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NAME

       XkbGetKeyboardByName  -  Build a new keyboard description from a set of
       named components, and to optionally have the server use  the  resulting
       description to replace an active one

SYNOPSIS

       XkbDescPtr    XkbGetKeyboardByName    (Display   *dpy,   unsigned   int
              device_spec,  XkbComponentNamesPtr  names,  unsigned  int  want,
              unsigned int need, Bool load);

ARGUMENTS

       - dpy  connection to X server

       - device_spec
              device ID, or XkbUseCoreKbd

       - names
              names of components to fetch

       - want desired structures in returned record

       - need mandatory structures in returned record

       - load True => load into device_spec

DESCRIPTION

       A  client may request that the server fetch one or more components from
       its database and use those components to build a  new  server  keyboard
       description.   The  new keyboard description may be built from scratch,
       or it may be built starting with the current keyboard description for a
       particular  device. Once the keyboard description is built, all or part
       of it may be returned to the client.  The parts returned to the  client
       need not include all of the parts used to build the description. At the
       time it requests the server to build  a  new  keyboard  description,  a
       client  may  also  request  that  the  server  use  the new description
       internally to replace the current keyboard description for  a  specific
       device, in which case the behavior of the device changes accordingly.

       To build a new keyboard description from a set of named components, and
       to optionally have the server use the resulting description to  replace
       an active one, use XkbGetKeyboardByName.

       names  contains a set of expressions describing the keyboard components
       the server should use to build the new keyboard description.  want  and
       need  are  bit  fields  describing  the parts of the resulting keyboard
       description that should be present in the returned XkbDescRec.

       The individual fields in names are component  expressions  composed  of
       keyboard   component   names   (no   wildcarding  as  may  be  used  in
       XkbListComponents), the special component  name  symbol  ‘%’,  and  the
       special  operator  characters  ‘+’  and  ‘|’. A component expression is
       parsed left to right, as follows:

       ·    The special component name "computed"  may  be  used  in  keycodes
            component  expressions  and  refers to a component consisting of a
            set of keycodes computed automatically by the server as needed.

       ·    The special component  name  "canonical"  may  be  used  in  types
            component  expressions  and refers to a partial component defining
            the four standard key types: ALPHABETIC, ONE_LEVEL, TWO_LEVEL, and
            KEYPAD.

       ·    The  special component name ‘%’ refers to the keyboard description
            for the device  specified  in  device_spec  or  the  keymap  names
            component.  If a keymap names component is specified that does not
            begin with ‘+’ or ‘|’ and does not contain ‘%’, then ‘%’ refers to
            the   description   generated   by  the  keymap  names  component.
            Otherwise, it refers to the keyboard description for  device_spec.

       ·    The  ‘+’  operator  specifies  that the following component should
            override the currently assembled description; any definitions that
            are present in both components are taken from the second.

       ·    The  ‘|’  operator  specifies  that  the  next specified component
            should  augment   the   currently   assembled   description;   any
            definitions that are present in both components are taken from the
            first.

       ·    If the component expression begins with an operator, a leading ‘%’
            is implied.

       ·    If  any  unknown  or  illegal  characters  appear  anywhere in the
            expression, the entire expression is invalid and is ignored.

            For example, if names->symbols contained the expression "+de",  it
            specifies  that  the  default  member of the "de" class of symbols
            should be applied to the current keyboard mapping, overriding  any
            existing definitions (it could also be written "+de(default)").

            Here   is   a  slightly  more  involved  example:  the  expression
            "acme(ascii)+de(basic)|iso9995-3" constructs a German (de) mapping
            for  the  ASCII  keyboard  supplied  by the "acme" vendor. The new
            definition begins with the symbols for the ASCII keyboard for Acme
            (acme(ascii)),  overrides  them  with  definitions  for  the basic
            German keyboard (de(basic)), and then applies the definitions from
            the  default  iso9995-3 keyboard (iso9995-3) to any undefined keys
            or groups of keys (part three of the iso9995  standard  defines  a
            common  set  of  bindings  for  the  secondary  group,  but allows
            national layouts to override those definitions where necessary).

            NOTE The interpretation of the above expression components  (acme,
            ascii,  de,  basic,  iso9995-3)  is  not  defined by Xkb; only the
            operations and their ordering are.

            Note that the presence of a keymap names component that  does  not
            contain ‘%’ (either explicit or implied by virtue of an expression
            starting  with  an  operator)  indicates  a  description  that  is
            independent  of  the keyboard description for the device specified
            in device_spec.  The same is true of requests in which the  keymap
            names  component  is  empty  and  all  five other names components
            contain expressions void of references to ‘%’.  Requests  of  this
            form  allow  you  to deal with keyboard definitions independent of
            any actual device.

            The server parses all non-NULL fields in names and  uses  them  to
            build   a   keyboard  description.  However,  before  parsing  the
            expressions in names, the server ORs the bits  in  want  and  need
            together   and   examines   the  result  in  relationship  to  the
            expressions in names.  Table 1 identifies the components that  are
            required  for  each  of  the  possible bits in want or need.  If a
            required component has not been specified in the  names  structure
            (the  corresponding  field  is  NULL),  the server substitutes the
            expression "%", resulting in the component values being taken from
            device_spec.   In  addition,  if load is True, the server modifies
            names if necessary (again using a "%" entry) to ensure all of  the
            following  fields  are  non-NULL:  types,  keycodes,  symbols, and
            compat.

                       Table 1 Want and Need Mask Bits and Required Names Components
            ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            want or need mask bit      Required names Components                        value
            ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            XkbGBN_TypesMask           Types                                            (1L<<0)
            XkbGBN_CompatMapMask       Compat                                           (1L<<1)
            XkbGBN_ClientSymbolsMask   Types + Symbols + Keycodes                       (1L<<2)
            XkbGBN_ServerSymbolsMask   Types + Symbols + Keycodes                       (1L<<3)
            XkbGBN_SymbolsMask         Symbols                                          (1L<<1)
            XkbGBN_IndicatorMapMask    Compat                                           (1L<<4)
            XkbGBN_KeyNamesMask        Keycodes                                         (1L<<5)
            XkbGBN_GeometryMask        Geometry                                         (1L<<6)
            XkbGBN_OtherNamesMask      Types + Symbols + Keycodes + Compat + Geometry   (1L<<7)
            XkbGBN_AllComponentsMask                                                    (0xff)

            need specifies a set of keyboard components that the  server  must
            be  able  to resolve in order for XkbGetKeyboardByName to succeed;
            if any of the components specified in need cannot be  successfully
            resolved, XkbGetKeyboardByName fails.

            want specifies a set of keyboard components that the server should
            attempt to resolve, but that are not mandatory. If the  server  is
            unable  to  resolve  any of these components, XkbGetKeyboardByName
            still succeeds. Bits specified in want that are also specified  in
            need have no effect in the context of want.

            If  load  is True, the server updates its keyboard description for
            device_spec to match the result of the keyboard  description  just
            built.  If  load  is  False,  the  server’s description for device
            device_spec is not updated. In all cases, the parts  specified  by
            want  and  need  from  the  just-built  keyboard  description  are
            returned.

            The names structure in an XkbDescRec keyboard  description  record
            contains  one  field  for each of the five component types used to
            build a keyboard description. When a keyboard description is built
            from  a  set  of  database components, the corresponding fields in
            this names structure are set to  match  the  expressions  used  to
            build the component.

            Building a New Keyboard Description from the Server Database

            The  information  returned  to  the  client  in  the XkbDescRec is
            essentially the result of a series of calls to extract information
            from  a  fictitious  device whose description matches the one just
            built. The calls corresponding  to  each  of  the  mask  bits  are
            summarized  in  Table  2,  together with the XkbDescRec components
            that are filled in.

                                        Table 2 XkbDescRec Components Returned for Values of Want & Needs
            ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Request (want+need)                                Fills in Xkb components     Equivalent Function Call
            ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            XkbGBN_TypesMask                                   map.types                   XkbGetUpdatedMap(dpy, XkbTypesMask, Xkb)
            XkbGBN_ServerSymbolsMask                           server                      XkbGetUpdatedMap(dpy,
            XkbAllClientInfoMask, Xkb)
            XkbGBN_ClientSymbolsMask                           map, including map.types
            XkbGetUpdatedMap(dpy, XkbAllServerInfoMask, Xkb)
            XkbGBN_IndicatorMaps                               indicators                  XkbGetIndicatorMap(dpy,
            XkbAllIndicators, Xkb)
            XkbGBN_CompatMapMask                               compat                      XkbGetCompatMap(dpy, XkbAllCompatMask, Xkb)
            XkbGBN_GeometryMask                                geom                        XkbGetGeometry(dpy, Xkb)
            XkbGBN_KeyNamesMask                                names.keys                  XkbGetNames(dpy, XkbKeyNamesMask |

                                                               names.key_aliases           XkbKeyAliasesMask, Xkb)
            XkbGBN_OtherNamesMask                              names.keycodes              XkbGetNames(dpy, XkbAllNamesMask &
                                                               names.geometry              ~(XkbKeyNamesMask | XkbKeyAliasesMask),
                                                               names.symbols               Xkb)
                                                               names.types
                                                               map.types[*].lvl_names[*]
                                                               names.compat
                                                               names.vmods
                                                               names.indicators
                                                               names.groups
                                                               names.radio_groups
                                                               names.phys_symbols

            There is no way to determine which components  specified  in  want
            (but  not  in need) were actually fetched, other than breaking the
            call into successive calls to XkbGetKeyboardByName and  specifying
            individual components.

            XkbGetKeyboardByName  always sets min_key_code and max_key_code in
            the returned XkbDescRec structure.

            XkbGetKeyboardByName is synchronous; it sends the request  to  the
            server  to  build  a  new  keyboard  description and waits for the
            reply.   If   successful,   the   return   value   is    non-NULL.
            XkbGetKeyboardByName generates a BadMatch protocol error if errors
            are encountered when building the keyboard description.

STRUCTURES

       The complete description of an Xkb keyboard is given by an  XkbDescRec.
       The  component  structures  in  the  XkbDescRec represent the major Xkb
       components outlined in Figure 1.1.

       typedef struct {
          struct _XDisplay * display;      /∗ connection to X server */
          unsigned short     flags;        /∗ private to Xkb, do not modify */
          unsigned short     device_spec;  /∗ device of interest */
          KeyCode            min_key_code; /∗ minimum keycode for device */
          KeyCode            max_key_code; /∗ maximum keycode for device */
          XkbControlsPtr     ctrls;        /∗ controls */
          XkbServerMapPtr    server;       /∗ server keymap */
          XkbClientMapPtr    map;          /∗ client keymap */
          XkbIndicatorPtr    indicators;   /∗ indicator map */
          XkbNamesPtr        names;        /∗ names for all components */
          XkbCompatMapPtr    compat;       /∗ compatibility map */
          XkbGeometryPtr     geom;         /∗ physical geometry of keyboard */
       } XkbDescRec, *XkbDescPtr;

       The display field points to an X display structure. The flags field  is
       private  to  the  library:  modifying  flags  may  yield  unpredictable
       results. The device_spec field specifies the device identifier  of  the
       keyboard  input device, or XkbUseCoreKeyboard, which specifies the core
       keyboard device. The min_key_code and max_key_code fields  specify  the
       least and greatest keycode that can be returned by the keyboard.

       Each  structure  component has a corresponding mask bit that is used in
       function calls to indicate that the structure should be manipulated  in
       some manner, such as allocating it or freeing it. These masks and their
       relationships to the fields in the XkbDescRec are shown in Table 3.

               Table 3 Mask Bits for XkbDescRec
       --------------------------------------------------
       Mask Bit               XkbDescRec Field   Value
       --------------------------------------------------
       XkbControlsMask        ctrls              (1L<<0)

       XkbServerMapMask       server             (1L<<1)
       XkbIClientMapMask      map                (1L<<2)
       XkbIndicatorMapMask    indicators         (1L<<3)
       XkbNamesMask           names              (1L<<4)
       XkbCompatMapMask       compat             (1L<<5)
       XkbGeometryMask        geom               (1L<<6)
       XkbAllComponentsMask   All Fields         (0x7f)

DIAGNOSTICS

       BadMatch       A compatible version of Xkb was  not  available  in  the
                      server or an argument has correct type and range, but is
                      otherwise invalid

SEE ALSO

       XkbListComponents(3)