Colormap Utilization Policy and Extension

X Project Team Standard

Kaleb S. Keithley

   The Open Group

   X Version 11, Release 7.7

   Version 1.0

   Copyright  1986-1997 The Open Group

   Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
   obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation
   files (the Software), to use the Software without restriction,
   including, without limitation, the rights to copy, modify,
   merge, publish, distribute and sublicense the Software, to
   make, have made, license and distribute derivative works
   thereof, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
   furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

   The above copyright notice and the following permission notice
   shall be included in all copies of the Software:

   THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
   EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
   AND NON- INFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE OPEN GROUP BE
   LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
   ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF, OR
   IN CONNNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OF OTHER DEALINGS
   IN THE SOFTWARE.

   Except as contained in this notice, the name of The Open Group
   shall not be used in advertising or otherwise to promote the
   use or other dealings in this Software without prior written
   authorization from The Open Group.

   X Window System is a trademark of The Open Group.
     __________________________________________________________

   Table of Contents

   1. Overview
   2. Requests
   3. Events and Errors
   4. Changes to existing protocol.
   5. Encoding
   6. C Language Binding
   7. Using the TOG-CUP extension and Colormap Utilization Policy

Chapter 1. Overview

   This extension has three purposes: a) to provide mechanism for
   a special application (a colormap manager) to discover any
   special colormap requirements, e.g. the colormap entries that
   are nominally reserved for desktop colors in the MS-Windows
   environment and initialize the default colormap so that it can
   be more easily shared; and b) to encourage colormap sharing and
   reduce colormap flashing on low-end 8-bit frame buffers by
   providing a policy for sharing; and c) when colormaps aren't
   shared, define a behavior in the X server color allocation
   scheme to reduce colormap flashing.

   To encourage colormap sharing and accomodate special colormap
   requirements two new protocols are defined: the first provides
   a way to query the server for a list of reserved colormap
   entries, and the second is a way to initialize read-only
   (shareable) colormap entries at specific locations in a
   colormap.

   To minimize colormap flashing when the root window's default
   visual is one of GrayScale, PseudoColor, or DirectColor, and a
   private colormap for the default visual is being used, a minor
   (but compatible) change to the server implementation of the
   AllocColor and AllocNamedColor requests is required. Where the
   core protocol says nothing about the pixel values returned,
   when this extension is in effect, the AllocColor and
   AllocNamedColor requests will first look for a matching color
   in the default colormap, and, if a match is found and the same
   cell in the private colormap has not already been allocated,
   the color will be allocated in the private colormap at the same
   locaton as in the default colormap (instead of in the first
   available location.)

Chapter 2. Requests

   QueryVersion
   client_major_version: CARD16
   client_minor_version: CARD16
   =>
   server_major_version: CARD16
   server_minor_version: CARD16

   If supplied, the client_major_version and client_minor_version
   indicate what version of the protocol the client wants the
   server to implement. The server version numbers returned
   indicate the protocol this extension actually supports. This
   might not equal the version sent by the client. An
   implementation can (but need not) support more than one version
   simultaneously. The server_major_version and the
   server_minor_version are a mechanism to support future
   revisions of the TOG-CUP protocol that may be necessary. In
   general, the major version would increment for incompatible
   changes, and the minor version would increment for small
   upward-compatible changes. Servers that support the protocol
   defined in this document will return a server_major_version of
   one (1), and a server_minor_version of zero (0).

   GetReservedColormapEntries
   screen: CARD32
   =>
   entries: LISTofCOLORITEM

   This request returns a list of colormap entries (pixels) that
   are reserved by the system, e.g. MS-Windows reserved desktop
   colors. This list will, at a minimum, contain entries for the
   BlackPixel and WhitePixel of the specified screen. The do-red,
   do-green, and do-blue elements of the COLORITEMs are unused in
   this reply.

   Rationale: There are colormap entries (pixels) that, e.g.,
   MS-Windows desktop reserves as desktop colors, that should not
   be altered. If they are altered then X programs will cause
   colormap flashing between X and MS-Windows applications
   running/displaying on the same desktop.

   StoreColors
   cmap: COLORMAP
   items: LISTofCOLORITEM
   =>
   items: LISTofCOLORITEM

   This request changes the colormap entries of the specified
   pixels. The colormap entries are allocated as if by an
   AllocColor request. The do-red, do-green, and do-blue elements
   of the COLORITEMs are unused in this request. A boolean
   alloc-ok element (a bit) is returned indicating whether the
   particular pixel was successfully allocated or not. If
   successfully allocated the RGB and pixel are returned.

   A Value error is generated if a pixel is not a valid index into
   cmap. A BadMatch error is generated if if cmap does not belong
   to a GrayScale, PseudoColor, or DirectColor visual.

Chapter 3. Events and Errors

   No new events or errors are defined by this extension.

Chapter 4. Changes to existing protocol.

   None.

Chapter 5. Encoding

   The name of this extension is "TOG-CUP".

   The conventions used here are the same as those for the core
   X11 Protocol Encoding.
QueryVersion
     1     CARD8               opcode
     1     0                   TOG-CUP opcode
     2     2                   request length
     2     CARD16              client_major_version
     2     CARD16              client_minor_version
=>
     1     1                   reply
     1                         unused
     2     CARD16              sequence number
     4     0                   length
     2     CARD16              server_major_version
     2     CARD16              server_minor_number
     20                        unused

GetReservedColormapEntries
     1     CARD8               opcode
     1     1                   TOG-CUP opcode
     2     2                   request length
     4     CARD32              screen
=>
     1     1                   reply
     1                         unused
     2     CARD16              sequence number
     4     3n                  length
     24                        unused
     12n   LISTofCOLORITEM     items

StoreColors
     1     CARD8               opcode
     1     2                   TOG-CUP opcode
     2     2+3n                request length
     4     COLORMAP            cmap
     12n   LISTofCOLORITEM     items
=>
     1     1                   reply
     1                         unused
     2     CARD16              sequence number
     4     3n                  length
     24                        unused
     12n   LISTofCOLORITEM     items

   (The definition of COLORITEM here is only for the purpose of
   defining the additional alloc-ok member in the CUPStoreColors
   reply.)
  COLORITEM
     4     CARD32              pixel
     2     CARD16              red
     2     CARD16              green
     2     CARD16              blue
     1                         alloc-ok
           #x07                unused
           #x08                alloc-ok (1 is True, 0 is False)
           #xF0                unused
     1                         unused

Chapter 6. C Language Binding

   The C functions provide direct access to the protocol and add
   no additional semantics. For complete details on the effects of
   these functions, refer to the appropriate protocol request,
   which can be derived by deleting XCup at the start of the
   function. All functions that have return type Status will
   return nonzero for success and zero for failure.

   The include file for this extension is <X11/extensions/Xcup.h>.

   Status fsfunc XCupQueryVersion(Display* display, int*
   major_version_return, int* minor_version_return);

   display

   Specifies the connection to the X server.

   major_version_return

   Returns the major version supported by the server.

   minor_version_return

   Returns the minor version supported by the server.

   XCupQueryVersions sets major_version_return and
   minor_version_return to the major and minor TOG-CUP protocol
   version supported by the server. If the TOG-CUP library is
   compatible with the version returned by the server, it returns
   nonzero. If dpy does not support the TOG-CUP extension, or if
   there was an error during communication with the server, or if
   the server and library protocol versions are incompatible, it
   returns zero. No other XCup functions may be called before this
   function. If a client violates this rule, the effects of all
   subsequent XCup calls that it makes are undefined.

   To get the list of reserved colormap entries, use
   XCupGetReservedColormapEntries.

   Status fsfunc XCupGetReservedColormapEntries(Display* display,
   int screen, XColor** colors_out, int* ncolors);

   display

   Specifies the connection to the X server.

   colors_out

   Returns the values reserved by the server.

   ncolors

   Returns the number of items in colors_out.

   The XCupGetReservedColormapEntries function gets system
   specific colormap entries. E.g. the MS-Windows desktop uses N
   colormap entries at the beginning (0..N) and end (256-N..255)
   of the colormap. Use XFree to free colors_out.

   To allocate one or more read-only color cells with RGB values,
   use XCupStoreColors.

   Status fsfunc XCupStoreColors(Display* display, Colormap
   colormap, XColor* colors_in_out, int ncolors);

   display

   Specifies the connection to the X server.

   colormap

   Specifies the colormap.

   colors_in_out

   Specifies and returns the values actually used in the colormap.

   ncolors

   Specifies the number of items in colors_in_out.

   The XCupStoreColors function changes the colormap entries of
   the pixel values specified in the pixel members of the XColor
   structures. The colormap entries are allocated as if an
   AllocColor had been used instead, i.e. the colors are read-only
   (shareable). XCupStoreColors returns the number of colors that
   were successfully allocated in the colormap.

Chapter 7. Using the TOG-CUP extension and Colormap Utilization
Policy

   The X server preallocates any hardware or desktop special
   colors in the default colormap; e.g. UNIX X servers preallocate
   Black and White pixels. PC X servers should also preallocate
   the MS-Windows desktop colors. (Note to implementors: in the
   Sample Implementation special colors are allocated in the
   default colormap in cfbCreateDefColormap for dumb memory
   framebuffers.)

   To minimize colormap flash an application which installs its
   own private colormap should query the special colors by calling
   XCupGetReservedColormapEntries, and can then store those
   entries (in the proper location) in its private colormap using
   XCupStoreColors.

   Applications which allocate many colors in a screen's default
   colormap, e.g. a color-cube or a gray-ramp, should allocate
   them with XCupStoreColors. By using XCupStoreColors the colors
   will be allocated sharable (read-only) and any other
   application which allocates the same color will share that
   color cell.
