Am 20.02.2012 00:44, schrieb Anthony Liguori:
Hi,
I realize UIs are the third rail of QEMU development, but over the
years I've
gotten a lot of feedback from users about our UI. I think everyone
struggles
with the SDL interface and its lack of discoverability but it's worse
than I
think most people realize for users that rely on accessibility tools.
The two pieces of feedback I've gotten the most re: accessibility are
the lack
of QEMU's enablement for screen readers and the lack of configurable
accelerators.
Since we render our own terminal using a fixed sized font, we don't
respect
system font settings which means we ignore if the user has configured
large
print.
We also don't integrate at all with screen readers which means that
for blind
users, the virtual consoles may as well not even exist.
We also don't allow any type of configuration of accelerators. For
users with
limited dexterity (this is actually more common than you would think),
they may
use an input device that only inputs one key at a time. Holding down
two keys
at once is not possible for these users.
These are solved problems though and while we could reinvent all of this
ourselves with SDL, we would be crazy if we did. Modern toolkits, like
GTK,
solve these problems.
By using GTK, we can leverage VteTerminal for screen reader
integration and font
configuration. We can also use GTK's accelerator support to make
accelerators
configurable (Gnome provides a global accelerator configuration
interface).
I'm not attempting to make a pretty desktop virtualization UI. Maybe
we'll go
there eventually but that's not what this series is about.
This is just attempting to use a richer toolkit such that we can
enable basic
accessibility support. As a consequence, the UI is much more usable
even for a
user without accessibility requirements so it's a win-win.
This first version of the new GTK UI still shares some problems with
the SDL UI and adds new ones:
It's quite common for the VGA code to set a very small size (e.g. 1 x 1
pixel)
during boot. MIPS Malta does (if no VGA module like cirrusfb is loaded,
it will never set a different size), and even the 386 / x86_64 emulation
has a (very short) time were the display size is unusually small.
This results in a very small window size which is only limited by the
display manager.
Usually it is so small that any user interaction with the window becomes
difficult.
The GDK UI increases the problem because it also resizes the monitor,
serial and
all other text consoles. On Ubuntu, I get a Malta serial console with 7
characters
in 5 rows, and the serial output also wraps after 7 characters.
Zooming changes the number of rows and lines, not the size of the characters
in all text consoles.
There is also a new kind of QEMU crash:
The program '<unknown>' received an X Window System error.
This probably reflects a bug in the program.
The error was 'BadAlloc (insufficient resources for operation)'.
(Details: serial 28914 error_code 11 request_code 53 minor_code 0)
(Note to programmers: normally, X errors are reported asynchronously;
that is, you will receive the error a while after causing it.
To debug your program, run it with the --sync command line
option to change this behavior. You can then get a meaningful
backtrace from your debugger if you break on the gdk_x_error()
function.)
I just got it while writing this mail when I wanted to check some facts.
Program '<unknown>' is not user friendly (crashing never is, but when it
crashes, at least the error message should be good :-)).
The bug also occurred a second time when I started MIPS Malta
(when the Linux kernel loaded module cirrusfb), so it seems to be
reproducible.
Regards,
Stefan Weil