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menuconfig.py
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#!/usr/bin/env python3
# Copyright (c) 2018-2019, Nordic Semiconductor ASA and Ulf Magnusson
# SPDX-License-Identifier: ISC
"""
Overview
========
A curses-based Python 2/3 menuconfig implementation. The interface should feel
familiar to people used to mconf ('make menuconfig').
Supports the same keys as mconf, and also supports a set of keybindings
inspired by Vi:
J/K : Down/Up
L : Enter menu/Toggle item
H : Leave menu
Ctrl-D/U: Page Down/Page Up
G/End : Jump to end of list
g/Home : Jump to beginning of list
[Space] toggles values if possible, and enters menus otherwise. [Enter] works
the other way around.
The mconf feature where pressing a key jumps to a menu entry with that
character in it in the current menu isn't supported. A jump-to feature for
jumping directly to any symbol (including invisible symbols), choice, menu or
comment (as in a Kconfig 'comment "Foo"') is available instead.
A few different modes are available:
F: Toggle show-help mode, which shows the help text of the currently selected
item in the window at the bottom of the menu display. This is handy when
browsing through options.
C: Toggle show-name mode, which shows the symbol name before each symbol menu
entry
A: Toggle show-all mode, which shows all items, including currently invisible
items and items that lack a prompt. Invisible items are drawn in a different
style to make them stand out.
Running
=======
menuconfig.py can be run either as a standalone executable or by calling the
menuconfig() function with an existing Kconfig instance. The second option is a
bit inflexible in that it will still load and save .config, etc.
When run in standalone mode, the top-level Kconfig file to load can be passed
as a command-line argument. With no argument, it defaults to "Kconfig".
The KCONFIG_CONFIG environment variable specifies the .config file to load (if
it exists) and save. If KCONFIG_CONFIG is unset, ".config" is used.
When overwriting a configuration file, the old version is saved to
<filename>.old (e.g. .config.old).
$srctree is supported through Kconfiglib.
Color schemes
=============
It is possible to customize the color scheme by setting the MENUCONFIG_STYLE
environment variable. For example, setting it to 'aquatic' will enable an
alternative, less yellow, more 'make menuconfig'-like color scheme, contributed
by Mitja Horvat (pinkfluid).
This is the current list of built-in styles:
- default classic Kconfiglib theme with a yellow accent
- monochrome colorless theme (uses only bold and standout) attributes,
this style is used if the terminal doesn't support colors
- aquatic blue-tinted style loosely resembling the lxdialog theme
It is possible to customize the current style by changing colors of UI
elements on the screen. This is the list of elements that can be stylized:
- path Top row in the main display, with the menu path
- separator Separator lines between windows. Also used for the top line
in the symbol information display.
- list List of items, e.g. the main display
- selection Style for the selected item
- inv-list Like list, but for invisible items. Used in show-all mode.
- inv-selection Like selection, but for invisible items. Used in show-all
mode.
- help Help text windows at the bottom of various fullscreen
dialogs
- show-help Window showing the help text in show-help mode
- frame Frame around dialog boxes
- body Body of dialog boxes
- edit Edit box in pop-up dialogs
- jump-edit Edit box in jump-to dialog
- text Symbol information text
The color definition is a comma separated list of attributes:
- fg:COLOR Set the foreground/background colors. COLOR can be one of
* or * the basic 16 colors (black, red, green, yellow, blue,
- bg:COLOR magenta, cyan, white and brighter versions, for example,
brightred). On terminals that support more than 8 colors,
you can also directly put in a color number, e.g. fg:123
(hexadecimal and octal constants are accepted as well).
Colors outside the range -1..curses.COLORS-1 (which is
terminal-dependent) are ignored (with a warning). The COLOR
can be also specified using a RGB value in the HTML
notation, for example #RRGGBB. If the terminal supports
color changing, the color is rendered accurately.
Otherwise, the visually nearest color is used.
If the background or foreground color of an element is not
specified, it defaults to -1, representing the default
terminal foreground or background color.
Note: On some terminals a bright version of the color
implies bold.
- bold Use bold text
- underline Use underline text
- standout Standout text attribute (reverse color)
More often than not, some UI elements share the same color definition. In such
cases the right value may specify an UI element from which the color definition
will be copied. For example, "separator=help" will apply the current color
definition for "help" to "separator".
A keyword without the '=' is assumed to be a style template. The template name
is looked up in the built-in styles list and the style definition is expanded
in-place. With this, built-in styles can be used as basis for new styles.
For example, take the aquatic theme and give it a red selection bar:
MENUCONFIG_STYLE="aquatic selection=fg:white,bg:red"
If there's an error in the style definition or if a missing style is assigned
to, the assignment will be ignored, along with a warning being printed on
stderr.
The 'default' theme is always implicitly parsed first, so the following two
settings have the same effect:
MENUCONFIG_STYLE="selection=fg:white,bg:red"
MENUCONFIG_STYLE="default selection=fg:white,bg:red"
If the terminal doesn't support colors, the 'monochrome' theme is used, and
MENUCONFIG_STYLE is ignored. The assumption is that the environment is broken
somehow, and that the important thing is to get something usable.
Other features
==============
- Seamless terminal resizing
- No dependencies on *nix, as the 'curses' module is in the Python standard
library
- Unicode text entry
- Improved information screen compared to mconf:
* Expressions are split up by their top-level &&/|| operands to improve
readability
* Undefined symbols in expressions are pointed out
* Menus and comments have information displays
* Kconfig definitions are printed
* The include path is shown, listing the locations of the 'source'
statements that included the Kconfig file of the symbol (or other
item)
Limitations
===========
Doesn't work out of the box on Windows, but can be made to work with
pip install windows-curses
See the https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/windows-curses repository.
"""
from __future__ import print_function
import os
import sys
_IS_WINDOWS = os.name == "nt" # Are we running on Windows?
try:
import curses
except ImportError as e:
if not _IS_WINDOWS:
raise
sys.exit("""\
menuconfig failed to import the standard Python 'curses' library. Try
installing a package like windows-curses
(https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/windows-curses) by running this command
in cmd.exe:
pip install windows-curses
Starting with Kconfiglib 13.0.0, windows-curses is no longer automatically
installed when installing Kconfiglib via pip on Windows (because it breaks
installation on MSYS2).
Exception:
{}: {}""".format(type(e).__name__, e))
import errno
import locale
import re
import textwrap
from kconfiglib import Symbol, Choice, MENU, COMMENT, MenuNode, \
BOOL, TRISTATE, STRING, INT, HEX, \
AND, OR, \
expr_str, expr_value, split_expr, \
standard_sc_expr_str, \
TRI_TO_STR, TYPE_TO_STR, \
standard_kconfig, standard_config_filename
#
# Configuration variables
#
# If True, try to change LC_CTYPE to a UTF-8 locale if it is set to the C
# locale (which implies ASCII). This fixes curses Unicode I/O issues on systems
# with bad defaults. ncurses configures itself from the locale settings.
#
# Related PEP: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0538/
_CHANGE_C_LC_CTYPE_TO_UTF8 = True
# How many steps an implicit submenu will be indented. Implicit submenus are
# created when an item depends on the symbol before it. Note that symbols
# defined with 'menuconfig' create a separate menu instead of indenting.
_SUBMENU_INDENT = 4
# Number of steps for Page Up/Down to jump
_PG_JUMP = 6
# Height of the help window in show-help mode
_SHOW_HELP_HEIGHT = 8
# How far the cursor needs to be from the edge of the window before it starts
# to scroll. Used for the main menu display, the information display, the
# search display, and for text boxes.
_SCROLL_OFFSET = 5
# Minimum width of dialogs that ask for text input
_INPUT_DIALOG_MIN_WIDTH = 30
# Number of arrows pointing up/down to draw when a window is scrolled
_N_SCROLL_ARROWS = 14
# Lines of help text shown at the bottom of the "main" display
_MAIN_HELP_LINES = """
[Space/Enter] Toggle/enter [ESC] Leave menu [S] Save
[O] Load [?] Symbol info [/] Jump to symbol
[F] Toggle show-help mode [C] Toggle show-name mode [A] Toggle show-all mode
[Q] Quit (prompts for save) [D] Save minimal config (advanced)
"""[1:-1].split("\n")
# Lines of help text shown at the bottom of the information dialog
_INFO_HELP_LINES = """
[ESC/q] Return to menu [/] Jump to symbol
"""[1:-1].split("\n")
# Lines of help text shown at the bottom of the search dialog
_JUMP_TO_HELP_LINES = """
Type text to narrow the search. Regexes are supported (via Python's 're'
module). The up/down cursor keys step in the list. [Enter] jumps to the
selected symbol. [ESC] aborts the search. Type multiple space-separated
strings/regexes to find entries that match all of them. Type Ctrl-F to
view the help of the selected item without leaving the dialog.
"""[1:-1].split("\n")
#
# Styling
#
_STYLES = {
"default": """
path=fg:black,bg:white,bold
separator=fg:black,bg:yellow,bold
list=fg:black,bg:white
selection=fg:white,bg:blue,bold
inv-list=fg:red,bg:white
inv-selection=fg:red,bg:blue
help=path
show-help=list
frame=fg:black,bg:yellow,bold
body=fg:white,bg:black
edit=fg:white,bg:blue
jump-edit=edit
text=list
""",
# This style is forced on terminals that do no support colors
"monochrome": """
path=bold
separator=bold,standout
list=
selection=bold,standout
inv-list=bold
inv-selection=bold,standout
help=bold
show-help=
frame=bold,standout
body=
edit=standout
jump-edit=
text=
""",
# Blue-tinted style loosely resembling lxdialog
"aquatic": """
path=fg:white,bg:blue
separator=fg:white,bg:cyan
help=path
frame=fg:white,bg:cyan
body=fg:white,bg:blue
edit=fg:black,bg:white
"""
}
_NAMED_COLORS = {
# Basic colors
"black": curses.COLOR_BLACK,
"red": curses.COLOR_RED,
"green": curses.COLOR_GREEN,
"yellow": curses.COLOR_YELLOW,
"blue": curses.COLOR_BLUE,
"magenta": curses.COLOR_MAGENTA,
"cyan": curses.COLOR_CYAN,
"white": curses.COLOR_WHITE,
# Bright versions
"brightblack": curses.COLOR_BLACK + 8,
"brightred": curses.COLOR_RED + 8,
"brightgreen": curses.COLOR_GREEN + 8,
"brightyellow": curses.COLOR_YELLOW + 8,
"brightblue": curses.COLOR_BLUE + 8,
"brightmagenta": curses.COLOR_MAGENTA + 8,
"brightcyan": curses.COLOR_CYAN + 8,
"brightwhite": curses.COLOR_WHITE + 8,
# Aliases
"purple": curses.COLOR_MAGENTA,
"brightpurple": curses.COLOR_MAGENTA + 8,
}
def _rgb_to_6cube(rgb):
# Converts an 888 RGB color to a 3-tuple (nice in that it's hashable)
# representing the closest xterm 256-color 6x6x6 color cube color.
#
# The xterm 256-color extension uses a RGB color palette with components in
# the range 0-5 (a 6x6x6 cube). The catch is that the mapping is nonlinear.
# Index 0 in the 6x6x6 cube is mapped to 0, index 1 to 95, then 135, 175,
# etc., in increments of 40. See the links below:
#
# https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Xterm_256color_chart.svg
# https://github.com/tmux/tmux/blob/master/colour.c
# 48 is the middle ground between 0 and 95.
return tuple(0 if x < 48 else int(round(max(1, (x - 55)/40))) for x in rgb)
def _6cube_to_rgb(r6g6b6):
# Returns the 888 RGB color for a 666 xterm color cube index
return tuple(0 if x == 0 else 40*x + 55 for x in r6g6b6)
def _rgb_to_gray(rgb):
# Converts an 888 RGB color to the index of an xterm 256-color grayscale
# color with approx. the same perceived brightness
# Calculate the luminance (gray intensity) of the color. See
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/596216/formula-to-determine-brightness-of-rgb-color
# and
# https://www.w3.org/TR/AERT/#color-contrast
luma = 0.299*rgb[0] + 0.587*rgb[1] + 0.114*rgb[2]
# Closest index in the grayscale palette, which starts at RGB 0x080808,
# with stepping 0x0A0A0A
index = int(round((luma - 8)/10))
# Clamp the index to 0-23, corresponding to 232-255
return max(0, min(index, 23))
def _gray_to_rgb(index):
# Convert a grayscale index to its closet single RGB component
return 3*(10*index + 8,) # Returns a 3-tuple
# Obscure Python: We never pass a value for rgb2index, and it keeps pointing to
# the same dict. This avoids a global.
def _alloc_rgb(rgb, rgb2index={}):
# Initialize a new entry in the xterm palette to the given RGB color,
# returning its index. If the color has already been initialized, the index
# of the existing entry is returned.
#
# ncurses is palette-based, so we need to overwrite palette entries to make
# new colors.
#
# The colors from 0 to 15 are user-defined, and there's no way to query
# their RGB values, so we better leave them untouched. Also leave any
# hypothetical colors above 255 untouched (though we're unlikely to
# allocate that many colors anyway).
if rgb in rgb2index:
return rgb2index[rgb]
# Many terminals allow the user to customize the first 16 colors. Avoid
# changing their values.
color_index = 16 + len(rgb2index)
if color_index >= 256:
_warn("Unable to allocate new RGB color ", rgb, ". Too many colors "
"allocated.")
return 0
# Map each RGB component from the range 0-255 to the range 0-1000, which is
# what curses uses
curses.init_color(color_index, *(int(round(1000*x/255)) for x in rgb))
rgb2index[rgb] = color_index
return color_index
def _color_from_num(num):
# Returns the index of a color that looks like color 'num' in the xterm
# 256-color palette (but that might not be 'num', if we're redefining
# colors)
# - _alloc_rgb() won't touch the first 16 colors or any (hypothetical)
# colors above 255, so we can always return them as-is
#
# - If the terminal doesn't support changing color definitions, or if
# curses.COLORS < 256, _alloc_rgb() won't touch any color, and all colors
# can be returned as-is
if num < 16 or num > 255 or not curses.can_change_color() or \
curses.COLORS < 256:
return num
# _alloc_rgb() might redefine colors, so emulate the xterm 256-color
# palette by allocating new colors instead of returning color numbers
# directly
if num < 232:
num -= 16
return _alloc_rgb(_6cube_to_rgb(((num//36)%6, (num//6)%6, num%6)))
return _alloc_rgb(_gray_to_rgb(num - 232))
def _color_from_rgb(rgb):
# Returns the index of a color matching the 888 RGB color 'rgb'. The
# returned color might be an ~exact match or an approximation, depending on
# terminal capabilities.
# Calculates the Euclidean distance between two RGB colors
def dist(r1, r2): return sum((x - y)**2 for x, y in zip(r1, r2))
if curses.COLORS >= 256:
# Assume we're dealing with xterm's 256-color extension
if curses.can_change_color():
# Best case -- the terminal supports changing palette entries via
# curses.init_color(). Initialize an unused palette entry and
# return it.
return _alloc_rgb(rgb)
# Second best case -- pick between the xterm 256-color extension colors
# Closest 6-cube "color" color
c6 = _rgb_to_6cube(rgb)
# Closest gray color
gray = _rgb_to_gray(rgb)
if dist(rgb, _6cube_to_rgb(c6)) < dist(rgb, _gray_to_rgb(gray)):
# Use the "color" color from the 6x6x6 color palette. Calculate the
# color number from the 6-cube index triplet.
return 16 + 36*c6[0] + 6*c6[1] + c6[2]
# Use the color from the gray palette
return 232 + gray
# Terminal not in xterm 256-color mode. This is probably the best we can
# do, or is it? Submit patches. :)
min_dist = float('inf')
best = -1
for color in range(curses.COLORS):
# ncurses uses the range 0..1000. Scale that down to 0..255.
d = dist(rgb, tuple(int(round(255*c/1000))
for c in curses.color_content(color)))
if d < min_dist:
min_dist = d
best = color
return best
def _parse_style(style_str, parsing_default):
# Parses a string with '<element>=<style>' assignments. Anything not
# containing '=' is assumed to be a reference to a built-in style, which is
# treated as if all the assignments from the style were inserted at that
# point in the string.
#
# The parsing_default flag is set to True when we're implicitly parsing the
# 'default'/'monochrome' style, to prevent warnings.
for sline in style_str.split():
# Words without a "=" character represents a style template
if "=" in sline:
key, data = sline.split("=", 1)
# The 'default' style template is assumed to define all keys. We
# run _style_to_curses() for non-existing keys as well, so that we
# print warnings for errors to the right of '=' for those too.
if key not in _style and not parsing_default:
_warn("Ignoring non-existent style", key)
# If data is a reference to another key, copy its style
if data in _style:
_style[key] = _style[data]
else:
_style[key] = _style_to_curses(data)
elif sline in _STYLES:
# Recursively parse style template. Ignore styles that don't exist,
# for backwards/forwards compatibility.
_parse_style(_STYLES[sline], parsing_default)
else:
_warn("Ignoring non-existent style template", sline)
# Dictionary mapping element types to the curses attributes used to display
# them
_style = {}
def _style_to_curses(style_def):
# Parses a style definition string (<element>=<style>), returning
# a (fg_color, bg_color, attributes) tuple.
def parse_color(color_def):
color_def = color_def.split(":", 1)[1]
# HTML format, #RRGGBB
if re.match("#[A-Fa-f0-9]{6}", color_def):
return _color_from_rgb((
int(color_def[1:3], 16),
int(color_def[3:5], 16),
int(color_def[5:7], 16)))
if color_def in _NAMED_COLORS:
color_num = _color_from_num(_NAMED_COLORS[color_def])
else:
try:
color_num = _color_from_num(int(color_def, 0))
except ValueError:
_warn("Ignoring color", color_def, "that's neither "
"predefined nor a number")
return -1
if not -1 <= color_num < curses.COLORS:
_warn("Ignoring color {}, which is outside the range "
"-1..curses.COLORS-1 (-1..{})"
.format(color_def, curses.COLORS - 1))
return -1
return color_num
fg_color = -1
bg_color = -1
attrs = 0
if style_def:
for field in style_def.split(","):
if field.startswith("fg:"):
fg_color = parse_color(field)
elif field.startswith("bg:"):
bg_color = parse_color(field)
elif field == "bold":
# A_BOLD tends to produce faint and hard-to-read text on the
# Windows console, especially with the old color scheme, before
# the introduction of
# https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/commandline/2017/08/02/updating-the-windows-console-colors/
attrs |= curses.A_NORMAL if _IS_WINDOWS else curses.A_BOLD
elif field == "standout":
attrs |= curses.A_STANDOUT
elif field == "underline":
attrs |= curses.A_UNDERLINE
else:
_warn("Ignoring unknown style attribute", field)
return _style_attr(fg_color, bg_color, attrs)
def _init_styles():
if curses.has_colors():
try:
curses.use_default_colors()
except curses.error:
# Ignore errors on funky terminals that support colors but not
# using default colors. Worst it can do is break transparency and
# the like. Ran across this with the MSYS2/winpty setup in
# https://github.com/msys2/MINGW-packages/issues/5823, though there
# seems to be a lot of general brokenness there.
pass
# Use the 'default' theme as the base, and add any user-defined style
# settings from the environment
_parse_style("default", True)
if "MENUCONFIG_STYLE" in os.environ:
_parse_style(os.environ["MENUCONFIG_STYLE"], False)
else:
# Force the 'monochrome' theme if the terminal doesn't support colors.
# MENUCONFIG_STYLE is likely to mess things up here (though any colors
# would be ignored), so ignore it.
_parse_style("monochrome", True)
# color_attribs holds the color pairs we've already created, indexed by a
# (<foreground color>, <background color>) tuple.
#
# Obscure Python: We never pass a value for color_attribs, and it keeps
# pointing to the same dict. This avoids a global.
def _style_attr(fg_color, bg_color, attribs, color_attribs={}):
# Returns an attribute with the specified foreground and background color
# and the attributes in 'attribs'. Reuses color pairs already created if
# possible, and creates a new color pair otherwise.
#
# Returns 'attribs' if colors aren't supported.
if not curses.has_colors():
return attribs
if (fg_color, bg_color) not in color_attribs:
# Create new color pair. Color pair number 0 is hardcoded and cannot be
# changed, hence the +1s.
curses.init_pair(len(color_attribs) + 1, fg_color, bg_color)
color_attribs[(fg_color, bg_color)] = \
curses.color_pair(len(color_attribs) + 1)
return color_attribs[(fg_color, bg_color)] | attribs
#
# Main application
#
def _main():
menuconfig(standard_kconfig(__doc__))
def menuconfig(kconf):
"""
Launches the configuration interface, returning after the user exits.
kconf:
Kconfig instance to be configured
"""
global _kconf
global _conf_filename
global _conf_changed
global _minconf_filename
global _show_all
_kconf = kconf
# Filename to save configuration to
_conf_filename = standard_config_filename()
# Load existing configuration and set _conf_changed True if it is outdated
_conf_changed = _load_config()
# Filename to save minimal configuration to
_minconf_filename = "defconfig"
# Any visible items in the top menu?
_show_all = False
if not _shown_nodes(kconf.top_node):
# Nothing visible. Start in show-all mode and try again.
_show_all = True
if not _shown_nodes(kconf.top_node):
# Give up. The implementation relies on always having a selected
# node.
print("Empty configuration -- nothing to configure.\n"
"Check that environment variables are set properly.")
return
# Disable warnings. They get mangled in curses mode, and we deal with
# errors ourselves.
kconf.warn = False
# Make curses use the locale settings specified in the environment
locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, "")
# Try to fix Unicode issues on systems with bad defaults
if _CHANGE_C_LC_CTYPE_TO_UTF8:
_change_c_lc_ctype_to_utf8()
# Get rid of the delay between pressing ESC and jumping to the parent menu,
# unless the user has set ESCDELAY (see ncurses(3)). This makes the UI much
# smoother to work with.
#
# Note: This is strictly pretty iffy, since escape codes for e.g. cursor
# keys start with ESC, but I've never seen it cause problems in practice
# (probably because it's unlikely that the escape code for a key would get
# split up across read()s, at least with a terminal emulator). Please
# report if you run into issues. Some suitable small default value could be
# used here instead in that case. Maybe it's silly to not put in the
# smallest imperceptible delay here already, though I don't like guessing.
#
# (From a quick glance at the ncurses source code, ESCDELAY might only be
# relevant for mouse events there, so maybe escapes are assumed to arrive
# in one piece already...)
os.environ.setdefault("ESCDELAY", "0")
# Enter curses mode. _menuconfig() returns a string to print on exit, after
# curses has been de-initialized.
print(curses.wrapper(_menuconfig))
def _load_config():
# Loads any existing .config file. See the Kconfig.load_config() docstring.
#
# Returns True if .config is missing or outdated. We always prompt for
# saving the configuration in that case.
print(_kconf.load_config())
if not os.path.exists(_conf_filename):
# No .config
return True
return _needs_save()
def _needs_save():
# Returns True if a just-loaded .config file is outdated (would get
# modified when saving)
if _kconf.missing_syms:
# Assignments to undefined symbols in the .config
return True
for sym in _kconf.unique_defined_syms:
if sym.user_value is None:
if sym.config_string:
# Unwritten symbol
return True
elif sym.orig_type in (BOOL, TRISTATE):
if sym.tri_value != sym.user_value:
# Written bool/tristate symbol, new value
return True
elif sym.str_value != sym.user_value:
# Written string/int/hex symbol, new value
return True
# No need to prompt for save
return False
# Global variables used below:
#
# _stdscr:
# stdscr from curses
#
# _cur_menu:
# Menu node of the menu (or menuconfig symbol, or choice) currently being
# shown
#
# _shown:
# List of items in _cur_menu that are shown (ignoring scrolling). In
# show-all mode, this list contains all items in _cur_menu. Otherwise, it
# contains just the visible items.
#
# _sel_node_i:
# Index in _shown of the currently selected node
#
# _menu_scroll:
# Index in _shown of the top row of the main display
#
# _parent_screen_rows:
# List/stack of the row numbers that the selections in the parent menus
# appeared on. This is used to prevent the scrolling from jumping around
# when going in and out of menus.
#
# _show_help/_show_name/_show_all:
# If True, the corresponding mode is on. See the module docstring.
#
# _conf_filename:
# File to save the configuration to
#
# _minconf_filename:
# File to save minimal configurations to
#
# _conf_changed:
# True if the configuration has been changed. If False, we don't bother
# showing the save-and-quit dialog.
#
# We reset this to False whenever the configuration is saved explicitly
# from the save dialog.
def _menuconfig(stdscr):
# Logic for the main display, with the list of symbols, etc.
global _stdscr
global _conf_filename
global _conf_changed
global _minconf_filename
global _show_help
global _show_name
_stdscr = stdscr
_init()
while True:
_draw_main()
curses.doupdate()
c = _getch_compat(_menu_win)
if c == curses.KEY_RESIZE:
_resize_main()
elif c in (curses.KEY_DOWN, "j", "J"):
_select_next_menu_entry()
elif c in (curses.KEY_UP, "k", "K"):
_select_prev_menu_entry()
elif c in (curses.KEY_NPAGE, "\x04"): # Page Down/Ctrl-D
# Keep it simple. This way we get sane behavior for small windows,
# etc., for free.
for _ in range(_PG_JUMP):
_select_next_menu_entry()
elif c in (curses.KEY_PPAGE, "\x15"): # Page Up/Ctrl-U
for _ in range(_PG_JUMP):
_select_prev_menu_entry()
elif c in (curses.KEY_END, "G"):
_select_last_menu_entry()
elif c in (curses.KEY_HOME, "g"):
_select_first_menu_entry()
elif c == " ":
# Toggle the node if possible
sel_node = _shown[_sel_node_i]
if not _change_node(sel_node):
_enter_menu(sel_node)
elif c in (curses.KEY_RIGHT, "\n", "l", "L"):
# Enter the node if possible
sel_node = _shown[_sel_node_i]
if not _enter_menu(sel_node):
_change_node(sel_node)
elif c in ("n", "N"):
_set_sel_node_tri_val(0)
elif c in ("m", "M"):
_set_sel_node_tri_val(1)
elif c in ("y", "Y"):
_set_sel_node_tri_val(2)
elif c in (curses.KEY_LEFT, curses.KEY_BACKSPACE, _ERASE_CHAR,
"\x1B", "h", "H"): # \x1B = ESC
if c == "\x1B" and _cur_menu is _kconf.top_node:
res = _quit_dialog()
if res:
return res
else:
_leave_menu()
elif c in ("o", "O"):
_load_dialog()
elif c in ("s", "S"):
filename = _save_dialog(_kconf.write_config, _conf_filename,
"configuration")
if filename:
_conf_filename = filename
_conf_changed = False
elif c in ("d", "D"):
filename = _save_dialog(_kconf.write_min_config, _minconf_filename,
"minimal configuration")
if filename:
_minconf_filename = filename
elif c == "/":
_jump_to_dialog()
# The terminal might have been resized while the fullscreen jump-to
# dialog was open
_resize_main()
elif c == "?":
_info_dialog(_shown[_sel_node_i], False)
# The terminal might have been resized while the fullscreen info
# dialog was open
_resize_main()
elif c in ("f", "F"):
_show_help = not _show_help
_set_style(_help_win, "show-help" if _show_help else "help")
_resize_main()
elif c in ("c", "C"):
_show_name = not _show_name
elif c in ("a", "A"):
_toggle_show_all()
elif c in ("q", "Q"):
res = _quit_dialog()
if res:
return res
def _quit_dialog():
if not _conf_changed:
return "No changes to save (for '{}')".format(_conf_filename)
while True:
c = _key_dialog(
"Quit",
" Save configuration?\n"
"\n"
"(Y)es (N)o (C)ancel",
"ync")
if c is None or c == "c":
return None
if c == "y":
# Returns a message to print
msg = _try_save(_kconf.write_config, _conf_filename, "configuration")
if msg:
return msg
elif c == "n":
return "Configuration ({}) was not saved".format(_conf_filename)
def _init():
# Initializes the main display with the list of symbols, etc. Also does
# misc. global initialization that needs to happen after initializing
# curses.
global _ERASE_CHAR
global _path_win
global _top_sep_win
global _menu_win
global _bot_sep_win
global _help_win
global _parent_screen_rows
global _cur_menu
global _shown
global _sel_node_i
global _menu_scroll
global _show_help
global _show_name
# Looking for this in addition to KEY_BACKSPACE (which is unreliable) makes
# backspace work with TERM=vt100. That makes it likely to work in sane
# environments.
_ERASE_CHAR = curses.erasechar()
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
# erasechar() returns a one-byte bytes object on Python 3. This sets
# _ERASE_CHAR to a blank string if it can't be decoded, which should be
# harmless.
_ERASE_CHAR = _ERASE_CHAR.decode("utf-8", "ignore")
_init_styles()
# Hide the cursor
_safe_curs_set(0)
# Initialize windows