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The MGR Window System HOWTO
Draft 17 Feb 1994
Copyright Vincent Broman 1994
Permission granted to make and distribute
verbatim (unaltered) copies for any purpose.
.0 This HOWTO
.01 Table of Contents
This HOWTO .0
What is the MGR window system? .1
Installing MGR .2
Running MGR .3
Programming for MGR .4
More Documentation .5
Credit for MGR .6
.02 Archiving
This HOWTO is temporarily archived for anonymous FTP on
bugs.nosc.mil in pub/Mgr/MGR-HOWTO, and more permanently
on sunsite.unc.edu in pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO .
.03 Credit for the HOWTO
While Vincent Broman first put together this HOWTO,
much of the information and text was obtained from FAQs,
READMEs, etc. written by Stephen Uhler, Michael Haardt,
and other public-spirited net-persons.
Email corrections and suggested changes to broman@nosc.mil .
Uhler was the main architect of MGR -- see the Credit section below.
.1 What is the MGR window system?
.11 Function
MGR (ManaGeR) is a graphical window system. The MGR server
provides a builtin window manager and windowed graphics terminal
emulation on color and monochrome bitmap displays. MGR is
controlled by mousing pop-up menus, by keyboard interaction, and by
escape sequences written on pseudo-terminals by client software.
MGR provides each client window with: termcap-style terminal
control functions, graphics primitives such as line and circle
drawing; facilities for manipulating bitmaps, fonts, icons, and
pop-up menus; commands to reshape and position windows; and a
message passing facility enabling client programs to rendezvous
and exchange messages. Client programs may ask to be informed
when a change in the window system occurs, such as a reshaped
window, a pushed mouse button, or a message sent from another
client program. These changes are called events. MGR notifies a
client program of an event by sending it an ASCII character string
in a format specified by the client program. Existing
applications can be integrated into the windowing environment
without modification by having MGR imitate keystrokes in response
to user defined menu selections or other events.
.12 Requirements
MGR currently runs on Linux, Sun 3/4 workstations with SunOS, and
Coherent. Various older versions of MGR run on the Macintosh,
Atari ST MiNT, Xenix, 386-Minix, DEC 3100, and the 3b1 Unix-pc.
The programming interface is implemented in C and in ELisp,
although supporting clients written in other languages is quite
easy.
Running MGR requires much less in resources than X, or even gcc.
It does not have the user-base, software repertory, or high-level
libraries of X or MS-Windows, say, but it is quite elegant
and approachable.
It has been said that MGR is to X as Unix was to Multics.
.13 How do MGR, X11 and 8.5 compare?
MGR consists of a server with builtin window manager and terminal
emulator, and clients which run in this terminal emulator and use it
to communicate with the server. No resource multiplexing is done.
X11 consists of a server and clients, which usually connect to the
server using a socket. All user visible things like terminal
emulators, window managers etc are done using clients. No resource
multiplexing is done.
8.5, the Plan 9 window system, is a resource multiplexer, as each
process running in a window can access /dev/bitblt, /dev/mouse and
/dev/kbd in its own namespace. These are multiplexed to the
/dev/bitblit, /dev/mouse and /dev/kbd in the namespace of 8.5.
This approach allows one to run 8.5 in an 8.5 window,
a very clean design. 8.5 further has an integrated window manager
and terminal emulator.
.2 Installing MGR
The latest version can be FTPed from bugs.nosc.mil:pub/Mgr/62 .
You can get older MGR sources from ftp.thp.uni-koeln.de[134.95.64.1]
in pub/linux/mgr, or on [134.95.80.1] in pub/thp/linux/mgr, if you
can't reach the first site. Even older versions of this distribution
from Haardt can be found on tsx-11.mit.edu and elsewhere. Pre-Linux
versions of MGR from Uhler and others (prior to Haardt) can be
found at bellcore.com:pub/mgr, although no one seems to maintain
things there. MGR has been through a lot of versions and releases,
but the current *Linux* version number is 0.62. This version number
ought to arrive at 1.0 when 256-color VGA code for Linux appears.
Required tools to build this distribution of MGR are m4 (GNU, or
perhaps another supporting the -D option), make (GNU, or perhaps
another supporting include) and *roff for the docs. Also sh,
awk, and POSIX install. Binary distributions have not been assembled
yet, so you need an ANSI C compiler environment, e.g. gcc + gas.
A Linux installation requires Linux 0.99.10 or better, an HGC,
EGA, VGA, or SVGA graphics card, and a mouse. Mouses supported
are: serial Microsoft mouse, serial MouseSystems 3 and 5 byte
mouse, serial MMSeries mouse, serial Logitech mouse, PS/2 mouse,
or a bus mouse. The VGA 640x480 monochrome graphics mode is
supported out of the box, as is 640x350 and 640x200. To run
800x600, or other modes that your BIOS can initialize and which
do not require bank-switching, you need to run a small program
(supplied as src/vgamisc/regs.exe) under DOS to read the VGA registers
while that mode is set and write a header file which you place in the
directory src/libbitblit/linux. Some VGA cards can use 128k
windows, and these can run higher resolutions. The Linux code
does not yet support more than two colors.
Suns with SunOS 4.1.2 and bwtwo, cgthree, or cgsix frame buffers
are supported. Coherent installations should refer to the
README.Coh file in the source distribution. Porting the
latest-and-greatest MGR to another POSIX-like system which
provides select() and pty's and direct access to a bitmapped
frame-buffer ought to be straightforward, just implementing the
libbitblit library based on the sunmono or colorport code, say.
If you want to install everything, you need 4.8 MB disk space for
binaries, fonts, manual pages etc. The sources are about 2 MB,
plus object files during compilation.
Normally, /usr/mgr should be either the directory or a link to the
directory where you install MGR stuff for runtime use. Typing
"chdir /usr/mgr; gunzip < whereveryouputit/mgrusr.tgz | tar xvf -"
and optionally
"chdir /usr/mgr; gunzip < wherever/morefonts.tgz | tar xvf -"
will unpack these. The source can be put anywhere, e.g. typing
"chdir /usr/src/local/mgr; gunzip < wherever/mgrsrc.tgz | tar xvf -"
to unpack the sources from bugs.nosc.mil.
The source tree can be compiled from one top-level Makefile which
invokes lower-level Makefiles, all of which "include" a "Configfile"
at the top level. The Configfile is created by an interactive sh
script named Configure, which runs m4 on a Configfile.m4,
so you do something like this:
chdir /usr/src/local/mgr
sh ./Configure
make first
make depend
make install
make clean
It might be wise, before running make, to eyeball the Configfile
generated by the Configure script, checking that it looks reasonable.
(At least one m4 poops out, creating a very short Configfile.
If this happens, try editing a copy of Configfile.sun or Configfile.lx)
Several flags in MGRFLAGS can be added/omitted to change some
optional features in the server, viz:
-DWHO: muck utmp file so "who" works
-DVI code for clicking the mouse in vi moving the cursor
-DDEBUG enable debugging output selectable with -d options.
-DFASTMOUSE XOR the mouse track
-DBUCKEY for hot-key server commands without mousing
-DPRIORITY for priority window scheduling instead of
round-robin; the active window gets higher priority
-DCUT for cut/paste between windows and a global snarf buffer
-DALIGN forces window alignment for fast scrolling (monochr)
-DKILL kills windows upon tty i/o errors
-DSHRINK use only some of the screen ($MGRSIZE in environment)
-DNOSTACK don't permit event stacking
-DBELL really ring the bell
-DKBD read mgr input from the sun kbd, instead of stdin.
This permits redirection of console msgs to a window.
-DFRACCHAR fractional character movement for proportional fonts
-DXMENU extended menu stuff (experimental)
-DMOVIE movie making extension which logs all operations to a
file for later replay -- not quite working under Linux
-DEMUMIDMSBUT Emulate a missing middle mouse button by chording
Not all combinations of these options work on all systems.
If a make complains about the lack of a default_font.h or an
icon_server.h in the directory src/mgr, then just do a
"make default_font.h icon_server.h" in that directory.
C code for the static variables containing icons and fonts
is generated by a translator from icon and font files.
Not all the clients are compiled and installed by the Makefiles.
Clients found under src/clients having capitalized names or
not compiled by the supplied Makefiles may have problems compiling
and/or running, but they may be interesting to hack on.
Several screen drivers found under the libbitblit directory are
of mainly archeological interest. Grave robbing can be profitable.
At some point check that your /etc/termcap and/or terminfo file
contain entries for MGR terminals such as found in the misc
directory. If all your software checks $TERMCAP in the environment,
this is not needed, as long as you run set_termcap in each window.
MGR works better if run setuid root, because it wants to chown
ptys and write in the utmp file. This helps the ify iconifier
client work better and the event passing mechanism be more secure.
On Linux, root permissions are required in order to do in/out on the
screen device. Otherwise, you decide whether to trust it.
In versions around 0.62 there are troubles on the Sun with using
the csh as the default shell. Programs seem to run in a different
process group than the foreground process group of the window's pty.
There is no trouble with bash, sh, or rc. Ideas why?
.3 Running MGR
The only file =required= in an MGR installation is the server
itself. That would give you terminal emulator windows with shells
running in them, but no nice clocks, extra fonts, fancy graphics,
etc. Depending on options, the server needs about 200K of RAM
plus dynamic space for windows, bitmaps, etc.
If /usr/mgr/bin is in your PATH, then just type "mgr" to start up.
When the hatched background and mouse pointer appear, hold down
the left mouse button, highlight the "new window" menu item, and
release the button. Then drag the mouse from corner to corner
where you want a window to appear. The window will have your
default shell running in it. Hold down the left mouse button over
an existing window to see another menu for doing things to that
window. The menu you saw that pops-up over the empty background
includes the quit command. For people with a two button mouse:
press both buttons together to emulate the missing middle button.
** When trying to run MGR, if you get:
- can't find the screen
make sure you have a /dev entry for your display device, e.g. on
a Sun /dev/bwtwo0. If not, as root cd to /dev, and type
"MAKEDEV bwtwo0". Otherwise, you might need the -S/dev/bwtwo0
or (on Linux) the -S640x480 command line option when starting mgr.
- Can't find the mouse
make sure /dev/mouse exists, usually as a symbolic link to the
real device name for your mouse. If you haven't permission to
write in /dev, then something like a -m/dev/cua0 option can be
given when starting mgr. Also, make sure you've supplied the
right mouse protocol choice when you configured mgr. The mouse
may speak Microsoft, even if that is not the brand name.
- can't get a pty
make sure all of /dev/[tp]ty[pq]? are owned by root, mode 666
and all programs referenced with the "shell" option in your
.mgrc startup file (if any) exist and are executable.
- none but the default font, make sure MGR is looking in the right
place for its fonts. Check the Configfile in the source or
see whether a -f/usr/mgr/font option to mgr fixes the problem.
- completely hung (not even the mouse track moves)
login to your machine from another terminal (or rlogin) and kill the
mgr process. A buckey-Q key will quit MGR if the keyboard still works.
Sometimes you can switch to another virtual terminal with an alt-F key
and kill mgr from there.
.31 Applications not aware of MGR
Any tty-oriented application can be run in an MGR window
without further ado. Screen-oriented applications using
termcap or curses can get the correct number of lines and
columns by your using shape(1) to reshape the window or using
set_termcap(1) or set_emacs(1) to obtain the correct termcap.
.32 MGR Applications (clients) distributed with the server
bounce, grav, grid, hilbert, mgreyes, stringart, walk - graphics demos
browse - an icon browser
bury - bury this window
clock - digital display of time of day
clock2 - analog display of time of day
close - close this window, iconify
cmenu - vi menus from C compiler errors
color - set the foreground and background color for text in this window
cursor - change appearance of the character cursor
cut - cut text from this window into the cut buffer
cycle - display a sequence of icons
dmgr - crude ditroff previewer
fade - fade a home movie script from one scene to another
font - change to a new font in this window
hpmgr - hp 2621 terminal emulator
ico - animate an icosahedron or other polyhedron
iconmail - notification of mail arrival
iconmsgs - message arrival notification
ify - iconify and deiconify windows
loadfont - load a font from the file system
maze - a maze game
mclock - micky mouse clock
menu - create or select a pop-up menu
mgr - bellcore window manager and server
mgrbd - boulder-dash game
mgrbiff - watch mailbox for mail and notify
mgrload - graph of system load average
mgrlock - lock the console
mgrlogin - graphical login controller
mgrmag - magnify a part of the screen, optionally dump to file
mgrmail - notification of mail arrival
mgrmode - set or clear window modes
mgrmsgs - message arrival notification
mgrplot - Unix "plot" graphics filter
mgrsclock - sandclock
mgrshowfont - browse through mgr fonts
mgrsketch - a sketching/drawing program
mgrview - view mgr bitmap images
mless - start up less/more in separate window, menu added for less
mvi - start up vi in a separate window, mouse pointing
oclose - (old) close a window
omgrmail - (old) notification of mail arrival
pbmrawtomgr - convert pbm raw bitmap to mgr bitmap format
pbmstream - split out a stream of bitmaps
pbmtoprt - printer output from PBM
pilot - a bitmap browser
resetwin - cleanup window state after client crashes messily
rotate - rotate a bitmap 90 degrees.
screendump - write graphics screen dump to a bitmap file
set_console - redirect console messages to this window
set_termcap, set_emacs - output an appropriate TERMCAP value
setname - name a window, for messages and iconifying
shape - reshape this window
square - square this window
squeeze - compress mgr bitmap using run-length encoding
startup - produce a skeleton startup file for current window layout
texmgr - tex dvi file previewer
text2font, font2text - convert between mgr font format and text dump
unsqueeze - uncompress mgr bitmap using run length encoding
window_print - print an image of a window
zoom - an icon editor
.33 MGR-aware clients distributed separately, see "SUPPORT" file
chess - frontend to /usr/games/chess
gnu emacs - editor with lisp/term/mgr.el mouse & menu support
gnuplot - universal scientific data plotting
metafont - font design and creation
origami - folding editor
pbmplus - portable bitmap format conversions, manipulations
pgs - ghostscript patch and front end
plplot - slick scientific data plotting
? - a groff PBM driver using Hershey fonts
.4 Programming for MGR
The MGR programmers manual, the C language applications interface,
is found in the doc directory in troff/nroff form. It covers
general concepts, the function/macro calls controlling the server,
a sample application, with an index and glossary.
Porting client code used with older versions of MGR sometimes
requires the substitution of
#include <mgr/mgr.h>
for
#include <term.h>
and substituting or redefining BIT_XOR, BIT_AND, et al
for B_XOR, B_AND, et al in the bitblt operations.
Compiling client code generally requires compiler options like
-I/usr/mgr/include -L/usr/mgr/lib -lmgr
as well as an occasional -DOLDMGR or -DOLDLIBMGR for some dusty decks.
One can get some interactive feel for the MGR server functions by
reading and experimenting with the mgr.el terminal driver for GNU
Emacs which implements the MGR interface library in ELisp.
The usual method of inquiring state from the server has the
potential of stumbling on a race condition if the client also
expects a large volume of event notifications. The problem arises
if an (asynchronous) event notification arrives when a
(synchronous) inquiry response was expected. If this arises in
practice (unusual) then the MGR state inquiry functions would have
to be integrated with your event handling loop.
The only major drawing function missing from the MGR protocol, it
seems, is an area fill for areas other than upright rectangles.
At present, the color palette itself is manipulated by
programs external to MGR, but version 0.62 has experimental code
for clients to get MGR to manipulate the color palette.
If you are thinking of hacking on the server, you can find the mouse
driver in mouse.* and mouse_get.*, the grotty parts of the keyboard
interface in kbd.c, and the interface to the display in the
src/libbitblit/linux directory. The main procedure, much
initialization, and the top level input loop are in mgr.c, and the
interpretation of escape sequences is in put_window.c .
.5 More documentation
The programmer's manual is essential for concepts.
Nearly all the clients supplied come with a man page which is installed
into /usr/mgr/man/man1 or man6.
Other useful man pages are bitblit.3, font.5, and bitmap.5 .
There is some ambiguity in the docs in distinguishing the
internal bitmap format found in your frame-buffer and the external
bitmap format found in files, e.g. icons.
The mgr.1 man page covers command line options, commands in the
~/.mgrc startup file, mouse and menu interaction with the server,
and hot-key shortcuts available on systems with such hot-keys.
Many of the fonts in /usr/mgr/font/* are described to some
extent in /usr/mgr/font/*.txt, e.g. /usr/mgr/font/FONTDIR.txt
gives X-style font descriptions for the fonts obtained
in .bdf format. Font names end in WxH, where W and H are the
decimal width and height in pixels of each character box.
.6 Credit for MGR
Stephen Uhler, with others working at Bellcore, was the original
designer and implementer of MGR, so Bellcore has copyrighted much
of the code and documentation for MGR under the following conditions.
* Permission is granted to copy or use this program, EXCEPT that it
* may not be sold for profit, the copyright notice must be reproduced
* on copies, and credit should be given to Bellcore where it is due.
One required showing of the copyright notice is the startup title screen.
Other credits to:
Stephen Hawley for his wonderful icons.
Tommy Frandsen for the VGA linux library.
Tom Heller for his Gasblit library.
Andrew Haylett for the Mouse driver code.
Dan McCrackin for his gasblit->linux patches.
Dave Gymer, dgp@cs.nott.ac.uk, for the Startrek effect fix.
Alex Liu for first releasing a working Linux version of MGR.
Lars Aronsson (aronsson@lysator.liu.se) for text2font and
an ISO8859-1 8-bit font.
Harry Pulley (hcpiv@grumpy.cis.uoguelph.ca,
hcpiv@snowhite.cis.uoguelph.ca) for the Coherent port.
Vance Petree & Grant Edwards & Udo Munk for their work on Hercules.
Udo Munk for his work on serial mouse initialization & select.
Norman Bartek & Hal Snyder at Mark Williams Co. for their help
with some bugs & with Coherent device drivers.
Extra thanks to Zeyd Ben Halim for lots of helpful patches,
especially the adaptation of selection.
Bradley Bosch <brad@lachman.com> for lots of patches from his 3b1
port, which fix bugs and implement new and desirable features.
Andrew Morton <applix@runxtsa.runx.oz.au> who first wrote the
cut-word code.
Kapil Paranjape <kapil@motive.math.tifr.res.in> for the EGA
support.
Michael Haardt for MOVIE support fixes, bug fixes, separation of the
libbitblit code into output drivers, origami folding of the code.
Yossi Gil for many fonts.
Vincent Broman for middle mouse-button emulation, linting, Sun cgsix
support, VGA colormap acess, and integration of the sunport code
into Haardt's layering scheme.
All bitmap fonts from any source are strictly public domain in the
USA. The 450 fixed-width fonts supplied with MGR were obtained
from Uhler, the X distribution, Yossi Gil, and elsewhere.
The Hershey vector fonts and the code for rendering them
are probably freely redistributable.