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110 lines
3.7 KiB
110 lines
3.7 KiB
The rules file
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==============
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The purpose of the rules file is to map between configuration values
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that are easy for a user to specify and understand, and the
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configuration values xkbcomp uses and understands.
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xkbcomp uses the xkb_component_names struct, which maps directly to
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include statements of the appropriate sections, called for short
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KcCGST (see doc/keymap-format-text-v1.txt; 'G' stands for "geometry",
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which is not supported). These are not really intuitive or straight-
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forward for the uninitiated.
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Instead, the user passes in a xkb_rule_names struct, which consists
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of the name of a rules file (in Linux this is usually "evdev"), a
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keyboard model (e.g. "pc105"), a set of layouts (which will end up
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in different groups, e.g. "us,fr"), variants (used to alter/augment
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the respective layout, e.g. "intl,dvorak"), and a set of options
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(used to tweak some general behavior of the keyboard, e.g.
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"ctrl:nocaps,compose:menu" to make the Caps Lock key act like Ctrl
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and the Menu key like Compose). We call these RMLVO.
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Format of the file
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------------------
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The file consists of rule sets, each consisting of rules (one per
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line), which match the MLVO values on the left hand side, and, if
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the values match to the values the user passed in, results in the
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values on the right hand side being added to the resulting KcCGST.
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Since some values are related and repeated often, it is possible
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to group them together and refer to them by a group name in the
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rules.
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Along with matching values by simple string equality, and for
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membership in a group defined previously, rules may also contain
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"wildcard" values - "*" - which always match. These usually appear
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near the end.
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Grammar
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-------
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(It might be helpful to look at a file like rules/evdev along with
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this grammar. Comments, whitespace, etc. are not shown.)
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```
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File ::= { "!" (Include | Group | RuleSet) }
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Include ::= "include" <ident>
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Group ::= GroupName "=" { GroupElement } "\n"
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GroupName ::= "$"<ident>
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GroupElement ::= <ident>
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RuleSet ::= Mapping { Rule }
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Mapping ::= { Mlvo } "=" { Kccgst } "\n"
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Mlvo ::= "model" | "option" | ("layout" | "variant") [ Index ]
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Index ::= "[" 1..XKB_NUM_GROUPS "]"
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Kccgst ::= "keycodes" | "symbols" | "types" | "compat" | "geometry"
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Rule ::= { MlvoValue } "=" { KccgstValue } "\n"
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MlvoValue ::= "*" | GroupName | <ident>
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KccgstValue ::= <ident>
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```
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Notes:
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- Include processes the rules in the file path specified in the ident,
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in order. %-expansion is performed, as follows:
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```
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%%:
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A literal %.
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%H:
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The value of the HOME environment variable.
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%E:
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The extra lookup path for system-wide XKB data (usually /etc/xkb/rules).
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%S:
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The system-installed rules directory (usually /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules).
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```
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- The order of values in a Rule must be the same as the Mapping it
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follows. The mapping line determines the meaning of the values in
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the rules which follow in the RuleSet.
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- If a Rule is matched, %-expansion is performed on the KccgstValue,
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as follows:
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```
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%m, %l, %v:
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The model, layout or variant, if only one was given (e.g.
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%l for "us,il" is invalid).
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%l[1], %v[1]:
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Layout or variant for the specified group Index, if more than
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one was given (e.g. %l[1] for "us" is invalid).
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%+m, %+l, %+v, %+l[1], %+v[1]
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As above, but prefixed with '+'. Similarly, '|', '-', '_' may be
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used instead of '+'.
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%(m), %(l), %(l[1]), %(v), %(v[1]):
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As above, but prefixed by '(' and suffixed by ')'.
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```
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In case the expansion is invalid, as described above, it is
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skipped (the rest of the string is still processed); this includes
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the prefix and suffix (that's why you shouldn't use e.g. "(%v[1])").
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