FvwmPerl - Online in the Cloud

This is the command FvwmPerl that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator

PROGRAM:

NAME


FvwmPerl - the fvwm perl manipulator and preprocessor

SYNOPSIS


FvwmPerl should be spawned by fvwm(1) for normal functionality.

To run this module, place this command somewhere in the configuration:

Module FvwmPerl [params]

or:

ModuleSynchronize FvwmPerl [params]

if you want to immediately start to send commands to FvwmPerl.

DESCRIPTION


This module is intended to extend fvwm commands with the perl scripting power. It enables
to embed perl expressions in the fvwm config files and construct fvwm commands.

INVOCATION


If you want to invoke the unique and persistent instanse of FvwmPerl, it is suggested to
do this from the StartFunction. Calling it from the top is also possible, but involves
some issues not discussed here.

AddToFunc StartFunction I Module FvwmPerl

There are several command line switches:

FvwmPerl [ --eval line ] [ --load file ] [ --preprocess [ --quote char ] [ --winid wid ] [
--cmd ] [ --nosend ] [ --noremove ] [ line | file ] ] [ --export [names] ] [ --stay ] [
--nolock ] [ alias ]

Long switches may be abbreviated to short one-letter switches.

-e|--eval line - evaluate the given perl code

-l|--load file - evaluate perl code in the given file

-p|--preprocess [ file ] - preprocess the given fvwm config file

The following 5 options are only valid together with --preprocess option.

-c|--cmd line - an fvwm command to be preprocessed instead of file

-q|--quote char - change the default '%' quote

-w|--winid wid - set explicit window context (should begin with digit, may be in oct or
hex form; this window id overwrites implicit window context if any)

--nosend - do not send the preprocessed file to fvwm for Reading, the default is send.
Useful for preprocessing non fvwm config files.

--noremove - do not remove the preprocessed file after sending it to fvwm for Reading, the
default is remove. Useful for debugging.

-x|--export [names] - define fvwm shortcut functions (by default, two functions named
"Eval" and "."). This option implies --stay.

-s|--stay - continues an execution after --eval, --load or --preprocess are processed. By
default, the module is not persistent in this case, i.e. --nostay is assumed.

--nolock - when one of the 3 action options is given, this option causes unlocking fvwm
immediately. By default the requested action is executed synchronously; this only makes
difference when invoked like:

ModuleSynchronous FvwmPerl --preprocess someconfig.ppp

If --nolock is added here, ModuleSynchronous returns immediately. Note that Module returns
immediately regardless of this option.

USING ALIAS


Aliases allow to have several module invocations and work separately with all invocations,
here is an example:

ModuleSynchronous FvwmPerl FvwmPerl-JustTest
SendToModule FvwmPerl-JustTest eval $a = 2 + 2; $b = $a
SendToModule FvwmPerl-JustTest eval cmd("Echo 2 + 2 = $b")
KillModule FvwmPerl FvwmPerl-JustTest

PREPROCESSING EXAMPLE


One of the effective proprocessing solutions is to pass the whole fvwm configuration with
embeded perl code to "FvwmPerl --preprocess". An alternative approach is to write a perl
script that produces fvwm commands and sends them for execution, this script may be loaded
using "FvwmPerl --load". There are hovewer intermediate solutions that preprocess only
separate configuration lines (or alternatively, execute separate perl commands that
produce fvwm commands).

The following code snippet adds ability of arithmetics and string scripting to certain
lines that need this. To use this, you want to start FvwmPerl as your first command so
that other commands may be asked to be preprosessed.

ModuleSynchronize FvwmPerl

AddToFunc .
+ I SendToModule FvwmPerl preprocess -c -- $*

. Exec exec xterm -name xterm-%{++$i}% # use unique name

. GotoDesk 0 %{ $[desk.n] + 1 }% # go to next desk

. Exec exec %{ -x "/usr/bin/X11/aterm" ? "aterm" : "xterm" }% -sb

# center a window
Next (MyWindow) . Move
%{($WIDTH - $[w.width]) / 2}%p %{($HEIGHT - $[w.height]) / 2}%p

. Exec exec xmessage %{2 + 2}% # simple calculator

. %{main::show_message(2 + 2, "Yet another Calculator"); ""}%

ACTIONS


There are several actions that FvwmPerl may perform:

eval perl-code
Evaluate a line of perl code.

A special function cmd("command") may be used in perl code to send commands back to
fvwm.

If perl code contains an error, it is printed to the standard error stream with the
[FvwmPerl][eval]: header prepended.

load file-name
Load a file of perl code. If the file is not fully qualified, it is searched in the
user directory $FVWM_USERDIR (usually ~/.fvwm) and the system wide data directory
$FVWM_DATADIR.

A special function cmd("command") may be used in perl code to send commands back to
fvwm.

If perl code contains an error, it is printed to the standard error stream with the
[FvwmPerl][load]: header prepended.

preprocess [-q|--quote char] [-c|--cmd] [line | file]
Preprocess fvwm config file or (if --cmd is given) line. This file contains lines that
are not touched (usually fvwm commands) and specially preformatted perl code that is
processed and replaced. Text enclosed in %{ ... }% delimiters, that may start anywhere
on the line and end anywhere on the same or another line, is perl code.

The quote parameter changes perl code delimiters. If a single char is given, like
'@', the delimiters are @{ ... }@. If the given quote is 2 chars, like <>, the quotes
are <{ ... }>

The perl code is substituted for the result of its evaluation. I.e. %{$a = "c"; ++$a}%
is replaced with "d".

The evaluation is unlike eval and load is done under the package PreprocessNamespace
and without use strict, so you are free to use any variable names without fear of
conflicts. Just don't use uninitialized variables to mean undef or empty list (they
may be in fact initialized by the previous preprocess action), and do a clean-up if
needed. The variables and function in the main package are still available, like
::cmd() or ::skip(), but it is just not a good idea to access them while
preprocessing.

There is a special function include(file) that loads a file, preprocesses it and
returns the preprocessed result. Avoid recursion.

If any embedded perl code contains an error, it is printed to the standard error
stream and prepended with the [FvwmPerl][preprocess]: header. The result of
substitution is empty in this case.

The following variables may be used in the perl code:

$USER, $DISPLAY, $WIDTH, $HEIGHT, $FVWM_VERSION, $FVWM_MODULEDIR, $FVWM_DATADIR,
$FVWM_USERDIR

The following line based directives are recognized when preprocessing. They are
processed after the perl code (if any) is substituted.

%Repeat count
Causes the following lines to be repeated count times.

%ModuleConfig module-name [ destroy ]
Causes the following lines to be interpreted as the given module configuration. If
"destroy" is specified the previous module configuration is destroyed first.

%Prefix prefix
Prefixes the following lines with the quoted prefix.

%End any-optional-comment
Ends any of the directives described above, may be nested.

Examples:

%Prefix "AddToFunc SwitchToWindow I"
Iconify off
WindowShade off
Raise
WarpToWindow 50 50
%End

%ModuleConfig FvwmPager destroy
Colorset 0
Font lucidasans-10
DeskTopScale 28
MiniIcons
%End ModuleConfig FvwmPager

%Prefix "All (MyWindowToAnimate) ResizeMove "
100 100 %{($WIDTH - 100) / 2}% %{($HEIGHT - 100) / 2}%
%Repeat %{$count}%
br w+2c w+2c w-1c w-1c
%End
%Repeat %{$count}%
br w-2c w-2c w+1c w+1c
%End
%End Prefix

Additional preprocess parameters --nosend and --noremove may be given too. See their
description at the top.

export [func-names]
Send to fvwm the definition of shortcut functions that help to activate different
actions of the module (i.e. eval, load and preprocess).

Function names (func-names) may be separated by commas or/and whitespace. By default,
two functions "Eval" and "." are assumed.

The actual action defined in a function is guessed from the function name if possible,
where function name "." is reserved for preprocess action.

For example, any of these two fvwm commands

SendToModule MyPerl export PerlEval,PP
FvwmPerl --export PerlEval,PP MyPerl

define the following two shortcut functions:

DestroyFunc PerlEval
AddToFunc I SendToModule MyPerl eval $*
DestroyFunc PP
AddToFunc I SendToModule MyPerl preprocess -c -- $*

These 4 actions may be requested in one of 3 ways: 1) in the command line when FvwmPerl is
invoked (in this case FvwmPerl is short-lived unless --stay or --export is also given), 2)
by sending the corresponding message in fvwm config using SendToModule, 3) by calling the
corresponding perl function in perl code.

FUNCTIONS


There are several functions that perl code may call:

cmd($fvwm_command)
In case of eval or load - send back to fvwm a string $fvwm_command. In case of
preprocess - append a string $fvwm_command to the output of the embedded perl code.

do_eval($perl_code)
This function is equivalent to the eval functionality on the string $perl_code,
described above.

load($filename)
This function is equivalent to the load functionality on the file $filename, described
above.

preprocess(@params, ["-c $command"] [$filename])
This function is equivalent to the preprocess functionality with the given parameters
and the file $filename described above.

export($func_names, [$do_unexport])
This function is equivalent to the export functionality with the given $func_names,
described above. May also unexport the function names if the second parameter is true.

Function names should be separated by commas or/and whitespace. If $func_names is
empty then functions "Eval" and "." are assumed.

stop()
Terminates the module.

skip()
Skips the rest of the event callback code, i.e. the module returns to listen to new
module events.

unlock()
Unsynchronizes the event callback from fvwm. This may be useful to prevent deadlocks,
i.e. usually fvwm kills the non-responding module if the event callback is not
finished in ModuleTimeout seconds. This prevents it.

This example causes FvwmPerl to suspend its execution for one minute:

SendModule FvwmPerl eval unlock(); sleep(60);

However, verify that there is no way a new message is sent by fvwm while the module is
busy, and fvwm stays locked on this new message for too long. See also the detach
solution if you need long lasting operations.

detach()
Forks and detaches the rest of the event callback code from the main process. This may
be useful to prevent killing the module if its event callback should take a long time
to complete and it may be done in the detached child. The detached child may still
send commands to fvwm (don't rely on this), but not receive the events of course, it
exits immediately after the callback execution is finished.

If you use detach(), better only send commands to fvwm in one process (the main one or
the detached one), doing otherwise may often cause conflicts.

show_message($msg, $title[, $use_stderr_too=1])
Shows a dialog window with the given message, using whichever X tool is found in the
system.

See FVWM::Module::Toolkit::show_message for more information.

VARIABLES


There are several global variables in the main namespace that may be used in the perl
code:

$a, $b, ... $h
@a, @b, ... @h
%a, %b, ... %h

They all are initialized to the empty value and may be used to store a state between
different calls to FvwmPerl actions (eval and load).

If you need more readable variable names, either write "no strict 'vars';" at the start of
every perl code or use a hash for this, like:

$h{id} = $h{first_name} . " " . $h{second_name}

or use a package name, like:

@MyMenu::terminals = qw( xterm rxvt );
$MyMenu::item_num = @MyMenu::terminals;

There may be a configuration option to turn strictness on and off.

MESSAGES


FvwmPerl may receive messages using the fvwm command SendToModule. The names, meanings and
parameters of the messages are the same as the corresponding actions, described above.

Additionally, a message stop causes a module to quit.

A message unexport [func-names] undoes the effect of export, described in the ACTIONS
section.

A message dump dumps the contents of the changed variables (not yet).

EXAMPLES


A simple test:

SendToModule FvwmPerl eval $h{dir} = $ENV{HOME}
SendToModule FvwmPerl eval load($h{dir} . "/test.fpl")
SendToModule FvwmPerl load $[HOME]/test.fpl
SendToModule FvwmPerl preprocess config.ppp
SendToModule FvwmPerl export Eval,PerlEval,PerlLoad,PerlPP
SendToModule FvwmPerl unexport PerlEval,PerlLoad,PerlPP
SendToModule FvwmPerl stop

The following example handles root backgrounds in fvwmrc. All these commands may be added
to StartFunction.

Module FvwmPerl --export PerlEval

# find all background pixmaps for a later use
PerlEval $a = $ENV{HOME} . "/bg";
opendir DIR, $a; @b = grep { /xpm$/ } readdir(DIR); closedir DIR

# build a menu of background pixmaps
AddToMenu MyBackgrounds "My Backgrounds" Title
PerlEval foreach $b (@b)
{ cmd("AddToMenu MyBackgrounds '$b' Exec fvwm-root $a/$b") }

# choose a random background to load on start-up
PerlEval cmd("AddToFunc
InitFunction + I Exec exec fvwm-root $a/" . $b[int(random(@b))])

ESCAPING


SendToModule just like any other fvwm commands expands several dollar prefixed variables.
This may clash with the dollars perl uses. You may avoid this by prefixing SendToModule
with a leading dash. The following 2 lines in each pair are equivalent:

SendToModule FvwmPerl eval $$d = "$[DISPLAY]"
-SendToModule FvwmPerl eval $d = "$ENV{DISPLAY}"

SendToModule FvwmPerl eval
cmd("Echo desk=$d, display=$$d")
SendToModule FvwmPerl preprocess -c
Echo desk=%("$d")%, display=%{$$d}%

Another solution to avoid escaping of special symbols like dollars and backslashes is to
create a perl file in ~/.fvwm and then load it:

SendToModule FvwmPerl load build-menus.fpl

If you need to preprocess one command starting with a dash, you should precede it using
"--".

# this prints the current desk, i.e. "0"
SendToModule FvwmPerl preprocess -c Echo "$%{$a = "c"; ++$a}%"
# this prints "$d"
SendToModule FvwmPerl preprocess -c -- -Echo "$%{"d"}%"
# this prints "$d" (SendToModule expands $$ to $)
SendToModule FvwmPerl preprocess -c -- -Echo "$$%{"d"}%"
# this prints "$$d"
-SendToModule FvwmPerl preprocess -c -- -Echo "$$%{"d"}%"

Again, it is suggested to put your command(s) into file and preprocess the file instead.

CAVEATS


FvwmPerl being written in perl and dealing with perl, follows the famous perl motto:
"There's more than one way to do it", so the choice is yours.

Here are more pairs of equivalent lines:

Module FvwmPerl --load "my.fpl" --stay
Module FvwmPerl -e 'load("my.fpl")' -s

SendToModule FvwmPerl preprocess --quote '@' my.ppp
SendToModule FvwmPerl eval preprocess({quote => '@'}, "my.ppp");

Warning, you may affect the way FvwmPerl works by evaluating appropriate perl code, this
is considered a feature not a bug. But please don't do this, write your own fvwm module
in perl instead.

Use FvwmPerl online using onworks.net services



Latest Linux & Windows online programs