| Software cursor for VGA by Pavel Machek <pavel@atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz> |
| ======================= and Martin Mares <mj@atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz> |
| |
| Linux now has some ability to manipulate cursor appearance. Normally, you |
| can set the size of hardware cursor (and also work around some ugly bugs in |
| those miserable Trident cards--see #define TRIDENT_GLITCH in drivers/video/ |
| vgacon.c). You can now play a few new tricks: you can make your cursor look |
| like a non-blinking red block, make it inverse background of the character it's |
| over or to highlight that character and still choose whether the original |
| hardware cursor should remain visible or not. There may be other things I have |
| never thought of. |
| |
| The cursor appearance is controlled by a "<ESC>[?1;2;3c" escape sequence |
| where 1, 2 and 3 are parameters described below. If you omit any of them, |
| they will default to zeroes. |
| |
| Parameter 1 specifies cursor size (0=default, 1=invisible, 2=underline, ..., |
| 8=full block) + 16 if you want the software cursor to be applied + 32 if you |
| want to always change the background color + 64 if you dislike having the |
| background the same as the foreground. Highlights are ignored for the last two |
| flags. |
| |
| The second parameter selects character attribute bits you want to change |
| (by simply XORing them with the value of this parameter). On standard VGA, |
| the high four bits specify background and the low four the foreground. In both |
| groups, low three bits set color (as in normal color codes used by the console) |
| and the most significant one turns on highlight (or sometimes blinking--it |
| depends on the configuration of your VGA). |
| |
| The third parameter consists of character attribute bits you want to set. |
| Bit setting takes place before bit toggling, so you can simply clear a bit by |
| including it in both the set mask and the toggle mask. |
| |
| Examples: |
| ========= |
| |
| To get normal blinking underline, use: echo -e '\033[?2c' |
| To get blinking block, use: echo -e '\033[?6c' |
| To get red non-blinking block, use: echo -e '\033[?17;0;64c' |