/* -*- mode: C; c-file-style: "gnu"; indent-tabs-mode: nil; -*- */ /** * \file bell.h Ring the bell or flash the screen * * Sometimes, X programs "ring the bell", whatever that means. Mutter lets * the user configure the bell to be audible or visible (aka visual), and * if it's visual it can be configured to be frame-flash or fullscreen-flash. * We never get told about audible bells; X handles them just fine by itself. * * The visual bell was the result of a discussion in Bugzilla here: * . */ /* * Copyright (C) 2002 Sun Microsystems Inc. * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as * published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the * License, or (at your option) any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU * General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA * 02111-1307, USA. */ #include #ifdef HAVE_XKB #include #endif #include "display-private.h" #include "frame.h" #ifdef HAVE_XKB /** * Gives the user some kind of visual bell; in fact, this is our response * to any kind of bell request, but we set it up so that we only get * notified about visual bells, and X deals with audible ones. * * If the configure script found we had no XKB, this does not exist. * * \param display The display the bell event came in on * \param xkb_ev The bell event we just received */ void meta_bell_notify (MetaDisplay *display, XkbAnyEvent *xkb_ev); #endif /** * Turns the bell to audible or visual. This tells X what to do, but * not Mutter; you will need to set the "visual bell" pref for that. * * If the configure script found we had no XKB, this is a no-op. * * \param display The display we're configuring * \param audible True for an audible bell, false for a visual bell */ void meta_bell_set_audible (MetaDisplay *display, gboolean audible); /** * Initialises the bell subsystem. This involves intialising * XKB (which, despite being a keyboard extension, is the * place to look for bell notifications), then asking it * to send us bell notifications, and then also switching * off the audible bell if we're using a visual one ourselves. * * Unlike most X extensions we use, we only initialise XKB here * (rather than in main()). It's possible that XKB is not * installed at all, but if that was known at build time * we will have HAVE_XKB undefined, which will cause this * function to be a no-op. * * \param display The display which is opening * * \bug There is a line of code that's never run that tells * XKB to reset the bell status after we quit. Bill H said * () * that XFree86's implementation is broken so we shouldn't * call it, but that was in 2002. Is it working now? */ gboolean meta_bell_init (MetaDisplay *display); /** * Shuts down the bell subsystem. * * \param display The display which is closing * * \bug This is never called! If we had XkbSetAutoResetControls * enabled in meta_bell_init(), this wouldn't be a problem, but * we don't. */ void meta_bell_shutdown (MetaDisplay *display); /** * Deals with a frame being destroyed. This is important because if we're * using a visual bell, we might be flashing the edges of the frame, and * so we'd have a timeout function waiting ready to un-flash them. If the * frame's going away, we can tell the timeout not to bother. * * \param frame The frame which is being destroyed */ void meta_bell_notify_frame_destroy (MetaFrame *frame);