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vt: properly ignore xterm-256 colour codes

This is not a bug on our side, but a misdesign in ITU T.416, yet with
all popular terminals supporting these codes, people consider this to
be a bug in Linux.  By breaking the design principles behind SGR codes
(gracefully ignoring unsupported ones should not require knowing about
them), 256 colour ones tend to turn blinking on before invoking an
arbitrary unrelated command.

This commit doesn't add such support, merely skips such codes without
ill effects.

Signed-off-by: Adam Borowski <kilobyte@angband.pl>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
hifive-unleashed-5.1
Adam Borowski 2013-07-12 22:23:41 +02:00 committed by Greg Kroah-Hartman
parent 6454588092
commit 3415097ff0
1 changed files with 22 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -1300,6 +1300,28 @@ static void csi_m(struct vc_data *vc)
case 27:
vc->vc_reverse = 0;
break;
case 38:
case 48: /* ITU T.416
* Higher colour modes.
* They break the usual properties of SGR codes
* and thus need to be detected and ignored by
* hand. Strictly speaking, that standard also
* wants : rather than ; as separators, contrary
* to ECMA-48, but no one produces such codes
* and almost no one accepts them.
*/
i++;
if (i > vc->vc_npar)
break;
if (vc->vc_par[i] == 5) /* 256 colours */
i++; /* ubiquitous */
else if (vc->vc_par[i] == 2) /* 24 bit colours */
i += 3; /* extremely rare */
/* Subcommands 3 (CMY) and 4 (CMYK) are so insane
* that detecting them is not worth the few extra
* bytes of kernel's size.
*/
break;
case 39:
vc->vc_color = (vc->vc_def_color & 0x0f) | (vc->vc_color & 0xf0);
break;