summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/xembed
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorOwen Taylor <otaylor@redhat.com>2002-04-21 13:03:08 +0000
committerOwen Taylor <otaylor@redhat.com>2002-04-21 13:03:08 +0000
commitc7b2cbb458b13c1392c24b2df276715885cfb842 (patch)
tree4c67bb64222c79280df928319afa69032a9ade72 /xembed
parent0384881729afeaa1ff5c6ef1282b1222ebfd7179 (diff)
downloadxdg-specs-c7b2cbb458b13c1392c24b2df276715885cfb842.tar.xz
Remove now moved spec from toplevel
Diffstat (limited to 'xembed')
-rw-r--r--xembed/xembed-spec.xml1407
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 1407 deletions
diff --git a/xembed/xembed-spec.xml b/xembed/xembed-spec.xml
deleted file mode 100644
index b60a2e1..0000000
--- a/xembed/xembed-spec.xml
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1407 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0"?>
-<!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
-"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd" [
-]>
-<article id="index">
- <articleinfo>
- <title>XEmbed Protocol Specification</title>
- <releaseinfo>Version 0.5</releaseinfo>
- <date>15 April 2002</date>
- <authorgroup>
- <author>
- <firstname>Mathias</firstname>
- <surname>Ettrich</surname>
- <affiliation>
- <address>
- <email>ettrich@trolltech.com</email>
- </address>
- </affiliation>
- </author>
- <author>
- <firstname>Owen</firstname>
- <surname>Taylor</surname>
- <affiliation>
- <address>
- <email>otaylor@redhat.com</email>
- </address>
- </affiliation>
- </author>
- </authorgroup>
- </articleinfo>
-
- <sect1 id="overview">
- <title>Overview</title>
- <para>
- XEmbed is a protocol that uses basic X mechanisms such as client
- messages and reparenting windows to provide embedding of a
- control from one application into another application. Some
- of the goals of the XEmbed design are:
- </para>
- <orderedlist>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Support for out-of process controls, written in any toolkit
- or even plain Xlib.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Support for in-process-controls when mixing different
- toolkits in one process.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Smooth integration of the embedding application and embedded client
- in areas such as input device handling and visual feedback.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Easy implementation. A full implementation supporting all
- details correctly may require minor toolkit modifications,
- but it should be possible to get basic functionality going
- in less than 1000 lines of code.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </orderedlist>
- <para>
- Goal 1 is the most urgent one. A embedding specification allows
- developers to write applets for whatever desktop the user is
- using in whatever toolkit they prefer. Goal 2 is more of
- something to keep in mind than a immediate requirement. While
- there are other ways to mix two or more toolkits, using XEmbed
- might be the easiest and thus most comfortable way. Goal 3
- describes the targeted level of integration. The users should
- not necessarily notice that they work with embedded controls;
- devices like the keyboard and the mouse should work as expected,
- inactive windows should look like they are inactive, and so
- forth. The level of integration may, however, be limited by goal
- 4. In order for the protocol to be successful, it's crucial to
- get implementations for the most important toolkits. Thus, the
- implementation should not require too much coding and no or only
- few modifications to the toolkit's kernel.
- </para>
- <para>
- At the time of writing, an implementation of XEmbed is included
- in GTK+-2.0 that mostly conforms to this version of the
- specification. The main area of divergence is in the area of
- accelerators, where a simpler scheme is implemented than the
- XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR, XEMBED_UNREGISTER_ACCELERATOR
- accelerator scheme described here. The KDE libraries (libkdeui)
- include QXEmbed, a mostly-complete implementation for Qt of an
- earlier version of the protocol.
- </para>
- </sect1>
- <sect1 id="definitions">
- <title>Definitions</title>
- <variablelist>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>Active</term>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- A toplevel window is <firstterm>active</firstterm> if it
- currently is receiving keyboard events. (The window or a
- descendent has the X keyboard focus.) A widget within the
- toplevel is active if the toplevel is active, regardless
- of whether that widget has the input focus within the
- toplevel.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>Client</term>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- In an embedding situation, the <firstterm>client</firstterm> is
- the window that is embedded into an embedder. Sometimes also
- called a plug. (Note that the usage here should not be
- confused with the typical X usage of "client" to mean an application
- connecting to the X server. That is always referred to as
- an application in this document)
- </para>
- <remark>
- [ Should we replace client by some other term in
- this document to avoid the confusion? ]
- </remark>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>Embedder</term>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- In an embedding situation, the <firstterm>embedder</firstterm>
- is the graphical location that embeds an external
- client. Sometimes also called a socket or site.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>Focused</term>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- A widget is <firstterm>focused</firstterm> if it receives
- keyboard events within its toplevel. This is without
- regard to whether the toplevel is active, and has nothing
- to do with the X keyboard focus.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- </variablelist>
- </sect1>
- <sect1 id="rationale">
- <title>Rationale and discussion</title>
- <para>
- The basis for handling embedding is that the embedder acts like
- a "window manager" for the client. (The window management
- protocol is defined in the X Inter-Client Communications Manual
- or ICCCM). The embedder selects with SubstructureRedirectMask
- on its window so that it can intercept, and then the client
- window is reparented (using
- <function>XReparentWindow()</function>)
- as a child of the embedder window. Because of the substructure redirect, the
- embedder is able to intercept calls to move or resize the client
- window, and handle them as appropriate to the location in the
- embedding application. (Map requests are also redirected, but
- XEmbed actually handles map requests separately... see the
- description of the XEMBED_MAPPED flag.)
- </para>
- <para>
- The window management protocol is sufficient to handle the
- basics of visual embedding, but has deficiencies in other areas
- that prevent it from providing natural integration between
- toolkits. These areas include:
- </para>
-
- <simplelist>
- <member>window activation state</member>
- <member>keyboard focus</member>
- <member>tab focus chain</member>
- <member>keyboard short cuts / accelerators</member>
- <member>modality</member>
- <member>drag and drop (XDND)</member>
- </simplelist>
-
- <para>
- The XEmbed protocol is mainly concerned with communicating
- additional information between embedder and client to handle
- these areas. Communication in XEmbed is done by forwarding
- slightly modified XEvents using
- <function>XSendEvent()</function>,
- by sending special xembed messages, and by setting X properties. In addition,
- standard ICCCM features like WMNormalHints are used where
- appropriate.
- </para>
- <para>
- The next sections explain why these problems occur with the
- simple "window management" approach and how XEmbed solves them.
- </para>
-
- <sect2>
- <title>Window activation state</title>
- <para>
- A widget has to know the activation state of its toplevel
- window. This enables input widgets like a line editor, to display
- a blinking cursor only when the user can actually type into it. In
- addition, certain GUI styles choose to display inactive windows
- differently, typically with a lighter and less contrasting color
- palette.
- </para>
- <para>
- Unfortunately, there are no such messages like WindowActivate
- or WindowDeactivate in the X protocol. Instead, a window knows
- that it is active when it receives keyboard focus (XFocusInEvent
- with certain modes) or looses it (XFocusOutEvent with certain
- modes). This applies to embedded child windows only, when the
- mouse pointer points onto one of the child's subwindows in the very
- moment the window manager puts the X focus on the toplevel
- window. For that reason, XEmbed requires the embedders to pass
- XEMBED_WINDOW_ACTIVATE and XEMBED_WINDOW_DEACTIVATE messages to
- their respective clients whenever they get or loose X keyboard
- </para>
- </sect2>
-
- <sect2>
- <title>Keyboard focus</title>
- <para>
- The delivery of keyboard events in X is designed in a way that
- does not correspond to the typical operation of modern
- toolkits; instead it seems designed to allow things to allow
- things to work without either a window manager or a focus
- handling in the toolkit. Typically, key events are sent to the
- window which has the X input focus (set with
- XSetInputFocus()). However, if the mouse pointer is inside
- that focus window, the event is sent to the subwindow of the
- focus window that is under the moues pointer. In modern toolkits,
- the X input focus is typically left on the toplevel window and
- a separate logical input focus is implemented within the
- toolkit. The toolkit ignores the window that the key event is
- actually sent to (which might be a scrollbar or other random
- widget within the toplevel, depending on where the mouse
- pointer is), and distributes key events to widget with the
- logical input focus.
- </para>
- <para>
- So, for standard operation, the behavior where key events are sent
- to the window with the mouse pointer is simply ignored. But
- with embedded windows, it causes problems, since, if the
- mouse pointer is within the embedded window, the outer toolkit
- doesn't see any key events, even if the logical keyboard focus
- is elsewhere within the outer toolkits toplevel window.
- </para>
- <para>
- Previous embedding techniques therefore required clients to
- forward any key event they receive (KeyPress and KeyRelease) to
- their respective embedder. In order to support multiple levels of
- embedding, events that stem from a SendEvent request had to be
- forwarded as well. While this is a possible solution, it adds both
- race conditions and inefficency
- </para>
- <para>
- The solution proposed by XEmbed is is to beat X11 with its own
- weapons: The topmost toolkit is <emphasis>required</emphasis>
- to keep the X input focus on one of its own windows without
- any embedded children. Keeping the focus on such a window
- ensures that key events are always delivered to the outer
- toolkit and thus can be forwarded easily to any embedded
- window. This also makes it possible to use this part of XEmbed
- with clients that do not support the protocol at all, without
- breaking keyboard input for the embedding application.
- </para>
- <para>
- In detail, the topmost embedder creates a not-visible X Window to
- hold the focus, the focus proxy. (It might be a 1x1 child
- window of toplevel located at -1,-1.) Since the focus proxy isn't
- an ancestor of the client window, the X focus can never move
- into the client window because of the mouse pointer location.
- In other words, whenever the outer window is activated
- (receives the X input focus), it has to put the X focus on the
- FocusProxy by calling <function>XSetInputFocus()</function>.
- </para>
- <para>
- The trouble with this is, that you should not use <function>XSetInputFocus()</function>
- without a proper time stamp from the Server, to avoid race
- conditions. Unfortunately, the XFocusIn even does not carry a
- timestamp. The solution to this is, to ask the window manager for
- the WM_TAKE_FOCUS window protocol. Thus, whenever the window is
- activated, it will receive a WM_PROTOCOLS client message with
- data.l[0] being WM_TAKE_FOCUS and data.l[1] being a proper
- timestamp. This timestamp can be used safely for the call to
- <function>XSetInputFocus()</function>.
- </para>
- <para>
- If an embedder widget gets the logical input focus, it sends
- an XEMBED_FOCUS_IN message to its client. The client that
- receives this messages knows that its logical focus is now
- also the logical focus of the application window and will
- react accordingly. If its logical focus lies on the line
- editor control mentioned above, and the window is active, the
- editor will show a blinking cursor after processing this
- message.
- </para>
- <para>
- In a similar fashion, if the embedder looses focus, it sends
- an XEMBED_FOCUS_OUT message.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Tab focus chain</title>
- <para>
- X does not have a concept of a tab focus chain, it is up to the
- toolkit or the application to implement it. Since the concept
- is standard among almost all toolkits, XEmbed supports it. An
- XEmbed client integrates perfectly in the embedder's tab focus
- chain, i.e. the user can tab onto the client, through all its
- widgets and back to the outer world without noticing that they
- traversed an external window.
- </para>
- <para>
- As explained in the previous section, an embedder sends an
- XEMBED_FOCUS_IN message to its client when it gets focus. The
- detail code of this message is per default 0, that is,
- XEMBED_FOCUS_CURRENT. It indicates that the clients keeps its own
- logical focus where it was. To support tabbing, XEmbed provides
- two more detail codes, namely XEMBED_FOCUS_FIRST and
- XEMBED_FOCUS_LAST, that indicate that the client should move
- its focus to the beginning or end of the focus chain.
- </para>
- <para>
- When the user tabs to the very end of a client's tab chain, the
- client follows the request (i.e. it puts its logical focus back to
- the beginning its tab chain) and sends an XEMBED_FOCUS_NEXT
- message to the embedder. If the embedder has siblings that accept
- tab focus, it will do a virtual tab forward. As a result, it will
- loose focus itself and consequently send an XEMBED_FOCUS_OUT
- message to the client. As expected, the client's line edit control
- from the previous example will stop blinking.
- </para>
- <para>
- Backward tabbing is done exactly in the same manner, using the
- XEMBED_FOCUS_PREV message.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Keyboard short cuts / accelerators</title>
- <para>
- XEmbed is designed in such a way, that keyboard events are
- received by the toplevel window, and then sent down the focus
- focus chain. Toolkits will usually check for shortcuts or
- accelerators before sending the event to the focus widget. If
- such a shortcut is defined, the respective action is taken
- rather than passing the event through to the focus
- widget. This means, accelerators in the outmost window always
- work properly, whereas accelerators defined inside an embedded
- client only work if that client actually has focus. XEmbed
- solves this problem with two messages,
- XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR and XEMBED_UNREGISTER_ACCELERATOR.
- With XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR, a client can reserve a
- certain key/modifier combination as shortcut or
- accelerator. The message is passed through to the topmost
- embedder, where the key combination is stored. An
- XEMBED_UNREGISTER_ACCELERATOR message releases the key again.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Modality</title>
- <para>
- If an application window is shadowed by a modal dialog, no user
- input is supposed to get through. The XEmbed design ensures this
- for keyboard input, because the toplevel window knows about its
- modal state and will not pass key events through. Embedded clients
- thus inherit the modality from the topmost embedder. Mouse input,
- however, is sent directly to the embedded clients by the X-Server,
- unaffected by the modality of the application window. To give
- clients the possibility to behave correctly when being shadowed by
- a modal dialog, an embedder can choose to send an
- XEMBED_MODALITY_ON message to its client when it becomes shadowed,
- and an XEMBED_MODALITY_OFF message when it leaves modality
- again. If the client contains embedders itself, those have to pass
- both messages through to their clients.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Drag and drop (XDND)</title>
- <para>
- XDND drag-and-drop does not work with reparented external
- windows, since messages are exchanged with the toplevel window
- only. This is done for performance reasons. While it is cheap to
- get the window under the mouse pointer, it is very expensive to
- get a window under another window. Unfortunately, this is required
- quite often when dragging objects around, since the pointer
- may overlap the drag icon.
- </para>
- <para>
- Solving the drag-and-drop problem, however, is quite easy,
- since the XDND protocol was carefully designed in a way that
- makes it possible to support embedded windows. Basically, the
- embedder has to operate as drag-and-drop proxy for the client. Any
- XDND messages like XdndEnter, Xdnd,Leave, etc. simply have to be
- passed through. A toollkit's XDND implementation has to take this
- situation in consideration.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- </sect1>
- <sect1 id="lifecycle">
- <title>Embedding life cycle</title>
- <para>
- The protocol is started by the embedder. The window ID of
- the client window is passed (by unspecified means) to the
- embedding application, and the embedder calls
- <function>XReparentWindow()</function> to reparent the client
- window into the embedder window.
- </para>
- <para>
- Implementations may choose to support an alternate method of
- beginning the protocol where the window ID of the embedder
- is passed to client application and the client creates a window
- within the embedder, or reparents an existing window into
- the embedder's window. Which method of starting XEmbed is
- used a matter up to higher level agreement and outside the
- scope of this specification.
- </para>
- <para>
- In either case the client window must have a property called
- _XEMBED_INFO on it. This property has type _XEMBED_INFO
- and format 32. The contents of the property are:
- </para>
- <table>
- <title>_XEMBED_INFO</title>
- <tgroup cols="3">
- <thead>
- <row>
- <entry>Field</entry><entry>Type</entry><entry>Comments</entry>
- </row>
- </thead>
- <tbody>
- <row>
- <entry>version</entry><entry>CARD32</entry><entry>The protocol version</entry>
- </row>
- <row>
- <entry>flags</entry><entry>CARD32</entry><entry>A bitfield of flags</entry>
- </row>
- </tbody>
- </tgroup>
- </table>
- <para>
- The <structfield>version</structfield> field indicates the
- maximum version of the protocol that the client supports.
- The embedder should retrieve this field and set the data2 field
- of the XEMBED_EMBEDDED_NOTIFY to
- Min (<structfield>version</structfield>, <replaceable>max version supported by embedder</replaceable>).
- The version number corresponding to the current version of the
- protocol is 0.
- <remark>[Should the version be defined as (Major &lt;&lt; 16 | Minor) ?]</remark>
- </para>
- <para>
- The currently defined bit in the
- <structfield>flags</structfield> field is:
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
--->/* Flags for _XEMBED_INFO */
-#define XEMBED_MAPPED (1 &lt;&lt; 0)<!--
- --></programlisting>
- <variablelist>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>XEMBED_MAPPED</term>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- If set the client should be mapped. The embedder must
- track the flags field by selecting for PropertyNotify
- events on the client and map and unmap the client
- appropriately. (The embedder can leave the client unmapped
- when this bit is set, but should immediately unmap the
- client upon detecting that the bit has been unset.)
- </para>
- <remark>
- Rationale: the reason for using this bit rather than
- MapRequest events is so that the client can reliably
- control it's map state before the inception of the
- protocol without worry that the client window will
- become visible as a child of the root window.
- </remark>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- </variablelist>
- <para>
- To support future expansion, all fields not currently defined
- must be set to zero. To add proprietary extensions to the
- XEMBED protocol, an application must use a separate property, rather
- than using unused bits in the struct field or extending the
- _XEMBED_INFO property.
- </para>
- <para>
- At the start of the protocol, the embedder first sends an
- XEMBED_EMBEDDED_NOTIFY message, then sends
- XEMBED_FOCUS_IN, XEMBED_WINDOW_ACTIVATE, and XEMBED_MODALITY_ON
- messages as necessary to synchronize the state of the
- client with that of the embedder. Before any of these messages
- received, the state of the client is:
- <simplelist>
- <member>Not focused</member>
- <member>Not active</member>
- <member>Modality off</member>
- </simplelist>
- </para>
- <para>
- If the embedder is geometry managed and can change its size, it
- should obey the client's WMNormalHints settings. Note that
- most toolkits will not have equivalents for all the hints in
- the WMNormalHints settings, clients must not assume that the
- requested hints will be obeyed exactly. The
- <structfield>width_inc</structfield>,
- <structfield>height_inc</structfield>,
- <structfield>min_aspect</structfield>, and
- <structfield>max_aspect</structfield> fields are examples of
- fields from WMNormalHints that are unlikely to be supported
- by embedders.
- </para>
- <para>
- The protocol ends in one of three ways:
- </para>
- <orderedlist>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- The embedder can unmap the client and reparent the client
- window to the root window. If the client receives an
- ReparentNotify event, it should check the
- <structfield>parent</structfield> field of the
- <structname>XReparentEvent</structname> structure. If this
- is the root window of the window's screen, then the protocol
- is finished and there is no further interaction. If it
- is a window other than the root window, then the protocol
- continues with the new parent acting as the embedder window.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- The client can reparent its window out of the embedder
- window. If the embedder receives a ReparentNotify signal
- with the <structfield>window</structfield> field being the
- current client and the <structfield>parent</structfield>
- field being a different window, this indicates the end
- of the protocol.
- </para>
- <remark>
- [ GTK+ doesn't currently handle this; but it seems useful
- to allow the protocol to be ended in a non-destructive
- fashion from either end. ]
- </remark>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- The client can destroy its window.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </orderedlist>
- </sect1>
- <sect1 id="messages">
- <title>Message Specifications</title>
- <para>
- An XEmbed message is an X11 client message with message type
- "_XEMBED". The format is 32, the first three data longs carry the
- toolkit's X time (l[0]), the message's major opcode (l[1]) and the
- message's detail code (l[2]). If no detail is required, the value
- passed has to be 0. The remaining two data longs (l[3] and l[4])
- are reserved for data1 and data2. Unused bytes of the client
- message are set to 0. The event is sent to the target window with
- no event mask and propagation turned off.
- </para>
- <para>
- The valid XEmbed messages are:
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
--->/* XEMBED messages */
-#define XEMBED_EMBEDDED_NOTIFY 0
-#define XEMBED_WINDOW_ACTIVATE 1
-#define XEMBED_WINDOW_DEACTIVATE 2
-#define XEMBED_REQUEST_FOCUS 3
-#define XEMBED_FOCUS_IN 4
-#define XEMBED_FOCUS_OUT 5
-#define XEMBED_FOCUS_NEXT 6
-#define XEMBED_FOCUS_PREV 7
-/* 8-9 were used for XEMBED_GRAB_KEY/XEMBED_UNGRAB_KEY */
-#define XEMBED_MODALITY_ON 10
-#define XEMBED_MODALITY_OFF 11
-#define XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR 12
-#define XEMBED_UNREGISTER_ACCELERATOR 13
-#define XEMBED_ACTIVATE_ACCELERATOR 14<!--
- --></programlisting>
- <para>
- A detail code is required for XEMBED_FOCUS_IN. The following values
- are valid:
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
--->/* Details for XEMBED_FOCUS_IN: */
-#define XEMBED_FOCUS_CURRENT 0
-#define XEMBED_FOCUS_FIRST 1
-#define XEMBED_FOCUS_LAST 2<!--
- --></programlisting>
- <sect2>
- <title>XEMBED_EMBEDDED_NOTIFY</title>
- <para>
- Sent from the embedder to the client on embedding, after
- reparenting and mapping the client's X window. A client that
- receives this messages knows that its window was embedded by an
- XEmbed site and not simply reparented by a window manager. To support toolkits
- that do not keep track of reparenting events, the message carries
- the embedder's window handle as data1:
- </para>
- <table>
- <title>XEMBED_EMBEDDED_NOTIFY</title>
- <tgroup cols="2">
- <tbody>
- <row>
- <entry>data1</entry><entry>The embedder's window handle.</entry>
- </row>
- <row>
- <entry>data2</entry><entry>The protocol version in use
- (see the description of _XEMBED_INFO).</entry>
- </row>
- </tbody>
- </tgroup>
- </table>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>XEMBED_WINDOW_ACTIVATE / XEMBED_WINDOW_DEACTIVATE</title>
- <para>
- Sent from the embedder to the client when the window becomes
- active or inactive, i.e. when the window gets or looses the
- keyboard input focus. If the client contains embedders itself,
- those have to pass the message through to their clients.
- </para>
- <para>
- Note that no XEMBED_FOCUS_IN or XEMBED_FOCUS_OUT messages
- should be sent when the toplevel window gains or loses
- focus. The XEMBED_FOCUS_IN and XEMBED_FOCUS_OUT messages
- refer only to focus <firstterm>within</firstterm> the
- toplevel window and are independent of toplevel activation
- state. This independence is necessary so that input focus
- within a toplevel can be moved programmatically when the
- toplevel doesn't have input focus.
- </para>
- <remark>
- [ GTK+ is currently in violation of the preceding note,
- and sends FOCUS_IN and FOCUS_OUT only when the toplevel
- is active. See
- <ulink
- url="http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67943">GNOME bug #67943</ulink> ]
- </remark>
- <para>
- Widgets within the client should typically be displayed with
- the focus only when the client both has focus and is active.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>XEMBED_REQUEST_FOCUS</title>
- <para>
- Sent from the client to the embedder when the client wants
- focus. The most common ocassion is when the user clicks into one
- of the client's child widgets, for example a line editor, in order
- to type something in.
- </para>
- <para>
- The message is passed along to the topmost embedder that
- eventually responds with a XEMBED_FOCUS_IN message. The focus in
- message is passed all the way back until it reaches the original
- focus requestor. In the end, not only the original client has
- focus, but also all its ancestor embedders.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>XEMBED_FOCUS_IN</title>
- <para>
- Sent from the embedder to the client when it gets focus. The
- detail code determines, where the client shall move its own
- logical focus to. Three possibilities exist:
- </para>
- <variablelist>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>XEMBED_FOCUS_CURRENT</term>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Normal activation, does not move the clients logical
- focus.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>XEMBED_FOCUS_FIRST</term>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Used when the user tabs onto a client. It indicates that
- the client should put its logical focus onto the widget
- that comes first in its own tab focus chain.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>XEMBED_FOCUS_LIST</term>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Used when the user tabs onto a client. It indicates that
- the client should put its logical focus onto the widget
- that comes first in its own tab focus chain.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- </variablelist>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>XEMBED_FOCUS_OUT</title>
- <para>
- Sent from the embedder to the client when it looses focus.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>XEMBED_FOCUS_NEXT</title>
- <para>
- Sent from the client to the embedder when it reaches the end of
- its logical tab chain after the user tabbed forwards. If the
- embedder has siblings that accept tab focus, it will do a virtual
- tab forward. As a result, it will loose focus itself and
- consequently send an XEMBED_FOCUS_OUT message to the client
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>XEMBED_FOCUS_PREV</title>
- <para>
- Sent from the client to the embedder when it reaches the
- beginning of its logical tab chain after the user tabbed
- backwards. If the embedder has siblings that accept tab focus, it
- will do a virtual tab backward. As a result, it will loose focus
- itself and consequently send an XEMBED_FOCUS_OUT message to the
- client
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR / XEMBED_UNREGISTER_ACCELERATOR</title>
- <para>
- A client that needs to reserve a certain key/modifier
- combination as shortcut or accelerators, sends a XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR
- message to its embedder. As long as the embedder itself is a child
- of a client, the accelerator will be propagated up to the toplevel.
- </para>
- <table>
- <title>XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR</title>
- <tgroup cols="2">
- <tbody>
- <row>
- <entry>detail</entry><entry>accelerator_id</entry>
- </row>
- <row>
- <entry>data1</entry><entry>X key symbol</entry>
- </row>
- <row>
- <entry>data2</entry><entry>bit field of modifier values</entry>
- </row>
- </tbody>
- </tgroup>
- </table>
- <para>
- The accelerator_id is used to identify the accelerator when
- activating the accelerator. The reason for using an
- accelerator ID instead of identifying accelerators simply by
- key symbol and modifiers is to allow the correct handling of
- overloaded accelerators with embedded widgets. (An accelerator
- is overloaded if there multiple accelerators on the same key,
- usually because of accidental collisions.) When an overloaded
- accelerator is pressed repeatedly, the toplevel activates
- accelerators on that key in round-robin fashion. If this
- round-robin behavior is not supported by the embedding
- toolkit, picking an arbitrary accelerator for the key and
- activating it is acceptable. Well designed applications should
- avoid collisions in any case.
- </para>
- <note>
- <para>
- Ordering the round-robin of conflicting accelerators
- in a predictable (geometric or in focus chain) order
- is desirable. This can be achieved if the toplevel sorts
- the conflicting accelerators as if they applied to the
- client instead of widgets within the client and then
- each client does the same sort on the subset of conflicting
- accelerators within it. To get this to work properly
- if there are conflicting accelerators within a client, say widget
- A and B both have the same mnemonic, then instead of
- registering one accelerator for widget A and one for
- widget B, the client should register two accelerators that
- corresponds to both A and B, and then when
- XEMBED_ACTIVATE_ACCELERATOR is received for either
- accelerator, implement round robin between A and B
- with the correct sorting.
- </para>
- </note>
- <para>
- The modified bit field is a bitwise OR of values indicating
- various accelerators; these indicate logical accelerator
- keys rather than corresponding directly to the bits in
- the XKeyEvent state field.
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
--->/* Modifiers field for XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR */
-#define XEMBED_MODIFIER_SHIFT (1 &lt;&lt; 0)
-#define XEMBED_MODIFIER_CONTROL (1 &lt;&lt; 1)
-#define XEMBED_MODIFIER_ALT (1 &lt;&lt; 2)
-#define XEMBED_MODIFIER_SUPER (1 &lt;&lt; 3)
-#define XEMBED_MODIFIER_HYPER (1 &lt;&lt; 4)<!--
- --></programlisting>
- <para>
- (Meta is intentionally left out here because if you try to separate
- Alt and Meta, a large fraction of users will experience problems
- with their keyboard setups... there is no reliably standard
- of which one is the primary modifier key and on the Alt key.)
- </para>
- <para>
- On activation, the topmost embedder will send
- XEMBED_ACTIVATE_ACCELERATOR to its client; if the
- accelerator was registered by an embedder inside that
- client, the embedder will send XEMBED_ACTIVATE_ACCELERATOR
- to its client and so forth.
- </para>
- <para>
- Note that the assignment of ID's is private for each pair
- of client and embedder and when accelerators are being
- propagated through multiple client/embedder pairs, a
- different accelerator ID may be used for each pair.
- </para>
- <para>
- The XEMBED_UNREGISTER_ACCELERATOR message releases the key
- combination again.
- </para>
- <table>
- <title>XEMBED_UNREGISTER_ACCELERATOR</title>
- <tgroup cols="2">
- <tbody>
- <row>
- <entry>detail</entry><entry>integer ID passed
- to XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR</entry>
- </row>
- </tbody>
- </tgroup>
- </table>
- <para>
- Hint to implementators: It is the responsibility of the
- embedder to keep track of all forwarded accelerators
- and to remove them when the client window dies.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>XEMBED_ACTIVATE_ACCELERATOR</title>
- <para>
- The XEMBED_ACTIVATE_ACCELERATOR message is sent when a
- accelerator previously registered with
- XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR is activated on the toplevel
- containing the embedder.
- </para>
- <table>
- <title>XEMBED_ACTIVATE_ACCELERATOR</title>
- <tgroup cols="2">
- <tbody>
- <row>
- <entry>detail</entry><entry>integer ID passed
- when registering the accelerator</entry>
- </row>
- <row>
- <entry>data1</entry><entry>flags.</entry>
- </row>
- </tbody>
- </tgroup>
- </table>
- <para>
- The following bit is defined for the flags field; all
- other bits must be zero.
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
--->/* Flags for XEMBED_ACTIVATE_ACCELERATOR */
-#define XEMBED_ACCELERATOR_OVERLOADED (1 &lt;&lt; 0)<!--
- -->
- </programlisting>
- <variablelist>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>XEMBED_ACCELERATOR_OVERLOADED</term>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- This flag indicates that multiple accelerators exist for
- the key combination within the toplevel. The toolkit
- may modify the behavior of the accelerator based on
- this value. For instance, if the accelerator is a
- mnemonic for a button, it might activate the the button
- immediately if the accelerator is not overloaded, but
- when overloaded, it would only focus the button.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- </variablelist>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>XEMBED_MODALITY_ON / XEMBED_MODALITY_OFF</title>
- <para>
- Sent from the embedder to the client when the window becomes
- shadowed by a modal dialog, or when it is released again. If the
- client contains embedders itself, those have to pass the message
- through to their clients. An embedded control should ignore
- mouse input while modality is active. Note that that keyboard
- input is blocked anyway by XEmbed, since the topmost embedder will
- not pass keyboard events through in modal state.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- </sect1>
-
- <sect1 id="techniques">
- <title>Techniques</title>
-
- <sect2>
- <title>Handling errors</title>
- <para>
- Implementors of the XEmbed protocol should handle the other
- party disappearing at any point. For this reason X errors
- must be trapped when performing any operation with a window
- not created by the application. This is done by using
- <function>XSetErrorHandler()</function>.
- A sample implementation of trapping errors in C looks like:
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
--->#include &lt;X11/Xlib.h&gt;
-
-static int trapped_error_code = 0;
-static int (*old_error_handler) (Display *, XErrorEvent *);
-
-static int
-error_handler(Display *display,
- XErrorEvent *error)
-{
- trapped_error_code = error->error_code;
- return 0;
-}
-
-void
-trap_errors(void)
-{
- trapped_error_code = 0;
- old_error_handler = XSetErrorHandler(error_handler);
-}
-
-int
-untrap_errors(void)
-{
- XSetErrorHandler(old_error_handler);
- return trapped_error_code;
-}<!--
- --></programlisting>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Forwarding X Events</title>
- <para>
- An XEmbed embedder has to forward key-press and key-release
- events to its respective client.
- </para>
- <para>
- Key events are forwarded by changing the event's window field
- to the window handle of the client and sending the modifed
- message via <function>XSendEvent()</function> to the embedder,
- with no event mask and propagation turned off.
- </para>
- <para>
- Note: XEmbed requires toolkits to handle key-events that come
- from a SendEvent request. That means, if somebody can access
- your X-Server, it's possible to fake keyboard input. Given
- that most toolkits accept sent key events today anyway and the
- X Server is typically protected through magic cookie
- authorization, this is not considered to be an
- issue. Applications with higher security requirements may
- choose not to use embedded components, though, and to filter
- out any events coming from <function>XSendEvent()</function>.
- </para>
- <para>
- Given that Window client is the client's window handle,
- here is a piece of code of an imaginary event-loop in C that does
- the forwarding.
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
--->#include &lt;X11/Xlib.h&gt;
-
-void handle_event(
- Display* dpy, /* display */
- XEvent* ev /* event */
-){
- if ( ev->type == KeyPress || ev->type == KeyRelease ) {
- ev->xkey.window = client;
- trap_errors();
- XSendEvent( dpy, client, False, NoEventMask, ev );
- XSync( dpy, False );
- if (untrap_errors()) {
- /* Handle failure */
- }
-
- return;
- }
- ... /* normal event handling */
-}<!--
- --></programlisting>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Sending XEmbed messages</title>
- <para>
- Given that Time x_time contains the timestamp from the event
- currently being processed. (CurrentTime is generally the best
- choice if no event is being processed), here is a valid
- implementation in C of sending an XEMBED message:
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
--->#include &lt;X11/Xlib.h&gt;
-
-void send_xembed_message(
- Display* dpy, /* display */
- Window w, /* receiver */
- long message, /* message opcode */
- long detail /* message detail */
- long data1 /* message data 1 */
- long data2 /* message data 2 */
-){
- XEvent ev;
- memset(&amp;ev, 0, sizeof(ev));
- ev.xclient.type = ClientMessage;
- ev.xclient.window = w;
- ev.xclient.message_type = XInternAtom( dpy, "_XEMBED", False );
- ev.xclient.format = 32;
- ev.xclient.data.l[0] = x_time;
- ev.xclient.data.l[1] = message;
- ev.xclient.data.l[2] = detail;
- ev.xclient.data.l[3] = data1;
- ev.xclient.data.l[4] = data2;
- trap_errors();
- XSendEvent(dpy, w, False, NoEventMask, &amp;ev);
- XSync(dpy, False);
- if (untrap_errors()) {
- /* Handle failure */
- }
-}<!--
- --></programlisting>
- </sect2>
- </sect1>
- <sect1 id="issues">
- <title>Issues</title>
- <sect2>
- <title>Implementation of modality</title>
- <para>
- The protocol could be simplified by removing the
- XEMBED_MODALITY_ON and XEMBED_MODALITY_OFF messages in favor
- of requiring the embedder to map an input-only window over
- it's child when it beings shadowed by a modal grab.
- </para>
- <para>
- One possible reason for the current protocol is that a toolkit
- might want to have elements such as scrollbars that remain
- active even when grab shadowed. (I know of no toolkit that
- actually implements this.)
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Clarify function of timestamps</title>
- <para>
- The function of the timestamp arguments needs to be clarified,
- as well as the requirements for what should be passed
- in the field. The original draft of the specification
- contained the text about the determining the timestamp.
- </para>
- <blockquote>
- <para>
- The x time is to be updated whenever the toolkit receives an
- event from the server that carries a timestamp. XEmbed client
- messages qualify for that.
- </para>
- <para>
- Hint to implementators: Check that the xembed time stamp
- is actually later than your current x time. While this cannot
- happen with ordinary XEvents, delayed client messages may have
- this effect. Be prepared that evil implementations may even
- pass CurrentTime sometimes.
- </para>
- </blockquote>
- <para>
- But I [OWT] wouldn't agree with this advice. The point
- of a timestamp is to make sure that when events are processed
- out of order, the event generated last by the user wins
- for shared resources such as input focus, selections, and
- grabs. An example of where this can matter is if you have
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
---> Toplevel Window
- Embedder
- Client
- Text Entry 1
- Embedder
- Client
- Text Entry 2<!--
- --></programlisting>
- <para>
- If the entries are set to select the text on focus in, and the
- user hits TAB in quick succession, then the timestamps on the
- FOCUS_IN events are what makes sure that Entry 2 actually ends
- up owning the PRIMARY selection, instead of it being a race
- between the two clients. But in situations like this having
- the correct timestamp only matters if a user action triggers
- the behavior.
- </para>
- <para>
- Hence the advice that the timestamp should be the time from
- the event currently being processed.
- </para>
- <para>
- If no explicit user action is involved, then the
- best thing to do is to use CurrentTime; using the timestamp
- from the last X event received can cause problems if the
- ultimate trigger of the behavior is a timeout or network
- and the last X event happened some time in the distant past.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Complexity of accelerator handling</title>
- <para>
- The current specification for accelerator handling is a little
- complex. Most of the complexity (the accelerator IDs) comes
- from the need to handle conflicting accelerators.
- GTK+ currently implements a simpler scheme where grabs are
- identified only by key symbol and modifier and conflicting
- mnemonic resolution doesn't work across embedder/client
- interfaces.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Infinite loops in focusing</title>
- <para>
- There is the potential for infinite loops of focusing -
- Consider the case:
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
---> Toplevel Window
- Embedder
- Client<!--
- --></programlisting>
- <para>
- Where there are no focusable sites in the client or in the
- toplevel window. Then if <keysym>Tab</keysym> is pressed, the embedder
- will send: FOCUS_IN/FOCUS_FIRST to the client, the client will
- send FOCUS_NEXT to the embedder, the toplevel window will
- wrap the focus around and send FOCUS_IN/FOCUS_FIRST to the
- client...
- </para>
- <para>
- The minimum mechanism that seems necessary to prevent this
- loop is a serial number in the FOCUS_IN/FOCUS_FIRST message
- that is repeated in a resulting FOCUS_NEXT message.
- </para>
- <para>
- A possibly better way of handling this could be to make FOCUS_IN have
- an explicit response; that, is, add a XEMBED_FOCUS_IN_RESPONSE
- that the client must send to the embedder after receipt
- of a FOCUS_IN message.
- </para>
-
- <table>
- <title>XEMBED_FOCUS_IN_RESPONSE</title>
- <tgroup cols="2">
- <tbody>
- <row>
- <entry>detail</entry><entry>1 if the client accepted the focus, 0 otherwise</entry>
- </row>
- <row>
- <entry>data1</entry><entry>serial number from XEMBED_FOCUS_IN</entry>
- </row>
- </tbody>
- </tgroup>
- </table>
- <para>
- The main problem with requiring a response here is that caller
- needs to wait for the return event, and to handle cases like
- parent (client 1) => child (client 2) => grandchild (client 1),
- it probably needs to process all sorts of incoming events at
- this point. If the user hits <keysym>Tab</keysym><keysym>Tab</keysym>
- in quick succession things could get very complicated.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Robustness</title>
- <para>
- The protocol, as currently constituted, is not robust against
- the embedder crashing. This will result in the embedder
- window being destroyed by the X server, and, as a consequence
- client's window being unexpectedly destroyed, which will likely cause the
- client to die with a BadWindow error.
- </para>
- <para>
- To fix this requires an X protocol extension which extends
- the functionality of <function>XChangeSaveSet()</function> in
- two areas:
- </para>
- <itemizedlist>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Allow it to be specified that the saved window should be
- reparented to the root window rather than to the nearest
- parent. (The nearest parent typically being the window
- manager's frame window, reparenting to the nearest
- parent only saves the client until the window manager
- cleans up and destroys the frame window.)
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Allow it to be specified that the saved window should be
- unmapped rather than then mapped. (Without this capability
- the client will mapped as a child of the root window,
- which will be confusing to the user.)
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </itemizedlist>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Sensitivity</title>
- <para>
- Toolkits such as Qt and GTK+ have a concept of disabled
- widgets. This notion is typically hierarchical, so if
- the embedder or a ancestory of the embedder becomes
- insensitive, widgets inside the client should be displayed as,
- and act insensitive as well.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Directional focusing</title>
- <para>
- Some toolkits, such as GTK+, support, along with the standard
- concept of a focus chain, the idea of <firstterm>directional
- focusing</firstterm>; it's possible in some cases to navigate
- focus using the arrow keys. To do this perfectly, you need
- to have information about the coordinates of the original
- focus window, which is hard to do in an embedding context,
- but a good approximation is to, when focusing into a
- container, provide the side of the container where focus
- is coming from and to focus the "middle widget" on this side.
- </para>
- <para>
- This could be supported by adding an extra data field to
- to the XEMBED_FOCUS_FIRST/XEMBED_FOCUS_LAST subtypes
- of XEMBED_FOCUS_IN and to XEMBED_FOCUS_NEXT and
- XEMBED_FOCUS_PREV, which would contain:
- </para>
- <programlisting><!--
--->/* Directions for focusing */
-#define XEMBED_DIRECTION_DEFAULT 0
-#define XEMBED_DIRECTION_UP_DOWN 1
-#define XEMBED_DIRECTION_LEFT_RIGHT 2<!--
- --></programlisting>
- <para>
- Applications supporting only normal tab focusing would always
- pass XEMBED_DIRECTION_DEFAULT and treat all received
- directions as XEMBED_DIRECTION_DEFAULT.
- </para>
- <para>
- The argument against supporting this is that it's a rather
- confusing feature to start with (many widgets eat arrow keys
- for other purposes), and becomes more confusing if you have
- a application containing widgets from different toolkits,
- some of which support it, some of which don't.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Modal dialogs</title>
- <para>
- The specification doesn't have any provisions for handling the
- case where an embedded client wants to put up a dialog. Such a
- dialog should be transient-for the real toplevel window, and,
- if modal, should block the entire toplevel window. To fully
- implement this, you would need some concept of an application
- that spanned multiple toplevel windows in multiple clients.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Propagation of key presses</title>
- <para>
- It's frequently useful to have keybindings that trigger on
- a widget if the focus is on a child of that widget. For
- instance, <keysym>Control</keysym><keysym>PageUp</keysym>
- and <keysym>Control</keysym><keysym>PageUp</keysym> switch
- pages in a notebook widget when the focus is on a child
- of the notebook. The XEmbed spec currently has no handling
- of this situation.
- </para>
- <para>
- The simplest solution would be to specify that if the client
- widget doesn't handle a key press sent to it, it then sends
- the event back to the embedder. Some care would be required
- in the embedder handle infinite loops, but it shouldn't
- be that bad.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- <sect2>
- <title>Handling of toplevel modes</title>
- <para>
- GTK+-2.0 contains a feature for key navigation of tooltips
- where Control-F1 toggles a "tooltips keyboard mode" where
- the tooltip for the currently focused window is displayed.
- There is no way of propagating this across XEMBED.
- This feature could clearly be implemented the same
- way as XEMBED_WINDOW_ACTIVATE, but adding a pair of
- messages for every feature of this type seems excessive.
- </para>
- <para>
- A possible alternate idea would be to add a _XEMBED_STATE
- property that the embedder sets on the client window which
- is a list of atoms. This could actually be used to
- replace XEMBED_WINDOW_ACTIVATE, and XEMBED_MODALITY_ON,
- simplifying the protocol.
- </para>
- <para>
- There are some race conditions in maintaining this property
- if the client is allowed to reparent itself out of the
- embedder that would have to be considered.
- </para>
- </sect2>
- </sect1>
- <appendix id="changes">
- <title>Change history</title>
- <formalpara>
- <title>"Version 1.0 DRAFT 1", 22 April 2000, Matthias Ettrich</title>
- <para>
- </para>
- </formalpara>
- <formalpara>
- <title>"Version 1.0 DRAFT 2", 15 August 2000, Matthias Ettrich</title>
- <para>
- </para>
- </formalpara>
- <formalpara>
- <title>Version 0.5, 19 April 2002, Owen Taylor</title>
- <para>
- <itemizedlist>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Add the life-cycle chapter, including _XEMBED_INFO
- property, and the XEMBED_MAPPED flags.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Define the data2 for XEMBED_EMBEDDED_NOTIFY to be the
- protocol version in use.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Replaced XEMBED_GRAB_KEY scheme for handling accelerators
- with XEMBED_REGISTER_ACCELERATOR.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Removed text "This also means that the client has to
- prepare for becoming visible anytime without filing a map
- request itself" from the description of
- XEMBED_EMBEDDED_NOTIFY".
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Added text about the independence of FOCUS_IN/OUT and
- ACTIVATE/DEACTIVE to the description of
- XEMBED_WINDOW_ACTIVATE / XEMBED_WINDOW_DEACTIVATE.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Added note about fields in WMNormalHints not necessarily
- being obeyed by embedders.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Removed mention of XEMBED_PROCESS_NEXT_EVENT, which is
- no longer part of the protocol.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Added definitions of "Active" and "Focused" to the
- definitions section.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Added issues and change history sections.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Lots of textual editing for clarity, style consistency.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- <listitem>
- <para>
- Converted to docbook format.
- </para>
- </listitem>
- </itemizedlist>
- </para>
- </formalpara>
- </appendix>
-</article>