The DAMAGE Extension Protocol Version 0.0 Document Revision 1 2003-11-03 Keith Packard keithp@keithp.com 1. Introduction Monitoring the regions affected by rendering has wide-spread use, from VNC-like systems scraping the screen to screen magnifying applications designed to aid users with limited visual acuity. The DAMAGE extension is designed to make such applications reasonably efficient in the face of server-client latency. 2. Acknolwedgements As usual, the author had significant input from many people, in particular: + Havoc Pennington who designed and implemented a Damage extension last year which was then lost to the mists of time. + Bill Haneman whose work on accessibility in the Gnome environment is legendary. + Jim Gettys who found a way to avoid streaming damage rectangles to the client in many cases. + Owen Taylor who suggested that streaming damage rectangles may be warranted in some cases after all. 3. Damage Model We call changes made to pixel contents of windows and pixmaps 'damage' throughout this extension. Another notion of 'damage' are drawable regions which are in need of redisplay to repair the effects of window manipulation or other data loss. This extension doesn't deal with this second notion at all; suggestions on a better term which isn't easily conflated with existing notions are eagerly solicited. Damage accumulates as drawing occurs in the drawable. Each drawing operation 'damages' one or more rectangular areas within the drawable. The rectangles are guaranteed to include the set of pixels modified by each operation, but may include significantly more than just those pixels. The desire is for the damage to strike a balance between the number of rectangles reported and the extraneous area included. A reasonable goal is for each primitive object drawn (line, string, rectangle) to be represented as a single rectangle and for the damage area of the operation to be the union of these rectangles. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to either receive the raw rectangles as a stream of events, or to have them partially processed within the X server to reduce the amount of data transmitted as well as reduce the processing latency once the repaint operation has started. Damage to a window reflects both drawing within the window itself as well as drawing within any inferior window that affects pixels seen by IncludeInferiors rendering operations. To reduce the computational complexity of this, the DAMAGE extension allows the server to monitor all rendering operations within the physical target pixel storage that fall within the bounds of the window. In a system with a single frame buffer holding all windows, this means that damage will accumulate for all rendering operations that lie within the visible part of the window. The precise reason for this architecture will be made clear in the XSPLITTREE extension which will provide multiple pixel storage areas for the screen contents. 4. Data types The "Damage" object holds any accumulated damage region and reflects the relationship between the drawable selected for damage notification and the drawable for which damage is tracked. 5. Errors Damage A value for a DAMAGE argument does not name a defined DAMAGE. 6. Types DAMAGE 32-bit value (top three bits guaranteed to be zero) DamageReportLevel { DamageReportRawRectangles, DamageReportDeltaRectangles, DamageReportBoundingBox, DamageReportNonEmpty } DamageReportRawRectangles Delivers DamageNotify events each time the screen is modified with rectangular bounds that circumscribe the damaged area. No attempt to compress out overlapping rectangles is made. DamageReportDeltaRectangles Delivers DamageNotify events each time damage occurs which is not included in the damage region. The reported rectangles include only the changes to that area, not the raw damage data. DamageReportBoundingBox Delivers DamageNotify events each time the bounding box enclosing the damage region increases in size. The reported rectangle encloses the entire damage region, not just the changes to that size. DamageReportNonEmpty Delivers a single DamageNotify event each time the damage rectangle changes from empty to non-empty, and also whenever the result of a DamageSubtract request results in a non-empty region. 7. Events DamageNotify level: DamageReportLevel drawable: Drawable damage: DAMAGE more: Bool timestamp: Timestamp area: Rectangle drawable-geometry: Rectangle 'more' indicates whether there are subsequent damage events being delivered immediately as part of a larger damage region 8. Extension Initialization The client must negotiate the version of the extension before executing extension requests. Otherwise, the server will return BadRequest for any operations other than QueryVersion. QueryVersion client-major-version: CARD32 client-minor-version: CARD32 -> major-version: CARD32 minor-version: CARD32 The client sends the highest supported version to the server and the server sends the highest version it supports, but no higher than the requested version. Major versions changes can introduce incompatibilities in existing functionality, minor version changes introduce only backward compatible changes. It is the clients responsibility to ensure that the server supports a version which is compatible with its expectations. Servers are encouraged to support multiple versions of the extension. 9. Enable Monitoring DamageCreate damage: DAMAGE drawable: Drawable level: DamageReportLevel Creates a damage object to monitor changes to Drawable DamageDestroy damage: DAMAGE Destroys damage. DamageSubtract damage: DAMAGE repair: Region or None parts: Region Synchronously modifies the regions in the following manner: If repair is None: 1) parts = damage 2) damage = Otherwise: 1) parts = damage INTERSECT repair 2) damage = damage - parts 3) Generate DamageNotify for remaining damage areas