NAME¶
infocmp - compare or print out
terminfo descriptions
SYNOPSIS¶
infocmp [
-1CDEFGIKLTUVcdegilnpqrtux]
[
-v n] [
-s d|
i|
l|
c] [
-R
subset]
[
-w width] [
-A directory]
[
-B directory]
[
termname...]
DESCRIPTION¶
infocmp can be used to compare a binary
terminfo entry with other
terminfo entries, rewrite a
terminfo description to take advantage of
the
use= terminfo field, or print out a
terminfo description
from the binary file (
term) in a variety of formats. In all cases, the
boolean fields will be printed first, followed by the numeric fields, followed
by the string fields.
Default Options¶
If no options are specified and zero or one
termnames are specified, the
-I option will be assumed. If more than one
termname is
specified, the
-d option will be assumed.
Comparison Options [-d] [-c] [-n]¶
infocmp compares the
terminfo description of the first terminal
termname with each of the descriptions given by the entries for the
other terminal's
termnames. If a capability is defined for only one of
the terminals, the value returned will depend on the type of the capability:
F for boolean variables,
-1 for integer variables, and
NULL for string variables.
The
-d option produces a list of each capability that is different
between two entries. This option is useful to show the difference between two
entries, created by different people, for the same or similar terminals.
The
-c option produces a list of each capability that is common between
two or more entries. Capabilities that are not set are ignored. This option
can be used as a quick check to see if the
-u option is worth using.
The
-n option produces a list of each capability that is in none of the
given entries. If no
termnames are given, the environment variable
TERM will be used for both of the
termnames. This can be used as
a quick check to see if anything was left out of a description.
Source Listing Options [-I] [-L] [-C] [-r]¶
The
-I,
-L, and
-C options will produce a source listing
for each terminal named.
| -I |
use the terminfo names |
| -L |
use the long C variable name listed in <term.h> |
| -C |
use the termcap names |
| -r |
when using -C, put out all capabilities in termcap
form |
| -K |
modifies the -C option, improving BSD-compatibility. |
If no
termnames are given, the environment variable
TERM will be
used for the terminal name.
The source produced by the
-C option may be used directly as a
termcap entry, but not all parameterized strings can be changed to the
termcap format.
infocmp will attempt to convert most of the
parameterized information, and anything not converted will be plainly marked
in the output and commented out. These should be edited by hand.
For best results when converting to
termcap format, you should use both
-C and
-r. Normally a termcap description is limited to 1023
bytes. infocmp trims away less essential parts to make it fit. If you are
converting to one of the (rare) termcap implementations which accept an
unlimited size of termcap, you may want to add the
-T option. More
often however, you must help the termcap implementation, and trim excess
whitespace (use the
-0 option for that).
All padding information for strings will be collected together and placed at the
beginning of the string where
termcap expects it. Mandatory padding
(padding information with a trailing '/') will become optional.
All
termcap variables no longer supported by
terminfo, but which
are derivable from other
terminfo variables, will be output. Not all
terminfo capabilities will be translated; only those variables which
were part of
termcap will normally be output. Specifying the
-r
option will take off this restriction, allowing all capabilities to be output
in
termcap form. Normally you would use both the
-C and
-r options. The actual format used incorporates some improvements for
escaped characters from terminfo format. For a stricter BSD-compatible
translation, use the
-K option rather than
-C.
Note that because padding is collected to the beginning of the capability, not
all capabilities are output. Mandatory padding is not supported. Because
termcap strings are not as flexible, it is not always possible to
convert a
terminfo string capability into an equivalent
termcap
format. A subsequent conversion of the
termcap file back into
terminfo format will not necessarily reproduce the original
terminfo source.
Some common
terminfo parameter sequences, their
termcap
equivalents, and some terminal types which commonly have such sequences, are:
| terminfo |
termcap |
Representative Terminals |
|
| %p1%c |
%. |
adm |
| %p1%d |
%d |
hp, ANSI standard, vt100 |
| %p1%'x'%+%c |
%+x |
concept |
| %i |
%iq |
ANSI standard, vt100 |
| %p1%?%'x'%>%t%p1%'y'%+%; |
%>xy |
concept |
| %p2 is printed before %p1 |
%r |
hp |
Use= Option [-u]¶
The
-u option produces a
terminfo source description of the first
terminal
termname which is relative to the sum of the descriptions
given by the entries for the other terminals
termnames. It does this by
analyzing the differences between the first
termname and the other
termnames and producing a description with
use= fields for the
other terminals. In this manner, it is possible to retrofit generic terminfo
entries into a terminal's description. Or, if two similar terminals exist, but
were coded at different times or by different people so that each description
is a full description, using
infocmp will show what can be done to
change one description to be relative to the other.
A capability will get printed with an at-sign (@) if it no longer exists in the
first
termname, but one of the other
termname entries contains a
value for it. A capability's value gets printed if the value in the first
termname is not found in any of the other
termname entries, or
if the first of the other
termname entries that has this capability
gives a different value for the capability than that in the first
termname.
The order of the other
termname entries is significant. Since the
terminfo compiler
tic does a left-to-right scan of the capabilities,
specifying two
use= entries that contain differing entries for the same
capabilities will produce different results depending on the order that the
entries are given in.
infocmp will flag any such inconsistencies
between the other
termname entries as they are found.
Alternatively, specifying a capability
after a
use= entry that
contains that capability will cause the second specification to be ignored.
Using
infocmp to recreate a description can be a useful check to make
sure that everything was specified correctly in the original source
description.
Another error that does not cause incorrect compiled files, but will slow down
the compilation time, is specifying extra
use= fields that are
superfluous.
infocmp will flag any other
termname use= fields
that were not needed.
Changing Databases [-A directory] [-B directory]¶
Like other
ncurses utilities, infocmp looks for the terminal descriptions
in several places. You can use the
TERMINFO and
TERMINFO_DIRS
environment variables to override the compiled-in default list of places to
search (see
curses(3X) for details).
You can also use the options
-A and
-B to override the list of
places to search when comparing terminal descriptions:
- •
- The -A option sets the location for the first termname
- •
- The -B option sets the location for the other
termnames.
Using these options, it is possible to compare descriptions for a terminal with
the same name located in two different databases. For instance, you can use
this feature for comparing descriptions for the same terminal created by
different people.
Other Options¶
- -0
- causes the fields to be printed on one line, without wrapping.
- -1
- causes the fields to be printed out one to a line. Otherwise, the fields
will be printed several to a line to a maximum width of 60
characters.
- -a
- tells infocmp to retain commented-out capabilities rather than
discarding them. Capabilities are commented by prefixing them with a
period.
- -D
- tells infocmp to print the database locations that it knows about,
and exit.
- -E
- Dump the capabilities of the given terminal as tables, needed in the C
initializer for a TERMTYPE structure (the terminal capability structure in
the <term.h>). This option is useful for preparing versions
of the curses library hardwired for a given terminal type. The tables are
all declared static, and are named according to the type and the name of
the corresponding terminal entry.
Before ncurses 5.0, the split between the -e and -E options
was not needed; but support for extended names required making the arrays
of terminal capabilities separate from the TERMTYPE structure.
- -e
- Dump the capabilities of the given terminal as a C initializer for a
TERMTYPE structure (the terminal capability structure in the
<term.h>). This option is useful for preparing versions of
the curses library hardwired for a given terminal type.
- -F
- compare terminfo files. This assumes that two following arguments are
filenames. The files are searched for pairwise matches between entries,
with two entries considered to match if any of their names do. The report
printed to standard output lists entries with no matches in the other
file, and entries with more than one match. For entries with exactly one
match it includes a difference report. Normally, to reduce the volume of
the report, use references are not resolved before looking for
differences, but resolution can be forced by also specifying
-r.
- -f
- Display complex terminfo strings which contain if/then/else/endif
expressions indented for readability.
- -G
- Display constant literals in decimal form rather than their character
equivalents.
- -g
- Display constant character literals in quoted form rather than their
decimal equivalents.
- -i
- Analyze the initialization (is1, is2, is3), and reset
( rs1, rs2, rs3), strings in the entry. For each
string, the code tries to analyze it into actions in terms of the other
capabilities in the entry, certain X3.64/ISO 6429/ECMA-48 capabilities,
and certain DEC VT-series private modes (the set of recognized special
sequences has been selected for completeness over the existing terminfo
database). Each report line consists of the capability name, followed by a
colon and space, followed by a printable expansion of the capability
string with sections matching recognized actions translated into
{}-bracketed descriptions. Here is a list of the DEC/ANSI special
sequences recognized: i.
| Action |
Meaning |
|
| RIS |
full reset |
| SC |
save cursor |
| RC |
restore cursor |
| LL |
home-down |
| RSR |
reset scroll region |
|
| DECSTR |
soft reset (VT320) |
| S7C1T |
7-bit controls (VT220) |
|
| ISO DEC G0 |
enable DEC graphics for G0 |
| ISO UK G0 |
enable UK chars for G0 |
| ISO US G0 |
enable US chars for G0 |
| ISO DEC G1 |
enable DEC graphics for G1 |
| ISO UK G1 |
enable UK chars for G1 |
| ISO US G1 |
enable US chars for G1 |
|
| DECPAM |
application keypad mode |
| DECPNM |
normal keypad mode |
| DECANSI |
enter ANSI mode |
|
| ECMA[+-]AM |
keyboard action mode |
| ECMA[+-]IRM |
insert replace mode |
| ECMA[+-]SRM |
send receive mode |
| ECMA[+-]LNM |
linefeed mode |
|
| DEC[+-]CKM |
application cursor keys |
| DEC[+-]ANM |
set VT52 mode |
| DEC[+-]COLM |
132-column mode |
| DEC[+-]SCLM |
smooth scroll |
| DEC[+-]SCNM |
reverse video mode |
| DEC[+-]OM |
origin mode |
| DEC[+-]AWM |
wraparound mode |
| DEC[+-]ARM |
auto-repeat mode |
It also recognizes a SGR action corresponding to ANSI/ISO 6429/ECMA Set
Graphics Rendition, with the values NORMAL, BOLD, UNDERLINE, BLINK, and
REVERSE. All but NORMAL may be prefixed with `+' (turn on) or `-' (turn
off).
- An SGR0 designates an empty highlight sequence (equivalent to
{SGR:NORMAL}).
- -l
- Set output format to terminfo.
- -p
- Ignore padding specifications when comparing strings.
- -q
- Make the comparison listing shorter by omitting subheadings, and using
"-" for absent capabilities, "@" for canceled rather
than "NULL".
- -Rsubset
- Restrict output to a given subset. This option is for use with archaic
versions of terminfo like those on SVr1, Ultrix, or HP/UX that do not
support the full set of SVR4/XSI Curses terminfo; and variants such as AIX
that have their own extensions incompatible with SVr4/XSI. Available
terminfo subsets are "SVr1", "Ultrix", "HP",
and "AIX"; see terminfo(5) for details. You can also
choose the subset "BSD" which selects only capabilities with
termcap equivalents recognized by 4.4BSD.
- -s [d|i|l|c]
- The -s option sorts the fields within each type according to the
argument below:
- d
- leave fields in the order that they are stored in the terminfo
database.
- i
- sort by terminfo name.
- l
- sort by the long C variable name.
- c
- sort by the termcap name.
- If the -s option is not given, the fields printed out will be
sorted alphabetically by the terminfo name within each type, except
in the case of the -C or the -L options, which cause the
sorting to be done by the termcap name or the long C variable name,
respectively.
- -T
- eliminates size-restrictions on the generated text. This is mainly useful
for testing and analysis, since the compiled descriptions are limited
(e.g., 1023 for termcap, 4096 for terminfo).
- -t
- tells tic to discard commented-out capabilities. Normally when
translating from terminfo to termcap, untranslatable capabilities are
commented-out.
- -U
- tells infocmp to not post-process the data after parsing the source
file. This feature helps when comparing the actual contents of two source
files, since it excludes the inferences that infocmp makes to fill
in missing data.
- -V
- reports the version of ncurses which was used in this program, and
exits.
- -v n
- prints out tracing information on standard error as the program runs.
Higher values of n induce greater verbosity.
- -w width
- changes the output to width characters.
- -x
- print information for user-defined capabilities. These are extensions to
the terminfo repertoire which can be loaded using the -x option of
tic.
FILES¶
- /etc/terminfo
- Compiled terminal description database.
EXTENSIONS¶
The
-0,
-1,
-E,
-F,
-G,
-R,
-T,
-V,
-a,
-e,
-f,
-g,
-i,
-l,
-p,
-q and
-t options are not supported in SVr4 curses.
The
-r option's notion of `termcap' capabilities is System V Release 4's.
Actual BSD curses versions will have a more restricted set. To see only the
4.4BSD set, use
-r -RBSD.
BUGS¶
The
-F option of
infocmp(1) should be a
toe(1) mode.
SEE ALSO¶
captoinfo(1),
infotocap(1),
tic(1),
toe(1),
ncurses(3NCURSES),
terminfo(5).
http://invisible-island.net/ncurses/tctest.html
This describes
ncurses version 5.9 (patch 20140913).
AUTHOR¶
Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> and
Thomas E. Dickey <dickey@invisible-island.net>