1-- $Id: INSTALL,v 1.52 2002/01/12 22:56:44 tom Exp $ 2--------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 How to install Ncurses/Terminfo on your system 4--------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 6 ************************************************************ 7 * READ ALL OF THIS FILE BEFORE YOU TRY TO INSTALL NCURSES. * 8 ************************************************************ 9 10You should be reading the file INSTALL in a directory called ncurses-d.d, where 11d.d is the current version number. There should be several subdirectories, 12including `c++', `form', `man', `menu', 'misc', `ncurses', `panel', `progs', 13and `test'. See the README file for a roadmap to the package. 14 15If you are a Linux or FreeBSD or NetBSD distribution integrator or packager, 16please read and act on the section titled IF YOU ARE A SYSTEM INTEGRATOR 17below. 18 19If you are converting from BSD curses and do not have root access, be sure 20to read the BSD CONVERSION NOTES section below. 21 22If you are using a version of XFree86 xterm older than 3.1.2F, see the section 23on RECENT XTERM VERSIONS below. 24 25If you are trying to build GNU Emacs using ncurses for terminal support, 26read the USING NCURSES WITH EMACS section below. 27 28If you are trying to build applications using gpm with ncurses, 29read the USING NCURSES WITH GPM section below. 30 31If you are running over the Andrew File System see the note below on 32USING NCURSES WITH AFS. 33 34If you are cross-compiling, see the note below on BUILDING NCURSES WITH A 35CROSS-COMPILER. 36 37If you want to build the Ada95 binding, go to the Ada95 directory and 38follow the instructions there. The Ada95 binding is not covered below. 39 40If you are using anything but (a) Linux, or (b) one of the 4.4BSD-based 41i386 Unixes, go read the Portability section in the TO-DO file before you 42do anything else. 43 44 45REQUIREMENTS: 46------------ 47 48You will need the following in order to build and install ncurses under UNIX: 49 50 * ANSI C compiler (gcc is recommended) 51 * sh (bash will do) 52 * awk (mawk or gawk will do) 53 * sed 54 * BSD or System V style install (a script is enclosed) 55 56Ncurses has been also built in the OS/2 EMX environment. 57 58 59INSTALLATION PROCEDURE: 60---------------------- 61 621. First, decide whether you want ncurses to replace your existing library (in 63 which case you'll need super-user privileges) or be installed in parallel 64 with it. 65 66 The --prefix option to configure changes the root directory for installing 67 ncurses. The default is in subdirectories of /usr/local. Use 68 --prefix=/usr to replace your default curses distribution. This is the 69 default for Linux and BSD/OS users. 70 71 The package gets installed beneath the --prefix directory as follows: 72 73 In $(prefix)/bin: tic, infocmp, captoinfo, tset, 74 reset, clear, tput, toe 75 In $(prefix)/lib: libncurses*.* libcurses.a 76 In $(prefix)/share/terminfo: compiled terminal descriptions 77 In $(prefix)/include: C header files 78 Under $(prefix)/man: the manual pages 79 80 Note however that the configure script attempts to locate previous 81 installation of ncurses, and will set the default prefix according to where 82 it finds the ncurses headers. 83 842. Type `./configure' in the top-level directory of the distribution to 85 configure ncurses for your operating system and create the Makefiles. 86 Besides --prefix, various configuration options are available to customize 87 the installation; use `./configure --help' to list the available options. 88 89 If your operating system is not supported, read the PORTABILITY section in 90 the file ncurses/README for information on how to create a configuration 91 file for your system. 92 93 The `configure' script generates makefile rules for one or more object 94 models and their associated libraries: 95 96 libncurses.a (normal) 97 98 libcurses.a (normal, a link to libncurses.a) 99 This gets left out if you configure with --disable-overwrite. 100 101 libncurses.so (shared) 102 103 libncurses_g.a (debug) 104 105 libncurses_p.a (profile) 106 107 libncurses.la (libtool) 108 109 If you do not specify any models, the normal and debug libraries will be 110 configured. Typing `configure' with no arguments is equivalent to: 111 112 ./configure --with-normal --with-debug --enable-overwrite 113 114 Typing 115 116 ./configure --with-shared 117 118 makes the shared libraries the default, resulting in 119 120 ./configure --with-shared --with-normal --with-debug --enable-overwrite 121 122 If you want only shared libraries, type 123 124 ./configure --with-shared --without-normal --without-debug 125 126 Rules for generating shared libraries are highly dependent upon the choice 127 of host system and compiler. We've been testing shared libraries on Linux 128 and SunOS with gcc, but more work needs to be done to make shared libraries 129 work on other systems. 130 131 If you have libtool installed, you can type 132 133 ./configure --with-libtool 134 135 to generate the appropriate static and/or shared libraries for your 136 platform using libtool. 137 138 You can make curses and terminfo fall back to an existing file of termcap 139 definitions by configuring with --enable-termcap. If you do this, the 140 library will search /etc/termcap before the terminfo database, and will 141 also interpret the contents of the TERM environment variable. See the 142 section BSD CONVERSION NOTES below. 143 1443. Type `make'. Ignore any warnings, no error messages should be produced. 145 This should compile the ncurses library, the terminfo compiler tic(1), 146 captoinfo(1), infocmp(1), toe(1), clear(1) tset(1), reset(1), and tput(1) 147 programs (see the manual pages for explanation of what they do), some test 148 programs, and the panels, menus, and forms libraries. 149 1504. Run ncurses and several other test programs in the test directory to 151 verify that ncurses functions correctly before doing an install that 152 may overwrite system files. Read the file test/README for details on 153 the test programs. 154 155 NOTE: You must have installed the terminfo database, or set the 156 environment variable $TERMINFO to point to a SVr4-compatible terminfo 157 database before running the test programs. Not all vendors' terminfo 158 databases are SVr4-compatible, but most seem to be. Exceptions include 159 DEC's Digital Unix (formerly known as OSF/1). 160 161 The ncurses program is designed specifically to test the ncurses library. 162 You can use it to verify that the screen highlights work correctly, that 163 cursor addressing and window scrolling works OK, etc. 164 1655. Once you've tested, you can type `make install' to install libraries, 166 the programs, the terminfo database and the manual pages. Alternately, you 167 can type `make install' in each directory you want to install. In the 168 top-level directory, you can do a partial install using these commands: 169 170 'make install.progs' installs tic, infocmp, etc... 171 'make install.includes' installs the headers. 172 'make install.libs' installs the libraries (and the headers). 173 'make install.data' installs the terminfo data. (Note: `tic' must 174 be installed before the terminfo data can be 175 compiled). 176 'make install.man' installs the manual pages. 177 178 ############################################################################ 179 # CAVEAT EMPTOR: `install.data' run as root will NUKE any existing # 180 # terminfo database. If you have any custom or unusual entries SAVE them # 181 # before you install ncurses. I have a file called terminfo.custom for # 182 # this purpose. Don't forget to run tic on the file once you're done. # 183 ############################################################################ 184 185 The terminfo(5) manual page must be preprocessed with tbl(1) before 186 being formatted by nroff(1). Modern man(1) implementations tend to do 187 this by default, but you may want to look at your version's manual page 188 to be sure. You may also install the manual pages after preprocessing 189 with tbl(1) by specifying the configure option --with-manpage-tbl. 190 191 If the system already has a curses library that you need to keep using 192 for some bizarre binary-compatibility reason, you'll need to distinguish 193 between it and ncurses. If ncurses is installed outside the standard 194 directories (/usr/include and /usr/lib) then all your users will need 195 to use the -I option to compile programs and -L to link them. 196 197 If you have BSD curses installed in your system and you accidentally 198 compile using its curses.h you'll end up with a large number of 199 undefined symbols at link time. _waddbytes is one of them. 200 201 IF YOU DO NOT HAVE ROOT: Change directory to the `progs' subdirectory 202 and run the `capconvert' script. This script will deduce various things 203 about your environment and use them to build you a private terminfo tree, 204 so you can use ncurses applications. 205 206 If more than one user at your site does this, the space for the duplicate 207 trees is wasted. Try to get your site administrators to install a system- 208 wide terminfo tree instead. 209 210 See the BSD CONVERSION NOTES section below for a few more details. 211 2126. The c++ directory has C++ classes that are built on top of ncurses and 213 panels. You must have c++ (and its libraries) installed before you can 214 compile and run the demo. 215 216 Use --without-cxx-binding to tell configure to not build the C++ bindings 217 and demo. 218 219 If you do not have C++, you must use the --without-cxx option to tell 220 the configure script to not attempt to determine the type of 'bool' 221 which may be supported by C++. IF YOU USE THIS OPTION, BE ADVISED THAT 222 YOU MAY NOT BE ABLE TO COMPILE (OR RUN) NCURSES APPLICATIONS WITH C++. 223 2247. If you're running an older Linux, you must either (a) tell Linux that the 225 console terminal type is `linux' or (b) make a link to or copy of the 226 linux entry in the appropriate place under your terminfo directory, named 227 `console'. All 1.3 and many 1.2 distributions (including Yggdrasil and 228 Red Hat) already have the console type set to `linux'. 229 230 The way to change the wired-in console type depends on the configuration 231 of your system. This may involve editing /etc/inittab, /etc/ttytype, 232 /etc/profile and other such files. 233 234 Warning: this is not for the fainthearted, if you mess up your console 235 getty entries you can make your system unusable! However, if you are 236 a distribution maker, this is the right thing to do (see the note for 237 integrators near the end of this file). 238 239 The easier way is to link or copy l/linux to c/console under your terminfo 240 directory. Note: this will go away next time you do `make install.data' 241 and you'll have to redo it. There is no need to have entries for all 242 possible screen sizes, ncurses will figure out the size automatically. 243 244 245SUMMARY OF CONFIGURE OPTIONS: 246---------------------------- 247 248 The configure script provides a short list of its options when you type 249 250 ./configure --help 251 252 The --help and several options are common to all configure scripts that are 253 generated with autoconf. Those are all listed before the line 254 255 --enable and --with options recognized: 256 257 The other options are specific to this package. We list them in alphabetic 258 order. 259 260 --disable-assumed-color 261 With ncurses 5.1, we introduced a new function, assume_default_colors() 262 which allows applications to specify what the default foreground and 263 background color are assumed to be. Most color applications use 264 full-screen color; but a few do not color the background. While the 265 assumed values can be overridden by invoking assume_default_colors(), 266 you may find it useful to set the assumed values to the pre-5.1 267 convention, using this configure option. 268 269 --disable-big-core 270 Assume machine has little memory. The configure script attempts to 271 determine if your machine has enough memory (about 6Mb) to compile the 272 terminfo database without writing portions to disk. Some allocators 273 return deceptive results, so you may have to override the configure 274 script. Or you may be building tic for a smaller machine. 275 276 --disable-database 277 Use only built-in data. The ncurses libraries normally read terminfo 278 and termcap data from disk. You can configure ncurses to have a 279 built-in database, aka "fallback" entries. Embedded applications may 280 have no need for an external database. Some, but not all of the 281 programs are useful in this configuration, e.g., reset and tput versus 282 infocmp and tic. 283 284 --disable-ext-funcs 285 Disable function-extensions. Configure ncurses without the functions 286 that are not specified by XSI. See ncurses/modules for the exact 287 list of library modules that would be suppressed. 288 289 --disable-hashmap 290 Compile without hashmap scrolling-optimization code. This algorithm is 291 the default. 292 293 --disable-leaks 294 For testing, compile-in code that frees memory that normally would not 295 be freed, to simplify analysis of memory-leaks. 296 297 --disable-macros 298 For testing, use functions rather than macros. The program will run 299 more slowly, but it is simpler to debug. This makes a header file 300 "nomacros.h". See also the --enable-expanded option. 301 302 --disable-overwrite 303 If you are installing ncurses on a system which contains another 304 development version of curses, or which could be confused by the loader 305 for another version, we recommend that you leave out the link to 306 -lcurses. The ncurses library is always available as -lncurses. 307 Disabling overwrite also causes the ncurses header files to be 308 installed into a subdirectory, e.g., /usr/local/include/ncurses, 309 rather than the include directory. This makes it simpler to avoid 310 compile-time conflicts with other versions of curses.h 311 312 --disable-root-environ 313 Compile with environment restriction, so certain environment variables 314 are not available when running as root, or via a setuid/setgid 315 application. These are (for example $TERMINFO) those that allow the 316 search path for the terminfo or termcap entry to be customized. 317 318 --disable-scroll-hints 319 Compile without scroll-hints code. This option is ignored when 320 hashmap scrolling is configured, which is the default. 321 322 --enable-add-ons=DIR... 323 This is used to check if this package is a glibc add-on. This is used 324 only by the glibc makefiles. 325 326 --enable-assertions 327 For testing, compile-in assertion code. This is used only for a few 328 places where ncurses cannot easily recover by returning an error code. 329 330 --enable-broken_linker 331 A few platforms have what we consider a broken linker: it cannot link 332 objects from an archive solely by referring to data objects in those 333 files, but requires a function reference. This configure option 334 changes several data references to functions to work around this 335 problem. 336 337 NOTE: With ncurses 5.1, this may not be necessary, since we are 338 told that some linkers interpret uninitialized global data as a 339 different type of reference which behaves as described above. We have 340 explicitly initialized all of the global data to work around the 341 problem. 342 343 --enable-bsdpad 344 Recognize BSD-style prefix padding. Some ancient BSD programs (such as 345 nethack) call tputs("50") to implement delays. 346 347 --enable-colorfgbg 348 Compile with experimental $COLORFGBG code. That environment variable 349 is set by some terminal emulators as a hint to applications, by 350 advertising the default foreground and background colors. During 351 initialization, ncurses sets color pair 0 to match this. 352 353 --enable-const 354 The curses interface as documented in XSI is rather old, in fact 355 including features that precede ANSI C. The prototypes generally do 356 not make effective use of "const". When using stricter compilers (or 357 gcc with appropriate warnings), you may see warnings about the mismatch 358 between const and non-const data. We provide a configure option which 359 changes the interfaces to use const - quieting these warnings and 360 reflecting the actual use of the parameters more closely. The ncurses 361 library uses the symbol NCURSES_CONST for these instances of const, 362 and if you have asked for compiler warnings, will add gcc's const-qual 363 warning. There will still be warnings due to subtle inconsistencies 364 in the interface, but at a lower level. 365 366 NOTE: configuring ncurses with this option may detract from the 367 portability of your applications by encouraging you to use const in 368 places where the XSI curses interface would not allow them. Similar 369 issues arise when porting to SVr4 curses, which uses const in even 370 fewer places. 371 372 --enable-echo 373 Use the option --disable-echo to make the build-log less verbose by 374 suppressing the display of the compile and link commands. This makes 375 it easier to see the compiler warnings. (You can always use "make -n" 376 to see the options that are used). 377 378 --enable-expanded 379 For testing, generate functions for certain macros to make them visible 380 as such to the debugger. See also the --disable-macros option. 381 382 --enable-getcap 383 Use the 4.4BSD getcap code if available, or a bundled version of it to 384 fetch termcap entries. Entries read in this way cannot use (make 385 cross-references to) the terminfo tree, but it is faster than reading 386 /etc/termcap. 387 388 --enable-getcap-cache 389 Cache translated termcaps under the directory $HOME/.terminfo 390 391 NOTE: this sounds good - it makes ncurses run faster the second time. 392 But look where the data comes from - an /etc/termcap containing lots of 393 entries that are not up to date. If you configure with this option and 394 forget to install the terminfo database before running an ncurses 395 application, you will end up with a hidden terminfo database that 396 generally does not support color and will miss some function keys. 397 398 --enable-hard-tabs 399 Compile-in cursor-optimization code that uses hard-tabs. We would make 400 this a standard feature except for the concern that the terminfo entry 401 may not be accurate, or that your stty settings have disabled the use 402 of tabs. 403 404 --enable-no-padding 405 Compile-in support for the $NCURSES_NO_PADDING environment variable, 406 which allows you to suppress the effect of non-mandatory padding in 407 terminfo entries. This is the default, unless you have disabled the 408 extended functions. 409 410 --enable-rpath 411 Use rpath option when generating shared libraries, and with some 412 restrictions when linking the corresponding programs. This applies 413 mainly to systems using the GNU linker (read the manpage). 414 415 --enable-safe-sprintf 416 Compile with experimental safe-sprintf code. You may consider using 417 this if you are building ncurses for a system that has neither 418 vsnprintf() or vsprintf(). It is slow, however. 419 420 --enable-sigwinch 421 Compile support for ncurses' SIGWINCH handler. If your application has 422 its own SIGWINCH handler, ncurses will not use its own. The ncurses 423 handler causes wgetch() to return KEY_RESIZE when the screen-size 424 changes. This option is the default, unless you have disabled the 425 extended functions. 426 427 --enable-symlinks 428 If your system supports symbolic links, make tic use symbolic links 429 rather than hard links to save diskspace when writing aliases in the 430 terminfo database. 431 432 --enable-tcap-names 433 Compile-in support for user-definable terminal capabilities. Use the 434 -x option of tic and infocmp to treat unrecognized terminal 435 capabilities as user-defined strings. This option is the default, 436 unless you have disabled the extended functions. 437 438 --enable-termcap 439 Compile in support for reading terminal descriptions from termcap if no 440 match is found in the terminfo database. See also the --enable-getcap 441 and --enable-getcap-cache options. 442 443 --enable-warnings 444 Turn on GCC compiler warnings. There should be only a few. 445 446 --enable-widec 447 Compile with experimental wide-character code. This makes a different 448 version of the libraries (e.g., libncursesw.so), which stores 449 characters in 16-bits. We provide a simple UTF-8 driver and test 450 program to use this feature with terminals that can display UTF-8. 451 452 NOTE: applications compiled with this configuration are not compatible 453 with those built for 8-bit characters. You cannot simply make a 454 symbolic link to equate libncurses.so with libncursesw.so 455 456 --enable-xmc-glitch 457 Compile-in support experimental xmc (magic cookie) code. 458 459 --with-ada-compiler=CMD 460 Specify the Ada95 compiler command (default "gnatmake") 461 462 --with-ada-include=DIR 463 Tell where to install the Ada includes (default: 464 PREFIX/lib/ada/adainclude) 465 466 --with-ada-objects=DIR 467 Tell where to install the Ada objects (default: PREFIX/lib/ada/adalib) 468 469 --with-bool=TYPE 470 If --without-cxx is specified, override the type used for the "bool" 471 declared in curses.h (normally the type is automatically chosen to 472 correspond with that in <stdbool.h>, or defaults to platform-specific 473 sizes). 474 475 --with-build-cc=XXX 476 If cross-compiling, specify a host C compiler, which is needed to 477 compile a few utilties which generate source modules for ncurses. 478 If you do not give this option, the configure script checks if the 479 $BUILD_CC variable is set, and otherwise defaults to gcc or cc. 480 481 --with-build-cflags=XXX 482 If cross-compiling, specify the host C compiler-flags. You might need 483 to do this if the target compiler has unusual flags which confuse the 484 host compiler. 485 486 --with-build-ldflags=XXX 487 If cross-compiling, specify the host linker-flags. You might need to 488 do this if the target linker has unusual flags which confuse the host 489 compiler. 490 491 --with-build-libs=XXX 492 If cross-compiling, the host libraries. You might need to do this if 493 the target environment requires unusual libraries. 494 495 --with-caps=XXX 496 Specify an alternate terminfo capabilities file, which makes the 497 configure script look for "include/Caps.XXX". A few systems, e.g., 498 AIX 4.x use the same overall file-format as ncurses for terminfo 499 data, but use different alignments within the tables to support 500 legacy applications. For those systems, you can configure ncurses 501 to use a terminfo database which is compatible with the native 502 applications. 503 504 --with-database=XXX 505 Specify the terminfo source file to install. Usually you will wish 506 to install ncurses' default (misc/terminfo.src). Certain systems 507 have special requirements, e.g, OS/2 EMX has a customized terminfo 508 source file. 509 510 --with-dbmalloc 511 For testing, compile and link with Conor Cahill's dbmalloc library. 512 513 --with-debug 514 Generate debug-libraries (default). These are named by adding "_g" 515 to the root, e.g., libncurses_g.a 516 517 --with-default-terminfo-dir=XXX 518 Specify the default terminfo database directory. This is normally 519 DATADIR/terminfo, e.g., /usr/share/terminfo. 520 521 --with-develop 522 Enable experimental/development options. This does not count those 523 that change the interface, such as --enable-widec. 524 525 --with-dmalloc 526 For testing, compile and link with Gray Watson's dmalloc library. 527 528 --with-fallbacks=XXX 529 Specify a list of fallback terminal descriptions which will be 530 compiled into the ncurses library. See CONFIGURING FALLBACK ENTRIES. 531 532 --with-gpm 533 use Alessandro Rubini's GPM library to provide mouse support on the 534 Linux console. 535 536 --with-install-prefix=XXX 537 Allows you to specify an alternate location for installing ncurses 538 after building it. The value you specify is prepended to the "real" 539 install location. This simplifies making binary packages. 540 541 NOTE: a few systems build shared libraries with fixed pathnames; this 542 option probably will not work for those configurations. 543 544 --with-libtool 545 Generate libraries with libtool. If this option is selected, then 546 it overrides all other library model specifications. 547 548 --with-manpage-format=XXX 549 Tell the configure script how you would like to install man-pages. The 550 option value must be one of these: gzip, compress, BSDI, normal, 551 formatted. If you do not give this option, the configure script 552 attempts to determine which is the case. 553 554 --with-manpage-renames=XXX 555 Tell the configure script that you wish to rename the manpages while 556 installing. Currently the only distribution which does this is 557 the Linux Debian. The option value specifies the name of a file 558 that lists the renamed files, e.g., $srcdir/man/man_db.renames 559 560 --with-manpage-symlinks 561 Tell the configure script that you wish to make symbolic links in the 562 man-directory for aliases to the man-pages. This is the default, but 563 can be disabled for systems that provide this automatically. Doing 564 this on systems that do not support symbolic links will result in 565 copying the man-page for each alias. 566 567 --with-manpage-tbl 568 Tell the configure script that you with to preprocess the manpages 569 by running them through tbl to generate tables understandable by 570 nroff. 571 572 --with-ospeed=TYPE 573 Override type of ospeed variable, which is part of the termcap 574 compatibility interface. In termcap, this is a 'short', which works 575 for a wide range of baudrates because ospeed is not the actual speed 576 but the encoded value, e.g., B9600 would be a small number such as 13. 577 However the encoding scheme originally allowed for values "only" up to 578 38400bd. A newer set of definitions past 38400bd is not encoded as 579 compactly, and is not guaranteed to fit into a short (see the function 580 cfgetospeed(), which returns a speed_t for this reason). In practice, 581 applications that required knowledge of the ospeed variable, i.e., 582 those using termcap, do not use the higher speeds. Your application 583 (or system, in general) may or may not. 584 585 --with-normal 586 Generate normal (i.e., static) libraries (default). 587 588 --with-profile 589 Generate profile-libraries These are named by adding "_p" to the root, 590 e.g., libncurses_p.a 591 592 --with-rcs-ids 593 Compile-in RCS identifiers. Most of the C files have an identifier. 594 595 --with-shared 596 Generate shared-libraries. The names given depend on the system for 597 which you are building, typically using a ".so" suffix, along with 598 symbolic links that refer to the release version. 599 600 NOTE: Unless you override the configure script by setting the $CFLAGS 601 environment variable, these will not be built with the -g debugging 602 option. 603 604 --with-shlib-version=XXX 605 Specify whether to use the release or ABI version for shared libraries. 606 This is normally chosen automatically based on the type of system 607 which you are building on. We use it for testing the configure script. 608 609 --with-system-type=XXX 610 For testing, override the derived host system-type which is used to 611 decide things such as the linker commands used to build shared 612 libraries. This is normally chosen automatically based on the type of 613 system which you are building on. We use it for testing the configure 614 script. 615 616 --with-terminfo-dirs=XXX 617 Specify a search-list of terminfo directories which will be compiled 618 into the ncurses library (default: DATADIR/terminfo) 619 620 --with-termlib 621 When building the ncurses library, organize this as two parts: the 622 curses library (libncurses) and the low-level terminfo library 623 (libtinfo). This is done to accommodate applications that use only 624 the latter. The terminfo library is about half the size of the total. 625 626 --with-termpath=XXX 627 Specify a search-list of termcap files which will be compiled into the 628 ncurses library (default: /etc/termcap:/usr/share/misc/termcap) 629 630 --without-ada 631 Suppress the configure script's check for Ada95, do not build the 632 Ada95 binding and related demo. 633 634 --without-curses-h 635 Don't install the ncurses header with the name "curses.h". Rather, 636 install as "ncurses.h" and modify the installed headers and manpages 637 accordingly. 638 639 --without-cxx 640 XSI curses declares "bool" as part of the interface. C++ also declares 641 "bool". Neither specifies the size and type of booleans, but both 642 insist on the same name. We chose to accommodate this by making the 643 configure script check for the size and type (e.g., unsigned or signed) 644 that your C++ compiler uses for booleans. If you do not wish to use 645 ncurses with C++, use this option to tell the configure script to not 646 adjust ncurses bool to match C++. 647 648 --without-cxx-binding 649 Suppress the configure script's check for C++, do not build the 650 C++ binding and related demo. 651 652 --without-progs 653 Tell the configure script to suppress the build of ncurses' application 654 programs (e.g., tic). The test applications will still be built if you 655 type "make", though not if you simply do "make install". 656 657 658COMPATIBILITY WITH OLDER VERSIONS OF NCURSES: 659-------------------------------------------- 660 661 Because ncurses implements the X/Open Curses Specification, its interface 662 is fairly stable. That does not mean the interface does not change. 663 Changes are made to the documented interfaces when we find differences 664 between ncurses and X/Open or implementations which they certify (such as 665 Solaris). We add extensions to those interfaces to solve problems not 666 addressed by the original curses design, but those must not conflict with 667 the X/Open documentation. 668 669 Here are some of the major interface changes, and related problems which 670 you may encounter when building a system with different versions of 671 ncurses: 672 673 5.2 (October 21, 2000) 674 Interface changes: 675 676 + revert termcap ospeed variable to 'short' (see discussion of the 677 --with-ospeed configure option). 678 679 5.1 (July 8, 2000) 680 Interface changes: 681 682 + made the extended terminal capabilities 683 (configure --enable-tcap-names) a standard feature. This should 684 be transparent to applications that do not require it. 685 686 + removed the trace() function and related trace support from the 687 production library. 688 689 + modified curses.h.in, undef'ing some symbols to avoid conflict 690 with C++ STL. 691 692 Added extensions: assume_default_colors(). 693 694 5.0 (October 23, 1999) 695 Interface changes: 696 697 + implemented the wcolor_set() and slk_color() functions. 698 699 + move macro winch to a function, to hide details of struct ldat 700 701 + corrected prototypes for slk_* functions, using chtype rather than 702 attr_t. 703 704 + the slk_attr_{set,off,on} functions need an additional void* 705 parameter according to XSI. 706 707 + modified several prototypes to correspond with 1997 version of X/Open 708 Curses: [w]attr_get(), [w]attr_set(), border_set() have different 709 parameters. Some functions were renamed or misspelled: 710 erase_wchar(), in_wchntr(), mvin_wchntr(). Some developers have used 711 attr_get(). 712 713 Added extensions: keybound(), curses_version(). 714 715 Terminfo database changes: 716 717 + change translation for termcap 'rs' to terminfo 'rs2', which is 718 the documented equivalent, rather than 'rs1'. 719 720 The problems are subtler in recent releases. 721 722 a) This release provides users with the ability to define their own 723 terminal capability extensions, like termcap. To accomplish this, 724 we redesigned the TERMTYPE struct (in term.h). Very few 725 applications use this struct. They must be recompiled to work with 726 the 5.0 library. 727 728 a) If you use the extended terminfo names (i.e., you used configure 729 --enable-tcap-names), the resulting terminfo database can have some 730 entries which are not readable by older versions of ncurses. This 731 is a bug in the older versions: 732 733 + the terminfo database stores booleans, numbers and strings in 734 arrays. The capabilities that are listed in the arrays are 735 specified by X/Open. ncurses recognizes a number of obsolete and 736 extended names which are stored past the end of the specified 737 entries. 738 739 + a change to read_entry.c in 951001 made the library do an lseek() 740 call incorrectly skipping data which is already read from the 741 string array. This happens when the number of strings in the 742 terminfo data file is greater than STRCOUNT, the number of 743 specified and obsolete or extended strings. 744 745 + as part of alignment with the X/Open final specification, in the 746 990109 patch we added two new terminfo capabilities: 747 set_a_attributes and set_pglen_inch). This makes the indices for 748 the obsolete and extended capabilities shift up by 2. 749 750 + the last two capabilities in the obsolete/extended list are memu 751 and meml, which are found in most terminfo descriptions for xterm. 752 753 When trying to read this terminfo entry, the spurious lseek() 754 causes the library to attempt to read the final portion of the 755 terminfo data (the text of the string capabilities) 4 characters 756 past its starting point, and reads 4 characters too few. The 757 library rejects the data, and applications are unable to 758 initialize that terminal type. 759 760 FIX: remove memu and meml from the xterm description. They are 761 obsolete, not used by ncurses. (It appears that the feature was 762 added to xterm to make it more like hpterm). 763 764 This is not a problem if you do not use the -x option of tic to 765 create a terminfo database with extended names. Note that the 766 user-defined terminal capabilities are not affected by this bug, 767 since they are stored in a table after the older terminfo data ends, 768 and are invisible to the older libraries. 769 770 c) Some developers did not wish to use the C++ binding, and used the 771 configure --without-cxx option. This causes problems if someone 772 uses the ncurses library from C++ because that configure test 773 determines the type for C++'s bool and makes ncurses match it, since 774 both C++ and curses are specified to declare bool. Calling ncurses 775 functions with the incorrect type for bool will cause execution 776 errors. In 5.0 we added a configure option "--without-cxx-binding" 777 which controls whether the binding itself is built and installed. 778 779 4.2 (March 2, 1998) 780 Interface changes: 781 782 + correct prototype for termattrs() as per XPG4 version 2. 783 784 + add placeholder prototypes for color_set(), erasewchar(), 785 term_attrs(), wcolor_set() as per XPG4 version 2. 786 787 + add macros getcur[xy] getbeg[xy] getpar[xy], which are defined in 788 SVr4 headers. 789 790 New extensions: keyok() and define_key(). 791 792 Terminfo database changes: 793 794 + corrected definition in curses.h for ACS_LANTERN, which was 'I' 795 rather than 'i'. 796 797 4.1 (May 15, 1997) 798 799 We added these extensions: use_default_colors(). Also added 800 configure option --enable-const, to support the use of const where 801 X/Open should have, but did not, specify. 802 803 The terminfo database content changed the representation of color for 804 most entries that use ANSI colors. SVr4 curses treats the setaf/setab 805 and setf/setb capabilities differently, interchanging the red/blue 806 colors in the latter. 807 808 4.0 (December 24, 1996) 809 810 We bumped to version 4.0 because the newly released dynamic loader 811 (ld.so.1.8.5) on Linux did not load shared libraries whose ABI and REL 812 versions were inconsistent. At that point, ncurses ABI was 3.4 and the 813 REL was 1.9.9g, so we made them consistent. 814 815 1.9.9g (December 1, 1996) 816 817 This fixed most of the problems with 1.9.9e, and made these interface 818 changes: 819 820 + remove tparam(), which had been provided for compatibility with 821 some termcap. tparm() is standard, and does not conflict with 822 application's fallback for missing tparam(). 823 824 + turn off hardware echo in initscr(). This changes the sense of the 825 echo() function, which was initialized to echoing rather than 826 nonechoing (the latter is specified). There were several other 827 corrections to the terminal I/O settings which cause applications to 828 behave differently. 829 830 + implemented several functions (such as attr_on()) which were 831 available only as macros. 832 833 + corrected several typos in curses.h.in (i.e., the mvXXXX macros). 834 835 + corrected prototypes for delay_output(), 836 has_color, immedok() and idcok(). 837 838 + corrected misspelled getbkgd(). Some applications used the 839 misspelled name. 840 841 + added _yoffset to WINDOW. The size of WINDOW does not impact 842 applications, since they use only pointers to WINDOW structs. 843 844 These changes were made to the terminfo database: 845 846 + removed boolean 'getm' which was available as an extended name. 847 848 We added these extensions: wresize(), resizeterm(), has_key() and 849 mcprint(). 850 851 1.9.9e (March 24, 1996) 852 853 not recommended (a last-minute/untested change left the forms and 854 menus libraries unusable since they do not repaint the screen). 855 Foreground/background colors are combined incorrectly, working properly 856 only on a black background. When this was released, the X/Open 857 specification was available only in draft form. 858 859 Some applications (such as lxdialog) were "fixed" to work with the 860 incorrect color scheme. 861 862 863IF YOU ARE A SYSTEM INTEGRATOR: 864------------------------------ 865 866 Beginning with 1.9.9, the ncurses distribution includes both a tset 867 utility and /usr/share/tabset directory. If you are installing ncurses, 868 it is no longer either necessary or desirable to install tset-jv. 869 870 Configuration and Installation: 871 872 Configure with --prefix=/usr to make the install productions put 873 libraries and headers in the correct locations (overwriting any 874 previous curses libraries and headers). This will put the terminfo 875 hierarchy under /usr/share/terminfo; you may want to override this with 876 --datadir=/usr/share/misc; terminfo and tabset are installed under the 877 data directory. 878 879 Please configure the ncurses library in a pure-terminfo mode; that 880 is, with the --disable-termcap option. This will make the ncurses 881 library smaller and faster. The ncurses library includes a termcap 882 emulation that queries the terminfo database, so even applications 883 that use raw termcap to query terminal characteristics will win 884 (providing you recompile and relink them!). 885 886 If you must configure with termcap fallback enabled, you may also 887 wish to use the --enable-getcap option. This option speeds up 888 termcap-based startups, at the expense of not allowing personal 889 termcap entries to reference the terminfo tree. See the code in 890 ncurses/tinfo/read_termcap.c for details. 891 892 Note that if you have $TERMCAP set, ncurses will use that value 893 to locate termcap data. In particular, running from xterm will 894 set $TERMCAP to the contents of the xterm's termcap entry. 895 If ncurses sees that, it will not examine /etc/termcap. 896 897 Keyboard Mapping: 898 899 The terminfo file assumes that Shift-Tab generates \E[Z (the ECMA-48 900 reverse-tabulation sequence) rather than ^I. Here are the loadkeys -d 901 mappings that will set this up: 902 903 keycode 15 = Tab Tab 904 alt keycode 15 = Meta_Tab 905 shift keycode 15 = F26 906 string F26 ="\033[Z" 907 908 Naming the Console Terminal 909 910 In various Linuxes (and possibly elsewhere) there has been a practice 911 of designating the system console driver type as `console'. Please 912 do not do this any more! It complicates peoples' lives, because it 913 can mean that several different terminfo entries from different 914 operating systems all logically want to be called `console'. 915 916 Please pick a name unique to your console driver and set that up 917 in the /etc/inittab table or local equivalent. Send the entry to the 918 terminfo maintainer (listed in the misc/terminfo file) to be included 919 in the terminfo file, if it's not already there. See the 920 term(7) manual page included with this distribution for more on 921 conventions for choosing type names. 922 923 Here are some recommended primary console names: 924 925 linux -- Linux console driver 926 freebsd -- FreeBSD 927 netbsd -- NetBSD 928 bsdos -- BSD/OS 929 930 If you are responsible for integrating ncurses for one of these 931 distribution, please either use the recommended name or get back 932 to us explaining why you don't want to, so we can work out nomenclature 933 that will make users' lives easier rather than harder. 934 935 936RECENT XTERM VERSIONS: 937--------------------- 938 939 The terminfo database file included with this distribution assumes you 940 are running an XFree86 xterm based on X11R6 (i.e., xterm-r6). The 941 earlier X11R5 entry (xterm-r5) is provided as well. 942 943 If you are running XFree86 version 3.2 (actually 3.1.2F and up), you 944 should consider using the xterm-xf86-v32 (or later, the most recent 945 version is always named "xterm-xfree86") entry, which adds ANSI color 946 and the VT220 capabilities which have been added in XFree86. If you 947 are running a mixed network, however, where this terminal description 948 may be used on an older xterm, you may have problems, since 949 applications that assume these capabilities will produce incorrect 950 output on the older xterm (e.g., highlighting is not cleared). 951 952 953CONFIGURING FALLBACK ENTRIES: 954---------------------------- 955 956 In order to support operation of ncurses programs before the terminfo 957 tree is accessible (that is, in single-user mode or at OS installation 958 time) the ncurses library can be compiled to include an array of 959 pre-fetched fallback entries. 960 961 These entries are checked by setupterm() only when the conventional 962 fetches from the terminfo tree and the termcap fallback (if configured) 963 have been tried and failed. Thus, the presence of a fallback will not 964 shadow modifications to the on-disk entry for the same type, when that 965 entry is accessible. 966 967 By default, there are no entries on the fallback list. After you 968 have built the ncurses suite for the first time, you can change 969 the list (the process needs infocmp(1)). To do so, use the script 970 MKfallback.sh. A configure script option --with-fallbacks does this 971 (it accepts a comma-separated list of the names you wish, and does 972 not require a rebuild). 973 974 If you wanted (say) to have linux, vt100, and xterm fallbacks, you 975 would use the commands 976 977 cd ncurses; 978 MKfallback.sh linux vt100 xterm >fallback.c 979 980 Then just rebuild and reinstall the library as you would normally. 981 You can restore the default empty fallback list with 982 983 MKfallback.sh >fallback.c 984 985 The overhead for an empty fallback list is one trivial stub function. 986 Any non-empty fallback list is const-ed and therefore lives in sharable 987 text space. You can look at the comment trailing each initializer in 988 the generated ncurses/fallback.c file to see the core cost of the 989 fallbacks. A good rule of thumb for modern vt100-like entries is that 990 each one will cost about 2.5K of text space. 991 992 993BSD CONVERSION NOTES: 994-------------------- 995 996 If you need to support really ancient BSD programs, you probably 997 want to configure with the --enable-bsdpad option. What this does 998 is enable code in tputs() that recognizes a numeric prefix on a 999 capability as a request for that much trailing padding in milliseconds. 1000 There are old BSD programs that do things like tputs("50"). 1001 1002 (If you are distributing ncurses as a support-library component of 1003 an application you probably want to put the remainder of this section 1004 in the package README file.) 1005 1006 The following note applies only if you have configured ncurses with 1007 --enable-termcap. 1008 1009------------------------------- CUT HERE -------------------------------- 1010 1011If you are installing this application privately (either because you 1012have no root access or want to experiment with it before doing a root 1013installation), there are a couple of details you need to be aware of. 1014They have to do with the ncurses library, which uses terminfo rather 1015than termcap for describing terminal characteristics. 1016 1017Though the ncurses library is terminfo-based, it will interpret your 1018TERMCAP variable (if present), any local termcap files you reference 1019through it, and the system termcap file. However, in order to avoid 1020slowing down your application startup, it will only do this once per 1021terminal type! 1022 1023The first time you load a given terminal type from your termcap 1024database, the library initialization code will automatically write it 1025in terminfo format to a subdirectory under $HOME/.terminfo. After 1026that, the initialization code will find it there and do a (much 1027faster) terminfo fetch. 1028 1029Usually, all this means is that your home directory will silently grow 1030an invisible .terminfo subdirectory which will get filled in with 1031terminfo descriptions of terminal types as you invoke them. If anyone 1032ever installs a global terminfo tree on your system, this will quietly 1033stop happening and your $HOME/.terminfo will become redundant. 1034 1035The objective of all this logic is to make converting from BSD termcap 1036as painless as possible without slowing down your application (termcap 1037compilation is expensive). 1038 1039If you don't have a TERMCAP variable or custom personal termcap file, 1040you can skip the rest of this dissertation. 1041 1042If you *do* have a TERMCAP variable and/or a custom personal termcap file 1043that defines a terminal type, that definition will stop being visible 1044to this application after the first time you run it, because it will 1045instead see the terminfo entry that it wrote to $HOME/terminfo the 1046first time around. 1047 1048Subsequently, editing the TERMCAP variable or personal TERMCAP file 1049will have no effect unless you explicitly remove the terminfo entry 1050under $HOME/terminfo. If you do that, the entry will be recompiled 1051from your termcap resources the next time it is invoked. 1052 1053To avoid these complications, use infocmp(1) and tic(1) to edit the 1054terminfo directory directly. 1055 1056------------------------------- CUT HERE -------------------------------- 1057 1058USING NCURSES WITH AFS: 1059 AFS treats each directory as a separate logical filesystem, you 1060 can't hard-link across them. The --enable-symlinks option copes 1061 with this by making tic use symbolic links. 1062 1063USING NCURSES WITH EMACS: 1064 GNU Emacs has its own termcap support. By default, it uses a mixture 1065 of those functions and code linked from the host system's libraries. 1066 You need to foil this and shut out the GNU termcap library entirely. 1067 1068 In order to do this, hack the Linux config file (s/linux.h) to contain 1069 a #define TERMINFO and set the symbol LIBS_TERMCAP to "-lncurses". 1070 1071 We have submitted such a change for the 19.30 release, so it may 1072 already be applied in your sources -- check for the #define TERMINFO. 1073 1074USING NCURSES WITH GPM: 1075 Ncurses 4.1 and up can be configured to use GPM (General Purpose Mouse) 1076 which is used on Linux console. Be aware that GPM is commonly 1077 installed as a shared library which contains a wrapper for the curses 1078 wgetch() function (libcurses.o). Some integrators have simplified 1079 linking applications by combining all or part of libcurses.so (the BSD 1080 curses) into the libgpm.so file, producing symbol conflicts with 1081 ncurses (specifically the wgetch function). You may be able to work 1082 around this problem by linking as follows: 1083 1084 cc -o foo foo.o -lncurses -lgpm -lncurses 1085 1086 but the linker may not cooperate, producing mysterious errors. 1087 A patched version of gpm is available: 1088 1089 dickey.his.com:/ncurses/gpm-1.10-970125.tar.gz 1090 1091 This patch is incorporated in gpm 1.12; however some integrators 1092 are slow to update this library. Current distributions of gpm can 1093 be configured properly using the --without-curses option. 1094 1095BUILDING NCURSES WITH A CROSS-COMPILER 1096 Ncurses can be built with a cross-compiler. Some parts must be built 1097 with the host's compiler since they are used for building programs 1098 (e.g., ncurses/make_hash and ncurses/make_keys) that generate tables 1099 that are compiled into the ncurses library. You should set the 1100 BUILD_CC environment variable to your host's compiler, and run the 1101 configure script configuring for the cross-compiler. 1102 1103 Note that all of the generated source-files which are part of ncurses 1104 will be made if you use 1105 1106 make sources 1107 1108 This would be useful in porting to an environment which has little 1109 support for the tools used to generate the sources, e.g., sed, awk and 1110 Bourne-shell. 1111 1112BUGS: 1113 Send any feedback to the ncurses mailing list at 1114 bug-ncurses@gnu.org. To subscribe send mail to 1115 bug-ncurses-request@gnu.org with body that reads: 1116 subscribe ncurses <your-email-address-here> 1117 1118 The Hacker's Guide in the doc directory includes some guidelines 1119 on how to report bugs in ways that will get them fixed most quickly. 1120