Elektrified X.org released (was: X configuration paradigm, and a proposal)

Avi Alkalay avibrazil at gmail.com
Tue Nov 30 05:25:09 PST 2004


For people that still don't know the Elektra Project
(http://elektra.sourceforge.net), it provides an alternative back-end
for text configuration files. So instead, for example, the
human-readable-only xorg.conf file, we'll have a hierarchy of
key/value pairs easily and precisely accessible by X.org and also any
other programs through an API or command, and human beings too.
Same concept as GConf, but designed for system-wide use.

We've been working on X.org source code to do exactly what we just
described above. And it is ready for use, tested even with very
complex X.org configurations. A patched X server will convert your
xorg.conf file automatically, even the most complex ones, including
non-documented parameters.

It is available at 
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=117521
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=117521&package_id=136552

You'll find there the patch against X.org source, the patch against
Fedora Core 3 RPM spec file (to see how to build it), and the README
file, which is pasted in this e-mail bellow.

We'll write patches for other software, and everybody is invited to
join this integration effort.

Thank you,
Avi Alkalay
Elektra Project <http://elektra.sf.net>

----------------------README-------------------------
ELEKTRIFIED X.ORG: PRECISE AND PROGRAMATICALY EASY X CONFIGURATION

   Your X server has to work with your installed video card, monitor, find
   your font server and dirs, modules, extensions, drivers, plugins.
   You have to tell him how to integrate it all through its xorg.conf file.
   If you need to change something, you start a text editor and use your
   human brain and eyes to find the correct line, understand it, have the
   skills to change it, and change it in order to work.
   
   This is good for advanced technical guys, but very bad for people that
   don't have this skills, and in fact, don't really want to. He just
   wants to change the screen resolution to make that projector work with his
   laptop, and go ahead with his sales presentation. This is just an example.
   
   The point is: it is very difficult to make simple programs or scripts
   that make simple changes to X configuration. Another example is a monitor
   vendor that wants to support X, and for this he'd like to provide easy
   installation of his product, without having to ask his user to read
   documentation about horizontal Sync, and vertical refresh rates. For him
   again is difficult to write some simple software that preciselly changes X
   configuration to work correctly with his product.
   
   The xorg.conf file (as most Unix configuration files) was designed for
   human beings.
   
   The Elektra Project (http://elektra.sourceforge.net) introduces a new way
   to handle configurations through a clean API (or command line
   tool) that accesses atomic configuration data, into a standarized
   hierarchycal tree of key-value pairs. It is similar to GConf, but
   designed for system-wide use, which also implies it does not have
   dependencies.
   
   And this is what this patch is about: to make the X server look for its
   configurations into a machine-ready tree of key-value pairs, instead of
   the human-ready xorg.conf.
  
   So where you had to look for "Device radeon" into a "Section Device",
   with the key/value tree, X and other programs can look for it
   preciselly at
   
      system/sw/xorg/current/Devices/Videocard0/Driver = radeon

   
   Where you once had to "vi" your "Section Monitor", now X and other
   programs can do it accessing the keys:
   
      system/sw/xorg/current/Monitors/Monitor0/HorizSync = 31.5 - 48.5
      system/sw/xorg/current/Monitors/Monitor0/VertRefresh = 40.0 - 70.0
      system/sw/xorg/current/Monitors/Monitor0/ModelName = IBM T40 LCD Panel
      system/sw/xorg/current/Monitors/Monitor0/VendorName = IBM
      system/sw/xorg/current/Monitors/Monitor0/Options/dpms
  
   
   Where once the salesman above had to "vi" the Screen Section to change
   the resolution, color depth, etc, a program can help him accessing:
   
      system/sw/xorg/current/Screens/Screen0/Displays/00/Depth=24
      system/sw/xorg/current/Screens/Screen0/Displays/00/Modes=1024x768

   
   And so on....
   
   We believe an elektrified X server can leverage more plug-and-play
   configurations, providing configuration power to HW vendors in a
   very simple way, and making users experience less painfull.
   
   

   
      

BEHAVIOR OF AN ELEKTRIFIED X SERVER

   A patched X server will look for its configuration keys under the
   namespace:
   
      system/sw/xorg/current   first, then if not found it tries
      system/sw/xorg
      
   If not found, it will default to some xorg.conf file, parse it, and store
   in its internal structures, then convert and commit it to a set of
   keys under system/sw/xorg/current, and reload these keys.
   
   So you get automatic one-time conversion from xorg.conf to the
   hierarchycal configuration key/value pairs 
   
   Very complex examples of xorg.conf files were tested for conversion. Even
   undocumented configuration parameters (because the original source was
   used as the reference).
   
   The Elektrifyied X server also works for the Red Hat Graphical Boot,
   where you still don't have mounted partitions, network, etc.

   
      


ELEKTRIFING X.ORG

   You'll need the elektra-devel package installed in order to build X with
   Elektra support.

     1. Download and unpack X.org source code from
     2. Download the xorg-x11-6.8.1-elektra.patch file from
         http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=117521&package_id=136552
     3. Apply it:
         ~/src/xc$ cd ..
         ~/src$ patch -p0 < xorg-x11-6.8.1-elektra.patch
         ~/src$ cd xc
         ~/src/xc$ # ...configure your build in host.def
     4. Enable the patch:
         ~/src/xc$ echo "#define UseElektra" >> config/cf/host.def
     5. Build X.Org

   You'll find the new X server as file xc/programs/Xserver/Xorg .
   
   The patch will add the following files:

      xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/parser/
        elektra.h (exported methods)
        elektra.c (key fetching and X structs integration business logic)
        xorg-example.conf (a very complex conf file to test conversion)
        xelektrify.c (cmd to convert xorg.conf->keys and vice-versa)
        README.Elektra (this file)
   
   And it will instrument 
   xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/common/xf86Config.c::xf86HandleConfigFile()
   to trigger the one-time conversion, and key fetching logic.
   
   And instrument the Imakefiles for correct builds:
   
      xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/parser/Imakefile
      xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/common/Imakefile
      xc/programs/Xserver/Imakefile
      
   If "#define UseElektra" is not present in host.def, the patch is
   completelly disabled, and you'll get a binary-identicall built as before
   applying the patch. All patched code are surrounded by #ifdefs.

   
   
      

ELEKTRA MEETS X.ORG SOURCE CODE
or how we wrote the patch....

   X.org has an xorg.conf parser that takes this steps to handle
   configuration:
   
      1. Lexically parse the xorg.conf file
      2. Put each Section info in an equivalent struct
      3. Encapsulate all structs together and pass them to a validator
      4. Use structs to define X behavior

   This process is triggered by the xf86HandleConfigFile() method from
   
      xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/common/xf86Config.c
   
   Each xorg.conf Section has an equivalent structure defined in

      xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/parser/xf86Parser.h
      
   and the lexycall analyzer code to parse each Section is under
   
      xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/parser/
   
   A fully parsed file has its equivalent structures encapsulated in a
   parent XF86Config struct. We have:
   
      struct XF86ConfModuleRec for the "Section Modules"
      struct XF86ConfMonitorRec for the "Section Monitor"
      struct XF86ConfDeviceRec for the "Section Device"
      etc...
      
   These structs are a pure computer representation of the text in each
   Section, so the methods under "parser/" convert text to structs, and
   the structs to text. This is how original X.org source handles xorg.conf.
   
   The Elektrification add methods that act in steps 1 and 2 above. And also
   include methods to convert each struct to a KeySet. Both old (xorg.conf)
   and new (Elektra) ways to get configuration information can live together
   and they are actually used to automatically convert xorg.conf to keys. So
   at the first time you'll run your elektrified X server, it will:

      1. Not find configuration keys (because it is the first time)
      2. Parse xorg.conf into structs
      3. Convert structs to Keys
      4. Commit the keys to key database
      5. Reload configurations from the key database

   See the behavior in the previous section.
      
   After assembling the XF86Config C structure, X will decode all its info
   into more practicall parameters for its further operation.
   
   As a side note, with a key/value pair configuration hierarchy paradigm,
   the XF86Config assembling code (the parser) could be avoided, making X
   look for its configurations in a programatically easier, yet
   human-readable, configuration organization.
   We worked at the parser level to keep compatibility and to not go too
   deep in X.org source code.

   
http://elektra.sourceforge.net
The Elektra Project
Avi Alkalay
November 2004



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