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385 lines
15 KiB
Text
385 lines
15 KiB
Text
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NV-CONTROL X Extension - API specificiation v 1.6
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1. INTRODUCTION
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The NV-CONTROL X extension provides a mechanism for X clients to
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query and set configuration parameters of the NVIDIA X driver.
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State set by the NV-CONTROL X extension is assumed to be persistent
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only for the current server generation.
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Attributes are configurable on a per X screen basis, and some
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attributes are also configurable on a per display device basis.
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Addtionally, some attributes can only be queried, though most can
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be both queried and modified. The NV-CONTROL extension provides
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a mechanism to determine what values are valid for an attribute,
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if an attribute is read-only, if it can be read and written, if it
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requires a display device qualifier, and if the the attribute is
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available on the specified X screen.
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Finally, NV-CONTROL clients may also request to be notified when an
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attribute is changed by any other NV-CONTROL client.
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2. DISPLAY DEVICES
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A "Display Device" refers to some piece of hardware capable of
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displaying an image. Display devices are separated into the three
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general categories: analog CRTs, digital flatpanels, and TVs.
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Note that analog flatpanels fall under the category of analog CRTs.
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The NVIDIA X driver allows multiple display devices to display
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portions of the same X screen; this is configured through the
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TwinView feature of the NVIDIA X driver. TwinView is described in
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the Appendix on TwinView in the NVIDIA Linux driver text README file.
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A consequence of TwinView is that an X screen does not necessarily
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uniquely identify a display device.
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While most attributes controlled by the NV-CONTROL X extension
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apply to an entire X screen, some attributes can be controlled per
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display device. When querying and assigning such attributes, the
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particular display device is specified via a display device mask.
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A "display device mask" is an unsigned 32 bit value that identifies
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one or more display devices: the first 8 bits each identify a CRT, the
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next 8 bits each identify a TV, and the next 8 each identify a DFP.
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For example, 0x1 refers to CRT-0, 0x3 refers to CRT-0 and CRT-1,
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0x10001 refers to CRT-0 and DFP-0, etc.
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3. QUERYING THE EXTENSION
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NV-CONTROL clients can query for the existence of the NV-CONTROL X
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extension with:
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Bool XNVCTRLQueryExtension (Display *dpy,
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int *event_basep, int *error_basep);
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This function returns True if the extension exists, and returns False
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if the extension does not. It also returns the error and event bases.
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The arguments are:
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dpy - The connection to the X server.
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event_basep - The returned event base. Currently, only one
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extension specific event is defined.
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error_basep - The returned error base. Currently, no extension
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specific errors are defined.
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The version of the NV-CONTROL extension can be queried with:
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Bool XNVCTRLQueryVersion (Display *dpy, int *major, int *minor);
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This function returns True if the extension exists, and returns
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False if it does not. It also returns the major and minor version
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numbers of the extension. The arguments are:
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dpy - The connection to the X server.
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major - The returned major version number of the extension.
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minor - The returned minor version number of the extension.
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You can determine if a particular X screen is controlled by the
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NVIDIA X driver (and thus supports the NV-CONTROL X extension) with:
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Bool XNVCTRLIsNvScreen (Display *dpy, int screen);
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This function returns True if the specified screen is controlled by
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the NVIDIA driver, and thus supports the NV-CONTROL X extension.
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It returns False if the specified screen does not support the
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NV-CONTROL X extension. The arguments are:
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dpy - The connection to the X server.
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screen - the X screen to query.
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4. QUERYING VALID ATTRIBUTE VALUES
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NV-CONTROL clients can query the valid values for any integer
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attribute with:
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Bool XNVCTRLQueryValidAttributeValues (Display *dpy,
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int screen,
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unsigned int display_mask,
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unsigned int attribute,
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NVCTRLAttributeValidValuesRec
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*values);
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This function returns True if the attribute exists on the specified
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X screen, or False if the attribute is not available on the specified
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X screen.
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The arguments are:
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dpy - The connection to the X server.
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screen - the X screen to query.
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display_mask - for attributes that can be controlled on a per
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display device basis, the display_mask should
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uniquely identify a single display device.
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This argument is ignored for attributes that
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apply to the entire X screen.
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attribute - the integer attribute to query
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values - the returned NVCTRLAttributeValidValuesRec structure.
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The NVCTRLAttributeValidValuesRec structure is defined as:
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typedef struct _NVCTRLAttributeValidValues {
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int type;
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union {
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struct {
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int min;
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int max;
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} range;
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struct {
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unsigned int ints;
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} bits;
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} u;
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unsigned int permissions;
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} NVCTRLAttributeValidValuesRec;
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Where type can be one of:
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#define ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_UNKNOWN 0
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#define ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_INTEGER 1
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#define ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_BITMASK 2
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#define ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_BOOL 3
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#define ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_RANGE 4
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#define ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_INT_BITS 5
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ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_INTEGER indicates that the attribute is an integer
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value; any integer may be specified when setting this attribute.
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ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_BITMASK indicates that the attribute is an integer
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value, interpretted as a bitmask. This is the type, for example,
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of the NV_CTRL_CONNECTED_DISPLAYS attribute.
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ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_BOOL indicates that the attribute is a boolean;
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valid values are 1 (on/true) and 0 (off/false).
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ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_RANGE indicates that the attribute can have any
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integer value between NVCTRLAttributeValidValues.u.range.min and
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NVCTRLAttributeValidValues.u.range.max (inclusive).
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ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_INT_BITS indicates that the attribute can
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only have certain integer values, indicated by which bits in
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NVCTRLAttributeValidValues.u.bits.ints are on (for example: if bit
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0 is on, then 0 is a valid value; if bit 5 is on, then 5 is a valid
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value, etc). This is the type, for example, of NV_CTRL_FSAA_MODE.
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The permissions field in NVCTRLAttributeValidValuesRec is a bitmask
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that can contain any of:
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#define ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_READ 0x1
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#define ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_WRITE 0x2
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#define ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_DISPLAY 0x4
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ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_READ indicates that the attribute is readable; in
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general, all attributes will be readable.
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ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_WRITE indicates that the attribute is writable;
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attributes may not be writable for various reasons: they represent
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static system information, they can only be changed by changing an
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XF86Config option, etc.
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ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_DISPLAY indicates that the attribute can be
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controlled on a per display device basis, and thus
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XNVCTRLQueryAttribute() and XNVCTRLSetAttribute() require that a
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display device be specified.
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The XNVCTRLQueryValidAttributeValues() function can cause the
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following X protocol errors:
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BadValue - The screen does not exist.
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BadMatch - The NVIDIA driver is not present on that screen.
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5. QUERYING ATTRIBUTE VALUES
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NV-CONTROL clients can query the current value of an integer
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attribute with:
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Bool XNVCTRLQueryAttribute (Display *dpy,
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int screen,
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unsigned int display_mask,
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unsigned int attribute,
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int *value);
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This function returns True if the attribute exists, and stores the
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current attribute value in the memory pointed to by the value
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argument. False is returned if the attribute does not exist on the
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specified X screen.
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The arguments are:
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dpy - The connection to the X server.
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screen - the X screen to query.
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display_mask - if the attribute requires a display device,
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then this indicates the display device to query;
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this field is ignored if the attribute is not
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display device specific. You can determine
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if an attribute is display device specific by
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querying the valid values and checking for the
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ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_DISPLAY bit in the permissions
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field.
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attribute - the attribute to query.
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value - the returned attribute value.
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This function can cause the following X protocol errors:
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BadValue - The screen does not exist.
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BadMatch - The NVIDIA driver is not present on that screen.
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NV-CONTROL clients can query the read-only string attributes with:
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Bool XNVCTRLQueryStringAttribute (Display *dpy,
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int screen,
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unsigned int display_mask,
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unsigned int attribute,
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char **ptr);
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This function returns True if the string attribute exists;
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or it returns False if the string attribute does not exist. If
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XNVCTRLQueryStringAttribute returns True, *ptr will point to an
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allocated string containing the string attribute requested. It is
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the caller's responsibility to free the string with XFree().
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The arguments are:
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dpy - The connection to the X server.
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screen - the X screen to query.
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display_mask - if the attribute requires a display device,
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then this indicates the display device to query;
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this field is ignored if the attribute is not
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display device specific.
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attribute - the string attribute to query
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ptr - the returned allocated string
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This function can cause the following X protocol errors:
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BadValue - The screen does not exist.
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BadMatch - The NVIDIA driver is not present on that screen.
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BadAlloc - Insufficient resources to fulfill the request.
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See NVCtrl.h (distributed in the src/libXNVCtrl/ directory of
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the nvidia-settings source package) for a list of possible string
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attributes.
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6. ASSIGNING ATTRIBUTE VALUES
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An integer attribute can be assigned a value with:
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void XNVCTRLSetAttribute (Display *dpy,
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int screen,
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unsigned int display_mask,
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unsigned int attribute,
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int value);
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This function sets the attribute to the given value. This function
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does not have a return value. Note that, because it does not
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return a value, XNVCTRLSetAttribute() only queues the request in
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the X command stream. The command will not actually be sent to
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the server until an X command that flushes the X command stream
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(such as XFlush(), or any API command that queries a value from the
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server) is called.
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The arguments are:
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dpy - The connection to the X server.
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screen - the X screen to query.
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display_mask - if the attribute requires a display device,
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then this indicates the display device to set;
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this field is ignored if the attribute is not
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display device specific. You can determine
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if an attribute is display device specific by
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querying the valid values and checking for the
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ATTRIBUTE_TYPE_DISPLAY bit in the permissions
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field.
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attribute - the attribute to set.
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value - the value the attribute should be set to.
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See NVCtrl.h (distributed in the src/libXNVCtrl/ directory of
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the nvidia-settings source package) for a list of possible integer
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attributes.
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This function can cause the following X protocol errors:
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BadMatch - The NVIDIA driver is not present on that screen.
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BadValue - The screen does not exist, or an invalid value is
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specified, or the attribute does not exist on the
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specified X screen, or the attribute requires a
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display device and display_mask does not uniquely
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identify a display device.
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Before calling XNVCTRLSetAttribute(), an NV-CONTROL client should
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use XNVCTRLQueryAttribute() or XNVCTRLQueryValidAttributeValues()
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to determine if the attribute exists on the specified X screen;
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if the attribute does not exist and XNVCTRLSetAttribute()
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is called for that attribute, then a BadValue X protocol error will
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be triggered.
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7. SELECTING EVENT NOTIFICATION
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NV-CONTROL clients can enable NV-CONTROL events with:
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Bool XNVCtrlSelectNotify (Display *dpy,
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int screen,
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int type,
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Bool onoff);
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This function returns True if the extension exists, or False if the
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extension does not exist. The arguments are:
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dpy - The connection to the X server.
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screen - the X screen on which to enable events.
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type - the type of event to enable; currently, the only NV-CONTROL
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event type is ATTRIBUTE_CHANGED_EVENT.
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onoff - whether to enable (True) or disable (False) receiving
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this event type.
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This function can cause the following X protocol errors:
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BadValue - The screen does not exist.
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BadMatch - The NVIDIA driver is not present on that screen.
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When an NV-CONTROL client changes an integer attribute value, all
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other NV-CONTROL clients with ATTRIBUTE_CHANGED_EVENT notificaion
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enabled will receive an XEvent where XEvent.type is equal to:
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event_base + ATTRIBUTE_CHANGED_EVENT
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where event_base is the event base returned by
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XNVCTRLQueryExtension(). The XEvent can then be cast as an
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XNVCtrlAttributeChangedEvent structure:
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typedef struct {
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int type;
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unsigned long serial;
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Bool send_event; /* always FALSE, we don't allow send_events */
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Display *display;
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Time time;
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int screen;
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unsigned int display_mask;
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unsigned int attribute;
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int value;
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} XNVCtrlAttributeChangedEvent;
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The screen, display_mask, attribute, and value fields correspond to
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the arguments passed to XNVCTRLSetAttribute().
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8. NV-CONTROL EXTENSION HISTORY
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1.0 - 1.5 NVIDIA Internal development versions
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1.6 Initial public version
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