The latest source distribution can be FTPed from the directory
ftp://archimedes.nosc.mil/pub/Mgr/69 or Mosaiced
from http://archimedes.nosc.mil/Mgr/69. The same
should be found at
ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/apps/MGR and its
mirrors. Older versions of this distribution from Haardt can be
found on tsx-11.mit.edu and perhaps elsewhere.
Pre-Linux versions of MGR from Uhler and others have been
found at ftp://bellcore.com/pub/mgr, but I think
they are gone now. I have saved a copy of everything about
MGR seen on the Internet, but I am not aware of anything
weighty that is missing from this Linux/Sun distribution.
MGR has been through a lot of versions and releases, but
the current *Linux* version number is 0.69. This version number
could jump to 1.0 when stable 256-color VGA code for Linux
appears (for more than one video card type). RCS version numbers
have increased from Bellcore's 4.3 up to our 4.13 now.
Required tools to build this distribution of MGR are m4 (GNU, or perhaps another supporting the -D option), make (GNU, or perhaps another supporting include) and *roff for the docs. Also sh, awk, and POSIX install. Binary distributions are not assembled often so you need an ANSI C compiler environment, e.g. gcc.
A Linux installation requires Linux 0.99.10 or better (1.2.13 is
what I actually test on now), an HGC, EGA, VGA, or SVGA graphics
card, and a mouse. Mouses supported are: serial Microsoft mouse,
serial MouseSystems 3 and 5 byte mouse, serial MMSeries mouse,
serial Logitech mouse, PS/2 mouse, or a bus mouse. With Buckey
(Meta) hot keys enabled, even a mouseless system could do a
certain amount of useful work under MGR. The VGA 640x480
monochrome graphics mode is supported out of the box, as is
640x350 and 640x200. To run 800x600, or other modes that your
BIOS can initialize and which do not require bank-switching, you
need to run a small program (supplied as
src/vgamisc/regs.exe) under DOS or an emulator to
read the VGA registers and write a header file which you place in
the directory src/libbitblit/linux, so that it can
be #include'd by the vga.c file there.
Samples of these files are supplied, but please create your own.
Some VGA cards can use 128k windows, and these might run higher
monochrome resolutions.
The Linux-colorport code also runs in the standard 320x200x256 color VGA mode without difficulty, because no bank switching is required. If you think of how few 64000 pixels is, you would realize this color mode is quite limited. Non-fast, but simple, bank-switching code has been added in version 0.65, and it works with a Tseng ET4000 card in 640x480x256 and 800x600x256 modes. The S3 code does not work in super VGA resolutions, yet. Supporting new super VGA cards requires writing one function to switch banks and then making sure that the desired screen mode can be initialized from a register dump, possibly with hand-tweaking. The Linux color servers generally mangle the screen fonts, necessitating use of restorefont as in runx. If someone were to extract the VGA initialization code out of X, this might make MGR work on a lot more color systems.
Suns with SunOS 4.1.2+ and bwtwo,
cgthree, or cgsix frame buffers are
supported. Their speed handling color is good. Coherent
installations should refer to the
Versions/README.Coh file in the source distribution.
Porting the latest-and-greatest MGR to another POSIX-like
system which provides select() and pty's and direct
access to a bitmapped frame-buffer ought to be straightforward,
just implementing the libbitblit library based on
the sunmono or colorport code, say.
If you want to install everything, you need 7 MB disk space for binaries, fonts, manual pages etc. The sources are about 4.5 MB, plus object files during compilation.
Normally, /usr/mgr should be either the directory or
a link to the directory where you install MGR stuff for
runtime use. Typing
and optionallycd /usr/mgr; tar xvfz whereveryouputit/mgrusr-0.69.tgz
will unpack these. The source can be put anywhere, e.g. typingcd /usr/mgr; tar xvfz wherever/morefonts-0.69.tgz
to unpack the sources fromcd /usr/src/local/mgr; tar xvfz wherever/mgrsrc-0.69.tgz
archimedes.nosc.mil.
The source tree can be compiled from one top-level Makefile which
invokes lower-level Makefiles, all of which "include" a
"Configfile" at the top level. The
Configfile is created by an interactive sh script
named Configure, which asks you questions, then runs
m4 on a Configfile.m4. So you type something like
this:
chdir /usr/src/local/mgr sh ./Configure make first make depend make install make clean
It might be wise, before running make, to eyeball the
Configfile generated by the Configure
script, checking that it looks reasonable. (At least one m4 poops
out (Sun /usr/bin/m4), creating a very short
Configfile. If this happens, try hand editing a copy
of Configfile.sun or Configfile.lx) One
can also make all in any directory with a Makefile
as soon as the libraries have been compiled and installed. The
server, libraries, and some clients have been linted, but several
clients are K&R C code that generates many compiler warnings.
Several flags in MGRFLAGS can be added/omitted in the Configfile to change some optional features in the server, viz:
muck utmp file so "who" works
code for clicking the mouse in vi moving the cursor
enable debugging output selectable with -d options.
XOR the mouse track
for hot-key server commands without mousing
for priority window scheduling instead of round-robin; the active window gets higher priority
for cut/paste between windows and a global snarf buffer
forces window alignment for fast scrolling (monochrome)
kills windows upon tty i/o errors
use only some of the screen ($MGRSIZE in environment)
don't permit event stacking
audibly ring the bell
read mgr input from the sun kbd, instead of
stdin. This permits redirection of console msgs to a window.
fractional character movement for proportional fonts
extended menu stuff (experimental)
movie making extension which logs all operations to a file for later replay -- not quite working under Linux
Emulate a missing middle mouse button by chording
The BITBLITFLAGS macro should contain -DBANKED if
you're trying out the super VGA color.
C code for the static variables in the server containing icons and fonts is generated by a translator from icon and font files.
Not all the clients are compiled and installed by the Makefiles.
Clients found under src/clients having capitalized
names or not compiled by the supplied Makefiles may have problems
compiling and/or running, but they may be interesting to hack on.
Most of the screen drivers found under the
libbitblit directory are of mainly archeological
interest. Grave robbing can be profitable.
At some point check that your /etc/termcap and/or
terminfo file contain entries for MGR
terminals such as found in the misc directory. If
all your software checks $TERMCAP in the environment, this is not
needed, as long as you run eval `set_termcap` in
each window.
MGR works better if run setuid root, because it wants to chown ptys and write in the utmp file. This helps the ify iconifier client work better and the event passing mechanism be more secure. On Linux, root permissions are required in order to do in/out on the screen device. Otherwise, you decide whether to trust it.
In versions around 0.62 there are troubles on the Sun with using the csh as the default shell. Programs seem to run in a different process group than the foreground process group of the window's pty, in contradiction to man pages and posix specs. There is no trouble with bash, sh, or rc. Ideas why?