view README.wscons @ 2268:4baee598306d

Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2007 14:02:33 -0700 From: Sam Lantinga Subject: SDL 1.3 keyboard plan After lots of discussion with Christian, this is what we came up with: > So, to sum up... > SDLK_* become the physical keys, starting at > (1<<21) > We create a macro SDLK_INDEX(X) > We have two functions SDL_GetLayoutKey(SDLKey) and SDL_GetKeyName() > SDL_GetLayoutKey maps to UCS4 for printable characters, and SDLK* for non-printable characters > and does so based on the OS's current keyboard layout > SDL_GetKeyName() handles both SDLK_* and UCS4, converting UCS4 to UTF-8 and converting SDLK_* into our names, which are UTF-8 for printable characters. > WASD folks use SDLK_*, and 'I' folks use SDL_GetLayoutKey(SDLK_*) Here is the patch he came up with, and his e-mail about it: Date: Fri, 17 Aug 2007 19:50:28 +0200 From: Christian Walther Subject: Re: SDL 1.3 keyboard plan > Sounds great, go ahead and send me a patch. Here goes! Thanks for having a look. Don't hesitate to comment if anything does not conform to your ideas. One caveat: Committing this now may break compilability of some video drivers - specifically, if they use any of the SDLK_* codes that were obsoleted and moved into SDL_compat.h. I only tried Cocoa (which did break, but is already fixed) and X11 (which didn't, but then its key handling is #iffed out). If that's a problem, it may need to go into a branch. -Christian
author Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
date Sun, 19 Aug 2007 14:52:52 +0000
parents 19d8949b4584
children
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==============================================================================
Using the Simple DirectMedia Layer with OpenBSD/wscons
==============================================================================

The wscons SDL driver can be used to run SDL programs on OpenBSD
without running X.  So far, the driver only runs on the Sharp Zaurus,
but the driver is written to be easily extended for other machines.
The main missing pieces are blitting routines for anything but 16 bit
displays, and keycode maps for other keyboards.  Also, there is no
support for hardware palettes.

There is currently no mouse support.

To compile SDL with support for wscons, use the
"--enable-video-wscons" option when running configure.  I used the
following command line:

./configure --disable-oss --disable-ltdl --enable-pthread-sem \
	    --disable-esd --disable-arts --disable-video-aalib  \
	    --enable-openbsdaudio --enable-video-wscons \
	    --prefix=/usr/local --sysconfdir=/etc


Setting the console device to use
=================================

When starting an SDL program on a wscons console, the driver uses the
current virtual terminal (usually /dev/ttyC0).  To force the driver to
use a specific terminal device, set the environment variable
SDL_WSCONSDEV:

bash$ SDL_WSCONSDEV=/dev/ttyC1 ./some-sdl-program

This is especially useful when starting an SDL program from a remote
login prompt (which is great for development).  If you do this, and
want to use keyboard input, you should avoid having some other program
reading from the used virtual console (i.e., do not have a getty
running).


Rotating the display
====================

The display can be rotated by the wscons SDL driver.  This is useful
for the Sharp Zaurus, since the display hardware is wired so that it
is correctly rotated only when the display is folded into "PDA mode."
When using the Zaurus in "normal," or "keyboard" mode, the hardware
screen is rotated 90 degrees anti-clockwise.

To let the wscons SDL driver rotate the screen, set the environment
variable SDL_VIDEO_WSCONS_ROTATION to "CW", "CCW", or "UD", for
clockwise, counter clockwise, and upside-down rotation respectively.
"CW" makes the screen appear correct on a Sharp Zaurus SL-C3100.

When using rotation in the driver, a "shadow" frame buffer is used to
hold the intermediary display, before blitting it to the actual
hardware frame buffer.  This slows down performance a bit.

For completeness, the rotation "NONE" can be specified to use a shadow
frame buffer without actually rotating.  Unsetting
SDL_VIDEO_WSCONS_ROTATION, or setting it to '' turns off the shadow
frame buffer for maximum performance.


Running MAME
============

Since my main motivation for writing the driver was playing MAME on
the Zaurus, I'll give a few hints:

XMame compiles just fine under OpenBSD.

I'm not sure this is strictly necessary, but set

MY_CPU = arm

in makefile.unix, and

CFLAGS.arm = -DLSB_FIRST -DALIGN_INTS -DALIGN_SHORTS

in src/unix/unix.max

to be sure.

The latest XMame (0.101 at this writing) is a very large program.
Either tinker with the make files to compile a version without support
for all drivers, or, get an older version of XMame.  My recommendation
would be 0.37b16.

When running MAME, DO NOT SET SDL_VIDEO_WSCONS_ROTATION!  Performace
is MUCH better without this, and it is COMPLETELY UNNECESSARY, since
MAME can rotate the picture itself while drawing, and does so MUCH
FASTER.

Use the Xmame command line option "-ror" to rotate the picture to the
right.


Acknowledgments
===============

I studied the wsfb driver for XFree86/Xorg quite a bit before writing
this, so there ought to be some similarities.


--
Staffan Ulfberg <staffan@ulfberg.se>