xml-xcb.txt revision f591e195
1 xcb/proto 2 3Description 4=========== 5 6xcb/proto is a set of XML files describing the X Window System protocol 7It is designed for use with libxcb, the X C binding 8<http://xcb.freedesktop.org/>. xcb/proto consists of: 9 10xcb.xsd An XML Schema defining the data format for describing the X 11 protocol. 12 13*.py Code generator helpers that read the protocol descriptions 14 into python structures. See libxcb for example usage. 15 16*.xml XML descriptions of the core X protocol and many extensions. 17 18 19Generating C bindings 20===================== 21 22See libxcb <http://cgit.freedesktop.org/xcb/libxcb/>. 23 24 25Protocol Description Format 26=========================== 27 28Root element 29------------ 30 31<xcb header="string" extension-name="string" extension-xname="string"> 32 top-level elements 33</xcb> 34 35 This is the root element of a protocol description. The attributes are all 36 various forms of the extension name. header is the basename of the XML 37 protocol description file, which will be used as the basename for generated 38 bindings as well. extension-name is the name of the extension in InterCaps, 39 which will be used in the names of functions. extension-xname is the name 40 of the extension as passed to QueryExtension. 41 42 As an example, the XML-XCB description for the GO-FASTER extension would use 43 the root element <xcb header="gofaster" extension-name="GoFaster" 44 extension-xname="GO-FASTER">; as a result, C bindings will be put in 45 gofaster.h and gofaster.c, extension functions will be named 46 XCBGoFasterFunctionName, and the extension initialization will call 47 QueryExtension with the name "GO-FASTER". 48 49 This element can contain any number of the elements listed in the section 50 "Top-Level Elements" below. 51 52 53Top-Level Elements 54------------------ 55 56<import>header_name</import> 57 58 The import element allows the protocol description to reference types 59 declared in another extension. The content is be the basename of the 60 extension XML file, which is also the header attribute of the extension's 61 root node. Note that types from xproto are automatically available, without 62 explicitly importing them. 63 64<struct name="identifier">structure contents</struct> 65 66 This element represents a data structure. The name attribute gives the name 67 of the structure. The content represents the fields of the structure, and 68 consists of one or more of the field, pad, and list elements described in 69 the section "Structure Contents" below. 70 71<union name="identifier">structure contents</union> 72 73 This element represents a union of data types, which can hold one value of 74 any of those types. The name attribute gives the name of the union. The 75 content represents the fields of the union, and consists of one or more of 76 the field and pad elements described in the section "Structure Contents 77 below". 78 79<xidtype name="identifier" /> 80 81 This element represents an identifier for a particular type of resource. 82 The name attribute gives the name of the new type. 83 84<enum name="identifier"> 85 <item name="identifier">[optional expression]</item> 86 ... 87</enum> 88 89 The enum element represents an enumeration type, which can take on any of 90 the values given by the contained item elements. The name attribute on the 91 enum gives the name of the enumerated type. 92 93 The item element represents one possible value of an enumerated type. The 94 name attribute on the item gives the name of that value, and the optional 95 content is an expression giving the numeric value. If the expression is 96 omitted, the value will be one more than that of the previous item, or 0 for 97 the first item. 98 99<typedef oldname="identifier" newname="identifier" /> 100 101 The typedef element declares the type given by the newname attribute to be 102 an alias for the type given by the oldname attribute. 103 104<request name="identifier" opcode="integer" [combine-adjacent="true"]> 105 structure contents 106 [<reply>structure contents</reply>] 107</request> 108 109 The request element represents an X protocol request. The name attribute 110 gives the name of the request, and the opcode attribute gives the numeric 111 request code. The content of the request element represents the fields in 112 the request, and consists of one or more of any of the elements listed in 113 the "Structure Contents" section below. Note that for requests in the core 114 protocol, the first field in the request goes into the one-byte gap between 115 the major opcode and the length; if the request does not have any data in 116 that gap, put a one byte pad as the first element. Extension requests 117 always have this gap filled with the minor opcode. 118 119 The optional reply element is present if the request has a reply. The 120 content of the reply element represents the fields in the reply, and 121 consists of zero or more of the field, pad, and list elements listed in the 122 "Structure Contents" section below. Note that the first field in the reply 123 always goes into the one-byte gap between the response type and the sequence 124 number; if the reply does not have any data in that gap, put a one byte pad 125 as the first element. 126 127 If the optional combine-adjacent attribute is true, multiple adjacent 128 requests of the same type may be combined into a single request without 129 affecting the semantics of the requests. 130 131<event name="identifier" number="integer" 132 [[no-sequence-number="true"] | [xge="true"]]> 133 structure contents 134</event> 135 136 This element represents an X protocol event. The name attribute gives the 137 name of the event, and the number attribute gives the event number. The 138 content of the event element represents the fields in the event, and 139 consists of zero or more of the field, pad, and list elements listed in the 140 "Structure Contents" section below. 141 142 If the optional no-sequence-number attribute is true, the event does not 143 include a sequence number. This is a special-case for the KeymapNotify 144 event in the core protocol, and should not be used in any other event. 145 146 If the optional xge attribute is true, the event is an X Generic Event and 147 will be treated as such. 148 149 The no-sequence-number and xge attribute can not be combined. 150 151<error name="identifier" number="integer"> 152 structure contents 153</error> 154 155 This element represents an X protocol error. The name attribute gives the 156 name of the error, and the number attribute gives the error number. The 157 content of the error element represents the fields in the error, and 158 consists of zero or more of the field, pad, and list elements listed in the 159 "Structure Contents" section below. 160 161<eventcopy name="identifier" number="identifier" ref="identifier" /> 162 163 This element creates an alias for the event named in the ref attribute, with 164 the new name given in the name attribute, and the new event number given in 165 the number attribute. 166 167<errorcopy name="identifier" number="identifier" ref="identifier" /> 168 169 This element creates an alias for the error named in the ref attribute, with 170 the new name given in the name attribute, and the new error number given in 171 the number attribute. 172 173 174Structure Contents 175------------------ 176 177Note: "type" attributes below refer to types defined by previous elements, 178either in the current extension, xproto, or one of the imported extensions. 179The type name must refer to only one possible type; if more than one type 180matches, an error occurs. To avoid this, the type may be explicitly prefixed 181with a namespace, which should be the value of the header attribute on the 182protocol description containing the desired type. The namespace and type are 183separated by a single colon. For example, to refer to the PIXMAP type defined 184in glx rather than the one defined in xproto, use type="glx:PIXMAP" rather 185than type="PIXMAP". 186 187Note: Most of the below may optionally contain an enum, altenum, or mask 188attribute, which follows the above rules for "type". "enum" is an exhaustive 189enum; the value is restricted to one of the constants named in the enum. 190"altenum" may be one of the values contained in the enum, but it need not be. 191"mask" refers to an enum to be used as a bitmask. 192 193<pad bytes="integer" /> 194 195 This element declares some padding in a data structure. The bytes 196 attribute declares the number of bytes of padding. 197 198<field type="identifier" name="identifier" /> 199 200 This element represents a field in a data structure. The type attribute 201 declares the data type of the field, and the name attribute gives the name 202 of the field. 203 204<list type="identifier" name="identifier">expression</list> 205 206 This element represents an array or list of fields in a data structure. The 207 type attribute declares the data type of the field, and the name attribute 208 gives the name of the field. The content is an expression giving the length 209 of the list in terms of other fields in the structure. See the section 210 "Expressions" for details on the expression representation. 211 212<localfield type="identifier" name="identifier" /> 213 214 This element represents a parameter in a request that is not sent over the 215 wire. The field can be referenced in the length expressions of lists or in 216 an exprfield. The type attribute declares the data type of the field, and 217 the name attribute gives the name of the field. 218 219<exprfield type="identifier" name="identifier">expression</exprfield> 220 221 This element represents a field in a request that is calculated rather than 222 supplied by the caller. The type attribute declares the data type of the 223 field, and the name attribute gives the name of the field. The content is 224 the expression giving the value of the field. See the section "Expressions" 225 for details on the expression representation. 226 227<valueparam value-mask-type="identifier" value-mask-name="identifier" 228 value-list-name="identifier" /> 229 230 This element represents a BITMASK/LISTofVALUE parameter pair: a bitmask 231 defining the set of values included, and a list containing these values. 232 value-mask-type gives the type of the bitmask; this must be CARD16 or 233 CARD32. value-mask-name gives the field name of the bitmask, and 234 value-list-name gives the field name of the list of values. Please use 235 <switch> instead for new protocol definitions. 236 237<switch name="identifier"> switch expression 238 <bitcase> bitcase expression(s), fields </bitcase> </switch> 239 240 This element represents conditional inclusion of fields. It can be viewed 241 as sequence of multiple ifs: if ( switch expression & bitcase expression ) 242 is non-zero, bitcase fields are included in structure. It can be used only 243 as the last field of a structure. 244 245 When a bitcase includes multiple <enumref> clauses, the contents of the 246 bitcase are only present once regardless of the number of bitcase expressions 247 that match. 248 249 New protocol definitions should prefer to use this instead of <valueparam>. 250 251Expressions 252----------- 253 254 Expressions consist of a tree of <op> elements with leaves consisting of 255 <fieldref> or <value> elements. 256 257<op op="operator">expression expression</op> 258 259 The op element represents an operator, with the op attribute specifying 260 which operator. The supported operations are +, -, *, /, &, and 261 <<, and their semantics are identical to the corresponding operators 262 in C. The two operand expressions may be other expression elements. 263 264<fieldref>identifier</fieldref> 265 266 The fieldref element represents a reference to the value of another field in 267 the structure containing this expression. The identifier is the value of 268 the "name" attribute on the referenced field. 269 270<value>integer</value> 271 272 The value element represents a literal integer value in an expression. The 273 integer may be expressed in decimal or hexadecimal. 274 275<bit>integer</bit> 276 277 The bit element represents a literal bitmask value in an expression. 278 The integer must be in the range 0..31, expanding to (1<<n) in C. 279 280<enumref ref="identifier">enum item identifier</enumref> 281 282 This element represents a reference to item of enum. 283 284<unop op="operator">expression</unop> 285 286 This element represents a unary operator, with the op attribute specifying 287 which operator. The only supported operation so far is ~, and its semantic 288 is identical to the corresponding operator in C. 289 290<sumof ref="identifier" /> 291 292 This element represents a sumation of the elements of the referenced list. 293 294<popcount>expression</popcount> 295 296 This element represents the number of bits set in the expression. 297 298Documentation 299------------- 300 301 Documentation for each request, reply or event is stored in the appropriate 302 element using a <doc> element. The <doc> element can contain the following 303 elements: 304 305<brief>brief description</brief> 306 307 A short description of the request, reply or event. For example "makes a 308 window visible" for MapWindow. This will end up in the manpage NAME section 309 and in the doxygen @brief description. 310 311<description><![CDATA[longer description]]></description> 312 313 The full description. Use `` to highlight words, such as "Draws 314 `points_len`-1 lines between each pair of points…" 315 316<example><![CDATA[example code]]</description> 317 318 Example C code illustrating the usage of the particular request, reply or 319 event. 320 321<field name="name">field description</field> 322 323 The full description for the specified field. Depending on the context, this 324 is either a request parameter or a reply/event datastructure field. 325 326<error type="type">error description</field> 327 328 The full description for an error which can occur due to this request. 329 330<see type="request" name="name" /> 331 332 A reference to another relevant program, function, request or event. 333