gtk2/docs/reference/gtk/framebuffer.sgml
Havoc Pennington 31283d57ca link to new X11 section in a lot of places when mentioning the window
2002-01-19  Havoc Pennington  <hp@pobox.com>

	* gtk/gtkwindow.c: link to new X11 section in a lot of places when
	mentioning the window manager.

	* gtk/gtkwidget.c (gtk_widget_hide_on_delete): don't mention
	window manager since we're portable.

2002-01-19  Havoc Pennington  <hp@pobox.com>

	* gtk/x11.sgml: add a mostly-empty X11 section

	* gtk/framebuffer.sgml: make title consistent with windows section

	* gtk/tmpl/gtkdrawingarea.sgml: couple of fixes
2002-01-19 18:51:48 +00:00

191 lines
6.2 KiB
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<refentry id="gtk-framebuffer" revision="1 Jan 2002">
<refmeta>
<refentrytitle>Using GTK+ on the Framebuffer</refentrytitle>
<manvolnum>3</manvolnum>
<refmiscinfo>GTK Library</refmiscinfo>
</refmeta>
<refnamediv>
<refname>Using GTK+ on the Framebuffer</refname>
<refpurpose>
Linux framebuffer aspects of using GTK+
</refpurpose>
</refnamediv>
<refsect1>
<title>GTK+ for the Linux Framebuffer</title>
<para>
The linux-fb port of GTK+, also known as GtkFB is an implementation of
GDK (and therefore GTK+) that runs on the Linux framebuffer. It runs in
a single process that doesn't need X. It should run most GTK+ programs
without any changes to the source.
</para>
<refsect2><title>Build requirements</title>
<para>
You need GTK+ 2.0; the 1.2.x series does not have framebuffer support.
To compile GTK+ with framebuffer support you will need FreeType 2, we
recommend FreeType 2.0.1 or later, as there was some problems with
<command>freetype-config</command> in 2.0. Make sure that you install
FreeType before Pango, since Pango also needs it. FreeType can be found at
<ulink url="ftp://ftp.freetype.org">ftp://ftp.freetype.org</ulink>.
</para>
</refsect2>
<refsect2><title>Hardware requirements</title>
<para>
You need a graphics card with an available framebuffer driver that can
run in 8, 16, 24 or 32 bpp, such as matroxfb or vesafb. You also need
a supported mouse. GTK+ currently supports the ps2 mouse, ms serial
mouse and fidmour touchscreen. Additional hardware support should
be simple to add.
</para>
</refsect2>
<refsect2><title>Building and installing</title>
<para>
First build and install GLib and Pango as usual, in that order.
Then configure GTK+ by running <command>configure</command> (or
<command>autogen.sh</command> if running from
CVS) with <option>--with-gdktarget=linux-fb</option>.
</para>
<para>Then compile as usual: <command>make; make install</command></para>
</refsect2>
<refsect2><title>Fonts</title>
<para>
Since GtkFB uses FreeType 2 to render fonts it can render TrueType and
Postscript type 1 antialiased fonts.
</para>
<para>At startup it scans some directories looking for fonts. By default
it looks in <filename>$prefix/lib/ft2fonts</filename>, and if you want to
change this you must add something like:
<programlisting>
[PangoFT2]
FontPath = /usr/share/fonts/default/Type1:/usr/share/fonts/default/TrueType
</programlisting>
To your <filename>$prefix/etc/pango/pangorc</filename> or <filename>~/.pangorc</filename>.
</para>
<para>
You must also set up font aliases for the fonts Sans, Serif and
Monotype. This is done by creating a
<filename>$prefix/etc/pango/pangoft2.aliases</filename> or
<filename>~/.pangoft2_aliases</filename> file. You can also set the name of this file using
the key <literal>AliasFiles</literal> in the <literal>PangoFT2</literal> section in <filename>pangorc</filename>.
</para>
<para>
An example of a font alias file for the urw fontset is:
<informalexample><programlisting>
sans normal normal normal normal "urw gothic l"
serif normal normal normal normal "urw palladio l"
monospace normal normal normal normal "nimbus mono l"
</programlisting></informalexample>
</para>
<para>
And one using the Windows TrueType fonts is:
<informalexample><programlisting>
sans normal normal normal normal "arial"
serif normal normal normal normal "times new roman"
monospace normal normal normal normal "courier new"
</programlisting></informalexample>
A more detailed example can be found in
<filename>examples/pangoft2.aliases</filename> in the
Pango distribution.
</para>
</refsect2>
<refsect2><title>Running</title>
<para>
To run a program you should only need to start it, but there are some
things that can cause problems, and some things that can be controlled
by environment variables. Try <application>gtk-demo</application> distributed
with GTK+ to test if things work.
</para>
<para>
If you use a ps2 mouse, make sure that <filename>/dev/psaux</filename> is
readable and writable.
</para>
<para>Make sure <command>gpm</command> is not running.</para>
<para>If you don't specify anything GtkFB will start up in the current
virtual console in the current resolution and bit-depth. This can be
changed by specifying environment variables:
</para>
<para>
<programlisting>
<envar>GDK_VT</envar>:
unset means open on the current VT.
0-9: open on the specified VT. Make sure you have read/write rights
there.
new: Allocate a new VT after the last currently used one.
<envar>GDK_DISPLAY_MODE</envar>:
Specifies the name of a mode in <filename>/etc/fb.modes</filename> that you
want to use.
<envar>GDK_DISPLAY_DEPTH</envar>:
Specify the desired bit depth of the framebuffer.
<envar>GDK_DISPLAY_WIDTH</envar>:
Specify the desired width of the framebuffer.
<envar>GDK_DISPLAY_HEIGHT</envar>:
Specify the desired height of the framebuffer.
<envar>GDK_DISPLAY</envar>:
Specify the framebuffer device to use. Default is <filename>/dev/fb0</filename>.
<envar>GDK_MOUSE_TYPE</envar>:
Specify mouse type. Currently supported is:
ps2 - PS/2 mouse
imps2 - PS/2 intellimouse (wheelmouse)
ms - Microsoft serial mouse
fidmour - touch screen
Default is ps2.
<envar>GDK_KEYBOARD_TYPE</envar>:
Specify keyboard type. Currently supported is
xlate - normal tty mode keyboard.
Quite limited, cannot detect key up/key down events. Doesn't
handle ctrl/alt/shift for all keys. This is the default driver,
but should not be used in "production" use.
raw - read from the tty in RAW mode.
Sets the keyboard in RAW mode and handles all the keycodes. This
gives correct handling of modifiers and key up/down events. You
must be root to use this. If you use this for development or
debugging it is recommended to enable magic sysrq handling in the
kernel. Then you can use ALT-SysRQ-r to turn the keyboard back to
normal mode.
Default is xlate.
</programlisting>
</para>
</refsect2>
<refsect2><title>Debug features</title>
<para>Pressing Ctrl-Alt-Return repaints the whole screen.
Unfortunately this cannot be pressed when using the xlate keyboard
driver, so instead you can use shift-F1 instead when using this
driver.
</para>
<para>Pressing Ctrl-Alt-BackSpace kills the GtkFB program. (Can't be pressed
in the xlate driver.)</para>
</refsect2>
</refsect1>
</refentry>