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1   <chapter id="consoles">
2     <title>Consoles in Wine</title>
3
4     <sect1 id="wine-consoles">
5       <title>Consoles</title>
6
7       <para>
8         Written by &name-john-richardson; <email>&email-john-richardson;</email>
9         Maintained by &name-joseph-pranevich; <email>&email-joseph-pranevich;</email>
10       </para>
11       <para>
12         (Extracted from <filename>wine/documentation/console</filename>)
13       </para>
14
15       <sect2>
16         <title>Console - First Pass</title>
17
18         <para>
19           Consoles are just xterms created with the
20           <parameter>-Sxxn</parameter> switch. A
21           <systemitem>pty</systemitem> is opened and the master goes
22           to the <filename>xterm</filename> side and the slave is held
23           by the wine side.  The console itself is turned into a few
24           <type>HANDLE32</type>s and is set to the
25           <varname>STD_*_HANDLES</varname>.
26         </para>
27         <para>
28           It is possible to use the <function>WriteFile</function> and
29           <function>ReadFile</function> commands to write to a win32
30           console.  To accomplish this, all <type>K32OBJ</type>s that
31           support I/O have a read and write function pointer. So,
32           <function>WriteFile</function> calls
33           <function>K32OBJ_WriteFile</function> which calls the
34           <type>K32OBJ</type>'s write function pointer, which then
35           finally calls <function>write</function>.
36         </para>
37         <para>
38           <emphasis>[this paragraph is now out of date]</emphasis> If
39           the command line console is to be inherited or a process
40           inherits its parent's console (-- can that happen???), the
41           console is created at process init time via
42           <function>PROCESS_InheritConsole</function>. The
43           <literal>0</literal>, <literal>1</literal>, and
44           <literal>2</literal> file descriptors are duped to be the
45           <varname>STD_*_HANDLES</varname> in this case.  Also in this
46           case a flag is set to indicate that the console comes from
47           the parent process or command line.
48         </para>
49         <para>
50           If a process doesn't have a console at all, its
51           <varname>pdb-&gt;console</varname> is set to
52           <constant>NULL</constant>.  This helps indicate when it is
53           possible to create a new console (via
54           <function>AllocConsole</function>).
55         </para>
56         <para>
57           When <function>FreeConsole</function> is called, all handles that the process has
58           open to the console are closed.  Like most <type>K32OBJ</type>s, if the
59           console's refcount reaches zero, its <type>K32OBJ</type> destroy function
60           is called.  The destroy kills the xterm if one was open.
61         </para>
62         <para>
63           Also like most k32 objects, we assume that
64           (<type>K32OBJ</type>) header is the first field so the
65           casting (from <type>K32OBJ*</type>to <type>CONSOLE*</type>)
66           works correctly.
67         </para>
68         <para>
69           <function>FreeConsole</function> is called on process exit
70           (in <function>ExitProcess</function>) if
71           <varname>pdb-&gt;console</varname> is not
72           <constant>NULL</constant>.
73         </para>
74       </sect2>
75
76       <sect2>
77         <title>BUGS</title>
78
79         <para>
80           Console processes do not inherit their parent's handles.  I
81           think there needs to be two cases, one where they have to
82           inherit the <filename>stdin</filename> /
83           <filename>stdout</filename> / <filename>stderr</filename>
84           from unix, and one where they have to inherit from another
85           windows app.
86         </para>
87         <para>
88           <function>SetConsoleMode</function> -- UNIX only has
89           <constant>ICANON</constant> and various
90           <constant>ECHO</constant>s to play around with for
91           processing input.  Win32 has line-at-a-time processing,
92           character processing, and echo. I'm putting together an
93           intermediate driver that will handle this (and hopefully
94           won't be any more buggy than the NT4 console
95           implementation).
96         </para>
97       </sect2>
98
99       <sect2>
100         <title>Experimentation</title>
101
102         <para>
103           experimentation with NT4 yields that:
104         </para>
105
106         <variablelist>
107           <varlistentry>
108             <term><function>WriteFile</function></term>
109             <listitem>
110               <itemizedlist>
111                 <listitem>
112                   <para>does not truncate file on 0 length write</para>
113                 </listitem>
114                 <listitem>
115                   <para>
116                     0 length write or error on write changes
117                     <varname>numcharswritten</varname> to
118                     <literal>0</literal>
119                   </para>
120                 </listitem>
121                 <listitem>
122                   <para>0 length write returns <constant>TRUE</constant></para>
123                 </listitem>
124                 <listitem>
125                   <para>works with console handles</para>
126                 </listitem>
127               </itemizedlist>
128             </listitem>
129           </varlistentry>
130           <varlistentry>
131             <term><function>_lwrite</function></term>
132             <listitem>
133               <itemizedlist>
134                 <listitem>
135                   <para>does truncate/expand file at current position on 0 length write</para>
136                 </listitem>
137                 <listitem>
138                   <para>returns 0 on a zero length write</para>
139                 </listitem>
140                 <listitem>
141                   <para>works with console handles (typecasted)</para>
142                 </listitem>
143               </itemizedlist>
144             </listitem>
145           </varlistentry>
146           <varlistentry>
147             <term><function>WriteConsole</function></term>
148             <listitem>
149               <itemizedlist>
150                 <listitem>
151                   <para>expects only console handles</para>
152                 </listitem>
153               </itemizedlist>
154             </listitem>
155           </varlistentry>
156           <varlistentry>
157             <term><function>SetFilePointer</function></term>
158             <listitem>
159               <itemizedlist>
160                 <listitem>
161                   <para>returns -1 (err 6) when used with a console handle</para>
162                 </listitem>
163               </itemizedlist>
164             </listitem>
165           </varlistentry>
166           <varlistentry>
167             <term><function>FreeConsole</function></term>
168             <listitem>
169               <itemizedlist>
170                 <listitem>
171                   <para>
172                     even when all the handles to it are freed, the
173                     win32 console stays visible, the only way I could
174                     find to free it was via the <function>FreeConsole</function>
175                   </para>
176                 </listitem>
177               </itemizedlist>
178             </listitem>
179           </varlistentry>
180         </variablelist>
181
182         <para>
183           Is it possible to interrupt win32's
184           <function>FileWrite</function>?  I'm not sure. It may not be
185           possible to interrupt any system calls.
186         </para>
187       </sect2>
188
189       <sect2>
190         <title>DOS (Generic) Console Support</title>
191
192         <sect3>
193           <title>I. Command Line Configuration</title>
194
195           <para>
196             DOS consoles must be configured either on the command line
197             or in a dot resource file (<filename>.console</filename>).
198             A typical configuration consists of a string of driver
199             keywords separated by plus ('+') signs. To change the
200             configuration on the command-line, use the
201             <parameter>-console</parameter> switch.
202           </para>
203           <para>
204             For example:
205           </para>
206           <screen>
207 wine -console ncurses+xterm &lt;application&gt;
208           </screen>
209           <para>
210             Possible drivers:
211           </para>
212
213           <variablelist>
214             <varlistentry>
215               <term>tty:</term>
216               <listitem>
217                 <para>Generic text-only support. Supports redirection.</para>
218               </listitem>
219             </varlistentry>
220             <varlistentry>
221               <term>ncurses:</term>
222               <listitem>
223                 <para>Full-screen graphical support with color.</para>
224               </listitem>
225             </varlistentry>
226             <varlistentry>
227               <term>xterm:</term>
228               <listitem>
229                 <para>
230                   Load a new window to display the console in. Also
231                   supports resizing windows.
232                 </para>
233               </listitem>
234             </varlistentry>
235           </variablelist>
236         </sect3>
237
238         <sect3>
239           <title>II. wine config file configuration</title>
240
241           <para>
242             In the wine config file, you can create
243             a section called [console] that contains configuration
244             options that are respected by the assorted console
245             drivers.
246           </para>
247           <para>
248             Current Options:
249           </para>
250
251           <variablelist>
252             <varlistentry>
253               <term>XtermProg=&lt;program&gt;</term>
254               <listitem>
255                 <para>
256                   Use this program instead of
257                   <command>xterm</command>. This eliminates the need
258                   for a recompile. See the table below for a
259                   comparison of various terminals.
260                 </para>
261               </listitem>
262             </varlistentry>
263             <varlistentry>
264               <term>InitialRows=&lt;number&gt;</term>
265               <listitem>
266                 <para>
267                   Attempt to start all drivers with this number of
268                   rows. This causes xterms to be resized, for
269                   instance.
270                 </para>
271                 <note>
272                   <para>
273                     This information is passed on the command-line
274                     with the <parameter>-g</parameter> switch.
275                   </para>
276                 </note>
277               </listitem>
278             </varlistentry>
279             <varlistentry>
280               <term>InitialColumns=&lt;number&gt;</term>
281               <listitem>
282                 <para>
283                   Attempt to start all drivers with this number of
284                   columns. This causes xterms to be resized, for
285                   instance.
286                 </para>
287                 <note>
288                   <para>
289                     This information is passed on the command-line
290                     with the <parameter>-g</parameter> switch.
291                   </para>
292                 </note>
293               </listitem>
294             </varlistentry>
295             <varlistentry>
296               <term>TerminalType=&lt;name&gt;</term>
297               <listitem>
298                 <para>
299                   Tell any driver that is interested (ncurses) which
300                   termcap and/or terminfo type to use. The default is
301                   xterm which is appropriate for most uses.
302                   <command>nxterm</command> may give you better
303                   support if you use that terminal. This can also be
304                   changed to "linux" (or "console" on older systems)
305                   if you manage to hack the ability to write to the
306                   console into this driver.
307                 </para>
308               </listitem>
309             </varlistentry>
310           </variablelist>
311         </sect3>
312
313         <sect3>
314           <title>III. Terminal Types</title>
315
316           <para>
317             There are a large number of potential terminals that can
318             be used with Wine, depending on what you are trying to do.
319             Unfortunately, I am still looking for the "best" driver
320             combination.
321           </para>
322           <note>
323             <para>
324               'slave' is required for use in Wine, currently.
325             </para>
326           </note>
327
328           <informaltable>
329             <tgroup cols="4">
330               <thead>
331                 <row>
332                   <entry>Program</entry>
333                   <entry>Color?</entry>
334                   <entry>Resizing?</entry>
335                   <entry>Slave?</entry>
336                 </row>
337               </thead>
338               <tfoot>
339                 <row>
340                   <entry>(linux console)</entry>
341                   <entry>Y</entry>
342                   <entry>N</entry>
343                   <entry>?</entry>
344                 </row>
345               </tfoot>
346               <tbody>
347                 <row>
348                   <entry>xterm</entry>
349                   <entry>N</entry>
350                   <entry>Y</entry>
351                   <entry>Y</entry>
352                 </row>
353                 <row>
354                   <entry>nxterm</entry>
355                   <entry>Y</entry>
356                   <entry>N</entry>
357                   <entry>Y</entry>
358                 </row>
359                 <row>
360                   <entry>rxvt</entry>
361                   <entry>Y</entry>
362                   <entry>?</entry>
363                   <entry>N</entry>
364                 </row>
365               </tbody>
366             </tgroup>
367           </informaltable>
368
369           <para>
370             As X terminals typically use a 24x80 screen resolution
371             rather than the typical 25x80 one, it is necessary to
372             resize the screen to allow a DOS program to work
373             full-screen. There is a wine config file
374             option to work around this in some cases but run-time
375             resizing will be disabled.
376           </para>
377         </sect3>
378       </sect2>
379     </sect1>
380   </chapter>
381
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