This package CYGPKG_DEVS_FRAMEBUF_SYNTH
provides a
framebuffer device driver for the eCos synthetic target.
The driver supports up to four framebuffer devices
fb0
, fb1
, fb2
and fb3
. The width, height, depth, and display
format of each framebuffer can be controlled via configuration
options. It is also possible to set a viewport for each device and to
enable page flipping.
To use the framebuffer support the eCos application must run inside an
X session, not from the console, and it must be started with
--io
to enable the I/O auxiliary. The I/O
auxiliary will start a separate instance of a host-side utility
framebuf for each target-side framebuffer
device. The framebuf utility can access the
eCos framebuffer data via a shared memory region and draw it to the
screen using X library calls. It needs the X server to run with a
TrueColor visual and a display of depth of 24 or 32 bits per pixel.
The synthetic target framebuffer driver depends on host-side support which must be built and installed. The relevant code resides in the host subdirectory of the synthetic target framebuffer package, and building it involves the standard configure, make and make install steps. This will build and install a utility program framebuf that does the actual drawing of the eCos framebuffer contents to the host-side X display. It will also install a Tcl script and some support files. framebuf is an X11 application so can only be built on Linux systems with the appropriate X11 development package or packages.
There are two main ways of building the host-side software. It is possible to build both the generic host-side software and all package-specific host-side software, including the framebuffer support, in a single build tree. This involves using the configure script at the toplevel of the eCos repository. For more information on this, see the README.host file at the top of the repository. Note that if you have an existing build tree which does not include the synthetic target framebuffer support then it will be necessary to rerun the toplevel configure script: the search for appropriate packages happens at configure time.
The alternative is to build just the host-side for this package.
This requires a separate build directory, building directly in the
source tree is disallowed. The configure options
are much the same as for a build from the toplevel, and the
README.host file can be consulted for more
details. It is essential that the framebuffer support be configured with
the same --prefix
option as other eCos host-side
software, especially the I/O auxiliary provided by the architectural
synthetic target HAL package, otherwise the I/O auxiliary will be
unable to locate the framebuffer support.
The package is loaded automatically when creating a configuration for
the synthetic target. However it is inactive unless the generic
framebuffer support CYGPKG_IO_FRAMEBUF
is also
added to the configuration, for example by ecosconfig
add framebuf.
By default the package enables a single framebuffer device
fb0
with a corresponding
cyg_fb
data structure
cyg_synth_fb0
. The default settings for this device
are 320 by 240 pixels, a depth of 8 bits per pixel, a paletted
display, no viewport support, and no page flipping. All of these
settings can be changed by configuration options inside the CDL
component CYGPKG_DEVS_FRAMEBUF_SYNTH_FB0
. The
supported display formats are: 8 bpp paletted; 8bpp true colour 332;
16bpp true 565; 16bpp true 555; and 32bpp 0888. This allows the
synthetic target to match the actual display capabilities of the
hardware that is being emulated. If the actual hardware has more than
one framebuffer device then this can be emulated by enabling
additional components
CYGPKG_DEVS_FRAMEBUF_SYNTH_FB1
…, and
setting the appropriate options.
In addition to the target-side configurability it is possible to
customize the host-side behaviour. For example, the default behaviour
is for fb0
to be drawn inside the I/O auxiliary's
main window, if it is not too large. fb1
,
fb2
and fb3
will be drawn inside
separate toplevel windows, as will fb0
if that has
been configured too large for embedding in the main window. This
behaviour can be changed by providing a custom Tcl/Tk procedure that
creates the containing frame for the framebuffer device.
Customization involves adding a synth_device
framebuf
section to the .tdf
target definition file, usually default.tdf or
~/.ecos/synth/default.tdf.
proc my_framebuf_create_frame { … } { … } synth_device framebuf { fb2_magnification 2 create_frame_proc my_framebuf_create_frame } |
The pixel size on the host display may be rather smaller than on the
final hardware, causing a serious mismatch between the application's
appearance when using synthetic target emulation and when using real
hardware. To reduce this problem the host-side can magnify the
target-side framebuffer devices. In the example above each target-side
pixel in device fb2
will be drawn using 2*2 pixels
on the host side. Valid magnifications are 1, 2, 3 and 4. With a
magnification of 4 an eCos framebuffer device of 320*240 pixels will
be drawn in an X window of 1280*960 pixels.
The create_frame_proc
entry can be used to
specify a custom Tcl/Tk procedure that will create the containing Tk
frames for the host-side displays. This procedure can be written for a
specific configuration, but it is supplied with all the parameters
associated with the framebuffer device so can be more generic. An
example is supplied in the package's misc subdirectory:
Create a configuration for the synthetic target with the default template.
Import the example.ecm configuration fragment from the misc subdirectory. This will add the generic framebuffer support package, enable all four framebuffer devices, and configure each device. Build the resulting configuration.
Compile the example.c program and link it against the eCos configuration.
Incorporate the example.tdf fragment into the appropriate target definition file, typically default.tdf or ~/.ecos/synth/default.tdf.
Run the example executable. The four framebuffer devices should get
instantiated in a separate window in a single column.
FB0
just contains a static display.
FB1
supports two pages, one with vertical stripes
and one with horizontal stripes, and the two pages are flipped at
regular intervals. FB2
has a static display similar
to FB0
, but is drawn in a viewport of only 160x120
pixels. However example.tdf magnifies this by 2
so it appears the same size as the other devices. The application
moves the viewport around the underlying framebuffer device.
FB3
is also a static display, a simple set of
vertical stripes. However this framebuffer is paletted and the palette
is changed at regular intervals, causing apparent movement.