X11::Protocol::Ext::MIT_SHM (3)
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NAME
X11::Protocol::Ext::MIT_SHM - images in SysV style shared memorySYNOPSIS
use X11::Protocol; my $X = X11::Protocol->new; $X->init_extension('MIT-SHM') or print "MIT-SHM extension not available"; use IPC::SysV; my $shmid = shmget (IPC::SysV::IPC_PRIVATE(), 100000, # bytes IPC::SysV::IPC_CREAT() | 0666); my $shmseg = $X->new_rsrc; $X->MitShmAttach ($shmseg, $shmid, 0); my ($depth, $visual, $size) = $X->MitShmGetImage ($window, 0,0, 16,16, ~0, 'ZPixmap', $shmseg, 0); my $image_bytes; shmread ($shmid, $image_bytes, 0, 16*16*$bpp) || die "$!"; # $image_bytes is the top-left 16x16 pixels of the screen
DESCRIPTION
The MIT-SHM extension allows a client and server running on the same machine to transfer image data through System-V shared memory segments.The client creates a memory segment with "shmget()" (see ``shmget'' in perlfunc and ``SysV
The aim is to avoid sending large images through the I/O connection when on the same machine. Memory is faster, and may help avoid request size limits for very big images.
Byte order, padding, etc, required or generated in images is specified by the server "$X->{'image_byte_order'}", "$X->{'pixmap_formats'}", etc, the same as for the core "GetImage()" and "PutImage()". It's up to the client to adapt to the server's layout, which can be a bit of a chore.
Shm from Perl
A shared memory segment can be created from Perl with "shmget()", then read or write its contents with "shmread()" and "shmwrite()". Those functions attach and detach it each time with "shmat()" and "shmdt()" system calls, which is fine for grabbing the lot, but will be a bit slow for lots of little accesses."IPC::SysV" (version 2 up) offers a "shmat()" to keep the block attached and "memread()" and "memwrite()" to access it (see IPC::SysV). See IPC::SharedMem for an object-oriented wrapper around this too.
Incidentally, if "shmget()" is not available on the system then Perl's "shmget()" croaks. It's always possible for it to return "undef" too for not enough memory etc. With that, not being on the same machine, not having identifiable perms, etc, there's a quite a few cases where a fallback to plain I/O will be necessary.
Shm Permissions
A SysV shared memory segment has owner/group/other permission bits similar to a file. The server will only attach to segments which the requesting clientThe server can usually determine a client's
You can make a shm segment world-readable to ensure the server can read it. If the data for a PutImage etc is already from a world-readable file or is public then it doesn't matter who else reads the segment. Remember to ask for read-only in the "MitShmAttach()" so the server doesn't want writable too.
There's probably no need to risk relaxing permissions for writing. Chances are that if client
It's usual for the server to run as root, hence it's own permission checks, but it's also possible for the server to be an ordinary user. In that case the shm segments it can access will be limited in the usual way for the user it's running as.
REQUESTS
The following requests are available after an "init_extension()" per ``
my $bool = $X->init_extension('MIT-SHM');
In the following $shmid is the shared memory
- ($server_major, $server_minor, $uid, $gid, $shared_pixmaps, $pixmap_format) = $X->MitShmQueryVersion ()
-
Return information about the MIT-SHM extension. Unlike other extensions
there's no client version / server version negotiation.
$server_major and $server_minor are the extension version number implemented by the server.
$uid and $gid (integers) are the server's effective user
IDand groupID("geteuid()" and "getegid()"). Zero means root.$shared_pixmaps is non-zero if pixmaps in shared memory are supported (see "MitShmCreatePixmap()" below). $pixmap_format (an ImageFormat) is ``XYPixmap'' or ``ZPixmap'' for the layout required in such a pixmap.
- $X->MitShmAttach ($shmseg, $shmid, $readonly)
-
Attach the server to a given shared memory segment. $shmseg is a new XIDto represent the attached memory.
my $shmseg = $X->new_rsrc; $X->MitShmAttach ($shmseg, $shmid, 0); # read/write
$shmid is the shared memory
IDto attach, as obtained from "shmget()" (see ``shmget'' in perlfunc).$readonly is 1 to have the server attach read-only, or 0 for read-write. Read-only suffices for "MitShmPutImage()", but read-write is needed for "MitShmGetImage()" and "MitShmCreatePixmap()".
- $X->MitShmDetach ($shmseg)
-
Detach the server from shared memory $shmseg (an XID) and release thatXID.
$X->MitShmDetach ($shmseg);
- $X->MitShmPutImage ($drawable, $gc, $depth, $total_width, $total_height, $src_x, $src_y, $src_width, $src_height, $dst_x, $dst_y, $format, $send_event, $shmseg, $offset)
-
Put image data from $shmseg (an XID) to $drawable. The parameters are similar to the core "PutImage()".
$depth is the depth of the image. For $format ``Bitmap'' this must be 1 and the foreground and background colours of $gc are then drawn. For $format ``XYPixmap'' and ``ZPixmap'' $depth must be the depth of $drawable.
$total_width,$total_height is the full size of the image in the shared memory. $src_x,$src_y and $src_width,$src_height are the portion of it to draw. $dst_x,$dst_y is where in $drawable to put it.
$format is ``Bitmap'', ``XYPixmap'' or ``ZPixmap'' (an ImageFormat).
$send_event is 1 to have an "MitShmCompletionEvent" sent to the client when drawing is finished (see ``
EVENTS''below), or 0 if that's not wanted.$offset is a byte offset into the shared memory where the image starts.
- ($depth, $visual, $size) = $X->MitShmGetImage ($drawable, $x, $y, $width, $height, $planemask, $format, $shmseg, $offset)
-
Copy an image from $drawable to shared memory $shmseg (an XID). The parameters are similar to the core "GetImage()".
$x,$y, $width,$height are the part of $drawable to get. $planemask is a bit mask for which bit planes of the pixels are wanted.
$format is ``XYPixmap'' or ``ZPixmap'' for the layout to be written to the shared memory, and $offset is a byte offset into the memory where the image should start.
The returned $depth (an integer) is the depth of $drawable. $visual (integer
ID) is its visual for a window, or ``None'' for a pixmap. $size is how many bytes were written.$shmseg must be attached read-write in the "MitShmAttach()" or an "Access" error results.
- $X->MitShmCreatePixmap ($pixmap, $drawable, $depth, $width, $height, $shmseg, $offset)
-
Create $pixmap (a new XID) as a pixmap with contents in shared memory $shmseg (anXID). When the client reads or writes that memory it changes the pixmap contents. The parameters are similar to the core "CreatePixmap()".
my $pixmap = $X->new_rsrc; $X->MitShmCreatePixmap ($pixmap, # new XID $X->root, # for the screen $X->root_depth, # depth 10,10, # width,height $shmseg, 0); # byte offset into shm
The "MitShmQueryVersion()" request above reports whether shared memory pixmaps are supported, and if so whether they're ``XYPixmap'' or ``ZPixmap'' layout.
$drawable is used to determine the screen for the new $pixmap. $offset is a byte offset into the shared memory where the pixmap data will begin.
If damage objects from the
DAMAGEextension (see X11::Protocol::Ext::DAMAGE) are monitoring a shared $pixmap then client writes to the shared memory generally don't produce "DamageNotify" events. The client can use "DamageAdd()" requests (in Damage version 1.1) to tell the server about changes made, which it will broadcast to interested damage objects. It's probably unusual to have damage objects listening to a shared pixmap though.
EVENTS
"MitShmCompletionEvent" is sent to the client when requested in an "MitShmPutImage()". It says the server has finished reading the memory. The event has the usual fields
name "MitShmCompletionEvent" synthetic true if from a SendEvent code integer opcode sequence_number integer
and event-specific fields
drawable XID, target as from request shmseg XID, source as from request offset integer, byte offset as from request major_opcode integer, MIT-SHM extension code minor_opcode integer, 3 for MitShmPutImage
"major_opcode" and "minor_opcode" are the codes of the originating "MitShmPutImage()". These fields are similar to the core "GraphicsExposure" and "NoExposure" events, but here there's only one request ("MitShmPutImage()") which gives a completion event.
ERRORS
Error type ``ShmSeg'' is a bad $shmseg resourceSEE ALSO
X11::Protocol, ``shmget'' in perlfunc, ``SysVX11::Protocol::Ext::Damage
/usr/share/doc/x11proto-xext-dev/shm.txt.gz, /usr/share/X11/doc/hardcopy/Xext/mit-shm.PS.gz
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Copyright 2011 Kevin RydeX11-Protocol-Other is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the
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