Announcing ncurses 6.4 Overview The ncurses (new curses) library is a free software emulation of curses in System V Release 4.0 (SVr4), and more. It uses terminfo format, supports pads and color and multiple highlights and forms characters and function-key mapping, and has all the other SVr4-curses enhancements over BSD curses. SVr4 curses became the basis of X/Open Curses. In mid-June 1995, the maintainer of 4.4BSD curses declared that he considered 4.4BSD curses obsolete, and encouraged the keepers of unix releases such as BSD/OS, FreeBSD and NetBSD to switch over to ncurses. Since 1995, ncurses has been ported to many systems: * It is used in almost every system based on the Linux kernel (aside from some embedded applications). * It is used as the system curses library on OpenBSD, FreeBSD and MacOS. * It is used in environments such as Cygwin and MinGW. The first of these was EMX on OS/2 Warp. * It is used (though usually not as the system curses) on all of the vendor unix systems, e.g., AIX, HP-UX, IRIX64, SCO, Solaris, Tru64. * It should work readily on any ANSI/POSIX-conforming unix. The distribution includes the library and support utilities, including * captoinfo, a termcap conversion tool * clear, utility for clearing the screen * infocmp, the terminfo decompiler * tabs, set tabs on a terminal * tic, the terminfo compiler * toe, list (table of) terminfo entries * tput, utility for retrieving terminal capabilities in shell scripts * tset, to initialize the terminal Full manual pages are provided for the library and tools. The ncurses distribution is available at ncurses' homepage: https://invisible-island.net/archives/ncurses/ or https://invisible-mirror.net/archives/ncurses/ . It is also available at the GNU distribution site https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/ncurses/ . Release Notes These notes are for ncurses 6.4, released December 31, 2022. This release is designed to be source-compatible with ncurses 5.0 through 6.3; providing extensions to the application binary interface (ABI). Although the source can still be configured to support the ncurses 5 ABI, the reason for the release is to reflect improvements to the ncurses 6 ABI and the supporting utility programs. There are, of course, numerous other improvements, listed in this announcement. The most important bug-fixes/improvements dealt with robustness issues. The release notes also mention some other bug-fixes, but are focused on new features and improvements to existing features since ncurses 6.3 release. Library improvements New features There are no new features in this release. Other improvements These are improvements to existing features: * modify delscreen to more effectively delete all windows on the given screen. * modify wnoutrefresh to call pnoutrefresh if its parameter is a pad, rather than treating it as an error, and modify new_panel to permit its window-parameter to be a pad * modify curses_trace() to show the trace-mask as symbols, e.g., TRACE_ORDINARY, DEBUG_LEVEL(3). * improve checks for valid mouse events when an intermediate mouse state is not part of the mousemask specified by the caller * allow extended-color number in opts parameter of wattr_on. * improve _tracecchar_t2 formatting of base+combining character. * trim out some unwanted linker options from ncurses*config and .pc files seen in Fedora 36+. * improve shell-scripts with shellcheck * improve use of "trap" in shell scripts, using a script. * modify make-tar.sh scripts to make timestamps more predictable. These are corrections to existing features: * modify misc/gen-pkgconfig.in to allow for the case where the library directory does not yet exist, since this is processed before doing an install * set trailing null on string passed from winsnstr to wins_nwstr. * modify waddch_literal to allow for double-width base character when merging a combining character Program improvements Several improvements were made to the utility programs: infocmp + rewrite canonical_name function of infocmp to ensure buffer size + improve readability of long parameterized expressions with the infocmp "-f" option by allowing split before a "%p" marker. + modify verbose-option of infocmp, tic, toe to enable debug-tracing if that is configured. tabs limit tab-stop values to max-columns tic add consistency check in tic for u6/u7/u8/u9 and NQ capabilities. tput corrected use of original tty-modes in init/reset subcommands Examples Along with the library and utilities, improvements were made to the ncurses-examples. Most of this activity aimed at improving the test-packages: * add minimal -h (usage) and -V (version) getopt logic to all ncurses-examples programs. * fix an error in "@" command in test/ncurses.c F-menu * add curses_trace to ifdef's for START_TRACE in test/test.priv.h * improve pthread-configuration for test/worm.c * add setlocale call to several test-programs. * workaround in test/picsmap.c for use of floating point for rgb values by ImageMagick 6.9.11, which appears to use the wrong upper limit. * use static libraries for AdaCurses test-package for Mageia, since no gprbuild package is available. * install Ada95 sample programs in libexecdir, adding a wrapper script to invoke those. * install ncurses-examples programs in libexecdir, adding a wrapper script to invoke those. There are other new demo/test programs and reusable examples: test/combine demonstrate combining characters test/test_delwin demonstrate deleting a window test/test_mouse observe mouse events in the raw terminal or parsed ncurses modes test/test_unget_wch demonstrate the unget_wch and unget functions Terminal database There are several new terminal descriptions: * mosh * mosh-256color * teken-16color * teken-sc * teken-vt * xgterm There are many changes to existing terminal descriptions. Some were updates to several descriptions: * make description-fields distinct * fix errata in description fields * add/use several building-blocks: + aixterm+sl + ansi+cpr + apollo+vt132 + decid+cpr + ncr260vp+sl + wyse+sl + x10term+sl + xterm+acs + xterm+alt47 while others affected specific descriptions. These were retested, to take into account changes by their developers: * kitty * teken while these are specific fixes based on reviewing documentation, user reports, or warnings from tic: att610+cvis0 amended note as per documentation for att610, att620, att730 kon, kon2, jfbterm revise to undo "linux2.6" change to smacs/rmacs/enacs st-0.6 add dim, ecma+strikeout foot+base add xterm+sl-alt dec+sl correct dsl in dec+sl mintty and tmux correct setal in mintty/tmux entries, add to vte-2018 nsterm modify nsterm to use xterm+alt1049 putty modify putty to use xterm+alt1049 vte-2018 add blink and setal A few entries use extensions (user-defined terminal capabilities): * use ansi+enq and decid+cpr in cases where the terminal probably supported the u6-u9 extension * remove u6-u9 from teken-2018 * use NQ to flag entries where the terminal does not support query and response * add/use bracketed+paste to help identify terminals supporting this xterm feature * modify samples for xterm mouse 1002/1003 modes to use 1006 mode, and also provide for focus in/out responses * xterm patch #371 supports DEC-compatible status-line. add dec+sl to xterm-new, per xterm #371, add xterm-p371, add xterm-p370, for use in older terminals, and set "xterm-new" to "xterm-p370" (to ease adoption). Documentation As usual, this release * improves documentation by describing new features, * attempts to improve the description of features which users have found confusing * fills in overlooked descriptions of features which were described in the NEWS file but treated sketchily in manual pages. In addition to providing background information to explain these features and show how they evolved, there are corrections, clarifications, etc.: * Corrections: + remove a stray '/' from description of %g in terminfo(5). + correct/improve font-formatting in curs_getch.3x, as well as other manual pages. * New/improved history and portability sections: + add portability notes for delscreen and delwin in manual. + improve curs_slk.3x discussion of extensions and portability * Other improvements: + improve curs_bkgd.3x, explaining that bkgdset can affect results for bkgd + add note on portable memory-leak checking in curs_memleaks.3x + expanded description in resizeterm.3x + add section on releasing memory to curs_termcap.3x and curs_terminfo.3x manpages. + add clarification of the scope of dynamic variables in terminfo(5). + improve formatting of ncurses-intro.html and hackguide.html + improve curs_clear.3x links to other pages + update ncurses-howto, making documentation fixes along with corrections to example programs. + use newer version 1.36 of gnathtml for generating Ada html files. + update external links in Ada95.html There are no new manual pages (all of the manual page updates are to existing pages). Interesting bug-fixes While there were many bugs fixed during development of ncurses 6.4, only a few (the reason for this release) were both important and interesting. Most of the bug-fixes were for local issues which did not affect compatibility across releases. Since those are detailed in the NEWS file no elaboration is needed here. The interesting bugs were those dealing with memory leaks and buffer overflows. Although the utilities are designed for text files (which they do properly), some choose to test them with non-text files. * Text files contain no embedded nulls. Also, they end with a newline. Feeding tic non-text files exposed a few cases where the program did not check for those issues. As a result, further processing of the input found limit-checks whose assumptions were invalid. * Fixing the limit-checks (first) found a problem with tic managing the list of strings in a terminal description. In merging two terminal descriptions (i.e., the "use=" feature), tic was not allocating a complete copy. A quick repair for that introduced a memory leak. * The checks for non-text files are improved (i.e., embedded nulls in the input file will cause tic to reject it rather than attempting to process it). * The string allocations in tic are likewise improved. Configuration changes Major changes There are no major changes. No new options were added. Several improvements were made to configure checks. Configuration options There are a few new/modified configure options: --with-abi-version add ABI 7 defaults to configure script. --with-caps add warning in configure script if file specified for "--with-caps" does not exist. --with-manpage-format bzip2 and xz compression are now supported --with-xterm-kbs add check/warning in configure script if option "--with-xterm-kbs" is missing or inconsistent Portability Many of the portability changes are implemented via the configure script: * amend configure option's auto-search to account for systems where none of the directories known to pkg-config exist * corrected regex needed for older pkg-config used in Solaris 10 * improve handling of --with-pkg-config-libdir option, allowing for the case where either $PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR or the option value has a colon-separated list of directories * if the --with-pkg-config-libdir option is not given, use ${libdir}/pkgconfig as a default * improve search-path check for pkg-config, e.g., for Debian testing which installs pkg-config with architecture-prefixes. * build-fix for cross-compiling to MingW, conditionally add -lssp * improve configure check for getttynam * fixes to build with dietlibc: + add configure check for fpathconf + add configure check for math sine/cosine, needed in test/tclock, and eliminate pow() from test/hanoi + use wcsnlen as an alternative to wmemchr if it is not found * modify configure macro CF_BUILD_CC to check if the build-compiler works, rather than that it is different from the cross-compiler, e.g., to accommodate a compiler which can be used for either purpose with different flags * modify configure/scripts to work around interference by GNU grep 3.8 Here are some of the other portability fixes: * change man_db.renames to template, to handle ncurses*-config script with the --extra-suffix configure option. * update CF_XOPEN_SOURCE macro, adding variants "gnueabi" and "gnueabihf" to get _DEFAULT_SOURCE special case, as well as adding GNU libc suffixes for "abi64", "abin32", "x32" to distinguish it from other libc flavors. * work around musl's nonstandard use of feature test macros by adding a definition for NCURSES_WIDECHAR to the generated ".pc" and *-config files. * use "command -v" rather than "type" in Ada95/gen/Makefile.in to fix a portability issue. _________________________________________________________________ Features of ncurses The ncurses package is fully upward-compatible with SVr4 (System V Release 4) curses: * All of the SVr4 calls have been implemented (and are documented). * ncurses supports all of the for SVr4 curses features including keyboard mapping, color, forms-drawing with ACS characters, and automatic recognition of keypad and function keys. * ncurses provides these SVr4 add-on libraries (not part of X/Open Curses): + the panels library, supporting a stack of windows with backing store. + the menus library, supporting a uniform but flexible interface for menu programming. + the form library, supporting data collection through on-screen forms. * ncurses's terminal database is fully compatible with that used by SVr4 curses. + ncurses supports user-defined capabilities which it can see, but which are hidden from SVr4 curses applications using the same terminal database. + It can be optionally configured to match the format used in related systems such as AIX and Tru64. + Alternatively, ncurses can be configured to use hashed databases rather than the directory of files used by SVr4 curses. * The ncurses utilities have options to allow you to filter terminfo entries for use with less capable curses/terminfo versions such as the HP-UX and AIX ports. The ncurses package also has many useful extensions over SVr4: * The API is 8-bit clean and base-level conformant with the X/OPEN curses specification, XSI curses (that is, it implements all BASE level features, and most EXTENDED features). It includes many function calls not supported under SVr4 curses (but portability of all calls is documented so you can use the SVr4 subset only). * Unlike SVr3 curses, ncurses can write to the rightmost-bottommost corner of the screen if your terminal has an insert-character capability. * Ada95 and C++ bindings. * Support for mouse event reporting with X Window xterm and FreeBSD and OS/2 console windows. * Extended mouse support via Alessandro Rubini's gpm package. * The function wresize allows you to resize windows, preserving their data. * The function use_default_colors allows you to use the terminal's default colors for the default color pair, achieving the effect of transparent colors. * The functions keyok and define_key allow you to better control the use of function keys, e.g., disabling the ncurses KEY_MOUSE, or by defining more than one control sequence to map to a given key code. * Support for direct-color terminals, such as modern xterm. * Support for 256-color terminals, such as modern xterm. * Support for 16-color terminals, such as aixterm and modern xterm. * Better cursor-movement optimization. The package now features a cursor-local-movement computation more efficient than either BSD's or System V's. * Super hardware scrolling support. The screen-update code incorporates a novel, simple, and cheap algorithm that enables it to make optimal use of hardware scrolling, line-insertion, and line-deletion for screen-line movements. This algorithm is more powerful than the 4.4BSD curses quickch routine. * Real support for terminals with the magic-cookie glitch. The screen-update code will refrain from drawing a highlight if the magic- cookie unattributed spaces required just before the beginning and after the end would step on a non-space character. It will automatically shift highlight boundaries when doing so would make it possible to draw the highlight without changing the visual appearance of the screen. * It is possible to generate the library with a list of pre-loaded fallback entries linked to it so that it can serve those terminal types even when no terminfo tree or termcap file is accessible (this may be useful for support of screen-oriented programs that must run in single-user mode). * The tic/captoinfo utility provided with ncurses has the ability to translate many termcaps from the XENIX, IBM and AT&T extension sets. * A BSD-like tset utility is provided. * The ncurses library and utilities will automatically read terminfo entries from $HOME/.terminfo if it exists, and compile to that directory if it exists and the user has no write access to the system directory. This feature makes it easier for users to have personal terminfo entries without giving up access to the system terminfo directory. * You may specify a path of directories to search for compiled descriptions with the environment variable TERMINFO_DIRS (this generalizes the feature provided by TERMINFO under stock System V.) * In terminfo source files, use capabilities may refer not just to other entries in the same source file (as in System V) but also to compiled entries in either the system terminfo directory or the user's $HOME/.terminfo directory. * The table-of-entries utility toe makes it easy for users to see exactly what terminal types are available on the system. * The library meets the XSI requirement that every macro entry point has a corresponding function which may be linked (and will be prototype-checked) if the macro definition is disabled with #undef. * Extensive documentation is provided (see the Additional Reading section of the ncurses FAQ for online documentation). Applications using ncurses The ncurses distribution includes a selection of test programs (including a few games). These are available separately as ncurses-examples The ncurses library has been tested with a wide variety of applications including: aptitude FrontEnd to Apt, the debian package manager https://wiki.debian.org/Aptitude cdk Curses Development Kit https://invisible-island.net/cdk/ ded directory-editor https://invisible-island.net/ded/ dialog the underlying application used in Slackware's setup, and the basis for similar install/configure applications on many systems. https://invisible-island.net/dialog/ lynx the text WWW browser https://lynx.invisible-island.net/ mutt mail utility http://www.mutt.org/ ncftp file-transfer utility https://www.ncftp.com/ nvi New vi uses ncurses. https://sites.google.com/a/bostic.com/keithbostic/vi ranger A console file manager with VI key bindings in Python. https://ranger.github.io/ tin newsreader, supporting color, MIME http://www.tin.org/ vifm File manager with vi like keybindings https://vifm.info/ as well as some that use ncurses for the terminfo support alone: minicom terminal emulator for serial modem connections https://alioth.debian.org/projects/minicom/ mosh a replacement for ssh. https://mosh.org/ tack terminfo action checker https://invisible-island.net/ncurses/tack.html tmux terminal multiplexor https://github.com/tmux/tmux/wiki vile vi-like-emacs may be built to use the terminfo, termcap or curses interfaces. https://invisible-island.net/vile/ and finally, those which use only the termcap interface: emacs text editor https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/ less The most commonly used pager (a program that displays text files). http://www.greenwoodsoftware.com/less/ screen terminal multiplexor https://www.gnu.org/software/screen/ vim text editor https://www.vim.org/ Development activities Zeyd Ben-Halim started ncurses from a previous package pcurses, written by Pavel Curtis. Eric S. Raymond continued development. Juergen Pfeifer wrote most of the form and menu libraries. Ongoing development work is done by Thomas E. Dickey. Thomas E. Dickey has acted as the maintainer for the Free Software Foundation, which held a copyright on ncurses for releases 4.2 through 6.1. Following the release of ncurses 6.1, effective as of release 6.2, copyright for ncurses reverted to Thomas E. Dickey (see the ncurses FAQ for additional information). Contact the current maintainers at bug-ncurses@gnu.org To join the ncurses mailing list, please write email to bug-ncurses-request@gnu.org containing the line: subscribe @ This list is open to anyone interested in helping with the development and testing of this package. Beta versions of ncurses are made available at https://invisible-island.net/archives/ncurses/current/ and https://invisible-mirror.net/archives/ncurses/current/ . Patches to the current release are made available at https://invisible-island.net/archives/ncurses/6.3/ and https://invisible-mirror.net/archives/ncurses/6.3/ . There is an archive of the mailing list here: http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-ncurses (also https) Related resources The release notes make scattered references to these pages, which may be interesting by themselves: * ncurses licensing * Symbol versioning in ncurses * Comments on ncurses versus slang (S-Lang) * Comments on OpenBSD * tack - terminfo action checker * tctest - termcap library checker * Terminal Database Other resources The distribution provides a newer version of the terminfo-format terminal description file once maintained by Eric Raymond . Unlike the older version, the termcap and terminfo data are provided in the same file, which also provides several user-definable extensions beyond the X/Open specification. You can find lots of information on terminal-related topics not covered in the terminfo file at Richard Shuford's archive . The collection of computer manuals at bitsavers.org has also been useful. * Overview * Release Notes + Library improvements o New features o Other improvements + Program improvements o Utilities o Examples + Terminal database + Documentation + Interesting bug-fixes + Configuration changes o Major changes o Configuration options + Portability * Features of ncurses * Applications using ncurses * Development activities * Related resources * Other resources