when the requestor intends to pass
|
|
parameters with the request (see below).
|
|
.NT Rationale
|
|
It is necessary for requestors to delete the property before issuing the
|
|
request so that the target can later be extended to take parameters without
|
|
introducing an incompatibility. Also note that the requestor of a selection
|
|
need not know the client that owns the selection nor the window on which
|
|
the selection was acquired.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.FS
|
|
This requirement is new in version 2.0, and, in general, existing
|
|
clients do not conform to this requirement. To prevent these clients
|
|
from breaking, no existing targets should be extended to take
|
|
parameters until sufficient time has passed for clients to be updated.
|
|
Note that the MULTIPLE target was defined to take parameters in version
|
|
1.0 and its definition is not changing. There is thus no conformance
|
|
problem with MULTIPLE.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Some targets may be defined such that requestors can pass parameters
|
|
along with the request. If the requestor wishes to provide parameters
|
|
to a request, they should be placed in the specified property on the
|
|
requestor window before the requestor issues the
|
|
.PN Convert\%Selection
|
|
request, and this property should be named in the request.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Some targets may be defined so that parameters are optional. If no
|
|
parameters are to be supplied with the request of such a target, the
|
|
requestor must ensure that the property does not exist before issuing
|
|
the
|
|
.PN Convert\%Selection
|
|
request.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The protocol allows the property field to be set to
|
|
.PN None ,
|
|
in which case the owner is supposed to choose a property name.
|
|
However, it is difficult for the owner to make this choice safely.
|
|
.NT Conventions
|
|
.IP 1. 5
|
|
Requestors should not use
|
|
.PN None
|
|
for the property argument of a
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
request.
|
|
.IP 2. 5
|
|
Owners receiving
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
requests with a property argument of
|
|
.PN None
|
|
are talking to an obsolete client.
|
|
They should choose the target atom as the property name to be used
|
|
for the reply.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The result of the
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
request is that a
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
event will be received.
|
|
For the definition of a
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
event, see section 2.2.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The requestor, selection, time, and target arguments will be the same
|
|
as those on the
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
request.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the property argument is
|
|
.PN None ,
|
|
the conversion has been refused.
|
|
This can mean either that there is no owner for the selection,
|
|
that the owner does not support the conversion implied by the target,
|
|
or that the server did not have sufficient space to accommodate the data.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the property argument is not
|
|
.PN None ,
|
|
then that property will exist on the requestor window.
|
|
The value of the selection can be retrieved from this
|
|
property by using the
|
|
.PN GetProperty
|
|
request, which is defined as follows:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.sM
|
|
.IN "GetProperty" "" "@DEF@"
|
|
.PN GetProperty
|
|
.IP "" .2i
|
|
\fIwindow\fP\^: WINDOW
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIproperty\fP\^: ATOM
|
|
.br
|
|
\fItype\fP\^: ATOM or
|
|
.PN AnyPropertyType
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIlong-offset\fP, \fIlong-length\fP\^: CARD32
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIdelete\fP\^: BOOL
|
|
.LP
|
|
\(->
|
|
.IP "" .2i
|
|
type: ATOM or
|
|
.PN None
|
|
.br
|
|
format: {0, 8, 16, 32}
|
|
.br
|
|
bytes-after: CARD32
|
|
.br
|
|
value: LISTofINT8 or LISTofINT16 or LISTofINT32
|
|
.LP
|
|
.eM
|
|
.LP
|
|
When using
|
|
.PN GetProperty
|
|
to retrieve the value of a selection,
|
|
the property argument should be set to the corresponding value in the
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
event.
|
|
Because the requestor has no way of knowing beforehand what type
|
|
the selection owner will use,
|
|
the type argument should be set to
|
|
.PN AnyPropertyType .
|
|
Several
|
|
.PN GetProperty
|
|
requests may be needed to retrieve all the data in the selection;
|
|
each should set the long-offset argument to the amount of data received so far,
|
|
and the size argument to some reasonable buffer size (see section 2.5).
|
|
If the returned value of bytes-after is zero,
|
|
the whole property has been transferred.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Once all the data in the selection has been retrieved
|
|
(which may require getting the values of several properties \(em
|
|
see section 2.7),
|
|
the requestor should delete the property in the
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
request by using a
|
|
.PN GetProperty
|
|
request with the delete argument set to
|
|
.PN True .
|
|
As previously discussed,
|
|
the owner has no way of knowing when the data has been
|
|
transferred to the requestor unless the property is removed.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
The requestor must delete the property named in the
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
once all the data has been retrieved.
|
|
The requestor should invoke either
|
|
.PN DeleteProperty
|
|
or
|
|
.PN GetProperty (delete==True)
|
|
after it has successfully retrieved all the data in the selection.
|
|
For further information,
|
|
see section 2.5.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 2 "Large Data Transfers"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Selections can get large, which poses two problems:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Transferring large amounts of data to the server is expensive.
|
|
.bP
|
|
All servers will have limits on the amount of data that can be stored
|
|
in properties.
|
|
Exceeding this limit will result in an
|
|
.PN Alloc
|
|
error on the
|
|
.PN ChangeProperty
|
|
request that the selection owner uses to store the data.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The problem of limited server resources is addressed by the following
|
|
conventions:
|
|
.NT Conventions
|
|
.IP 1. 5
|
|
Selection owners should transfer the data describing a large selection
|
|
(relative to the maximum-request-size they received
|
|
in the connection handshake) using the INCR property mechanism
|
|
(see section 2.7.2).
|
|
.IP 2. 5
|
|
Any client using
|
|
.PN SetSelectionOwner
|
|
to acquire selection ownership should arrange to process
|
|
.PN Alloc
|
|
errors in property change requests.
|
|
For clients using Xlib,
|
|
this involves using the
|
|
.PN XSetErrorHandler
|
|
function to override the default handler.
|
|
.IP 3. 5
|
|
A selection owner must confirm that no
|
|
.PN Alloc
|
|
error occurred while storing the properties for a selection
|
|
before replying with a confirming
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
event.
|
|
.IP 4. 5
|
|
When storing large amounts of data (relative to maximum-request-size),
|
|
clients should use a sequence of
|
|
.PN ChangeProperty (mode==Append)
|
|
requests for reasonable quantities of data.
|
|
This avoids locking servers up and limits the waste of data an
|
|
.PN Alloc
|
|
error would cause.
|
|
.IP 5. 5
|
|
If an
|
|
.PN Alloc
|
|
error occurs during the storing of the selection data,
|
|
all properties stored for this selection should be deleted
|
|
and the
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
request should be refused (see section 2.2).
|
|
.IP 6. 5
|
|
To avoid locking servers up for inordinate lengths of time,
|
|
requestors retrieving large quantities of data from a property
|
|
should perform a series of
|
|
.PN GetProperty
|
|
requests, each asking for a reasonable amount of data.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.NT "Advice to Implementors"
|
|
Single-threaded servers should take care to avoid locking up during large
|
|
data transfers.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 2 "Use of Selection Atoms"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Defining a new atom consumes resources in the server
|
|
that are not released until the server reinitializes.
|
|
Thus, reducing the need for newly minted atoms is an important goal
|
|
for the use of the selection atoms.
|
|
.nH 3 "Selection Atoms"
|
|
.LP
|
|
There can be an arbitrary number of selections, each named by an atom.
|
|
To conform with the inter-client conventions, however,
|
|
clients need deal with only these three selections:
|
|
.bP
|
|
PRIMARY
|
|
.bP
|
|
SECONDARY
|
|
.bP
|
|
CLIPBOARD
|
|
.LP
|
|
Other selections may be used freely for private communication among
|
|
related groups of clients.
|
|
.nH 4 "The PRIMARY Selection"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The selection named by the atom PRIMARY is used for all commands
|
|
that take only a single argument and is the principal means of communication
|
|
between clients that use the selection mechanism.
|
|
.nH 4 "The SECONDARY Selection"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The selection named by the atom SECONDARY is used:
|
|
.bP
|
|
As the second argument to commands taking two arguments
|
|
(for example, \*Qexchange primary and secondary selections\*U)
|
|
.bP
|
|
As a means of obtaining data when there is a primary selection
|
|
and the user does not want to disturb it
|
|
.nH 4 "The CLIPBOARD Selection"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The selection named by the atom CLIPBOARD is used to hold data
|
|
that is being transferred between clients,
|
|
that is, data that usually is being cut and then pasted
|
|
or copied and then pasted.
|
|
Whenever a client wants to transfer data to the clipboard:
|
|
.bP
|
|
It should assert ownership of the CLIPBOARD.
|
|
.bP
|
|
If it succeeds in acquiring ownership,
|
|
it should be prepared to respond to a request for the contents of the CLIPBOARD
|
|
in the usual way (retaining the data to be able to return it).
|
|
The request may be generated by the clipboard client described below.
|
|
.bP
|
|
If it fails to acquire ownership,
|
|
a cutting client should not actually perform the cut or provide feedback
|
|
that would suggest that it has actually transferred data to the clipboard.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The owner should repeat this process whenever the data to be transferred
|
|
would change.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients wanting to paste data from the clipboard should request
|
|
the contents of the CLIPBOARD selection in the usual way.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Except while a client is actually deleting or copying data,
|
|
the owner of the CLIPBOARD selection may be a single, special client
|
|
implemented for the purpose.
|
|
This client maintains the content of the clipboard up-to-date
|
|
and responds to requests for data from the clipboard as follows:
|
|
.bP
|
|
It should assert ownership of the CLIPBOARD selection
|
|
and reassert it any time the clipboard data changes.
|
|
.bP
|
|
If it loses the selection (because another client has some new data
|
|
for the clipboard),
|
|
it should:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
Obtain the contents of the selection from the new owner by using the timestamp
|
|
in the
|
|
.PN SelectionClear
|
|
event.
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
Attempt to reassert ownership of the CLIPBOARD selection
|
|
by using the same timestamp.
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
Restart the process using a newly acquired timestamp if this attempt fails.
|
|
This timestamp should be obtained by asking the current owner of the
|
|
CLIPBOARD selection to convert it to a TIMESTAMP.
|
|
If this conversion is refused or if the same timestamp is received twice,
|
|
the clipboard client should acquire a fresh timestamp in the
|
|
usual way (for example by a zero-length append to a property).
|
|
.RE
|
|
.bP
|
|
It should respond to requests for the CLIPBOARD contents in the usual way.
|
|
.LP
|
|
A special CLIPBOARD client is not necessary.
|
|
The protocol used by the cutting client and the pasting client
|
|
is the same whether the CLIPBOARD client is running or not.
|
|
The reasons for running the special client include:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Stability \- If the cutting client were to crash or terminate,
|
|
the clipboard value would still be available.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Feedback \- The clipboard client can display the contents of the clipboard.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Simplicity \- A client deleting data does not have to retain it for so long,
|
|
thus reducing the chance of race conditions causing problems.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The reasons not to run the clipboard client include:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Performance \- Data is transferred only if it is actually required
|
|
(that is, when some client actually wants the data).
|
|
.bP
|
|
Flexibility \- The clipboard data may be available as more than one target.
|
|
.nH 3 "Target Atoms"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The atom that a requestor supplies as the target of a
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
request determines the form of the data supplied.
|
|
The set of such atoms is extensible,
|
|
but a generally accepted base set of target atoms is needed.
|
|
As a starting point for this,
|
|
the following table contains those that have been suggested so far.
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.\" This table has very tricky formatting. Several targets are too long to
|
|
.\" fit, so the table format needs to change around them. If the table
|
|
.\" format changes, it will need to be changed in several places. There are
|
|
.\" also two footnotes in this table, but the footnote text can't be
|
|
.\" embedded in the table. This means that the auto-numbering needs to be
|
|
.\" dinked around with after the end of the table.
|
|
.TS H
|
|
lw(1.8i) lw(1i) lw(3i) .
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Atom Type Data Received
|
|
.R
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.T&
|
|
l s s .
|
|
ADOBE_PORTABLE_DOCUMENT_FORMAT
|
|
.T&
|
|
lw(1.8i) lw(1i) lw(3i) .
|
|
STRING T{
|
|
[1]
|
|
T}
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
APPLE_PICT APPLE_PICT T{
|
|
[2]
|
|
T}
|
|
BACKGROUND PIXEL A list of pixel values
|
|
BITMAP BITMAP A list of bitmap IDs
|
|
CHARACTER_POSITION SPAN T{
|
|
The start and end of the selection in bytes
|
|
T}
|
|
CLASS TEXT (see section 4.1.2.5)
|
|
CLIENT_WINDOW WINDOW T{
|
|
Any top-level window owned by the selection owner
|
|
T}
|
|
COLORMAP COLORMAP A list of colormap IDs
|
|
COLUMN_NUMBER SPAN T{
|
|
The start and end column numbers
|
|
T}
|
|
COMPOUND_TEXT COMPOUND_TEXT Compound Text
|
|
DELETE NULL (see section 2.6.3.1)
|
|
DRAWABLE DRAWABLE A list of drawable IDs
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.T&
|
|
l s s .
|
|
ENCAPSULATED_POSTSCRIPT
|
|
.T&
|
|
lw(1.8i) lw(1i) lw(3i) .
|
|
STRING T{
|
|
[3], Appendix H\|\**
|
|
T}
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.T&
|
|
l s s .
|
|
ENCAPSULATED_POSTSCRIPT_INTERCHANGE
|
|
.T&
|
|
lw(1.8i) lw(1i) lw(3i) .
|
|
STRING T{
|
|
[3], Appendix H
|
|
T}
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
FILE_NAME TEXT The full path name of a file
|
|
FOREGROUND PIXEL T{
|
|
A list of pixel values
|
|
T}
|
|
HOST_NAME TEXT (see section 4.1.2.9)
|
|
INSERT_PROPERTY NULL (see section 2.6.3.3)
|
|
INSERT_SELECTION NULL (see section 2.6.3.2)
|
|
LENGTH INTEGER T{
|
|
The number of bytes in the selection\|\**
|
|
T}
|
|
LINE_NUMBER SPAN T{
|
|
The start and end line numbers
|
|
T}
|
|
LIST_LENGTH INTEGER T{
|
|
The number of disjoint parts of the selection
|
|
T}
|
|
MODULE TEXT T{
|
|
The name of the selected procedure
|
|
T}
|
|
MULTIPLE ATOM_PAIR T{
|
|
(see the discussion that follows)
|
|
T}
|
|
NAME TEXT (see section 4.1.2.1)
|
|
ODIF TEXT T{
|
|
ISO Office Document Interchange Format
|
|
T}
|
|
OWNER_OS TEXT T{
|
|
The operating system of the owner client
|
|
T}
|
|
PIXMAP T{
|
|
PIXMAP\|\**
|
|
T} T{
|
|
A list of pixmap IDs
|
|
T}
|
|
POSTSCRIPT STRING T{
|
|
[3]
|
|
T}
|
|
PROCEDURE TEXT T{
|
|
The name of the selected procedure
|
|
T}
|
|
PROCESS INTEGER, TEXT T{
|
|
The process ID of the owner
|
|
T}
|
|
STRING STRING ISO Latin-1 (+TAB+NEWLINE) text
|
|
TARGETS ATOM A list of valid target atoms
|
|
TASK INTEGER, TEXT T{
|
|
The task ID of the owner
|
|
T}
|
|
TEXT TEXT T{
|
|
The text in the owner's choice of encoding
|
|
T}
|
|
TIMESTAMP INTEGER T{
|
|
The timestamp used to acquire the selection
|
|
T}
|
|
USER TEXT T{
|
|
The name of the user running the owner
|
|
T}
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.\" Conditionalized on groff because
|
|
.\" groff keeps track of footnotes and fn references separately,
|
|
.\" so resetting isn't necessary (and referencing \n* gives a warning).
|
|
.if !\n(GS .nr * \n*-3 \" decrement by the number of footnotes in the table
|
|
.if 0 \{\
|
|
HACK! There are several footnotes in the table above, each marked with the
|
|
construct "\**". The actual footnote text is here, because I haven't found
|
|
a way to place it within the table itself. This causes a numbering problem,
|
|
because each \** increments the footnote counter (number register *) and the
|
|
FS macro uses its current value. To get around this, we decrement the *
|
|
register by the number of footnotes in the table. Then, before calling each
|
|
FS macro, we increment the register.
|
|
|
|
Also note that footnotes must appear within the T{ T} construct in tables.
|
|
If they don't, strange numbering problems will result, probably as a result
|
|
of multiple evaluation.
|
|
\}
|
|
.\" These footnotes are in the wrong order because Sun tbl numbers the
|
|
.\" footnote references wrong in the above table. Thus this doesn't
|
|
.\" do the right thing with gtbl, which gets the order right.
|
|
.if !\n(GS .nr * +1
|
|
.FS
|
|
Earlier versions of this document erroneously specified that conversion of
|
|
the PIXMAP target returns a property of type DRAWABLE instead of PIXMAP.
|
|
Implementors should be aware of this and may want to support the DRAWABLE
|
|
type as well to allow for compatibility with older clients.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.if !\n(GS .nr * +1
|
|
.FS
|
|
The targets ENCAPSULATED_POSTSCRIPT and ENCAPSULATED_POSTSCRIPT_INTERCHANGE
|
|
are equivalent to the targets _ADOBE_EPS and _ADOBE_EPSI (respectively) that
|
|
appear in the selection targets registry. The _ADOBE_ targets are
|
|
deprecated, but clients are encouraged to continue to support them for
|
|
backward compatibility.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.if !\n(GS .nr * +1
|
|
.FS
|
|
This definition is ambiguous, as the selection may be converted into any of
|
|
several targets that may return differing amounts of data. The requestor
|
|
has no way of knowing which, if any, of these targets corresponds to the
|
|
result of LENGTH. Clients are advised that no guarantees can be made about
|
|
the result of a conversion to LENGTH; its use is thus deprecated.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.LP
|
|
References:
|
|
.IP [1] 5
|
|
Adobe Systems, Incorporated.
|
|
.I
|
|
Portable Document Format Reference Manual.
|
|
.R
|
|
Reading, MA, Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-62628-4.
|
|
.IP [2] 5
|
|
Apple Computer, Incorporated.
|
|
.I
|
|
Inside Macintosh, Volume V.
|
|
.R
|
|
Chapter 4, \*QColor QuickDraw,\*U Color \%Picture Format.
|
|
ISBN 0-201-17719-6.
|
|
.IP [3] 5
|
|
Adobe Systems, Incorporated.
|
|
.I
|
|
PostScript Language Reference Manual.
|
|
.R
|
|
Reading, MA, Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-18127-4.
|
|
.LP
|
|
It is expected that this table will grow over time.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Selection owners are required to support the following targets.
|
|
All other targets are optional.
|
|
.bP
|
|
TARGETS \- The owner should return a list of atoms that represent
|
|
the targets for which an attempt to convert the current selection
|
|
will succeed (barring unforseeable problems such as
|
|
.PN Alloc
|
|
errors).
|
|
This list should include all the required atoms.
|
|
.bP
|
|
MULTIPLE \- The MULTIPLE target atom is valid only when a property
|
|
is specified on the
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
request.
|
|
If the property argument in the
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest
|
|
event is
|
|
.PN None
|
|
and the target is MULTIPLE,
|
|
it should be refused.
|
|
.IP
|
|
When a selection owner receives a
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest (target==MULTIPLE)
|
|
request,
|
|
the contents of the property named in the request will be a list of atom pairs:
|
|
the first atom naming a target and the second naming a property
|
|
.Pn ( None
|
|
is not valid here).
|
|
The effect should be as if the owner had received a sequence of
|
|
.PN SelectionRequest
|
|
events (one for each atom pair) except that:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
The owner should reply with a
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
only when all the requested conversions have been performed.
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
If the owner fails to convert the target named by an atom
|
|
in the MULTIPLE property,
|
|
it should replace that atom in the property with
|
|
.PN None .
|
|
.RE
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
The entries in a MULTIPLE property must be processed in the order
|
|
they appear in the property.
|
|
For further information,
|
|
see section 2.6.3.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.RS
|
|
.LP
|
|
The requestor should delete each individual property when it has
|
|
copied the data from that conversion, and the property specified in the
|
|
MULTIPLE request when it has copied all the data.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The requests are otherwise to be processed independently, and they
|
|
should succeed or fail independently. The MULTIPLE target is an
|
|
optimization that reduces the amount of protocol traffic between the
|
|
owner and the requestor; it is not a transaction mechanism. For
|
|
example, a client may issue a MULTIPLE request with two targets: a data
|
|
target and the DELETE target. The DELETE target will still be processed
|
|
even if the conversion of the data target fails.
|
|
.RE
|
|
.bP
|
|
TIMESTAMP \- To avoid some race conditions,
|
|
it is important that requestors be able to discover the timestamp
|
|
the owner used to acquire ownership.
|
|
Until and unless the protocol is changed so that a
|
|
.PN GetSelectionOwner
|
|
request returns the timestamp used to acquire ownership,
|
|
selection owners must support conversion to TIMESTAMP,
|
|
returning the timestamp they used to obtain the selection.
|
|
.nH 3 "Selection Targets with Side Effects"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Some targets (for example, DELETE) have side effects.
|
|
To render these targets unambiguous,
|
|
the entries in a MULTIPLE property must be processed in the order
|
|
that they appear in the property.
|
|
.LP
|
|
In general,
|
|
targets with side effects will return no information,
|
|
that is, they will return a zero length property of type NULL.
|
|
(Type NULL means the result of
|
|
.PN InternAtom
|
|
on the string \*QNULL\*U, not the value zero.)
|
|
In all cases,
|
|
the requested side effect must be performed before the conversion is accepted.
|
|
If the requested side effect cannot be performed,
|
|
the corresponding conversion request must be refused.
|
|
.NT Conventions
|
|
.IP 1. 5
|
|
Targets with side effects should return no information
|
|
(that is, they should have a zero-length property of type NULL).
|
|
.IP 2. 5
|
|
The side effect of a target must be performed before the conversion is accepted.
|
|
.IP 3. 5
|
|
If the side effect of a target cannot be performed,
|
|
the corresponding conversion request must be refused.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.NT Problem
|
|
The need to delay responding to the
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
request until a further conversion has succeeded poses problems
|
|
for the Intrinsics interface that need to be addressed.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
These side-effect targets are used to implement operations such as
|
|
\*Qexchange PRIMARY and SECONDARY selections.\*U
|
|
.nH 4 "DELETE"
|
|
.LP
|
|
When the owner of a selection receives a request to convert it to DELETE,
|
|
it should delete the corresponding selection
|
|
(whatever doing so means for its internal data structures)
|
|
and return a zero-length property of type NULL if the deletion was successful.
|
|
.nH 4 "INSERT_SELECTION"
|
|
.LP
|
|
When the owner of a selection receives a request to convert it to
|
|
INSERT_SELECTION,
|
|
the property named will be of type ATOM_PAIR.
|
|
The first atom will name a selection,
|
|
and the second will name a target.
|
|
The owner should use the selection mechanism to convert the named selection
|
|
into the named target and should insert it at the location of the selection
|
|
for which it got the INSERT_SELECTION request
|
|
(whatever doing so means for its internal data structures).
|
|
.nH 4 "INSERT_PROPERTY"
|
|
.LP
|
|
When the owner of a selection receives a request to convert it to
|
|
INSERT_PROPERTY,
|
|
it should insert the property named in the request at the location
|
|
of the selection for which it got the INSERT_SELECTION request
|
|
(whatever doing so means for its internal data structures).
|
|
.nH 2 "Use of Selection Properties"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The names of the properties used in selection data transfer are chosen by
|
|
the requestor.
|
|
The use of
|
|
.PN None
|
|
property fields in
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
requests (which request the selection owner to choose a name)
|
|
is not permitted by these conventions.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The selection owner always chooses the type of the property
|
|
in the selection data transfer.
|
|
Some types have special semantics assigned by convention,
|
|
and these are reviewed in the following sections.
|
|
.LP
|
|
In all cases,
|
|
a request for conversion to a target should return either
|
|
a property of one of the types listed in the previous table for that target
|
|
or a property of type INCR and then a property of one of the listed types.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Certain selection properties may contain resource IDs. The selection owner
|
|
should ensure that the resource is not destroyed and that its contents are
|
|
not changed until after the selection transfer is complete. Requestors that
|
|
rely on the existence or on the proper contents of a resource must operate
|
|
on the resource (for example, by copying the contents of a pixmap) before
|
|
deleting the selection property.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The selection owner will return a list of zero or more items
|
|
of the type indicated by the property type.
|
|
In general,
|
|
the number of items in the list will correspond to the number
|
|
of disjoint parts of the selection.
|
|
Some targets (for example, side-effect targets) will be of length zero
|
|
irrespective of the number of disjoint selection parts.
|
|
In the case of fixed-size items,
|
|
the requestor may determine the number of items by the property size.
|
|
Selection property types are listed in the table below.
|
|
For variable-length items such as text,
|
|
the separators are also listed.
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l c l.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Type Atom Format Separator
|
|
.R
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
APPLE_PICT 8 T{
|
|
Self-sizing
|
|
T}
|
|
ATOM 32 Fixed-size
|
|
ATOM_PAIR 32 Fixed-size
|
|
BITMAP 32 Fixed-size
|
|
C_STRING 8 T{
|
|
Zero
|
|
T}
|
|
COLORMAP 32 T{
|
|
Fixed-size
|
|
T}
|
|
COMPOUND_TEXT 8 Zero
|
|
DRAWABLE 32 Fixed-size
|
|
INCR 32 Fixed-size
|
|
INTEGER 32 Fixed-size
|
|
PIXEL 32 T{
|
|
Fixed-size
|
|
T}
|
|
PIXMAP 32 Fixed-size
|
|
SPAN 32 Fixed-size
|
|
STRING 8 Zero
|
|
WINDOW 32 Fixed-size
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
It is expected that this table will grow over time.
|
|
.nH 3 "TEXT Properties"
|
|
.LP
|
|
In general,
|
|
the encoding for the characters in a text string property is specified
|
|
by its type.
|
|
It is highly desirable for there to be a simple, invertible mapping
|
|
between string property types and any character set names
|
|
embedded within font names in any font naming standard adopted by the
|
|
Consortium.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The atom TEXT is a polymorphic target.
|
|
Requesting conversion into TEXT will convert into whatever encoding
|
|
is convenient for the owner.
|
|
The encoding chosen will be indicated by the type of the property returned.
|
|
TEXT is not defined as a type;
|
|
it will never be the returned type from a selection conversion request.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the requestor wants the owner to return the contents of the selection
|
|
in a specific encoding,
|
|
it should request conversion into the name of that encoding.
|
|
.LP
|
|
In the table in section 2.6.2,
|
|
the word TEXT (in the Type column) is used to indicate one
|
|
of the registered encoding names.
|
|
The type would not actually be TEXT;
|
|
it would be STRING or some other ATOM naming the encoding chosen by the owner.
|
|
.LP
|
|
STRING as a type or a target specifies the ISO Latin-1 character set plus the
|
|
control characters TAB (octal 11) and NEWLINE (octal 12).
|
|
The spacing interpretation of TAB is context dependent.
|
|
Other ASCII control characters are explicitly not included in STRING
|
|
at the present time.
|
|
.LP
|
|
COMPOUND_TEXT as a type or a target specifies the Compound Text interchange
|
|
format; see the \fICompound Text Encoding\fP.
|
|
.LP
|
|
There are some text objects where the source or intended user, as the
|
|
case may be, does not have a specific character set for the text, but
|
|
instead merely requires a zero-terminated sequence of bytes with no
|
|
other restriction; no element of the selection mechanism may assume that
|
|
any byte value is forbidden or that any two differing sequences are
|
|
equivalent.\** For these objects, the type C_STRING should be used.
|
|
.FS
|
|
Note that this is different from STRING, where many byte values are
|
|
forbidden, and from COMPOUND_TEXT, where, for example, inserting the
|
|
sequence 27,\ 40,\ 66 (designate ASCII into GL) at the start does not alter
|
|
the meaning.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.NT Rationale
|
|
An example of the need for C_STRING is to transmit the names of
|
|
files; many operating systems do not interpret filenames as having
|
|
a character set. For example, the same character string uses a
|
|
different sequence of bytes in ASCII and EBCDIC, and so most
|
|
operating systems see these as different filenames and offer no
|
|
way to treat them as the same. Thus no character-set based
|
|
property type is suitable.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Type STRING, COMPOUND_TEXT, and C_STRING properties will consist of a list
|
|
of elements separated by null characters; other encodings will need to
|
|
specify an appropriate list format.
|
|
.nH 3 "INCR Properties"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Requestors may receive a property of type INCR\**
|
|
in response to any target that results in selection data.
|
|
.FS
|
|
These properties were called INCREMENTAL in an earlier draft.
|
|
The protocol for using them has changed,
|
|
and so the name has changed to avoid confusion.
|
|
.FE
|
|
This indicates that the owner will send the actual data incrementally.
|
|
The contents of the INCR property will be an integer,
|
|
which represents a lower bound on the number of bytes of data in the selection.
|
|
The requestor and the selection owner transfer the data in the selection
|
|
in the following manner.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The selection requestor starts the transfer process by deleting
|
|
the (type==INCR) property forming the reply to the selection.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The selection owner then:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Appends the data in suitable-size chunks to the
|
|
same property on the same window as the selection reply
|
|
with a type corresponding to the actual type of the converted selection.
|
|
The size should be less than the maximum-request-size in the connection
|
|
handshake.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Waits between each append for a
|
|
.PN PropertyNotify (state==Deleted)
|
|
event that shows that the requestor has read the data.
|
|
The reason for doing this is to limit the consumption of space in the server.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Waits (after the entire data has been transferred to the server) until a
|
|
.PN PropertyNotify (state==Deleted)
|
|
event that shows that the data has been read by the requestor
|
|
and then writes zero-length data to the property.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The selection requestor:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Waits for the
|
|
.PN SelectionNotify
|
|
event.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Loops:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
Retrieving data using
|
|
.PN GetProperty
|
|
with the delete argument
|
|
.PN True .
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
Waiting for a
|
|
.PN PropertyNotify
|
|
with the state argument
|
|
.PN NewValue .
|
|
.RE
|
|
.bP
|
|
Waits until the property named by the
|
|
.PN PropertyNotify
|
|
event is zero-length.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Deletes the zero-length property.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The type of the converted selection is the type of the first partial property.
|
|
The remaining partial properties must have the same type.
|
|
.nH 3 "DRAWABLE Properties"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Requestors may receive properties of type PIXMAP, BITMAP, DRAWABLE, or WINDOW,
|
|
which contain an appropriate ID.
|
|
While information about these drawables is available from the server by means of
|
|
the
|
|
.PN GetGeometry
|
|
request,
|
|
the following items are not:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Foreground pixel
|
|
.bP
|
|
Background pixel
|
|
.bP
|
|
Colormap ID
|
|
.LP
|
|
In general,
|
|
requestors converting into targets whose returned type in the table
|
|
in section 2.6.2 is one of the DRAWABLE types should expect to convert also
|
|
into the following targets (using the MULTIPLE mechanism):
|
|
.bP
|
|
FOREGROUND returns a PIXEL value.
|
|
.bP
|
|
BACKGROUND returns a PIXEL value.
|
|
.bP
|
|
COLORMAP returns a colormap ID.
|
|
.nH 3 "SPAN Properties"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Properties with type SPAN contain a list of cardinal-pairs
|
|
with the length of the cardinals determined by the format.
|
|
The first specifies the starting position,
|
|
and the second specifies the ending position plus one.
|
|
The base is zero.
|
|
If they are the same,
|
|
the span is zero-length and is before the specified position.
|
|
The units are implied by the target atom,
|
|
such as LINE_NUMBER or CHARACTER_POSITION.
|
|
.nH 2 "Manager Selections"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Certain clients, often called managers, take on responsibility
|
|
for managing shared resources. A client that manages a shared
|
|
resource should take ownership of an appropriate selection,
|
|
named using the conventions described in sections 1.2.3
|
|
and 1.2.6. A client that manages multiple
|
|
shared resources (or groups of resources) should take
|
|
ownership of a selection for each one.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The manager may support conversion of various targets
|
|
for that selection. Managers are encouraged to use this
|
|
technique as the primary means by which clients interact
|
|
with the managed resource. Note that the conventions for
|
|
interacting with the window manager predate this section;
|
|
as a result many interactions with the window manager use
|
|
other techniques.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Before a manager takes ownership of a manager selection, it
|
|
should use the
|
|
.PN GetSelection\%Owner
|
|
request to check whether the selection is already owned by another client,
|
|
and, where appropriate, it should ask the user if the new manager should
|
|
replace the old one. If so, it may then take ownership of the selection.
|
|
Managers should acquire the selection using a window created expressly for
|
|
this purpose. Managers must conform to the rules for selection owners
|
|
described in sections 2.1 and 2.2, and they must also support the required
|
|
targets listed in section 2.6.2.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If a manager loses ownership of a manager selection, this
|
|
means that a new manager is taking over its responsibilities.
|
|
The old manager must release all resources it has managed
|
|
and must then destroy the window that owned the selection.
|
|
For example, a window manager losing ownership of WM_S2
|
|
must deselect from
|
|
.PN SubstructureRedirect
|
|
on the root window of screen 2 before destroying the window that owned
|
|
WM_S2.
|
|
.LP
|
|
When the new manager notices that the window owning the selection
|
|
has been destroyed, it knows that it can successfully proceed to
|
|
control the resource it is planning to manage. If the old
|
|
manager does not destroy the window within a reasonable time,
|
|
the new manager should check with the user before destroying
|
|
the window itself or killing the old manager.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If a manager wants to give up, on its own, management of a shared
|
|
resource controlled by a selection, it must do so by releasing
|
|
the resources it is managing and then by destroying the
|
|
window that owns the selection. It should not first disown
|
|
the selection, since this introduces a race condition.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients who are interested in knowing when the owner of a
|
|
manager selection is no longer managing the corresponding shared
|
|
resource should select for
|
|
.PN StructureNotify
|
|
on the window owning the selection so they can be notified when the window
|
|
is destroyed. Clients are warned that after doing a
|
|
.PN GetSelectionOwner
|
|
and selecting for
|
|
.PN StructureNotify ,
|
|
they should do a
|
|
.PN GetSelectionOwner
|
|
again to ensure that the owner did not change after initially getting the
|
|
selection owner and before selecting for
|
|
.PN StructureNotify .
|
|
.LP
|
|
Immediately after a manager successfully acquires ownership of a
|
|
manager selection, it should announce its arrival by sending a
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
event. This event should be sent using the
|
|
.PN SendEvent
|
|
protocol request with the following arguments:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS
|
|
l lw(4.5i) .
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Argument Value
|
|
.R
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
destination: T{
|
|
the root window of screen 0, or the root
|
|
window of the appropriate screen if the
|
|
manager is managing a screen-specific resource
|
|
T}
|
|
propagate: False
|
|
event-mask: T{
|
|
.PN StructureNotify
|
|
T}
|
|
event: T{
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
T}
|
|
\h'4n'type: MANAGER
|
|
\h'4n'format: 32
|
|
T{
|
|
\h'4n'data[0]:\|\**
|
|
T} timestamp
|
|
\h'4n'data[1]: manager selection atom
|
|
\h'4n'data[2]: the window owning the selection
|
|
\h'4n'data[3]: manager-selection-specific data
|
|
\h'4n'data[4]: manager-selection-specific data
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.FS
|
|
We use the notation data[n] to indicate the n\s-2\uth\d\s0 element
|
|
of the LISTofINT8, LISTofINT16, or LISTofINT32 in the data field of the
|
|
.PN ClientMessage ,
|
|
according to the format field.
|
|
The list is indexed from zero.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that wish to know when a specific manager has started should
|
|
select for
|
|
.PN Structure\%Notify
|
|
on the appropriate root window and should watch for the appropriate MANAGER
|
|
.PN Client\%Message .
|
|
.nH 1 "Peer-to-Peer Communication by Means of Cut Buffers"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The cut buffer mechanism is much simpler but much less powerful
|
|
than the selection mechanism.
|
|
The selection mechanism is active in that it provides a link
|
|
between the owner and requestor clients.
|
|
The cut buffer mechanism is passive;
|
|
an owner places data in a cut buffer from which a requestor retrieves
|
|
the data at some later time.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The cut buffers consist of eight properties on the root of screen zero,
|
|
named by the predefined atoms CUT_BUFFER0 to CUT_BUFFER7.
|
|
These properties must, at present, have type STRING and format 8.
|
|
A client that uses the cut buffer mechanism must initially ensure that
|
|
all eight properties exist by using
|
|
.PN ChangeProperty
|
|
requests to append zero-length data to each.
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client that stores data in the cut buffers (an owner) first must rotate the
|
|
ring of buffers by plus 1 by using
|
|
.PN RotateProperties
|
|
requests to rename each buffer;
|
|
that is, CUT_BUFFER0 to CUT_BUFFER1, CUT_BUFFER1 to CUT_BUFFER2, .\^.\^.\|,
|
|
and CUT_BUFFER7 to CUT_BUFFER0.
|
|
It then must store the data into CUT_BUFFER0 by using a
|
|
.PN Change\%Property
|
|
request in mode
|
|
.PN Replace .
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client that obtains data from the cut buffers should use a
|
|
.PN GetProperty
|
|
request to retrieve the contents of CUT_BUFFER0.
|
|
.LP
|
|
In response to a specific user request,
|
|
a client may rotate the cut buffers by minus 1 by using
|
|
.PN RotateProperties
|
|
requests to rename each buffer;
|
|
that is, CUT_BUFFER7 to CUT_BUFFER6, CUT_BUFFER6 to CUT_BUFFER5, .\^.\^.\|,
|
|
and CUT_BUFFER0 to CUT_BUFFER7.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Data should be stored to the cut buffers
|
|
and the ring rotated only when requested by explicit user action.
|
|
Users depend on their mental model of cut buffer operation
|
|
and need to be able to identify operations that transfer data to and fro.
|
|
.nH 1 "Client-to-Window-Manager Communication"
|
|
.LP
|
|
To permit window managers to perform their role of mediating the competing
|
|
demands for resources such as screen space,
|
|
the clients being managed must adhere to certain conventions
|
|
and must expect the window managers to do likewise.
|
|
These conventions are covered here from the client's point of view.
|
|
.LP
|
|
In general,
|
|
these conventions are somewhat complex
|
|
and will undoubtedly change as new window management paradigms are developed.
|
|
Thus, there is a strong bias toward defining only those conventions
|
|
that are essential and that apply generally to all window management paradigms.
|
|
Clients designed to run with a particular window manager can easily
|
|
define private protocols to add to these conventions,
|
|
but they must be aware that their users may decide to run some other
|
|
window manager no matter how much the designers of the private protocol
|
|
are convinced that they have seen the \*Qone true light\*U of user interfaces.
|
|
.LP
|
|
It is a principle of these conventions that a general client should
|
|
neither know nor care which window manager is running or, indeed,
|
|
if one is running at all.
|
|
The conventions do not support all client functions
|
|
without a window manager running;
|
|
for example, the concept of Iconic
|
|
is not directly supported by clients.
|
|
If no window manager is running,
|
|
the concept of Iconic does not apply.
|
|
A goal of the conventions is to make it possible to kill and
|
|
restart window managers without loss of functionality.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Each window manager will implement a particular window management policy;
|
|
the choice of an appropriate window management policy
|
|
for the user's circumstances is not one for an individual client to
|
|
make but will be made by the user or the user's system administrator.
|
|
This does not exclude the possibility of writing clients that
|
|
use a private protocol to restrict themselves to operating only
|
|
under a specific window manager.
|
|
Rather,
|
|
it merely ensures that no claim of general utility is made for such programs.
|
|
.LP
|
|
For example,
|
|
the claim is often made:
|
|
\*QThe client I'm writing is important, and it needs to be on top.\*U
|
|
Perhaps it is important when it is being run in earnest,
|
|
and it should then be run under the control of a window manager
|
|
that recognizes \*Qimportant\*U windows through some private protocol
|
|
and ensures that they are on top.
|
|
However, imagine, for example, that the \*Qimportant\*U client is being debugged.
|
|
Then, ensuring that it is always on top is no longer
|
|
the appropriate window management policy,
|
|
and it should be run under a window manager that allows other windows
|
|
(for example, the debugger) to appear on top.
|
|
.nH 2 "Client's Actions"
|
|
.LP
|
|
In general,
|
|
the object of the X Version 11 design is that clients should,
|
|
as far as possible, do exactly what they would do in the absence
|
|
of a window manager, except for the following:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Hinting to the window manager about the resources they would like
|
|
to obtain
|
|
.bP
|
|
Cooperating with the window manager by accepting the resources they
|
|
are allocated even if they are not those requested
|
|
.bP
|
|
Being prepared for resource allocations to change at any time
|
|
.nH 3 "Creating a Top-Level Window"
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client's \fItop-level window\fP is a window whose override-redirect
|
|
attribute is
|
|
.PN False .
|
|
It must either be a child of a root window, or it must have been a child of
|
|
a root window immediately prior to having been reparented by the window
|
|
manager. If the client reparents the window away from the root, the window
|
|
is no longer a top-level window; but it can become a top-level window again
|
|
if the client reparents it back to the root.
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client usually would expect to create its top-level windows
|
|
as children of one or more of the root windows by using some
|
|
boilerplate like the following:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.Ds 0
|
|
.TA 2i
|
|
.ta 2i
|
|
win = XCreateSimpleWindow(dpy, DefaultRootWindow(dpy), xsh.x, xsh.y,
|
|
xsh.width, xsh.height, bw, bd, bg);
|
|
.De
|
|
.LP
|
|
If a particular one of the root windows was required, however,
|
|
it could use something like the following:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.Ds 0
|
|
.TA 2i
|
|
.ta 2i
|
|
win = XCreateSimpleWindow(dpy, RootWindow(dpy, screen), xsh.x, xsh.y,
|
|
xsh.width, xsh.height, bw, bd, bg);
|
|
.De
|
|
.LP
|
|
Ideally,
|
|
it should be possible to override the choice of a root window
|
|
and allow clients (including window managers) to treat a nonroot window
|
|
as a pseudo-root.
|
|
This would allow, for example, the testing of window managers and the
|
|
use of application-specific window managers to control the subwindows
|
|
owned by the members of a related suite of clients.
|
|
Doing so properly requires an extension,
|
|
the design of which is under study.
|
|
.LP
|
|
From the client's point of view,
|
|
the window manager will regard its top-level window as being in
|
|
one of three states:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Normal
|
|
.bP
|
|
Iconic
|
|
.bP
|
|
Withdrawn
|
|
.LP
|
|
Newly created windows start in the Withdrawn state.
|
|
Transitions between states happen when the top-level window is mapped
|
|
and unmapped and when the window manager receives certain messages.
|
|
For further details, see sections 4.1.2.4 and 4.1.4.
|
|
.nH 3 "Client Properties"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Once the client has one or more top-level windows,
|
|
it should place properties on those windows to inform the window manager
|
|
of the behavior that the client desires.
|
|
Window managers will assume values they find convenient
|
|
for any of these properties that are not supplied;
|
|
clients that depend on particular values must explicitly supply them.
|
|
The window manager will not change properties written by the client.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The window manager will examine the contents of these
|
|
properties when the window makes the transition from the Withdrawn state
|
|
and will monitor some properties for changes while the window is
|
|
in the Iconic or Normal state.
|
|
When the client changes one of these properties,
|
|
it must use
|
|
.PN Replace
|
|
mode to overwrite the entire property with new data;
|
|
the window manager will retain no memory of the old value of the property.
|
|
All fields of the property must be set to suitable values in a single
|
|
.PN Replace
|
|
mode
|
|
.PN ChangeProperty
|
|
request.
|
|
This ensures that the full contents of the property will be
|
|
available to a new window manager if the existing one crashes,
|
|
if it is shut down and restarted,
|
|
or if the session needs to be shut down and restarted by the session manager.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients writing or rewriting window manager properties must
|
|
ensure that the entire content of each property remains valid
|
|
at all times.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Some of these properties may contain the IDs of resources, such as
|
|
windows or pixmaps. Clients should ensure that these resources exist
|
|
for at least as long as the window on which the property resides.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If these properties are longer than expected,
|
|
clients should ignore the remainder of the property.
|
|
Extending these properties is reserved to the X Consortium;
|
|
private extensions to them are forbidden.
|
|
Private additional communication between clients and window managers
|
|
should take place using separate properties.
|
|
The only exception to this rule is the WM_PROTOCOLS property, which may be
|
|
of arbitrary length and which may contain atoms representing private
|
|
protocols (see section 4.1.2.7).
|
|
.LP
|
|
The next sections describe each of the properties the clients
|
|
need to set, in turn.
|
|
They are summarized in the table in section 4.4.
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_NAME Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_NAME property is an uninterpreted string
|
|
that the client wants the window manager to display
|
|
in association with the window (for example, in a window headline bar).
|
|
.LP
|
|
The encoding used for this string
|
|
(and all other uninterpreted string properties)
|
|
is implied by the type of the property.
|
|
The type atoms to be used for this purpose are described in section 2.7.1.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Window managers are expected to make an effort to display this information.
|
|
Simply ignoring WM_NAME is not acceptable behavior.
|
|
Clients can assume that at least the first part of this string
|
|
is visible to the user and that if the information is not visible to the user,
|
|
it is because the user has taken an explicit action to make it invisible.
|
|
.LP
|
|
On the other hand,
|
|
there is no guarantee that the user can see the WM_NAME string
|
|
even if the window manager supports window headlines.
|
|
The user may have placed the headline off-screen
|
|
or have covered it by other windows.
|
|
WM_NAME should not be used for application-critical information
|
|
or to announce asynchronous changes of an application's state
|
|
that require timely user response.
|
|
The expected uses are to permit the user to identify one of a
|
|
number of instances of the same client
|
|
and to provide the user with noncritical state information.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Even window managers that support headline bars will place some limit
|
|
on the length of the WM_NAME string that can be visible;
|
|
brevity here will pay dividends.
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_ICON_NAME Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_ICON_NAME property is an uninterpreted string
|
|
that the client wants to be displayed in association with the window
|
|
when it is iconified (for example, in an icon label).
|
|
In other respects,
|
|
including the type, it is similar to WM_NAME.
|
|
For obvious geometric reasons,
|
|
fewer characters will normally be visible in WM_ICON_NAME than WM_NAME.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients should not attempt to display this string in their icon pixmaps
|
|
or windows; rather, they should rely on the window manager to do so.
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_NORMAL_HINTS Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The type of the WM_NORMAL_HINTS property is WM_SIZE_HINTS.
|
|
Its contents are as follows:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
lw(1i) lw(1i) lw(2i).
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Field Type Comments
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
flags CARD32 (see the next table)
|
|
pad 4*CARD32 For backwards compatibility
|
|
min_width INT32 If missing, assume base_width
|
|
min_height INT32 If missing, assume base_height
|
|
max_width INT32
|
|
max_height INT32
|
|
width_inc INT32
|
|
height_inc INT32
|
|
min_aspect (INT32,INT32)
|
|
max_aspect (INT32,INT32)
|
|
base_width INT32 If missing, assume min_width
|
|
base_height INT32 If missing, assume min_height
|
|
win_gravity INT32 T{
|
|
If missing, assume
|
|
.PN NorthWest
|
|
T}
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_SIZE_HINTS.flags bit definitions are as follows:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
lw(1i) nw(.5i) lw(3i).
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Name Value Field
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN USPosition
|
|
T} 1 User-specified x, y
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN USSize
|
|
T} 2 User-specified width, height
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN PPosition
|
|
T} 4 Program-specified position
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN PSize
|
|
T} 8 Program-specified size
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN PMinSize
|
|
T} 16 Program-specified minimum size
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN PMaxSize
|
|
T} 32 Program-specified maximum size
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN PResizeInc
|
|
T} 64 Program-specified resize increments
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN PAspect
|
|
T} 128 Program-specified min and max aspect ratios
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN PBaseSize
|
|
T} 256 Program-specified base size
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN PWinGravity
|
|
T} 512 Program-specified window gravity
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
To indicate that the size and position of the window
|
|
(when a transition from the Withdrawn state occurs) was specified by the user,
|
|
the client should set the
|
|
.PN USPosition
|
|
and
|
|
.PN USSize
|
|
flags,
|
|
which allow a window manager to know that the user specifically asked where
|
|
the window should be placed or how the window should be sized and that
|
|
further interaction is superfluous.
|
|
To indicate that it was specified by the client without any user involvement,
|
|
the client should set
|
|
.PN PPosition
|
|
and
|
|
.PN PSize .
|
|
.LP
|
|
The size specifiers refer to the width and height of the client's
|
|
window excluding borders.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The win_gravity may be any of the values specified for WINGRAVITY in
|
|
the core protocol except for
|
|
.PN Unmap :
|
|
.PN NorthWest
|
|
(1),
|
|
.PN North
|
|
(2),
|
|
.PN NorthEast
|
|
(3),
|
|
.PN West
|
|
(4),
|
|
.PN Center
|
|
(5),
|
|
.PN East
|
|
(6),
|
|
.PN SouthWest
|
|
(7),
|
|
.PN South
|
|
(8), and
|
|
.PN SouthEast
|
|
(9). It specifies how and whether the client window wants to be shifted to
|
|
make room for the window manager frame.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the win_gravity is
|
|
.PN Static ,
|
|
the window manager frame is positioned
|
|
so that the inside border of the client window inside the frame is
|
|
in the same position on the screen as it was when the client
|
|
requested the transition from Withdrawn state. Other values of
|
|
win_gravity specify a window reference point. For
|
|
.PN NorthWest ,
|
|
.PN NorthEast ,
|
|
.PN SouthWest ,
|
|
and
|
|
.PN SouthEast
|
|
the reference point is the specified outer corner of the window (on the
|
|
outside border edge). For
|
|
.PN North ,
|
|
.PN South ,
|
|
.PN East ,
|
|
and
|
|
.PN West
|
|
the reference point is the center of the specified outer edge of the window
|
|
border. For
|
|
.PN Center
|
|
the reference point is the center of the window. The reference point of the
|
|
window manager frame is placed at the location on the screen where the
|
|
reference point of the client window was when the client requested the
|
|
transition from Withdrawn state.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The min_width and min_height elements specify the
|
|
minimum size that the window can be for the client to be useful.
|
|
The max_width and max_height elements specify the maximum size.
|
|
The base_width and base_height elements in conjunction with width_inc
|
|
and height_inc define an arithmetic progression of preferred window
|
|
widths and heights for non-negative integers \fIi\fP and \fIj\fP:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.Ds
|
|
.EQ C
|
|
width ~ = ~ base_width ~ + ~ ( i ~ times ~ width_inc )
|
|
.EN
|
|
.EQ C
|
|
height ~ = ~ base_height ~ + ~ ( j ~ times ~ height_inc )
|
|
.EN
|
|
.De
|
|
.LP
|
|
Window managers are encouraged to use \fIi\fP and \fIj\fP
|
|
instead of width and height in reporting window sizes to users.
|
|
If a base size is not provided,
|
|
the minimum size is to be used in its place and vice versa.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The min_aspect and max_aspect fields are fractions with the numerator first
|
|
and the denominator second, and they allow a client to specify the range of
|
|
aspect ratios it prefers. Window managers that honor aspect ratios should
|
|
take into account the base size in determining the preferred window size. If
|
|
a base size is provided along with the aspect ratio fields, the base size
|
|
should be subtracted from the window size prior to checking that the aspect
|
|
ratio falls in range. If a base size is not provided, nothing should be
|
|
subtracted from the window size. (The minimum size is not to be used in
|
|
place of the base size for this purpose.)
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_HINTS Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_HINTS property (whose type is WM_HINTS)
|
|
is used to communicate to the window manager.
|
|
It conveys the information the window manager needs
|
|
other than the window geometry,
|
|
which is available from the window itself;
|
|
the constraints on that geometry,
|
|
which is available from the WM_NORMAL_HINTS structure;
|
|
and various strings,
|
|
which need separate properties, such as WM_NAME.
|
|
The contents of the properties are as follows:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l l l.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Field Type Comments
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
flags CARD32 (see the next table)
|
|
input CARD32 The client's input model
|
|
initial_state CARD32 The state when first mapped
|
|
icon_pixmap PIXMAP The pixmap for the icon image
|
|
icon_window WINDOW The window for the icon image
|
|
icon_x INT32 The icon location
|
|
icon_y INT32
|
|
icon_mask PIXMAP The mask for the icon shape
|
|
window_group WINDOW The ID of the group leader window
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_HINTS.flags bit definitions are as follows:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
lw(1.5i) nw(.5i) lw(1.5i).
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Name Value Field
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN InputHint
|
|
T} 1 input
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN StateHint
|
|
T} 2 initial_state
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN IconPixmapHint
|
|
T} 4 icon_pixmap
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN IconWindowHint
|
|
T} 8 icon_window
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN IconPositionHint
|
|
T} 16 icon_x & icon_y
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN IconMaskHint
|
|
T} 32 icon_mask
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN WindowGroupHint
|
|
T} 64 window_group
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN MessageHint
|
|
T} 128 (this bit is obsolete)
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN UrgencyHint
|
|
T} 256 urgency
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Window managers are free to assume convenient values for all fields of
|
|
the WM_HINTS property if a window is mapped without one.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The input field is used to communicate to the window manager the input focus
|
|
model used by the client (see section 4.1.7).
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients with the Globally Active and No Input models should set the
|
|
input flag to
|
|
.PN False .
|
|
Clients with the Passive and Locally Active models should set the input
|
|
flag to
|
|
.PN True .
|
|
.LP
|
|
From the client's point of view,
|
|
the window manager will regard the client's top-level window as being
|
|
in one of three states:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Normal
|
|
.bP
|
|
Iconic
|
|
.bP
|
|
Withdrawn
|
|
.LP
|
|
The semantics of these states are described in section 4.1.4.
|
|
Newly created windows start in the Withdrawn state.
|
|
Transitions between states happen when a
|
|
top-level window is mapped and unmapped
|
|
and when the window manager receives certain messages.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The value of the initial_state field determines the state the client
|
|
wishes to be in at the time the top-level window is mapped
|
|
from the Withdrawn state, as shown in the following table:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l n l.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
State Value Comments
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN NormalState
|
|
T} 1 The window is visible.
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN IconicState
|
|
T} 3 The icon is visible.
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The icon_pixmap field may specify a pixmap to be used as an icon.
|
|
This pixmap should be:
|
|
.bP
|
|
One of the sizes specified in the WM_ICON_SIZE property
|
|
on the root if it exists (see section 4.1.3.2).
|
|
.bP
|
|
1-bit deep.
|
|
The window manager will select, through the defaults database,
|
|
suitable background (for the 0 bits) and foreground (for the 1 bits) colors.
|
|
These defaults can, of course, specify different colors for the icons
|
|
of different clients.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The icon_mask specifies which pixels of the icon_pixmap should be used as the
|
|
icon, allowing for icons to appear nonrectangular.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The icon_window field is the ID of a window the client wants used as its icon.
|
|
Most, but not all, window managers will support icon windows.
|
|
Those that do not are likely to have a user interface in which small
|
|
windows that behave like icons are completely inappropriate.
|
|
Clients should not attempt to remedy the omission by working around it.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that need more capabilities from the icons than a simple 2-color
|
|
bitmap should use icon windows.
|
|
Rules for clients that do are set out in section 4.1.9.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The (icon_x,icon_y) coordinate is a hint to the window manager
|
|
as to where it should position the icon.
|
|
The policies of the window manager control the positioning of icons,
|
|
so clients should not depend on attention being paid to this hint.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The window_group field lets the client specify that this window belongs
|
|
to a group of windows.
|
|
An example is a single client manipulating multiple
|
|
children of the root window.
|
|
.NT Conventions
|
|
.IP 1. 5
|
|
The window_group field should be set to the ID of the group leader.
|
|
The window group leader may be a window that exists only for that purpose;
|
|
a placeholder group leader of this kind would never be mapped
|
|
either by the client or by the window manager.
|
|
.IP 2. 5
|
|
The properties of the window group leader are those for the group as
|
|
a whole (for example, the icon to be shown when the entire group is iconified).
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Window managers may provide facilities for manipulating the group as a whole.
|
|
Clients, at present, have no way to operate on the group as a whole.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The messages bit, if set in the flags field, indicates that the
|
|
client is using an obsolete window manager communication protocol,\**
|
|
rather than the WM_PROTOCOLS mechanism of section 4.1.2.7.
|
|
.FS
|
|
This obsolete protocol was described in the July 27, 1988,
|
|
draft of the ICCCM.
|
|
Windows using it can also be detected because their WM_HINTS properties are
|
|
4 bytes longer than expected.
|
|
Window managers are free to support clients using the obsolete protocol
|
|
in a backwards compatibility mode.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The
|
|
.PN UrgencyHint
|
|
flag, if set in the flags field, indicates that the client deems the window
|
|
contents to be urgent, requiring the timely response of the user. The
|
|
window manager must make some effort to draw the user's attention to this
|
|
window while this flag is set. The window manager must also monitor the
|
|
state of this flag for the entire time the window is in the Normal or Iconic
|
|
state and must take appropriate action when the state of the flag changes.
|
|
The flag is otherwise independent of the window's state; in particular, the
|
|
window manager is not required to deiconify the window if the client sets
|
|
the flag on an Iconic window. Clients must provide some means by which the
|
|
user can cause the
|
|
.PN UrgencyHint
|
|
flag to be set to zero or the window to be withdrawn. The user's action can
|
|
either mitigate the actual condition that made the window urgent, or it can
|
|
merely shut off the alarm.
|
|
.NT Rationale
|
|
This mechanism is useful for alarm dialog boxes or reminder windows, in
|
|
cases where mapping the window is not enough (e.g., in the presence of
|
|
multi-workspace or virtual desktop window managers), and where using an
|
|
override-redirect window is too intrusive. For example, the window manager
|
|
may attract attention to an urgent window by adding an indicator to its
|
|
title bar or its icon. Window managers may also take additional action
|
|
for a window that is newly urgent, such as by flashing its icon (if the
|
|
window is iconic) or by raising it to the top of the stack.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_CLASS Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_CLASS property (of type STRING without control characters)
|
|
contains two consecutive null-terminated strings.
|
|
These specify the Instance and Class names to be used by both the client
|
|
and the window manager for looking up resources for the application
|
|
or as identifying information.
|
|
This property must be present when the window leaves the Withdrawn state
|
|
and may be changed only while the window is in the Withdrawn state.
|
|
Window managers may examine the property only when they start up
|
|
and when the window leaves the Withdrawn state,
|
|
but there should be no need for a client to change its state dynamically.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The two strings, respectively, are:
|
|
.bP
|
|
A string that names the particular instance of the application to which
|
|
the client that owns this window belongs.
|
|
Resources that are specified by instance name override any resources
|
|
that are specified by class name.
|
|
Instance names can be specified by the user in an operating-system specific
|
|
manner.
|
|
On POSIX-conformant systems,
|
|
the following conventions are used:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
If \*Q\-name NAME\*U is given on the command line,
|
|
NAME is used as the instance name.
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
Otherwise, if the environment variable RESOURCE_NAME is set,
|
|
its value will be used as the instance name.
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
Otherwise,
|
|
the trailing part of the name used to invoke the program
|
|
(argv[0] stripped of any directory names) is used as the instance name.
|
|
.RE
|
|
.bP
|
|
A string that names the general class of applications to which the client
|
|
that owns this window belongs.
|
|
Resources that are specified by class apply to all applications
|
|
that have the same class name.
|
|
Class names are specified by the application writer.
|
|
Examples of commonly used class names include:
|
|
\*QEmacs\*U, \*QXTerm\*U, \*QXClock\*U, \*QXLoad\*U, and so on.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Note that WM_CLASS strings are null-terminated
|
|
and, thus, differ from the general conventions that STRING properties
|
|
are null-separated.
|
|
This inconsistency is necessary for backwards compatibility.
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_TRANSIENT_FOR Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_TRANSIENT_FOR property (of type WINDOW)
|
|
contains the ID of another top-level window.
|
|
The implication is that this window is a pop-up on behalf of the named window,
|
|
and window managers may decide not to decorate transient windows
|
|
or may treat them differently in other ways.
|
|
In particular,
|
|
window managers should present newly mapped WM_TRANSIENT_FOR
|
|
windows without requiring any user interaction,
|
|
even if mapping top-level windows normally does require interaction.
|
|
Dialogue boxes, for example, are an example of windows that should have
|
|
WM_TRANSIENT_FOR set.
|
|
.LP
|
|
It is important not to confuse WM_TRANSIENT_FOR with override-redirect.
|
|
WM_TRANSIENT_FOR should be used in those cases where the pointer
|
|
is not grabbed while the window is mapped (in other words,
|
|
if other windows are allowed to be active while the transient is up).
|
|
If other windows must be prevented from processing input
|
|
(for example, when implementing pop-up menus),
|
|
use override-redirect and grab the pointer while the window is mapped.
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_PROTOCOLS Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_PROTOCOLS property (of type ATOM) is a list of atoms.
|
|
Each atom identifies a communication protocol between the client
|
|
and the window manager in which the client is willing to participate.
|
|
Atoms can identify both standard protocols and private protocols
|
|
specific to individual window managers.
|
|
.LP
|
|
All the protocols in which a client can volunteer to take part
|
|
involve the window manager sending the client a
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
event and the client taking appropriate action.
|
|
For details of the contents of the event,
|
|
see section 4.2.8.
|
|
In each case,
|
|
the protocol transactions are initiated by the window manager.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_PROTOCOLS property is not required.
|
|
If it is not present,
|
|
the client does not want to participate in any window manager protocols.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The X Consortium will maintain a registry of protocols to avoid collisions
|
|
in the name space.
|
|
The following table lists the protocols that have been defined to date.
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l c l.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Protocol Section Purpose
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
WM_TAKE_FOCUS 4.1.7 Assignment of input focus
|
|
WM_SAVE_YOURSELF Appendix C Save client state request (deprecated)
|
|
WM_DELETE_WINDOW 4.2.8.1 Request to delete top-level window
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
It is expected that this table will grow over time.
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS property (of type WINDOW) on a top-level window
|
|
is a list of the IDs of windows that may need colormaps installed
|
|
that differ from the colormap of the top-level window.
|
|
The window manager will watch this list of windows for changes in their
|
|
colormap attributes.
|
|
The top-level window is always (implicitly or explicitly) on the watch list.
|
|
For the details of this mechanism,
|
|
see section 4.1.8.
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_CLIENT_MACHINE Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The client should set the WM_CLIENT_MACHINE property (of one of the TEXT
|
|
types) to a string that forms the name of the machine running the client as
|
|
seen from the machine running the server.
|
|
.nH 3 "Window Manager Properties"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The properties that were described in the previous section are those
|
|
that the client is responsible for maintaining on its top-level windows.
|
|
This section describes the properties that the window manager places on
|
|
client's top-level windows and on the root.
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_STATE Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The window manager will place a WM_STATE property (of type WM_STATE) on each
|
|
top-level client window that is not in the Withdrawn state. Top-level
|
|
windows in the Withdrawn state may or may not have the WM_STATE property.
|
|
Once the top-level window has been withdrawn, the client may re-use it for
|
|
another purpose. Clients that do so should remove the WM_STATE property if
|
|
it is still present.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Some clients (such as \fBxprop\fP) will ask the user to click over a window
|
|
on which the program is to operate. Typically, the intent is for this to be
|
|
a top-level window. To find a top-level window, clients should search the
|
|
window hierarchy beneath the selected location for a window with the
|
|
WM_STATE property. This search must be recursive in order to cover all
|
|
window manager reparenting possibilities. If no window with a WM_STATE
|
|
property is found, it is recommended that programs use a mapped
|
|
child-of-root window if one is present beneath the selected location.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The contents of the WM_STATE property are defined as follows:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l l l.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Field Type Comments
|
|
.R
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
state CARD32 (see the next table)
|
|
icon WINDOW ID of icon window
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The following table lists the WM_STATE.state values:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l n.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
State Value
|
|
.R
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN WithdrawnState
|
|
T} 0
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN NormalState
|
|
T} 1
|
|
T{
|
|
.PN IconicState
|
|
T} 3
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Adding other fields to this property is reserved to the X Consortium.
|
|
Values for the state field other than those defined in the above
|
|
table are reserved for use by the X Consortium.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The state field describes the window manager's idea of the state
|
|
the window is in, which may not match the client's idea as expressed
|
|
in the initial_state field of the WM_HINTS property
|
|
(for example, if the user has asked the window manager to iconify the window).
|
|
If it is
|
|
.PN Normal\%State ,
|
|
the window manager believes the client should be animating its window.
|
|
If it is
|
|
.PN IconicState ,
|
|
the client should animate its icon window.
|
|
In either state,
|
|
clients should be prepared to handle exposure events from either window.
|
|
.LP
|
|
When the window is withdrawn, the window manager will either change the
|
|
state field's value to
|
|
.PN Withdrawn\%State
|
|
or it will remove the WM_STATE property entirely.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The icon field should contain the window ID of the window that the
|
|
window manager uses as the icon for the window on which this property is
|
|
set. If no such window exists, the icon field should be
|
|
.PN None .
|
|
Note that this window could be but is not necessarily the same window as the
|
|
icon window that the client may have specified in its WM_HINTS property.
|
|
The WM_STATE icon may be a window that the window manager has supplied and
|
|
that contains the client's icon pixmap, or it may be an ancestor of the
|
|
client's icon window.
|
|
.nH 4 "WM_ICON_SIZE Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
A window manager that wishes to place constraints on the sizes of icon
|
|
pixmaps and/or windows should place a property called WM_ICON_SIZE on the root.
|
|
The contents of this property are listed in the following table.
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l l l.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Field Type Comments
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
min_width CARD32 The data for the icon size series
|
|
min_height CARD32
|
|
max_width CARD32
|
|
max_height CARD32
|
|
width_inc CARD32
|
|
height_inc CARD32
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
For more details see section 14.1.12 in \fIXlib \- C Language X Interface\fP.
|
|
.nH 3 "Changing Window State"
|
|
.LP
|
|
From the client's point of view,
|
|
the window manager will regard each of the client's top-level
|
|
windows as being in one of three states,
|
|
whose semantics are as follows:
|
|
.bP
|
|
.PN NormalState
|
|
\- The client's top-level window is viewable.
|
|
.bP
|
|
.PN IconicState
|
|
\- The client's top-level window is iconic
|
|
(whatever that means for this window manager).
|
|
The client can assume that its top-level window is not viewable,
|
|
its icon_window (if any) will be viewable
|
|
and, failing that,
|
|
its icon_pixmap (if any) or its WM_ICON_NAME will be displayed.
|
|
.bP
|
|
.PN WithdrawnState
|
|
\- Neither the client's top-level window nor its icon is visible.
|
|
.LP
|
|
In fact,
|
|
the window manager may implement states with semantics
|
|
other than those described above.
|
|
For example,
|
|
a window manager might implement a concept of an \*Qinactive\*U state
|
|
in which an infrequently used client's window would be represented
|
|
as a string in a menu.
|
|
But this state is invisible to the client,
|
|
which would see itself merely as being in the Iconic state.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Newly created top-level windows are in the Withdrawn state.
|
|
Once the window has been provided with suitable properties,
|
|
the client is free to change its state as follows:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Withdrawn \(-> Normal \- The client should map the window with
|
|
WM_HINTS.initial_state being
|
|
.PN NormalState .
|
|
.bP
|
|
Withdrawn \(-> Iconic \- The client should map the window with
|
|
WM_HINTS.initial_state being
|
|
.PN IconicState .
|
|
.bP
|
|
Normal \(-> Iconic \- The client should send a
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
event as described later in this section.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Normal \(-> Withdrawn \- The client should unmap the window and follow it
|
|
with a synthetic
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify
|
|
event as described later in this section.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Iconic \(-> Normal \- The client should map the window.
|
|
The contents of WM_HINTS.initial_state are irrelevant in this case.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Iconic \(-> Withdrawn \- The client should unmap the window
|
|
and follow it with a synthetic
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify
|
|
event as described later in this section.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Only the client can effect a transition into or out of the Withdrawn
|
|
state.
|
|
Once a client's window
|
|
has left the Withdrawn state,
|
|
the window will be mapped if it is in the Normal state and the window will be
|
|
unmapped if it is in the Iconic state. Reparenting window managers
|
|
must unmap the client's window when it is in the Iconic state, even if an
|
|
ancestor window being unmapped renders the client's window unviewable.
|
|
Conversely, if a reparenting window manager renders the client's window
|
|
unviewable by unmapping an ancestor, the client's window is by definition in
|
|
the Iconic state and must also be unmapped.
|
|
.NT "Advice to Implementors"
|
|
Clients can select for
|
|
.PN StructureNotify
|
|
on their
|
|
top-level windows to track transitions between Normal and Iconic states.
|
|
Receipt of a
|
|
.PN MapNotify
|
|
event will indicate a transition to the Normal state, and receipt of an
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify
|
|
event will indicate a transition to the Iconic state.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
When changing the state of the window to Withdrawn, the client must (in
|
|
addition to unmapping the window) send a synthetic
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify
|
|
event by
|
|
using a
|
|
.PN SendEvent
|
|
request with the following arguments:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS
|
|
l lw(3.5i).
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Argument Value
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.R
|
|
destination: The root
|
|
propagate: T{
|
|
.PN False
|
|
T}
|
|
event-mask: T{
|
|
.Pn ( SubstructureRedirect|SubstructureNotify )
|
|
T}
|
|
T{
|
|
event: an
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify
|
|
with:
|
|
T} T{
|
|
T}
|
|
\h'4n'event: The root
|
|
\h'4n'window: The window itself
|
|
\h'4n'from-configure: T{
|
|
.PN False
|
|
T}
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.NT Rationale
|
|
The reason for requiring the client to send a synthetic
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify
|
|
event is to ensure that the window manager
|
|
gets some notification of the client's desire to change state,
|
|
even though the window may already be unmapped when the desire is expressed.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.NT "Advice to Implementors"
|
|
For compatibility with obsolete clients,
|
|
window managers should trigger the transition to the Withdrawn state
|
|
on the real
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify
|
|
rather than waiting for the synthetic one.
|
|
They should also trigger the transition if they receive a synthetic
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify
|
|
on a window for which they have not yet received a real
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify .
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
When a client withdraws a window,
|
|
the window manager will then update or remove the WM_STATE
|
|
property as described in section 4.1.3.1.
|
|
Clients that want to re-use a client window (e.g., by mapping it again or
|
|
reparenting it elsewhere) after withdrawing it must wait for the
|
|
withdrawal to be complete before proceeding. The preferred method for
|
|
doing this is for clients to wait for the window manager to update or
|
|
remove the WM_STATE property.\**
|
|
.FS
|
|
Earlier versions of these conventions prohibited clients from
|
|
reading the WM_STATE property. Clients operating under the earlier
|
|
conventions used the technique of tracking
|
|
.PN ReparentNotify
|
|
events to wait for the top-level window to be reparented back to the root
|
|
window. This is still a valid technique; however, it works only for
|
|
reparenting window managers, and the WM_STATE technique is to be preferred.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the transition is from the Normal to the Iconic state,
|
|
the client should send a
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
event to the root with:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Window == the window to be iconified
|
|
.bP
|
|
Type\** == the atom WM_CHANGE_STATE
|
|
.FS
|
|
The type field of the
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
event (called the message_type field by Xlib) should not be confused with
|
|
the code field of the event itself,
|
|
which will have the value 33
|
|
.Pn ( ClientMessage ).
|
|
.FE
|
|
.bP
|
|
Format == 32
|
|
.bP
|
|
Data[0] == IconicState
|
|
.NT Rationale
|
|
The format of this
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
event does not match the format of
|
|
.PN ClientMessages
|
|
in section 4.2.8.
|
|
This is because they are sent by the window manager to clients,
|
|
and this message is sent by clients to the window manager.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Other values of data[0] are reserved for future extensions to these
|
|
conventions. The parameters of the
|
|
.PN SendEvent
|
|
request should be those described for the synthetic
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify
|
|
event.
|
|
.NT "Advice to Implementors"
|
|
Clients can also select for
|
|
.PN VisibilityChange
|
|
events on their top-level or icon windows.
|
|
They will then receive a
|
|
.PN VisibilityNotify (state==FullyObscured)
|
|
event when the window concerned becomes completely
|
|
obscured even though mapped (and thus, perhaps a waste
|
|
of time to update) and a
|
|
.PN VisibilityNotify (state!=FullyObscured)
|
|
event when it becomes even partly viewable.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.NT "Advice to Implementors"
|
|
When a window makes a transition from the Normal state to either the Iconic
|
|
or the Withdrawn state, clients should be aware that the window manager
|
|
may make transients for this window inaccessible. Clients should not rely
|
|
on transient windows being available to the user when the transient owner
|
|
window is not in the Normal state. When withdrawing a window, clients are
|
|
advised to withdraw transients for the window.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 3 "Configuring the Window"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients can resize and reposition their top-level windows by using the
|
|
.PN ConfigureWindow
|
|
request.
|
|
The attributes of the window that can be altered
|
|
with this request are as follows:
|
|
.bP
|
|
The [x,y] location of the window's upper left-outer corner
|
|
.bP
|
|
The [width,height] of the inner region of the window (excluding
|
|
borders)
|
|
.bP
|
|
The border width of the window
|
|
.bP
|
|
The window's position in the stack
|
|
.LP
|
|
The coordinate system in which the location is expressed is that of the root
|
|
(irrespective of any reparenting that may have occurred).
|
|
The border width to be used and win_gravity position hint
|
|
to be used are those most recently requested by the client.
|
|
Client configure requests are interpreted by the window manager
|
|
in the same manner as the initial window geometry mapped from
|
|
the Withdrawn state, as described in section 4.1.2.3.
|
|
Clients must be aware that there is no guarantee that the window manager
|
|
will allocate them the requested size or location and must be prepared to
|
|
deal with any size and location.
|
|
If the window manager decides to respond to a
|
|
.PN ConfigureRequest
|
|
request by:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Not changing the size, location, border width, or stacking order
|
|
of the window at all.
|
|
.IP
|
|
A client will receive a synthetic
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event that describes the (unchanged) geometry of the window.
|
|
The (x,y) coordinates will be in the root coordinate system,
|
|
adjusted for the border width the client requested,
|
|
irrespective of any reparenting that has taken place.
|
|
The border_width will be the border width the client requested.
|
|
The client will not receive a real
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event because no change has actually taken place.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Moving or restacking the window without resizing it or
|
|
changing its border width.
|
|
.IP
|
|
A client will receive a synthetic
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event following the change that describes the new geometry of the window.
|
|
The event's (x,y) coordinates will be in the root coordinate system adjusted
|
|
for the border width the client requested.
|
|
The border_width will be the border width the client requested.
|
|
The client may not receive a real
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event that describes this change because the window manager may have reparented
|
|
the top-level window.
|
|
If the client does receive a real event,
|
|
the synthetic event will follow the real one.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Resizing the window or changing its border width (regardless of whether the
|
|
window was also moved or restacked).
|
|
.IP
|
|
A client that has selected for
|
|
.PN StructureNotify
|
|
events will receive a real
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event.
|
|
Note that the coordinates in this event are relative to the parent,
|
|
which may not be the root if the window has been reparented.
|
|
The coordinates will reflect the actual border width of the window
|
|
(which the window manager may have changed).
|
|
The
|
|
.PN Translate\%Coordinates
|
|
request can be used to convert the coordinates if required.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The general rule is that coordinates in real
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
events are in the parent's space;
|
|
in synthetic events, they are in the root space.
|
|
.NT "Advice to Implementors"
|
|
Clients cannot distinguish between the case where a top-level window is
|
|
resized and moved from the case where the window is resized but not moved,
|
|
since a real
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event will be received in both cases. Clients that are concerned with
|
|
keeping track of the absolute position of a top-level window should keep a
|
|
piece of state indicating whether they are certain of its position. Upon
|
|
receipt of a real
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event on the top-level window, the client should note that the position is
|
|
unknown. Upon receipt of a synthetic
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event, the client should note the position as known, using the position in
|
|
this event. If the client receives a
|
|
.PN KeyPress ,
|
|
.PN KeyRelease ,
|
|
.PN ButtonPress ,
|
|
.PN ButtonRelease ,
|
|
.PN MotionNotify ,
|
|
.PN EnterNotify ,
|
|
or
|
|
.PN LeaveNotify
|
|
event on the window (or on any descendant), the client can deduce the
|
|
top-level window's position from the difference between the (event-x,
|
|
event-y) and (root-x, root-y) coordinates in these events. Only when the
|
|
position is unknown does the client need to use the
|
|
.PN Translate\%Coordinates
|
|
request to find the position of a top-level window.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients should be aware that their borders may not be visible.
|
|
Window managers are free to use reparenting techniques to
|
|
decorate client's top-level windows with borders containing
|
|
titles, controls, and other details to maintain a consistent look-and-feel.
|
|
If they do,
|
|
they are likely to override the client's attempts to set the border width
|
|
and set it to zero.
|
|
Clients, therefore, should not depend on the top-level window's border
|
|
being visible or use it to display any critical information.
|
|
Other window managers will allow the top-level windows border to
|
|
be visible.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients should set the desired value of the border-width attribute on all
|
|
.PN ConfigureWindow
|
|
requests to avoid a race condition.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that change their position in the stack must be aware
|
|
that they may have been reparented,
|
|
which means that windows that used to be siblings no longer are.
|
|
Using a nonsibling as the sibling parameter on a
|
|
.PN ConfigureWindow
|
|
request will cause an error.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients that use a
|
|
.PN ConfigureWindow
|
|
request to request a change in their position in the stack
|
|
should do so using
|
|
.PN None
|
|
in the sibling field.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that must position themselves in the stack relative to some
|
|
window that was originally a sibling must do the
|
|
.PN ConfigureWindow
|
|
request (in case they are running under a nonreparenting window manager),
|
|
be prepared to deal with a resulting error,
|
|
and then follow with a synthetic
|
|
.PN ConfigureRequest
|
|
event by invoking a
|
|
.PN SendEvent
|
|
request with the following arguments:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS
|
|
l lw(3.5i).
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Argument Value
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.R
|
|
destination: The root
|
|
propagate: T{
|
|
.PN False
|
|
T}
|
|
event-mask: T{
|
|
.Pn ( SubstructureRedirect|SubstructureNotify )
|
|
T}
|
|
T{
|
|
event: a
|
|
.PN ConfigureRequest
|
|
with:
|
|
T} T{
|
|
T}
|
|
\h'4n'event: The root
|
|
\h'4n'window: The window itself
|
|
T{
|
|
\h'4n'\&.\^.\^.
|
|
T} T{
|
|
Other parameters from the
|
|
.PN ConfigureWindow
|
|
request
|
|
T}
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Window managers are in any case free to position windows in the stack as
|
|
they see fit, and so clients should not rely on receiving the stacking
|
|
order they have requested. Clients should ignore the above-sibling
|
|
field of both real and synthetic
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
events received on their top-level windows because this field may not
|
|
contain useful information.
|
|
.nH 3 "Changing Window Attributes"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The attributes that may be supplied when a window is created may be
|
|
changed by using the
|
|
.PN ChangeWindowAttributes
|
|
request.
|
|
The window attributes are listed in the following table:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l l
|
|
l c.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Attribute Private to Client
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
Background pixmap Yes
|
|
Background pixel Yes
|
|
Border pixmap Yes
|
|
Border pixel Yes
|
|
Bit gravity Yes
|
|
Window gravity No
|
|
Backing-store hint Yes
|
|
Save-under hint No
|
|
Event mask No
|
|
Do-not-propagate mask Yes
|
|
Override-redirect flag No
|
|
Colormap Yes
|
|
Cursor Yes
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Most attributes are private to the client and will never be interfered with
|
|
by the window manager.
|
|
For the attributes that are not private to the client:
|
|
.bP
|
|
The window manager is free to override the window gravity;
|
|
a reparenting window manager may want to set the top-level window's
|
|
window gravity for its own purposes.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Clients are free to set the save-under hint on their top-level windows,
|
|
but they must be aware that the hint may be overridden by the window manager.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Windows, in effect, have per-client event masks,
|
|
and so, clients may select for whatever events are convenient irrespective
|
|
of any events the window manager is selecting for.
|
|
There are some events for which only one client at a time may select,
|
|
but the window manager should not select for them on any of the client's
|
|
windows.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Clients can set override-redirect on top-level windows but are
|
|
encouraged not to do so except as described in sections 4.1.10 and 4.2.9.
|
|
.nH 3 "Input Focus"
|
|
.LP
|
|
There are four models of input handling:
|
|
.bP
|
|
No Input \- The client never expects keyboard input.
|
|
An example would be
|
|
.PN xload
|
|
or another output-only client.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Passive Input \- The client expects keyboard input but never explicitly sets
|
|
the input focus.
|
|
An example would be a simple client with no subwindows,
|
|
which will accept input in
|
|
.PN PointerRoot
|
|
mode or when the window manager sets the input focus to its top-level window
|
|
(in click-to-type mode).
|
|
.bP
|
|
Locally Active Input \- The client expects keyboard input and explicitly sets
|
|
the input focus,
|
|
but it only does so when one of its windows already has the focus.
|
|
An example would be a client with subwindows defining various data
|
|
entry fields that uses Next and Prev keys to move the input focus
|
|
between the fields.
|
|
It does so when its top-level window has acquired the focus in
|
|
.PN PointerRoot
|
|
mode or when the window manager sets the input focus to its top-level window
|
|
(in click-to-type mode).
|
|
.bP
|
|
Globally Active Input \- The client expects keyboard input and explicitly sets
|
|
the input focus,
|
|
even when it is in windows the client does not own.
|
|
An example would be a client with a scroll bar that wants to allow
|
|
users to scroll the window without disturbing the input focus even if
|
|
it is in some other window.
|
|
It wants to acquire the input focus when the user clicks in the scrolled
|
|
region but not when the user clicks in the scroll bar itself.
|
|
Thus, it wants to prevent the window manager from setting the input focus
|
|
to any of its windows.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The four input models and the corresponding values of the input field
|
|
and the presence or absence of the WM_TAKE_FOCUS atom in the
|
|
WM_PROTOCOLS property are listed in the following table:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l l l
|
|
l c c.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Input Model Input Field WM_TAKE_FOCUS
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
T{
|
|
No Input
|
|
T} T{
|
|
.PN False
|
|
T} T{
|
|
Absent
|
|
T}
|
|
T{
|
|
Passive
|
|
T} T{
|
|
.PN True
|
|
T} T{
|
|
Absent
|
|
T}
|
|
T{
|
|
Locally Active
|
|
T} T{
|
|
.PN True
|
|
T} T{
|
|
Present
|
|
T}
|
|
T{
|
|
Globally Active
|
|
T} T{
|
|
.PN False
|
|
T} T{
|
|
Present
|
|
T}
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Passive and Locally Active clients set the input field of WM_HINTS to
|
|
.PN True ,
|
|
which indicates that they require window manager assistance in acquiring the
|
|
input focus.
|
|
No Input and Globally Active clients set the input field to
|
|
.PN False ,
|
|
which requests that the window manager not set the input focus
|
|
to their top-level window.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that use a
|
|
.PN SetInputFocus
|
|
request must set the time field to the timestamp of the event
|
|
that caused them to make the attempt.
|
|
This cannot be a
|
|
.PN FocusIn
|
|
event because they do not have timestamps.
|
|
Clients may also acquire
|
|
the focus without a corresponding
|
|
.PN EnterNotify .
|
|
Note that clients must not use
|
|
.PN CurrentTime
|
|
in the time field.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients using the Globally Active model can only use a
|
|
.PN SetInputFocus
|
|
request to acquire the input focus when they do not already have it on
|
|
receipt of one of the following events:
|
|
.bP
|
|
.PN ButtonPress
|
|
.bP
|
|
.PN ButtonRelease
|
|
.bP
|
|
Passive-grabbed
|
|
.PN KeyPress
|
|
.bP
|
|
Passive-grabbed
|
|
.PN KeyRelease
|
|
.LP
|
|
In general,
|
|
clients should avoid using passive-grabbed key events for this purpose,
|
|
except when they are unavoidable (as, for example, a selection tool
|
|
that establishes a passive grab on the keys that cut, copy, or paste).
|
|
.LP
|
|
The method by which the user commands the window manager to
|
|
set the focus to a window is up to the window manager.
|
|
For example,
|
|
clients cannot determine whether they will see the click
|
|
that transfers the focus.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Windows with the atom WM_TAKE_FOCUS in their WM_PROTOCOLS property
|
|
may receive a
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
event from the window manager (as described in section 4.2.8)
|
|
with WM_TAKE_FOCUS in its data[0] field and a valid timestamp
|
|
(i.e., not
|
|
.PN CurrentTime )
|
|
in its data[1] field.
|
|
If they want the focus,
|
|
they should respond with a
|
|
.PN SetInputFocus
|
|
request with its window field set to the window of theirs
|
|
that last had the input focus or to their default input window,
|
|
and the time field set to the timestamp in the message.
|
|
For further information,
|
|
see section 4.2.7.
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client could receive WM_TAKE_FOCUS when opening from an icon
|
|
or when the user has clicked outside the top-level window in an area that
|
|
indicates to the window manager that it should assign the focus
|
|
(for example, clicking in the headline bar can be used to assign the focus).
|
|
.LP
|
|
The goal is to support window managers that want to assign the input focus
|
|
to a top-level window in such a way that the top-level window either
|
|
can assign it to one of its subwindows or can decline the offer of the focus.
|
|
For example, a clock or a text editor with no currently open frames
|
|
might not want to take focus even though the window manager generally
|
|
believes that clients should take the input focus after being deiconified
|
|
or raised.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that set the input focus need to decide a value for the
|
|
revert-to field of the
|
|
.PN SetInputFocus
|
|
request.
|
|
This determines the behavior of the input focus
|
|
if the window the focus has been set to becomes not viewable.
|
|
The value can be any of the following:
|
|
.bP
|
|
.PN Parent
|
|
\- In general,
|
|
clients should use this value when assigning focus to one of their subwindows.
|
|
Unmapping the subwindow will cause focus to revert to the parent,
|
|
which is probably what you want.
|
|
.bP
|
|
.PN PointerRoot
|
|
\- Using
|
|
this value with a click-to-type focus management policy
|
|
leads to race conditions because the window becoming unviewable may
|
|
coincide with the window manager deciding to move the focus elsewhere.
|
|
.bP
|
|
.PN None
|
|
\- Using
|
|
this value causes problems if the window manager reparents
|
|
the window, as most window managers will, and then crashes.
|
|
The input focus will be
|
|
.PN None ,
|
|
and there will probably be no way to change it.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Note that neither
|
|
.PN PointerRoot
|
|
nor
|
|
.PN None
|
|
is really safe to use.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients that invoke a
|
|
.PN SetInputFocus
|
|
request should set the revert-to argument to
|
|
.PN Parent .
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
A convention is also required for clients that want to give up the
|
|
input focus.
|
|
There is no safe value set for them to set the input focus to;
|
|
therefore, they should ignore input material.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients should not give up the input focus of their own volition.
|
|
They should ignore input that they receive instead.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 3 "Colormaps"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The window manager is responsible for installing and uninstalling
|
|
colormaps on behalf of clients with top-level windows that
|
|
the window manager manages.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients provide the window manager with hints as to which colormaps to
|
|
install and uninstall. Clients must not install or uninstall colormaps
|
|
themselves (except under the circumstances noted below). When a client's
|
|
top-level window gets the colormap focus (as a result of whatever colormap
|
|
focus policy is implemented by the window manager), the window manager will
|
|
ensure that one or more of the client's colormaps are installed.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients whose top-level windows and subwindows all use the same colormap
|
|
should set its ID in the colormap field of the top-level window's
|
|
attributes. They should not set a WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS property on the
|
|
top-level window. If they want to change the colormap, they should change
|
|
the top-level window's colormap attribute. The window manager will track
|
|
changes to the window's colormap attribute and install colormaps as
|
|
appropriate.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that create windows can use the value
|
|
.PN CopyFrom\%Parent
|
|
to inherit their parent's colormap. Window managers will ensure that the
|
|
root window's colormap field contains a colormap that is suitable for
|
|
clients to inherit. In particular, the colormap will provide
|
|
distinguishable colors for
|
|
.PN BlackPixel
|
|
and
|
|
.PN WhitePixel .
|
|
.LP
|
|
Top-level windows that have subwindows or override-redirect pop-up windows
|
|
whose colormap requirements differ from the top-level window should have a
|
|
WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS property. This property contains a list of IDs for
|
|
windows whose colormaps the window manager should attempt to have installed
|
|
when, in the course of its individual colormap focus policy, it assigns the
|
|
colormap focus to the top-level window (see section 4.1.2.8). The list is
|
|
ordered by the importance to the client of having the colormaps installed.
|
|
The window manager will track changes to this property and will track
|
|
changes to the colormap attribute of the windows in the property.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the relative importance of colormaps changes, the client should update
|
|
the WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS property to reflect the new ordering. If the
|
|
top-level window does not appear in the list, the window manager will assume
|
|
it to be of higher priority than any window in the list.
|
|
.LP
|
|
WM_TRANSIENT_FOR windows can either have their own WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS
|
|
property or appear in the property of the window they are transient for,
|
|
as appropriate.
|
|
.NT Rationale
|
|
An alternative design was considered for how clients should hint to the
|
|
window manager about their colormap requirements. This alternative design
|
|
specified a list of colormaps instead of a list of windows. The current
|
|
design, a list of windows, was chosen for two reasons. First, it allows
|
|
window managers to find the visuals of the colormaps, thus permitting
|
|
visual-dependent colormap installation policies. Second, it allows window
|
|
managers to select for
|
|
.PN Visibility\%Change
|
|
events on the windows concerned and to ensure that colormaps are only
|
|
installed if the windows that need them are visible. The alternative design
|
|
allows for neither of these policies.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.NT "Advice to Implementors"
|
|
Clients should be aware of the min-installed-maps and max-installed-maps
|
|
fields of the connection setup information, and the effect that the minimum
|
|
value has on the \*Qrequired list\*U defined by the Protocol in the
|
|
description of the
|
|
.PN Install\%Colormap
|
|
request. Briefly, the min-installed-maps most recently installed maps are
|
|
guaranteed to be installed. This value is often one; clients needing
|
|
multiple colormaps should beware.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Whenever possible, clients should use the mechanisms described above and let
|
|
the window manager handle colormap installation. However, clients are
|
|
permitted to perform colormap installation on their own while they have the
|
|
pointer grabbed. A client performing colormap installation must notify the
|
|
window manager prior to the first installation. When the client has
|
|
finished its colormap installation, it must also notify the window manager.
|
|
The client notifies the window manager by issuing a
|
|
.PN Send\%Event
|
|
request with the following arguments:
|
|
.br
|
|
.LP
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS
|
|
tab(/) ;
|
|
lB lB
|
|
l lw(3.5i)
|
|
.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
Argument/Value
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
destination:/T{
|
|
the root window of the screen on
|
|
which the colormap is being installed
|
|
T}
|
|
propagate:/T{
|
|
.PN False
|
|
T}
|
|
event-mask:/T{
|
|
.PN ColormapChange
|
|
T}
|
|
T{
|
|
event: a
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
with:
|
|
T}
|
|
\h'2m'window:/the root window, as above
|
|
\h'2m'type:/WM_COLORMAP_NOTIFY
|
|
\h'2m'format:/32
|
|
\h'2m'data[0]:/T{
|
|
the timestamp of the event that caused
|
|
the client to start or stop installing colormaps
|
|
T}
|
|
\h'2m'data[1]:/T{
|
|
1 if the client is starting colormap installation, 0 if the client is
|
|
finished with colormap installation
|
|
T}
|
|
\h'2m'data[2]:/reserved, must be zero
|
|
\h'2m'data[3]:/reserved, must be zero
|
|
\h'2m'data[4]:/reserved, must be zero
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
This feature was introduced in version 2.0 of this document, and there will
|
|
be a significant period of time before all window managers can be expected
|
|
to implement this feature. Before using this feature, clients must check
|
|
the compliance level of the window manager (using the mechanism described in
|
|
section 4.3) to verify that it supports this feature. This is necessary to
|
|
prevent colormap installation conflicts between clients and older window
|
|
managers.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Window managers should refrain from installing colormaps while a client has
|
|
requested control of colormap installation. The window manager should
|
|
continue to track the set of installed colormaps so that it can reinstate
|
|
its colormap focus policy when the client has finished colormap installation.
|
|
.LP
|
|
This technique has race conditions that may result in the colormaps
|
|
continuing to be installed even after a client has issued its notification
|
|
message. For example, the window manager may have issued some
|
|
.PN Install\%Colormap
|
|
requests that are not executed until after the
|
|
client's
|
|
.PN SendEvent \%
|
|
and
|
|
.PN Install\%Colormap
|
|
requests, thus uninstalling the client's colormaps. If this occurs while
|
|
the client still has the pointer grabbed and before the client has issued
|
|
the \*Qfinished\*U message, the client may reinstall the desired colormaps.
|
|
.NT "Advice to Implementors"
|
|
Clients are expected to use this mechanism for things such as
|
|
pop-up windows and for animations that use override-redirect windows.
|
|
.\" Avoid .LP within a .NT, because it resets the margins. The .NT
|
|
.\" macro should probably be fixed.
|
|
.br
|
|
.sp \n(PDu
|
|
If a client fails to issue the \*Qfinished\*U message, the window manager
|
|
may be left in a state where its colormap installation policy is suspended.
|
|
Window manager implementors may want to implement a feature that resets
|
|
colormap installation policy in response to a command from the user.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 3 "Icons"
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client can hint to the window manager about the desired appearance
|
|
of its icon by setting:
|
|
.bP
|
|
A string in WM_ICON_NAME.
|
|
.IP
|
|
All clients should do this
|
|
because it provides a fallback for window managers whose ideas
|
|
about icons differ widely from those of the client.
|
|
.bP
|
|
A
|
|
.PN Pixmap
|
|
into the icon_pixmap field of the WM_HINTS property
|
|
and possibly another into the icon_mask field.
|
|
.IP
|
|
The window manager is expected to display the pixmap masked by the mask.
|
|
The pixmap should be one of the sizes found in the WM_ICON_SIZE property
|
|
on the root.
|
|
If this property is not found,
|
|
the window manager is unlikely to display icon pixmaps.
|
|
Window managers usually will clip or tile pixmaps that do not match
|
|
WM_ICON_SIZE.
|
|
.bP
|
|
A window into the icon_window field of the WM_HINTS property.
|
|
.IP
|
|
The window manager is expected to map that window whenever the client is
|
|
in the Iconic state.
|
|
In general,
|
|
the size of the icon window should be one of those specified in WM_ICON_SIZE
|
|
on the root, if it exists.
|
|
Window managers are free to resize icon windows.
|
|
.LP
|
|
In the Iconic state,
|
|
the window manager usually will ensure that:
|
|
.bP
|
|
If the window's WM_HINTS.icon_window is set,
|
|
the window it names is visible.
|
|
.bP
|
|
If the window's WM_HINTS.icon_window is not set
|
|
but the window's WM_HINTS.icon_pixmap is set,
|
|
the pixmap it names is visible.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Otherwise,
|
|
the window's WM_ICON_NAME string is visible.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients should observe the following conventions about their icon windows:
|
|
.NT Conventions
|
|
.IP 1. 5
|
|
The icon window should be an
|
|
.PN InputOutput
|
|
child of the root.
|
|
.IP 2. 5
|
|
The icon window should be one of the sizes specified
|
|
in the WM_ICON_SIZE property on the root.
|
|
.IP 3. 5
|
|
The icon window should use the root visual and default colormap
|
|
for the screen in question.
|
|
.IP 4. 5
|
|
Clients should not map their icon windows.
|
|
.IP 5. 5
|
|
Clients should not unmap their icon windows.
|
|
.IP 6. 5
|
|
Clients should not configure their icon windows.
|
|
.IP 7. 5
|
|
Clients should not set override-redirect on their icon windows
|
|
or select for
|
|
.PN Resize\%Redirect
|
|
events on them.
|
|
.IP 8. 5
|
|
Clients must not depend on being able to receive input events
|
|
by means of their icon windows.
|
|
.IP 9. 5
|
|
Clients must not manipulate the borders of their icon windows.
|
|
.IP 10. 5
|
|
Clients must select for
|
|
.PN Exposure
|
|
events on their icon window and repaint it when requested.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Window managers will differ as to whether they support input events
|
|
to client's icon windows;
|
|
most will allow the client to receive some subset of the keys and buttons.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Window managers will ignore any WM_NAME, WM_ICON_NAME, WM_NORMAL_HINTS,
|
|
WM_HINTS, WM_CLASS, WM_TRANSIENT_FOR, WM_PROTOCOLS, WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS,
|
|
WM_COMMAND, or WM_CLIENT_MACHINE
|
|
properties they find on icon windows.
|
|
.nH 3 "Pop-up Windows"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that wish to pop up a window can do one of three things:
|
|
.IP 1. 5
|
|
They can create and map another normal top-level window,
|
|
which will get decorated and managed as normal by the window manager.
|
|
See the discussion of window groups that follows.
|
|
.IP 2. 5
|
|
If the window will be visible for a relatively short time
|
|
and deserves a somewhat lighter treatment,
|
|
they can set the WM_TRANSIENT_FOR property.
|
|
They can expect less decoration but can set all the normal
|
|
window manager properties on the window.
|
|
An example would be a dialog box.
|
|
.IP 3. 5
|
|
If the window will be visible for a very short time
|
|
and should not be decorated at all,
|
|
the client can set override-redirect on the window.
|
|
In general,
|
|
this should be done only if the pointer is grabbed while the window is mapped.
|
|
The window manager will never interfere with these windows,
|
|
which should be used with caution.
|
|
An example of an appropriate use is a pop-up menu.
|
|
.NT "Advice to Implementors"
|
|
The user will not be able to move, resize, restack, or transfer the input
|
|
focus to override-redirect windows, since the window manager is not managing
|
|
them. If it is necessary for a client to receive keystrokes on an
|
|
override-redirect window, either the client must grab the keyboard or the
|
|
client must have another top-level window that is not override-redirect and
|
|
that has selected the Locally Active or Globally Active focus model. The
|
|
client may set the focus to the override-redirect window when the other
|
|
window receives a WM_TAKE_FOCUS message or one of the events listed in
|
|
section 4.1.7 in the description of the Globally Active focus model.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Window managers are free to decide if WM_TRANSIENT_FOR windows
|
|
should be iconified when the window they are transient for is.
|
|
Clients displaying WM_TRANSIENT_FOR windows that have
|
|
(or request to have) the window they are transient for iconified
|
|
do not need to request that the same operation be performed
|
|
on the WM_TRANSIENT_FOR window;
|
|
the window manager will change its state if that is the policy it wishes
|
|
to enforce.
|
|
.nH 3 "Window Groups"
|
|
.LP
|
|
A set of top-level windows that should be treated from the user's point of view
|
|
as related (even though they may belong to a number of clients) should be linked
|
|
together using the window_group field of the WM_HINTS structure.
|
|
.LP
|
|
One of the windows (that is, the one the others point to)
|
|
will be the group leader and will carry the group as opposed
|
|
to the individual properties.
|
|
Window managers may treat the group leader differently
|
|
from other windows in the group.
|
|
For example,
|
|
group leaders may have the full set of decorations,
|
|
and other group members may have a restricted set.
|
|
.LP
|
|
It is not necessary that the client ever map the group leader;
|
|
it may be a window that exists solely as a placeholder.
|
|
.LP
|
|
It is up to the window manager to determine the policy
|
|
for treating the windows in a group.
|
|
At present,
|
|
there is no way for a client to request a group,
|
|
as opposed to an individual, operation.
|
|
.nH 2 "Client Responses to Window Manager Actions"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The window manager performs a number of operations on client resources,
|
|
primarily on their top-level windows.
|
|
Clients must not try to fight this but may elect to receive notification
|
|
of the window manager's operations.
|
|
.nH 3 "Reparenting"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients must be aware that some window managers will reparent
|
|
their top-level windows
|
|
so that a window that was created as a child of the root will be displayed
|
|
as a child of some window belonging to the window manager.
|
|
The effects that this reparenting will have on the client are as follows:
|
|
.bP
|
|
The parent value returned by a
|
|
.PN QueryTree
|
|
request will no longer be the value supplied to the
|
|
.PN CreateWindow
|
|
request that created the reparented window.
|
|
There should be no need for the client to be aware of the identity
|
|
of the window to which the top-level window has been reparented.
|
|
In particular,
|
|
a client that wishes to create further top-level windows should continue
|
|
to use the root as the parent for these new windows.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The server will interpret the (x,y) coordinates in a
|
|
.PN ConfigureWindow
|
|
request in the new parent's coordinate space.
|
|
In fact, they usually will not be interpreted by the server
|
|
because a reparenting window manager usually will have intercepted
|
|
these operations (see section 4.2.2).
|
|
Clients should use the root coordinate space for these requests
|
|
(see section 4.1.5).
|
|
.bP
|
|
.PN ConfigureWindow
|
|
requests that name a specific sibling window may fail because the window named,
|
|
which used to be a sibling, no longer is after the reparenting operation
|
|
(see section 4.1.5).
|
|
.bP
|
|
The (x,y) coordinates returned by a
|
|
.PN GetGeometry
|
|
request are in the parent's coordinate space
|
|
and are thus not directly useful after a reparent operation.
|
|
.bP
|
|
A background of
|
|
.PN ParentRelative
|
|
will have unpredictable results.
|
|
.bP
|
|
A cursor of
|
|
.PN None
|
|
will have unpredictable results.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that want to be notified when they are reparented can select for
|
|
.PN StructureNotify
|
|
events on their top-level window.
|
|
They will receive a
|
|
.PN ReparentNotify
|
|
event if and when reparenting takes place.
|
|
When a client withdraws a top-level window, the window manager will
|
|
reparent it back to the root window if the window had been reparented
|
|
elsewhere.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the window manager reparents a client's window,
|
|
the reparented window will be placed in the save-set
|
|
of the parent window.
|
|
This means that the reparented window will not be destroyed
|
|
if the window manager terminates and will be remapped if it was unmapped.
|
|
Note that this applies to all client windows the window manager reparents,
|
|
including transient windows and client icon windows.
|
|
.nH 3 "Redirection of Operations"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients must be aware that some window managers will arrange
|
|
for some client requests to be intercepted and redirected.
|
|
Redirected requests are not executed;
|
|
they result instead in events being sent to the window manager,
|
|
which may decide to do nothing, to alter the arguments,
|
|
or to perform the request on behalf of the client.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The possibility that a request may be redirected means
|
|
that a client cannot assume that any redirectable request is actually
|
|
performed when the request is issued or is actually performed at all.
|
|
The requests that may be redirected are
|
|
.PN \%MapWindow ,
|
|
.PN Configure\%Window ,
|
|
and
|
|
.PN Circulate\%Window .
|
|
.NT "Advice to Implementors"
|
|
The following is incorrect because the
|
|
.PN MapWindow
|
|
request may be intercepted and the
|
|
.PN PolyLine
|
|
output made to an unmapped window:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.DS
|
|
MapWindow A
|
|
PolyLine A GC <point> <point> .\^.\^.
|
|
.DE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The client must wait for an
|
|
.PN Expose
|
|
event before drawing in the window.\**
|
|
.FS
|
|
This is true even if the client set the backing-store attribute to
|
|
.PN Always .
|
|
The backing-store attribute is a only a hint,
|
|
and the server may stop maintaining backing store contents at any time.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.LP
|
|
This next example incorrectly assumes that the
|
|
.PN ConfigureWindow
|
|
request is actually executed with the arguments supplied:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.DS
|
|
ConfigureWindow width=N height=M
|
|
<output assuming window is N by M>
|
|
.DE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The client should select for
|
|
.PN Structure\%Notify
|
|
on its window and monitor the window's size by tracking
|
|
.PN Configure\%Notify
|
|
events.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients must be especially careful when attempting to set the focus to a
|
|
window that they have just mapped. This sequence may result in an X
|
|
protocol error:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.DS
|
|
MapWindow B
|
|
SetInputFocus B
|
|
.DE
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the
|
|
.PN Map\%Window
|
|
request has been intercepted, the window will still be
|
|
unmapped, causing the
|
|
.PN SetInput\%Focus
|
|
request to generate the error. The solution to this problem is for clients
|
|
to select for
|
|
.PN Visibility\%Change
|
|
on the window and to delay the issuance of the
|
|
.PN SetInput\%Focus
|
|
request until they have received a
|
|
.PN Visibility\%Notify
|
|
event indicating that the window is visible.
|
|
.LP
|
|
This technique does not guarantee correct operation. The user may have
|
|
iconified the window by the time the
|
|
.PN SetInput\%Focus
|
|
request reaches the server, still causing an error. Or the window manager
|
|
may decide to map the window into Iconic state, in which case the window
|
|
will not be visible. This will delay the generation of the
|
|
.PN Visibility\%Notify
|
|
event indefinitely. Clients must be prepared to handle these cases.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
A window with the override-redirect bit set is immune from redirection,
|
|
but the bit should be set on top-level windows only in cases
|
|
where other windows should be prevented from processing input
|
|
while the override-redirect window is mapped (see section 4.1.10)
|
|
and while responding to
|
|
.PN ResizeRequest
|
|
events (see section 4.2.9).
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that have no non-Withdrawn top-level windows
|
|
and that map an override-redirect top-level window are taking over total
|
|
responsibility for the state of the system.
|
|
It is their responsibility to:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Prevent any preexisting window manager from interfering with their activities
|
|
.bP
|
|
Restore the status quo exactly after they unmap the window
|
|
so that any preexisting window manager does not get confused
|
|
.LP
|
|
In effect, clients of this kind are acting as temporary window managers.
|
|
Doing so is strongly discouraged because these clients will be unaware
|
|
of the user interface policies the window manager is trying to maintain
|
|
and because their user interface behavior is likely to conflict with that of
|
|
less demanding clients.
|
|
.nH 3 "Window Move"
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the window manager moves a top-level window without changing its size,
|
|
the client will receive a synthetic
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event following the move that describes the new location
|
|
in terms of the root coordinate space.
|
|
Clients must not respond to being moved by attempting to move
|
|
themselves to a better location.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Any real
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event on a top-level window implies that the window's position
|
|
on the root may have changed,
|
|
even though the event reports that the window's position
|
|
in its parent is unchanged because the window may have been reparented.
|
|
Note that the coordinates in the event will not, in this case,
|
|
be directly useful.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The window manager will send these events by using a
|
|
.PN SendEvent
|
|
request with the following arguments:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS
|
|
l l.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Argument Value
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.R
|
|
destination: The client's window
|
|
propagate: T{
|
|
.PN False
|
|
T}
|
|
event-mask: T{
|
|
.PN StructureNotify
|
|
T}
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.nH 3 "Window Resize"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The client can elect to receive notification of being resized by selecting for
|
|
.PN StructureNotify
|
|
events on its top-level windows.
|
|
It will receive a
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
event.
|
|
The size information in the event will be correct,
|
|
but the location will be in the parent window (which may not be the root).
|
|
.LP
|
|
The response of the client to being resized should be to accept
|
|
the size it has been given and to do its best with it.
|
|
Clients must not respond to being resized by attempting to resize
|
|
themselves to a better size.
|
|
If the size is impossible to work with,
|
|
clients are free to request to change to the Iconic state.
|
|
.nH 3 "Iconify and Deiconify"
|
|
.LP
|
|
A top-level window that is not Withdrawn will be
|
|
in the Normal state if it is mapped and in the Iconic state if it is unmapped.
|
|
This will be true even if the window has been reparented;
|
|
the window manager will unmap the window as well as its parent
|
|
when switching to the Iconic state.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The client can elect to be notified of these state changes by selecting for
|
|
.PN StructureNotify
|
|
events on the top-level window.
|
|
It will receive a
|
|
.PN UnmapNotify
|
|
event when it goes Iconic and a
|
|
.PN MapNotify
|
|
event when it goes Normal.
|
|
.nH 3 "Colormap Change"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that wish to be notified of their colormaps being installed
|
|
or uninstalled should select for
|
|
.PN ColormapNotify
|
|
events on their top-level windows and on any windows they have named
|
|
in WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS properties on their top-level windows.
|
|
They will receive
|
|
.PN ColormapNotify
|
|
events with the new field FALSE when the colormap for that window
|
|
is installed or uninstalled.
|
|
.nH 3 "Input Focus"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients can request notification that they have the input focus by selecting
|
|
for
|
|
.PN FocusChange
|
|
events on their top-level windows;
|
|
they will receive
|
|
.PN FocusIn
|
|
and
|
|
.PN FocusOut
|
|
events.
|
|
Clients that need to set the input focus to one of their
|
|
subwindows should not do so unless
|
|
they have set WM_TAKE_FOCUS in their WM_PROTOCOLS property
|
|
and have done one of the following:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Set the input field of WM_HINTS to
|
|
.PN True
|
|
and actually have the input focus in one of their top-level windows
|
|
.bP
|
|
Set the input field of WM_HINTS to
|
|
.PN False
|
|
and have received a suitable event as described in section 4.1.7
|
|
.bP
|
|
Have received a WM_TAKE_FOCUS message as described in section 4.1.7
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients should not warp the pointer in an attempt to transfer the focus;
|
|
they should set the focus and leave the pointer alone.
|
|
For further information,
|
|
see section 6.2.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Once a client satisfies these conditions,
|
|
it may transfer the focus to another of its windows by using the
|
|
.PN SetInputFocus
|
|
request, which is defined as follows:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.sM
|
|
.IN "SetInputFocus" "" "@DEF@"
|
|
.PN SetInputFocus
|
|
.IP "" .2i
|
|
\fIfocus\fP\^: WINDOW or
|
|
.PN PointerRoot
|
|
or
|
|
.PN None
|
|
.br
|
|
\fIrevert-to\fP\^:
|
|
.Pn { Parent ,
|
|
.PN PointerRoot ,
|
|
.PN None }
|
|
.br
|
|
\fItime\fP\^: TIMESTAMP or
|
|
.PN CurrentTime
|
|
.LP
|
|
.eM
|
|
.NT Conventions
|
|
.IP 1. 5
|
|
Clients that use a
|
|
.PN SetInputFocus
|
|
request must set the time argument to the timestamp of the event
|
|
that caused them to make the attempt.
|
|
This cannot be a
|
|
.PN FocusIn
|
|
event because they do not have timestamps.
|
|
Clients may also acquire the focus without a corresponding
|
|
.PN EnterNotify
|
|
event.
|
|
Clients must not use
|
|
.PN CurrentTime
|
|
for the time argument.
|
|
.IP 2. 5
|
|
Clients that use a
|
|
.PN SetInputFocus
|
|
request to set the focus to one of their windows must set
|
|
the revert-to field to
|
|
.PN Parent .
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 3 "ClientMessage Events"
|
|
.LP
|
|
There is no way for clients to prevent themselves being sent
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
events.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Top-level windows with a WM_PROTOCOLS property may be sent
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
events specific to the protocols named by the atoms in the property
|
|
(see section 4.1.2.7).
|
|
For all protocols, the
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
events have the following:
|
|
.bP
|
|
WM_PROTOCOLS as the type field
|
|
.bP
|
|
Format 32
|
|
.bP
|
|
The atom that names their protocol in the data[0] field
|
|
.bP
|
|
A timestamp in their data[1] field
|
|
.LP
|
|
The remaining fields of the event,
|
|
including the window field,
|
|
are determined by the protocol.
|
|
.LP
|
|
These events will be sent by using a
|
|
.PN SendEvent
|
|
request with the following arguments:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS
|
|
l l.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Argument Value
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.R
|
|
destination: The client's window
|
|
propagate: T{
|
|
.PN False
|
|
T}
|
|
event-mask: () empty
|
|
event: As specified by the protocol
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.nH 4 "Window Deletion"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients, usually those with multiple top-level windows, whose server
|
|
connection must survive the deletion of some of their top-level windows,
|
|
should include the atom WM_DELETE_WINDOW in the WM_PROTOCOLS property on
|
|
each such window. They will receive a
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
event as described above whose data[0] field is WM_DELETE_WINDOW.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients receiving a WM_DELETE_WINDOW message should behave as if the user
|
|
selected \*Qdelete window\*U from a hypothetical menu.
|
|
They should perform any confirmation dialog with the user
|
|
and, if they decide to complete the deletion, should do the following:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Either change the window's state to Withdrawn (as described in section 4.1.4)
|
|
or destroy the window.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Destroy any internal state associated with the window.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the user aborts the deletion during the confirmation dialog,
|
|
the client should ignore the message.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients are permitted to interact with the user and ask, for example,
|
|
whether a file associated with the window to be deleted should be saved
|
|
or the window deletion should be cancelled.
|
|
Clients are not required to destroy the window itself;
|
|
the resource may be reused,
|
|
but all associated state (for example, backing store) should be released.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the client aborts a destroy and the user then selects DELETE WINDOW again,
|
|
the window manager should start the WM_DELETE_WINDOW protocol again.
|
|
Window managers should not use
|
|
.PN DestroyWindow
|
|
requests on a window that has WM_DELETE_WINDOW in its WM_PROTOCOLS property.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that choose not to include WM_DELETE_WINDOW in the WM_PROTOCOLS
|
|
property may be disconnected from the server
|
|
if the user asks for one of the client's top-level windows to be deleted.
|
|
.nH 3 "Redirecting Requests"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Normal clients can use the redirection mechanism just as window managers do
|
|
by selecting for
|
|
.PN SubstructureRedirect
|
|
events on a parent window or
|
|
.PN ResizeRedirect
|
|
events on a window itself.
|
|
However, at most,
|
|
one client per window can select for these events,
|
|
and a convention is needed to avoid clashes.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients (including window managers) should select for
|
|
.PN SubstructureRedirect
|
|
and
|
|
.PN ResizeRedirect
|
|
events only on windows that they own.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
In particular,
|
|
clients that need to take some special action if they are resized can select
|
|
for
|
|
.PN Resize\%Redirect
|
|
events on their top-level windows.
|
|
They will receive a
|
|
.PN ResizeRequest
|
|
event if the window manager resizes their window,
|
|
and the resize will not actually take place.
|
|
Clients are free to make what use they like of the information
|
|
that the window manager wants to change their size,
|
|
but they must configure the window to the width and height specified
|
|
in the event in a timely fashion.
|
|
To ensure that the resize will actually happen at this stage
|
|
instead of being intercepted and executed by the window manager
|
|
(and thus restarting the process),
|
|
the client needs temporarily to set override-redirect on the window.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients receiving
|
|
.PN ResizeRequest
|
|
events must respond by doing the following:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Setting override-redirect on the window specified in the event
|
|
.bP
|
|
Configuring the window specified in the event
|
|
to the width and height specified in the event as soon as possible
|
|
and before making any other geometry requests
|
|
.bP
|
|
Clearing override-redirect on the window specified in the event
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
If a window manager detects that a client is not obeying this convention,
|
|
it is free to take whatever measures it deems appropriate to deal with
|
|
the client.
|
|
.nH 2 "Communication with the Window Manager by Means of Selections"
|
|
.LP
|
|
For each screen they manage, window managers will acquire ownership of a
|
|
selection named WM_S\fIn\fP, where \fIn\fP is the screen number, as
|
|
described in section 1.2.6. Window managers should comply with the
|
|
conventions for \*QManager Selections\*U described in section 2.8. The
|
|
intent is for clients to be able to request a variety of information or
|
|
services by issuing conversion requests on this selection. Window managers
|
|
should support conversion of the following target on their manager
|
|
selection:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 8
|
|
.TS
|
|
l l lw(3.5i) .
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Atom Type Data Received
|
|
.R
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
VERSION INTEGER T{
|
|
Two integers, which are the major and minor
|
|
release numbers (respectively) of the ICCCM
|
|
with which the window manager complies. For
|
|
this version of the ICCCM, the numbers are
|
|
2 and 0.\**
|
|
T}
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.FS
|
|
As a special case, clients not wishing to implement a selection
|
|
request may simply issue a
|
|
.PN GetSelectionOwner
|
|
request on the appropriate WM_S\fIn\fP selection. If this selection is owned,
|
|
clients may assume that the window manager complies with ICCCM version 2.0
|
|
or later.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.nH 2 "Summary of Window Manager Property Types"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The window manager properties are summarized in the following table
|
|
(see also section 14.1 of \fIXlib \- C Language X Interface\fP).
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l l n c.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Name Type Format See Section
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
WM_CLASS STRING 8 4.1.2.5
|
|
WM_CLIENT_MACHINE TEXT \& 4.1.2.9
|
|
WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS WINDOW 32 4.1.2.8
|
|
WM_HINTS WM_HINTS 32 4.1.2.4
|
|
WM_ICON_NAME TEXT 4.1.2.2
|
|
WM_ICON_SIZE WM_ICON_SIZE 32 4.1.3.2
|
|
WM_NAME TEXT 4.1.2.1
|
|
WM_NORMAL_HINTS WM_SIZE_HINTS 32 4.1.2.3
|
|
WM_PROTOCOLS ATOM 32 4.1.2.7
|
|
WM_STATE WM_STATE 32 4.1.3.1
|
|
WM_TRANSIENT_FOR WINDOW 32 4.1.2.6
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.nH 1 "Session Management and Additional Inter-Client Exchanges"
|
|
.LP
|
|
This section contains some conventions for clients that participate in
|
|
session management. See
|
|
.I
|
|
X Session Management Protocol
|
|
.R
|
|
for further details. Clients that do not support this protocol cannot
|
|
expect their window state (e.g., WM_STATE, position, size, and stacking order)
|
|
to be preserved across sessions.
|
|
.nH 2 "Client Support for Session Management"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Each session participant will obtain a unique client identifier (client-ID)
|
|
from the session manager. The client must identify one top-level window as
|
|
the \*Qclient leader.\*U This window must be created by the client. It may
|
|
be in any state, including the Withdrawn state. The client leader window
|
|
must have a SM_CLIENT_ID property, which contains the client-ID obtained
|
|
from the session management protocol. That property must:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Be of type STRING
|
|
.bP
|
|
Be of format 8
|
|
.bP
|
|
Contain the client-ID as a string of XPCS characters encoded using ISO
|
|
8859-1
|
|
.LP
|
|
All top-level, nontransient windows created by a client on the same display
|
|
as the client leader must have a WM_CLIENT_LEADER property. This property
|
|
contains a window ID that identifies the client leader window. The client
|
|
leader window must have a WM_CLIENT_LEADER property containing its own
|
|
window ID (i.e., the client leader window is pointing to itself). Transient
|
|
windows need not have a WM_CLIENT_LEADER property if the client leader can
|
|
be determined using the information in the WM_TRANSIENT_FOR property. The
|
|
WM_CLIENT_LEADER property must:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Be of type WINDOW
|
|
.bP
|
|
Be of format 32
|
|
.bP
|
|
Contain the window ID of the client leader window
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client must withdraw all of its top-level windows on the same display
|
|
before modifiying either the WM_CLIENT_LEADER or the SM_CLIENT_ID property
|
|
of its client leader window.
|
|
.LP
|
|
It is necessary that other clients be able to uniquely identify a window
|
|
(across sessions) among all windows related to the same client-ID. For
|
|
example, a window manager can require this unique ID to restore geometry
|
|
information from a previous session, or a workspace manager could use it to
|
|
restore information about which windows are in which workspace. A client
|
|
may optionally provide a WM_WINDOW_ROLE property to uniquely identify a
|
|
window within the scope specified above. The combination of SM_CLIENT_ID
|
|
and WM_WINDOW_ROLE can be used by other clients to uniquely identify a
|
|
window across sessions.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If the WM_WINDOW_ROLE property is not specified on a top-level window, a
|
|
client that needs to uniquely identify that window will try to use instead
|
|
the values of WM_CLASS and WM_NAME. If a client has multiple windows with
|
|
identical WM_CLASS and WM_NAME properties, then it should provide a
|
|
WM_WINDOW_ROLE property.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The client must set the WM_WINDOW_ROLE property to a string that uniquely
|
|
identifies that window among all windows that have the same client leader
|
|
window. The property must:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Be of type STRING
|
|
.bP
|
|
Be of format 8
|
|
.bP
|
|
Contain a string restricted to the XPCS characters, encoded in ISO 8859-1
|
|
.nH 2 "Window Manager Support for Session Management"
|
|
.LP
|
|
A window manager supporting session management must register with the
|
|
session manager and obtain its own client-ID. The window manager should
|
|
save and restore information such as the WM_STATE, the layout of windows on
|
|
the screen, and their stacking order for every client window that has a
|
|
valid SM_CLIENT_ID property (on itself, or on the window named by
|
|
WM_CLIENT_LEADER) and that can be uniquely identified.
|
|
Clients are allowed to change this state during the first phase of the
|
|
session checkpoint process. Therefore, window managers should request a
|
|
second checkpoint phase and save clients' state only during that phase.
|
|
.nH 2 "Support for ICE Client Rendezvous"
|
|
.IN "ICE Rendezvous"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The Inter-Client Exchange protocol (ICE) defined as of X11R6
|
|
specifies a generic communication framework, independent of the X
|
|
server, for data exchange between arbitrary clients. ICE also defines
|
|
a protocol for any two ICE clients who also have X connections
|
|
to the same X server to locate (rendezvous with) each other.
|
|
.LP
|
|
This protocol, called the "ICE X Rendezvous" protocol, is defined in
|
|
the ICE specification, Appendix B,
|
|
and uses the property ICE_PROTOCOLS plus
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
events. Refer to that specification for complete details.
|
|
.nH 1 "Manipulation of Shared Resources"
|
|
.LP
|
|
X Version 11 permits clients to manipulate a number of shared resources,
|
|
for example, the input focus, the pointer, and colormaps.
|
|
Conventions are required so that clients share resources in an
|
|
orderly fashion.
|
|
.nH 2 "The Input Focus"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that explicitly set the input focus must observe one of two modes:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Locally active mode
|
|
.bP
|
|
Globally active mode
|
|
.NT Conventions
|
|
.IP 1. 5
|
|
Locally active clients should set the input focus to one of their windows
|
|
only when it is already in one of their windows
|
|
or when they receive a WM_TAKE_FOCUS message.
|
|
They should set the input field of the WM_HINTS structure to
|
|
.PN True .
|
|
.IP 2. 5
|
|
Globally active clients should set the input focus to one of their windows
|
|
only when they receive a button event and a passive-grabbed key event,
|
|
or when they receive a WM_TAKE_FOCUS message.
|
|
They should set the input field of the WM_HINTS structure to
|
|
.PN False .
|
|
.IP 3. 5
|
|
In addition, clients should use the timestamp of the event
|
|
that caused them to attempt to set the input focus as the time field on the
|
|
.PN SetInputFocus
|
|
request, not
|
|
.PN CurrentTime .
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 2 "The Pointer"
|
|
.LP
|
|
In general, clients should not warp the pointer.
|
|
Window managers, however, may do so
|
|
(for example, to maintain the invariant that the pointer is always
|
|
in the window with the input focus).
|
|
Other window managers may want to preserve the illusion that the user
|
|
is in sole control of the pointer.
|
|
.NT Conventions
|
|
.IP 1. 5
|
|
Clients should not warp the pointer.
|
|
.IP 2. 5
|
|
Clients that insist on warping the pointer should do so only
|
|
with the src-window argument of the
|
|
.PN WarpPointer
|
|
request set to one of their windows.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 2 "Grabs"
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client's attempt to establish a button or a key grab on a window
|
|
will fail if some other client has already established a conflicting
|
|
grab on the same window.
|
|
The grabs, therefore, are shared resources,
|
|
and their use requires conventions.
|
|
.LP
|
|
In conformance with the principle that clients should behave,
|
|
as far as possible,
|
|
when a window manager is running as they would when it is not,
|
|
a client that has the input focus may assume that it can receive all
|
|
the available keys and buttons.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Window managers should ensure that they provide some mechanism for
|
|
their clients to receive events from all keys and all buttons,
|
|
except for events involving keys whose KeySyms are registered as being for
|
|
window management functions (for example, a hypothetical WINDOW KeySym).
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
In other words,
|
|
window managers must provide some mechanism by which a client
|
|
can receive events from every key and button (regardless of modifiers)
|
|
unless and until the X Consortium registers some KeySyms as being reserved
|
|
for window management functions.
|
|
Currently, no KeySyms are registered for window management functions.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Even so, clients are advised to allow the key and button combinations
|
|
used to elicit program actions to be modified,
|
|
because some window managers may choose not to observe this convention
|
|
or may not provide a convenient method for the user to transmit events
|
|
from some keys.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients should establish button and key grabs only on windows that
|
|
they own.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
In particular, this convention means that a window manager that wishes
|
|
to establish a grab over the client's top-level window should either establish
|
|
the grab on the root or reparent the window and establish the grab
|
|
on a proper ancestor.
|
|
In some cases,
|
|
a window manager may want to consume the event received,
|
|
placing the window in a state where a subsequent such event will go to
|
|
the client.
|
|
Examples are:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Clicking in a window to set focus with the click not being offered
|
|
to the client
|
|
.bP
|
|
Clicking in a buried window to raise it, again, with the click not offered
|
|
to the client
|
|
.LP
|
|
More typically,
|
|
a window manager should add to, rather than replace, the client's semantics
|
|
for key+button combinations by allowing the event to be used by the client
|
|
after the window manager is done with it.
|
|
To ensure this,
|
|
the window manager should establish the grab on the parent
|
|
by using the following:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.Ds
|
|
pointer/keyboard-mode == Synchronous
|
|
.De
|
|
.LP
|
|
Then, the window manager should release the grab by using an
|
|
.PN AllowEvents
|
|
request with the following specified:
|
|
.LP
|
|
.Ds
|
|
mode == ReplayPointer/Keyboard
|
|
.De
|
|
.LP
|
|
In this way,
|
|
the client will receive the events as if they had not been intercepted.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Obviously,
|
|
these conventions place some constraints on possible user interface policies.
|
|
There is a trade-off here between freedom for window managers to implement
|
|
their user interface policies and freedom for clients to implement theirs.
|
|
The dilemma is resolved by:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Allowing window managers to decide if and when a client will receive an
|
|
event from any given key or button
|
|
.bP
|
|
Placing a requirement on the window manager to provide some mechanism,
|
|
perhaps a \*QQuote\*U key,
|
|
by which the user can send an event from any key or button to the client
|
|
.nH 2 "Colormaps"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Section 4.1.8 prescribes conventions for clients to communicate with the
|
|
window manager about their colormap needs. If your clients are
|
|
.PN DirectColor
|
|
type applications,
|
|
you should consult section 14.3 of \fIXlib \- C Language X Interface\fP
|
|
for conventions connected with sharing standard colormaps.
|
|
They should look for and create the properties described there on
|
|
the root window of the appropriate screen.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The contents of the RGB_COLOR_MAP type property are as follows:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l l l.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Field Type Comments
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
colormap COLORMAP ID of the colormap described
|
|
red_max CARD32 Values for pixel calculations
|
|
red_mult CARD32
|
|
green_max CARD32
|
|
green_mult CARD32
|
|
blue_max CARD32
|
|
blue_mult CARD32
|
|
base_pixel CARD32
|
|
visual_id VISUALID Visual to which colormap belongs
|
|
kill_id CARD32 ID for destroying the resources
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
When deleting or replacing an RGB_COLOR_MAP,
|
|
it is not sufficient to delete the property;
|
|
it is important to free the associated colormap resources as well.
|
|
If kill_id is greater than one,
|
|
the resources should be freed by issuing a
|
|
.PN KillClient
|
|
request with kill_id as the argument.
|
|
If kill_id is one,
|
|
the resources should be freed by issuing a
|
|
.PN FreeColormap
|
|
request with colormap as the colormap
|
|
argument.
|
|
If kill_id is zero,
|
|
no attempt should be made to free the resources.
|
|
A client that creates an RGB_COLOR_MAP for which the colormap resource
|
|
is created specifically for this purpose should set kill_id to one
|
|
(and can create more than one such standard colormap
|
|
using a single connection).
|
|
A client that creates an RGB_COLOR_MAP for which the colormap resource
|
|
is shared in some way (for example, is the default colormap
|
|
for the root window) should create an arbitrary resource and use its
|
|
resource ID for kill_id (and should create no other standard colormaps
|
|
on the connection).
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
If an RGB_COLOR_MAP property is too short to contain the visual_id field,
|
|
it can be assumed that the visual_id is the root visual
|
|
of the appropriate screen.
|
|
If an RGB_COLOR_MAP property is too short to contain the kill_id field,
|
|
a value of zero can be assumed.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
During the connection handshake,
|
|
the server informs the client of the default colormap for each screen.
|
|
This is a colormap for the root visual,
|
|
and clients can use it to improve the extent of colormap sharing
|
|
if they use the root visual.
|
|
.nH 2 "The Keyboard Mapping"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The X server contains a table (which is read by
|
|
.PN GetKeyboardMapping
|
|
requests) that describes the set of symbols appearing
|
|
on the corresponding key for each keycode generated by the server.
|
|
This table does not affect the server's operations in any way;
|
|
it is simply a database used by clients that attempt to understand
|
|
the keycodes they receive.
|
|
Nevertheless, it is a shared resource and requires conventions.
|
|
.LP
|
|
It is possible for clients to modify this table by using a
|
|
.PN ChangeKeyboardMapping
|
|
request.
|
|
In general, clients should not do this.
|
|
In particular, this is not the way in which clients should implement
|
|
key bindings or key remapping.
|
|
The conversion between a sequence of keycodes received from the server
|
|
and a string in a particular encoding is a private matter for each client
|
|
(as it must be in a world where applications may be using different
|
|
encodings to support different languages and fonts).
|
|
See the Xlib reference manual for converting keyboard events to text.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The only valid reason for using a
|
|
.PN ChangeKeyboardMapping
|
|
request is when the symbols written on the keys have changed as, for example,
|
|
when a Dvorak key conversion kit or a set of APL keycaps has been installed.
|
|
Of course, a client may have to take the change to the keycap on trust.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The following illustrates a permissible interaction between a client
|
|
and a user:
|
|
.IP Client: 10
|
|
\*QYou just started me on a server without a Pause key.
|
|
Please choose a key to be the Pause key and press it now.\*U
|
|
.IP User: 10
|
|
Presses the Scroll Lock key
|
|
.IP Client: 10
|
|
\*QAdding Pause to the symbols on the Scroll Lock key: Confirm or Abort.\*U
|
|
.IP User: 10
|
|
Confirms
|
|
.IP Client: 10
|
|
Uses a
|
|
.PN ChangeKeyboardMapping
|
|
request to add Pause to the keycode that already contains Scroll Lock and
|
|
issues this request, \*QPlease paint Pause on the Scroll Lock key.\*U
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients should not use
|
|
.PN ChangeKeyboardMapping
|
|
requests.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
If a client succeeds in changing the keyboard mapping table,
|
|
all clients will receive
|
|
.PN MappingNotify (request==Keyboard)
|
|
events.
|
|
There is no mechanism to avoid receiving these events.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients receiving
|
|
.PN MappingNotify (request==Keyboard)
|
|
events should update any internal keycode translation tables they are using.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.nH 2 "The Modifier Mapping"
|
|
.LP
|
|
X Version 11 supports 8 modifier bits of which 3 are preassigned
|
|
to Shift, Lock, and Control.
|
|
Each modifier bit is controlled by the state of a set of keys,
|
|
and these sets are specified in a table accessed by
|
|
.PN GetModifierMapping
|
|
and
|
|
.PN SetModifierMapping
|
|
requests.
|
|
This table is a shared resource and requires conventions.
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client that needs to use one of the preassigned modifiers should assume
|
|
that the modifier table has been set up correctly to control these modifiers.
|
|
The Lock modifier should be interpreted as Caps Lock or Shift Lock
|
|
according as the keycodes in its controlling set include XK_Caps_Lock
|
|
or XK_Shift_Lock.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
Clients should determine the meaning of a modifier bit from the KeySyms
|
|
being used to control it.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client that needs to use an extra modifier (for example, META) should do
|
|
the following:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Scan the existing modifier mappings.
|
|
If it finds a modifier that contains a keycode whose set of KeySyms
|
|
includes XK_Meta_L or XK_Meta_R,
|
|
it should use that modifier bit.
|
|
.bP
|
|
If there is no existing modifier controlled by XK_Meta_L or XK_Meta_R,
|
|
it should select an unused modifier bit (one with an empty controlling set)
|
|
and do the following:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
If there is a keycode with XL_Meta_L in its set of KeySyms,
|
|
add that keycode to the set for the chosen modifier.
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
If there is a keycode with XL_Meta_R in its set of KeySyms,
|
|
add that keycode to the set for the chosen modifier.
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
If the controlling set is still empty,
|
|
interact with the user to select one or more keys to be META.
|
|
.RE
|
|
.bP
|
|
If there are no unused modifier bits,
|
|
ask the user to take corrective action.
|
|
.NT Conventions
|
|
.IP 1. 5
|
|
Clients needing a modifier not currently in use should assign keycodes
|
|
carrying suitable KeySyms to an unused modifier bit.
|
|
.IP 2. 5
|
|
Clients assigning their own modifier bits should ask the user politely to
|
|
remove his or her hands from the key in question if their
|
|
.PN SetModifierMapping
|
|
request returns a
|
|
.PN Busy
|
|
status.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
There is no good solution to the problem of reclaiming assignments
|
|
to the five nonpreassigned modifiers when they are no longer being used.
|
|
.NT Convention
|
|
The user must use
|
|
.PN xmodmap
|
|
or some other utility to deassign obsolete modifier mappings by hand.
|
|
.NE
|
|
.LP
|
|
When a client succeeds in performing a
|
|
.PN SetModifierMapping
|
|
request,
|
|
all clients will receive
|
|
.PN MappingNotify (request==Modifier)
|
|
events.
|
|
There is no mechanism for preventing these events from being received.
|
|
A client that uses one of the nonpreassigned modifiers that receives
|
|
one of these events should do a
|
|
.PN GetModifierMapping
|
|
request to discover the new mapping,
|
|
and if the modifier it is using has been cleared,
|
|
it should reinstall the modifier.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Note that a
|
|
.PN GrabServer
|
|
request must be used to make the
|
|
.PN GetModifierMapping
|
|
and
|
|
.PN SetModifierMapping
|
|
pair in these transactions atomic.
|
|
.nH 1 "Device Color Characterization"
|
|
.LP
|
|
.EQ
|
|
delim @@
|
|
define oc % "\\fR{\\fP" %
|
|
define cc % "\\fR}\\fP" %
|
|
.EN
|
|
The X protocol provides explicit Red, Green, and Blue (RGB) values,
|
|
which are used to directly drive a monitor, and color names. RGB values
|
|
provide a mechanism for accessing the full capabilities of the display
|
|
device, but at the expense of having the color perceived by the user remain
|
|
unknowable through the protocol. Color names were originally designed to
|
|
provide access to a device-independent color database by having the server
|
|
vendor tune the definitions of the colors in that textual database.
|
|
Unfortunately, this still does not provide the client any way of using
|
|
an existing device-independent color, nor for the client to get
|
|
device-independent color information back about colors that it has selected.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Furthermore, the client must be able to discover which set of colors are
|
|
displayable by the device (the device gamut), both to allow colors to be
|
|
intelligently modified to fit within the device capabilities (gamut
|
|
compression) and to enable the user interface to display a representation of
|
|
the reachable color space to the user (gamut display).
|
|
.LP
|
|
Therefore, a system is needed that will provide full access to
|
|
device-independent color spaces for X clients. This system should use a
|
|
standard mechanism for naming the colors, be able to provide names for
|
|
existing colors, and provide means by which unreachable colors can be
|
|
modified to fall within the device gamut.
|
|
.LP
|
|
We are fortunate in this area to have a seminal work, the 1931 CIE color
|
|
standard, which is nearly universally agreed upon as adequate for describing
|
|
colors on CRT devices. This standard uses a tri-stimulus model called CIE
|
|
XYZ in which each perceivable color is specified as a triplet of numbers.
|
|
Other appropriate device-independent color models do exist, but most of them
|
|
are directly traceable back to this original work.
|
|
.LP
|
|
X device color characterization
|
|
provides device-independent color spaces to X clients. It does this by
|
|
providing the barest possible amount of information to the client that
|
|
allows the client to construct a mapping between CIE XYZ and the regular X
|
|
RGB color descriptions.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Device color characterization is defined by
|
|
the name and contents of two window properties that,
|
|
together, permit converting between CIE XYZ space and
|
|
linear RGB device space (such as standard CRTs).
|
|
Linear RGB devices require just two
|
|
pieces of information to completely characterize them:
|
|
.IP \(bu 5
|
|
A @3 times 3@ matrix @M@ and its inverse @M sup -1@, which convert between
|
|
XYZ and RGB intensity (@RGB sub intensity@):
|
|
.EQ C
|
|
RGB sub intensity ~ = ~ M ~ times ~ XYZ
|
|
.EN
|
|
.EQ C
|
|
XYZ ~ = ~ M sup -1 ~ times ~ RGB sub intensity
|
|
.EN
|
|
.IP \(bu 5
|
|
A way of mapping between RGB intensity and RGB protocol value. XDCCC
|
|
supports three mechanisms which will be outlined later.
|
|
.LP
|
|
If other device types are eventually necessary, additional
|
|
properties will be required to describe them.
|
|
.nH 2 "XYZ \*(dA RGB Conversion Matrices"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Because of the limited dynamic range of both XYZ and RGB intensity,
|
|
these matrices will be encoded using a fixed-point representation of a
|
|
32-bit two's complement number scaled by @2 sup 27@, giving a range of @-16@ to
|
|
@16 - epsilon@, where @epsilon ~ = ~ 2 sup -27@.
|
|
.LP
|
|
These matrices will be packed into an 18-element list of 32-bit values,
|
|
XYZ \(-> RGB matrix first, in row major order and stored in the
|
|
XDCCC_LINEAR_RGB_MATRICES properties (format = 32) on the root window of
|
|
each screen, using values appropriate for that screen.
|
|
.LP
|
|
This will be encoded as shown in the following table:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS
|
|
center;
|
|
c s s
|
|
c c c
|
|
l l l.
|
|
XDCCC_LINEAR_RGB_MATRICES property contents
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Field Type Comments
|
|
.R
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
@M sub 0,0@ INT32 Interpreted as a fixed-point number @-16~<=~x~<~16@
|
|
@M sub 0,1@ INT32
|
|
\&.\^.\^.
|
|
@M sub 3,3@ INT32
|
|
@{M sup -1} sub 0,0@ INT32
|
|
@{M sup -1} sub 0,1@ INT32
|
|
\&.\^.\^.
|
|
@{M sup -1} sub 3,3@ INT32
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.nH 2 "Intensity \*(dA RGB Value Conversion"
|
|
.LP
|
|
XDCCC provides two representations for describing the conversion
|
|
between RGB intensity and the actual X protocol RGB values:
|
|
.DS
|
|
.TA .5i
|
|
.ta .5i
|
|
0 RGB value/RGB intensity level pairs
|
|
1 RGB intensity ramp
|
|
.DE
|
|
.LP
|
|
In both cases, the relevant data will be stored in the
|
|
XDCCC_LINEAR_RGB_CORRECTION properties on the root window of each screen,
|
|
using values appropriate for that screen, in whatever format provides
|
|
adequate resolution. Each property can consist of multiple entries
|
|
concatenated together, if different visuals for the screen require different
|
|
conversion data. An entry with a VisualID of 0 specifies data for all
|
|
visuals of the screen that are not otherwise explicitly listed.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The first representation is an array of RGB value/intensity level pairs, with
|
|
the RGB values in strictly increasing order. When converting, the client must
|
|
linearly interpolate between adjacent entries in the table to compute the
|
|
desired value. This allows the server to perform gamma correction
|
|
itself and encode that fact in a short two-element correction table. The
|
|
intensity will be encoded as an unsigned number to be interpreted as a value
|
|
between 0 and 1 (inclusive). The precision of this value will depend on the
|
|
format of the property in which it is stored (8, 16, or 32 bits). For 16-bit
|
|
and 32-bit formats, the RGB value will simply be the value stored in the
|
|
property. When stored in 8-bit format, the RGB value can be computed from
|
|
the value in the property by:
|
|
.EQ C
|
|
RGB sub value ~ = ~ { Property ~ Value ~ times ~ 65535 } over 255
|
|
.EN
|
|
.LP
|
|
Because the three electron guns in the device may not be exactly alike in
|
|
response characteristics, it is necessary to allow for three separate
|
|
tables, one each for red, green, and blue. Therefore, each table will be
|
|
preceded by the number of entries in that table, and the set of tables will be
|
|
preceded by the number of tables.
|
|
When three tables are provided, they will be in red, green, blue order.
|
|
.LP
|
|
This will be encoded as shown in the following table:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS
|
|
center;
|
|
c s s
|
|
c c c
|
|
l l l.
|
|
XDCCC_LINEAR_RGB_CORRECTION Property Contents for Type 0 Correction
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Field Type Comments
|
|
.R
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
VisualID0 CARD Most significant portion of VisualID
|
|
VisualID1 CARD Exists if and only if the property format is 8
|
|
VisualID2 CARD Exists if and only if the property format is 8
|
|
VisualID3 CARD T{
|
|
Least significant portion, exists if and only if the property format
|
|
is 8 or 16
|
|
T}
|
|
type CARD 0 for this type of correction
|
|
count CARD Number of tables following (either 1 or 3)
|
|
length CARD Number of pairs \- 1 following in this table
|
|
value CARD X Protocol RGB value
|
|
intensity CARD Interpret as a number @0~<=~intensity~<=~1@
|
|
\&.\^.\^. .\^.\^. Total of \fIlength+1\fP pairs of value/intensity values
|
|
lengthg CARD T{
|
|
Number of pairs \- 1 following in this table (if and
|
|
only if \fIcount\fP is 3)
|
|
T}
|
|
value CARD X Protocol RGB value
|
|
intensity CARD Interpret as a number @0~<=~intensity~<=~1@
|
|
\&.\^.\^. .\^.\^. Total of \fIlengthg+1\fP pairs of value/intensity values
|
|
lengthb CARD T{
|
|
Number of pairs \- 1 following in this table (if and
|
|
only if \fIcount\fP is 3)
|
|
T}
|
|
value CARD X Protocol RGB value
|
|
intensity CARD Interpret as a number @0~<=~intensity~<=~1@
|
|
\&.\^.\^. .\^.\^. Total of \fIlengthb+1\fP pairs of value/intensity values
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.LP
|
|
The VisualID is stored in 4, 2, or 1 pieces, depending on whether
|
|
the property format is 8, 16, or 32, respectively. The VisualID is always
|
|
stored most significant piece first.
|
|
Note that the length fields are stored as one less than the actual length,
|
|
so 256 entries can be stored in format 8.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The second representation is a simple array of intensities for a linear subset
|
|
of RGB values. The expected size of this table is the bits-per-rgb-value of
|
|
the screen, but it can be any length. This is similar to the first mechanism,
|
|
except that the RGB value numbers are implicitly defined by the index in the
|
|
array (indices start at 0):
|
|
.EQ C
|
|
RGB sub value ~ = ~ { Array ~ Index ~ times ~ 65535 } over
|
|
{ Array ~ Size ~ - ~ 1 }
|
|
.EN
|
|
When converting, the client may linearly interpolate between entries in this
|
|
table. The intensity values will be encoded just as in the first
|
|
representation.
|
|
.LP
|
|
This will be encoded as shown in the following table:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS
|
|
center;
|
|
c s s
|
|
c c c
|
|
l l l.
|
|
XDCCC_LINEAR_RGB_CORRECTION Property Contents for Type 1 Correction
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Field Type Comments
|
|
.R
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
VisualID0 CARD Most significant portion of VisualID
|
|
VisualID1 CARD Exists if and only if the property format is 8
|
|
VisualID2 CARD Exists if and only if the property format is 8
|
|
VisualID3 CARD T{
|
|
Least significant portion, exists if and only if
|
|
the property format is 8 or 16
|
|
T}
|
|
type CARD 1 for this type of correction
|
|
count CARD Number of tables following (either 1 or 3)
|
|
length CARD Number of elements \- 1 following in this table
|
|
intensity CARD Interpret as a number @0~<=~intensity~<=~1@
|
|
\&.\^.\^. .\^.\^. Total of \fIlength+1\fP intensity elements
|
|
lengthg CARD T{
|
|
Number of elements \- 1 following in this table (if and
|
|
only if \fIcount\fP is 3)
|
|
T}
|
|
intensity CARD Interpret as a number @0~<=~intensity~<=~1@
|
|
\&.\^.\^. .\^.\^. Total of \fIlengthg+1\fP intensity elements
|
|
lengthb CARD T{
|
|
Number of elements \- 1 following in this table (if and
|
|
only if \fIcount\fP is 3)
|
|
T}
|
|
intensity CARD Interpret as a number @0~<=~intensity~<=~1@
|
|
\&.\^.\^. .\^.\^. Total of \fIlengthb+1\fP intensity elements
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.nH 1 "Conclusion"
|
|
.LP
|
|
This document provides the protocol-level specification of the minimal
|
|
conventions needed to ensure that X Version 11 clients can interoperate
|
|
properly. This document specifies interoperability conventions only for the
|
|
X Version 11 protocol. Clients should be aware of other protocols that
|
|
should be used for better interoperation in the X environment. The reader
|
|
is referred to
|
|
.I
|
|
X Session Management Protocol
|
|
.R
|
|
for information on session management, and to
|
|
.I
|
|
Inter-Client Exchange Protocol
|
|
.R
|
|
for information on general-purpose communication among clients.
|
|
.nH 2 "The X Registry"
|
|
.IN "Registry"
|
|
.IN "X Registry"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The X Consortium maintains a registry of certain X-related items, to aid in
|
|
avoiding conflicts and in sharing of such items. Readers are
|
|
encouraged to use the registry. The classes of items kept in the registry
|
|
that are relevant to the ICCCM include property names, property types,
|
|
selection names, selection targets, WM_PROTOCOLS protocols,
|
|
.PN Client\%Message
|
|
types, and application classes. Requests to register items, or questions
|
|
about registration, should be addressed to
|
|
.EQ
|
|
delim off
|
|
.EN
|
|
.DS
|
|
xregistry@x.org
|
|
.DE
|
|
or to
|
|
.DS
|
|
The X.Org Group -- X11 Registry
|
|
c/o Ienup Sung
|
|
Sun Microsystems, Inc.
|
|
4150 Network Circle, MS SJC07-201
|
|
Santa Clara, CA 95054
|
|
USA
|
|
.DE
|
|
Electronic mail will be acknowledged upon receipt. Please allow up to 4
|
|
weeks for a formal response to registration and inquiries.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The registry is published as part of the X software distribution from the X
|
|
Consortium. All registered items must have the postal address of someone
|
|
responsible for the item or a reference to a document describing the item
|
|
and the postal address of where to write to obtain the document.
|
|
.bp
|
|
.\" Set registers to number the appendixes A.1, B.1, C.1, ...
|
|
.nr H1 0
|
|
.af H1 A
|
|
.cT "Appendix A" no
|
|
.nH 1 "Revision History"
|
|
.LP
|
|
This appendix describes the revision history of this document and
|
|
summarizes the incompatibilities between this and earlier versions.
|
|
.nH 2 "The X11R2 Draft"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The February 25, 1988, draft that was distributed as part of X Version 11,
|
|
Release 2, was clearly labeled as such,
|
|
and many areas were explicitly labeled as liable to change.
|
|
Nevertheless, in the revision work done since then,
|
|
we have been very careful not to introduce gratuitous incompatibility.
|
|
As far as possible,
|
|
we have tried to ensure that clients obeying the conventions
|
|
in the X11R2 draft would still work.
|
|
.nH 2 "The July 27, 1988, Draft"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The Consortium review was based on a draft dated July 27, 1988. This draft
|
|
included several areas in which incompatibilities with the X11R2 draft were
|
|
necessary:
|
|
.bP
|
|
The use of property
|
|
.PN None
|
|
in
|
|
.PN ConvertSelection
|
|
requests is no longer allowed.
|
|
Owners that receive them are free to use the target atom as the property
|
|
to respond with,
|
|
which will work in most cases.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The protocol for INCREMENTAL type properties as selection replies has changed,
|
|
and the name has been changed to INCR.
|
|
Selection requestors are free to implement the earlier protocol
|
|
if they receive properties of type INCREMENTAL.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The protocol for INDIRECT type properties as selection replies has changed,
|
|
and the name has been changed to MULTIPLE.
|
|
Selection requestors are free to implement the earlier protocol
|
|
if they receive properties of type INDIRECT.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The protocol for the special CLIPBOARD client has changed.
|
|
The earlier protocol is subject to race conditions and should not be used.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The set of state values in WM_HINTS.initial_state has been reduced,
|
|
but the values that are still valid are unchanged.
|
|
Window managers should treat the other values sensibly.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The methods an application uses to change the state of its top-level window
|
|
have changed but in such a way that cases that used to work will still work.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The x, y, width, and height fields have been removed from the WM_NORMAL_HINTS
|
|
property and replaced by pad fields.
|
|
Values set into these fields will be ignored.
|
|
The position and size of the window should be set by setting the appropriate
|
|
window attributes.
|
|
.bP
|
|
A pair of base fields and a win_gravity field have been added
|
|
to the WM_NORMAL_HINTS property.
|
|
Window managers will assume values for these fields if the client
|
|
sets a short property.
|
|
.nH 2 "The Public Review Drafts"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The Consortium review resulted in several incompatible changes. These
|
|
changes were included in drafts that were distributed for public review
|
|
during the first half of 1989.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The messages field of the WM_HINTS property was found to be unwieldy
|
|
and difficult to evolve.
|
|
It has been replaced by the WM_PROTOCOLS property,
|
|
but clients that use the earlier mechanism can be detected
|
|
because they set the messages bit in the flags field of the WM_HINTS property,
|
|
and window managers can provide a backwards compatibility mode.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The mechanism described in the earlier draft by which clients installed
|
|
their own subwindow colormaps could not be made to work reliably
|
|
and mandated some features of the look and feel.
|
|
It has been replaced by the WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS property.
|
|
Clients that use the earlier mechanism can be detected by the WM_COLORMAPS
|
|
property they set on their top-level window,
|
|
but providing a reliable backwards compatibility mode is not possible.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The recommendations for window manager treatment of top-level window borders
|
|
have been changed as those in the earlier draft produced problems
|
|
with Visibility events.
|
|
For nonwindow manager clients,
|
|
there is no incompatibility.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The pseudoroot facility in the earlier draft has been removed.
|
|
Although it has been successfully implemented,
|
|
it turns out to be inadequate to support the uses envisaged.
|
|
An extension will be required to support these uses fully,
|
|
and it was felt that the maximum freedom should be left to the designers
|
|
of the extension.
|
|
In general,
|
|
the previous mechanism was invisible to clients and no incompatibility
|
|
should result.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The addition of the WM_DELETE_WINDOW protocol (which prevents the danger
|
|
that multi-window clients may be terminated unexpectedly)
|
|
has meant some changes in the WM_SAVE_YOURSELF protocol,
|
|
to ensure that the two protocols are orthogonal.
|
|
Clients using the earlier protocol can be detected (see WM_PROTOCOLS above)
|
|
and supported in a backwards compatibility mode.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The conventions in Section 14.3.1. of \fIXlib \- C Language X Interface\fP
|
|
regarding properties of type RGB_COLOR_MAP have been changed,
|
|
but clients that use the earlier conventions can be detected
|
|
because their properties are 4 bytes shorter.
|
|
These clients will work correctly if the server supports only a single Visual
|
|
or if they use only the Visual of the root.
|
|
These are the only cases in which they would have worked, anyway.
|
|
.nH 2 "Version 1.0, July 1989"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The public review resulted in a set of mostly editorial changes. The
|
|
changes in version 1.0 that introduced some degree of incompatibility with
|
|
the earlier drafts are:
|
|
.bP
|
|
A new section (6.3) was added covering the window manager's
|
|
use of Grabs.
|
|
The restrictions it imposes should affect only window managers.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The TARGETS selection target has been clarified,
|
|
and it may be necessary for clients to add some entries to their replies.
|
|
.bP
|
|
A selection owner using INCR transfer should no longer replace targets in
|
|
a MULTIPLE property with the atom INCR.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The contents of the
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
event sent by a client to iconify itself has been clarified,
|
|
but there should be no incompatibility because the earlier contents
|
|
would not in fact have worked.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The border-width in synthetic
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
events is now specified,
|
|
but this should not cause any incompatibility.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Clients are now asked to set a border-width on all
|
|
.PN ConfigureWindow
|
|
requests.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Window manager properties on icon windows now will be ignored,
|
|
but there should be no incompatibility
|
|
because there was no specification that they be obeyed previously.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The ordering of real and synthetic
|
|
.PN ConfigureNotify
|
|
events is now specified,
|
|
but any incompatibility should affect only window managers.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The semantics of WM_SAVE_YOURSELF have been clarified and restricted to
|
|
be a checkpoint operation only.
|
|
Clients that were using it as part of a shutdown sequence may need to
|
|
be modified,
|
|
especially if they were interacting with the user during the shutdown.
|
|
.bP
|
|
A kill_id field has been added to RGB_COLOR_MAP properties.
|
|
Clients using earlier conventions can be detected by the size of their
|
|
RGB_COLOR_MAP properties,
|
|
and the cases that would have worked will still work.
|
|
.nH 2 "Version 1.1"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Version 1.1 was released with X11R5 in September 1991. In addition to some
|
|
minor editorial changes, there were a few semantic changes since Version
|
|
1.0:
|
|
.bP
|
|
The section on Device Color Characterization was added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The meaning of the NULL property type was clarified.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Appropriate references to Compound Text were added.
|
|
.nH 2 "Public Review Draft, December 1993"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The following changes have been made in preparing the public review draft
|
|
for Version 2.0.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P01] Addition of advice to clients on how to keep track of a top-level
|
|
window's absolute position on the screen.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P03] A technique for clients to detect when it is safe to reuse a
|
|
top-level window has been added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P06] Section 4.1.8, on colormaps, has been rewritten. A new feature that
|
|
allows clients to install their own colormaps has also been added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P08] The LENGTH target has been deprecated.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P11] The manager selections facility was added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P17] The definition of the aspect ratio fields of the WM_NORMAL_HINTS
|
|
property has been changed to include the base size.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P19]
|
|
.PN StaticGravity
|
|
has been added to the list of values allowed for the win_gravity field of
|
|
the WM_HINTS property. The meaning of the
|
|
.PN CenterGravity
|
|
value has been clarified.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P20] A means for clients to query the ICCCM compliance level of the window
|
|
manager has been added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P22] The definition of the MULTIPLE selection target has been clarified.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P25] A definition of \*Qtop-level window\*U has been added. The WM_STATE
|
|
property has been defined and exposed to clients.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P26] The definition of window states has been clarified and the wording
|
|
regarding window state changes has been made more consistent.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P27] Clarified the rules governing when window managers are required to send
|
|
synthetic
|
|
.PN \%ConfigureNotify
|
|
events.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P28] Added a recommended technique for setting the input focus to a window
|
|
as soon as it is mapped.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P29] The required lifetime of resource IDs named in window manager
|
|
properties has been specified.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P30] Advice for dealing with keystrokes and override-redirect windows has
|
|
been added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P31] A statement on the ownership of resources transferred through the
|
|
selection mechanism has been added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P32] The definition of the CLIENT_WINDOW target has been clarified.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P33] A rule about requiring the selection owner to reacquire the
|
|
selection under certain circumstances has been added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P42] Added several new selection targets.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P44] Ambiguous wording regarding the withdrawal of top-level windows
|
|
has been removed.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P45] A facility for requestors to pass parameters during a selection
|
|
request has been added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P49] A convention on discrimated names has been added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P57] The C_STRING property type was added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P62] An ordering requirement on processing selection requests was added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P63] The
|
|
.PN VisibleHint
|
|
flag was added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
[P64] The session management section has been updated to align with the new
|
|
session management protocol. The old session management conventions have
|
|
been moved to Appendix C.
|
|
.bP
|
|
References to the never-forthcoming \fIWindow and Session Manager
|
|
Conventions Manual\fP have been removed.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Information on the X Registry and references to the session management and
|
|
ICE documents have been added.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Numerous editorial and typographical improvements have been made.
|
|
.nH 2 "Version 2.0, April 1994"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The following changes have been made in preparation for releasing
|
|
the final edition of Version 2.0 with X11R6.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The PIXMAP selection target has been revised to return a property of type
|
|
PIXMAP instead of type DRAWABLE.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The session management section has been revised slightly to correspond with
|
|
the changes to the \fIX Session Management Protocol\fP.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Window managers are now prohibited from placing
|
|
.PN CurrentTime
|
|
in the timestamp field of WM_TAKE_FOCUS messages.
|
|
.bP
|
|
In the WM_HINTS property, the
|
|
.PN VisibleHint
|
|
flag has been renamed to
|
|
.PN UrgencyHint .
|
|
Its semantics have also been defined more thoroughly.
|
|
.bP
|
|
Additional editorial and typographical changes have been made.
|
|
.bp
|
|
.cT "Appendix B" no
|
|
.nH 1 "Suggested Protocol Revisions"
|
|
.LP
|
|
During the development of these conventions,
|
|
a number of inadequacies have been discovered in the
|
|
core X11 protocol.
|
|
They are summarized here as input to an eventual protocol revision
|
|
design process:
|
|
.bP
|
|
There is no way for anyone to find out the last-change time of
|
|
a selection.
|
|
The
|
|
.PN Get\%Selection\%Owner
|
|
request should be changed to return the last-change time as well as the owner.
|
|
.bP
|
|
There is no way for a client to find out which selection atoms are valid.
|
|
.bP
|
|
There would be no need for WM_TAKE_FOCUS if the
|
|
.PN FocusIn
|
|
event contained a timestamp and a previous-focus field.
|
|
This could avoid the potential race condition.
|
|
There is space in the event for this information;
|
|
it should be added at the next protocol revision.
|
|
.bP
|
|
There is a race condition in the
|
|
.PN Install\%Colormap
|
|
request.
|
|
It does not take a timestamp and may be executed after the top-level colormap
|
|
has been uninstalled.
|
|
The next protocol revision should provide the timestamp in the
|
|
.PN Install\%Colormap ,
|
|
.PN Uninstall\%Colormap ,
|
|
.PN List\%Installed\%Colormaps
|
|
requests and in the
|
|
.PN Colormap\%Notify
|
|
event.
|
|
The timestamp should be used in a similar way to the last-focus-change
|
|
time for the input focus. The lack of timestamps in these packets is the
|
|
reason for restricting colormap installation to the window manager.
|
|
.bP
|
|
The protocol needs to be changed to provide some way of identifying
|
|
the Visual and the Screen of a colormap.
|
|
.bP
|
|
There should be some way to reclaim assignments to the five nonpreassigned
|
|
modifiers when they are no longer needed. The manual method is unpleasantly
|
|
low-tech.
|
|
.bp
|
|
.cT "Appendix C" no
|
|
.nH 1 "Obsolete Session Manager Conventions"
|
|
.LP
|
|
This appendix contains obsolete conventions for session management using X
|
|
properties and messages. The conventions described here are deprecated and
|
|
are described only for historical interest. For further information on
|
|
session management, see
|
|
.I
|
|
X Session Management Protocol.
|
|
.R
|
|
.nH 2 "Properties"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The client communicates with the session manager by placing two properties
|
|
(WM_COMMAND and WM_CLIENT_MACHINE) on its top-level window.
|
|
If the client has a group of top-level windows,
|
|
these properties should be placed on the group leader window.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The window manager is responsible for placing a WM_STATE property
|
|
on each top-level client window for use by session managers and other clients
|
|
that need to be able to identify top-level client windows and their state.
|
|
.nH 3 "WM_COMMAND Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The WM_COMMAND property represents the command used to start or restart the
|
|
client. By updating this property, clients should ensure that it always
|
|
reflects a command that will restart them in their current state. The
|
|
content and type of the property depend on the operating system of the
|
|
machine running the client. On POSIX-conformant systems using ISO Latin-1
|
|
characters for their command lines, the property should:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Be of type STRING
|
|
.bP
|
|
Contain a list of null-terminated strings
|
|
.bP
|
|
Be initialized from argv
|
|
.IP
|
|
Other systems will need to set appropriate conventions for the type
|
|
and contents of WM_COMMAND properties.
|
|
Window and session managers should not assume that STRING is
|
|
the type of WM_COMMAND or that they will be able to understand
|
|
or display its contents.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Note that WM_COMMAND strings are null-terminated
|
|
and differ from the general conventions that STRING properties
|
|
are null-separated.
|
|
This inconsistency is necessary for backwards compatibility.
|
|
.LP
|
|
A client with multiple top-level windows should ensure
|
|
that exactly one of them has a WM_COMMAND with nonzero length.
|
|
Zero-length WM_COMMAND properties can be used to reply to WM_SAVE_YOURSELF
|
|
messages on other top-level windows but will otherwise be ignored.
|
|
.nH 3 "WM_CLIENT_MACHINE Property"
|
|
.LP
|
|
This property is described in section 4.1.2.9.
|
|
.nH 2 "Termination"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Because they communicate by means of unreliable network connections, clients
|
|
must be prepared for their connection to the server to be terminated at any
|
|
time without warning. They cannot depend on getting notification that
|
|
termination is imminent or on being able to use the server to negotiate with
|
|
the user about their fate. For example, clients cannot depend on being able
|
|
to put up a dialog box.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Similarly, clients may terminate at any time without notice to the session
|
|
manager. When a client terminates itself rather than being terminated by
|
|
the session manager, it is viewed as having resigned from the session in
|
|
question, and it will not be revived if the session is revived.
|
|
.nH 2 "Client Responses to Session Manager Actions"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients may need to respond to session manager actions in two ways:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Saving their internal state
|
|
.bP
|
|
Deleting a window
|
|
.nH 3 "Saving Client State"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that want to be warned when the session manager feels
|
|
that they should save their internal state (for example,
|
|
when termination impends) should include the atom WM_SAVE_YOURSELF
|
|
in the WM_PROTOCOLS property on their top-level windows to participate
|
|
in the WM_SAVE_YOURSELF protocol.
|
|
They will receive a
|
|
.PN ClientMessage
|
|
event as described in section 4.2.8
|
|
with the atom WM_SAVE_YOURSELF in its data[0] field.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Clients that receive WM_SAVE_YOURSELF should place themselves in a state from
|
|
which they can be restarted and should update WM_COMMAND to
|
|
be a command that will restart them in this state.
|
|
The session manager will be waiting for a
|
|
.PN PropertyNotify
|
|
event on WM_COMMAND as a confirmation that the client has saved its state.
|
|
Therefore, WM_COMMAND should be updated (perhaps with a zero-length append)
|
|
even if its contents are correct.
|
|
No interactions with the user are permitted during this process.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Once it has received this confirmation,
|
|
the session manager will feel free to terminate the client if that is what
|
|
the user asked for.
|
|
Otherwise,
|
|
if the user asked for the session to be put to sleep,
|
|
the session manager will ensure that the client does not
|
|
receive any mouse or keyboard events.
|
|
.LP
|
|
After receiving a WM_SAVE_YOURSELF, saving its state, and updating WM_COMMAND,
|
|
the client should not change its state (in the sense of doing anything
|
|
that would require a change to WM_COMMAND) until it receives a mouse
|
|
or keyboard event.
|
|
Once it does so,
|
|
it can assume that the danger is over.
|
|
The session manager will ensure that these events do not reach
|
|
clients until the danger is over or until the clients have been killed.
|
|
.LP
|
|
Irrespective of how they are arranged in window groups,
|
|
clients with multiple top-level windows should ensure the following:
|
|
.bP
|
|
Only one of their top-level windows has a nonzero-length WM_COMMAND
|
|
property.
|
|
.bP
|
|
They respond to a WM_SAVE_YOURSELF message by:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
First, updating the nonzero-length WM_COMMAND property, if necessary
|
|
.IP \- 5
|
|
Second, updating the WM_COMMAND property on the window for which they received
|
|
the WM_SAVE_YOURSELF message if it was not updated in the first step
|
|
.RE
|
|
.LP
|
|
Receiving WM_SAVE_YOURSELF on a window is, conceptually, a command
|
|
to save the entire client state.\**
|
|
.FS
|
|
This convention has changed since earlier drafts because of the
|
|
introduction of the protocol in the next section.
|
|
In the public review draft,
|
|
there was ambiguity as to whether WM_SAVE_YOURSELF was a checkpoint
|
|
or a shutdown facility.
|
|
It is now unambiguously a checkpoint facility;
|
|
if a shutdown facility is judged to be necessary,
|
|
a separate WM_PROTOCOLS protocol will be developed and registered
|
|
with the X Consortium.
|
|
.FE
|
|
.nH 3 "Window Deletion"
|
|
.LP
|
|
Windows are deleted using the WM_DELETE_WINDOW protocol, which
|
|
is described in section 4.2.8.1.
|
|
.nH 2 "Summary of Session Manager Property Types"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The session manager properties are listed in the following table:
|
|
.br
|
|
.ne 6
|
|
.TS H
|
|
l l n c.
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.B
|
|
Name Type Format See Section
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
.TH
|
|
.R
|
|
WM_CLIENT_MACHINE TEXT 4.1.2.9
|
|
WM_COMMAND TEXT C.1.1
|
|
WM_STATE WM_STATE 32 4.1.3.1
|
|
.sp 6p
|
|
_
|
|
.TE
|
|
.\" Finish up!
|
|
.YZ 3
|