#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # $File: terminfo,v 1.10 2018/01/21 03:26:33 christos Exp $ # terminfo: file(1) magic for terminfo # # URL: http://invisible-island.net/ncurses/man/term.5.html # URL: http://invisible-island.net/ncurses/man/scr_dump.5.html # # Workaround for Targa image type by Joerg Jenderek # GRR: line below too general as it catches also # Targa image type 1 with 26 long identification field # and HELP.DSK 0 string \032\001 # 5th character of terminal name list, but not Targa image pixel size (15 16 24 32) >16 ubyte >32 # namelist, if more than 1 separated by "|" like "st|stterm| simpleterm 0.4.1" >>12 regex \^[a-zA-Z0-9][a-zA-Z0-9.][^|]* Compiled terminfo entry "%-s" !:mime application/x-terminfo # no extension #!:ext # #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # The following was added for ncurses6 development: #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # 0 string \036\002 # imitate the legacy compiled-format, to get the entry-name printed >16 ubyte >32 # namelist, if more than 1 separated by "|" like "st|stterm| simpleterm 0. 4.1" >>12 regex \^[a-zA-Z0-9][a-zA-Z0-9.][^|]* Compiled 32-bit terminfo entry "%-s" !:mime application/x-terminfo2 # # While the compiled terminfo uses little-endian format irregardless of # platform, SystemV screen dumps do not. They came later, and that detail was # overlooked. # # AIX and HPUX use the SVr4 big-endian format # Solaris uses the SVr3 formats (sparc and x86 differ endian-ness) 0 beshort 0433 SVr2 curses screen image, big-endian 0 beshort 0434 SVr3 curses screen image, big-endian 0 beshort 0435 SVr4 curses screen image, big-endian # 0 leshort 0433 SVr2 curses screen image, little-endian 0 leshort 0434 SVr3 curses screen image, little-endian 0 leshort 0435 SVr4 curses screen image, little-endian # # Rather than SVr4, Solaris "xcurses" writes this header: 0 regex \^MAX=[0-9]+,[0-9]+$ >1 regex \^BEG=[0-9]+,[0-9]+$ >2 regex \^SCROLL=[0-9]+,[0-9]+$ >3 regex \^VMIN=[0-9]+$ >4 regex \^VTIME=[0-9]+$ >5 regex \^FLAGS=0x[[:xdigit:]]+$ >6 regex \^FG=[0-9],[0-9]+$ >7 regex \^BG=[0-9]+,[0-9]+, Solaris xcurses screen image # # ncurses5 (and before) did not use a magic number, making screen dumps "data". # ncurses6 (2015) uses this format, ignoring byte-order 0 string \210\210\210\210ncurses ncurses6 screen image # # PDCurses added this in 2005 0 string PDC\001 PDCurses screen image