; -*- lisp -*-
; The line above sets the editors to lisp mode, which probably
; is the mode with best syntax highlighting for this file.
; This configuration file requires the lisp-esque example
; configuration scripts
; Both ; (semicolon) and # (pound) start commands ending the end of the line
; You can define multiple configurations, the first one (called 'default' here ) is used by default.
(default
; Index of monitors to use.
(monitors) ; For all monitors
; For the primary monitor: (monitors 0)
; For the first two monitors: (monitors 0 1)
; For the primary on the screen 0 and screen 1: (monitors 0:0 1:0)
; For all monitors on screen 0: (monitors 0:)
; For monitors with output name DVI-0: (monitors :crtc "DVI-0")
; For monitors with output name DVI-0 or VGA-0: (monitors :crtc ("DVI-0" "VGA-0"))
; For monitors with size 364 mm × 291 mm: (monitors :size (364 291))
; Geographical coodinates: latitude longitude (northwards and eastwards in degrees)
(coordinates 59.3472 18.0728)
; If you have this store in ~/.location you can use
; (coordinates :parse (read "~/.location"))
; If the command `~/.location` prints the information you can use
; (coordinates :parse (spawn "~/.location"))
; Or if you want to the location to be updates continuously:
; (coordinates:cont :parse (spawn "~/.location"))
; You can also store the text "(coordinates 59.3472 18.0728)" in
; file named ~/.location:
; :include "~/.location"
; A more advance alternative is to have a Python file named "~/.location.py"
; that is parsed and have its function `location` invoked with not arguments:
; (source "~/.location.py")
; (coordinates :eval "location()")
; If location can continuously update your location you can use:
; (source "~/.location.py")
; (coordinates:cont :eval location)
; You can combine having a static location and continuously updating,
; which allows Blueshift to use the static location if the dynamic cannot
; be fetch when Blueshift starts:
; (coordinates 59.3472 18.0728)
; (coordinates:cont :parse (spawn "~/.location"))
; Time points when different settings are applied, continuous transition
; betweem them will be used. This are not used by default, be can be
; enabled in the next section.
(timepoints 2:00 8:00 22:00)
; Select method for calculating the time the different settings are (fully) applied
(points solar)
; Use the two default solar elevations
; (points solar :eval SOLAR_ELEVATION_ASTRONOMICAL_DUSK_DAWN :eval SOLAR_ELEVATION_SUNSET_SUNRISE)
; Use two standard solar elevations
; (points solar -18 -12 -6 0 6)
; Use four custom solar elevations
; (points time)
; Use the time points from (timepoints) (from the previous section)
; (points constant)
; Assume it 100 % are day long, and exit when settings have been applied.
; (One shot mode instead of continuous mode)
; If you have multiple values in (points) they can be reduced to two:
; (dayness 0 1 1)
; For example, if we have (points time) and (timepoints 2:00 8:00 22:00)
; than (dayness 0 1 1) will reduce it so that the settings only have to
; define values for day and night (in that order). At 2:00 it would be
; 100 % night, and at 8:00 to 22:00 it would be 100 % day.
; Colour curve applying method.
(method randr) ### --- MODERATE LEVEL ---
; Alternatively (limited to primary monitors): (method vidmode)
; For debugging (or passing to another application) you can use
; (method print)
; It is possible to use both:
; (method print randr)
(transfrom randr) ; yes, this it says ‘from’ not ‘form’
; This lets Blueshift transition from the currently applied settings
; when it starts. If you prefer to use vidmode instead of randr you
; can use
; (transfrom randr)
; If you do not want to do this you can use
; (transfrom nil)
; It an also be configured individually for the monitors:
; (transfrom randr nil)
; This will not do this for the second monitor
;; Important: The following options are applied in order of appearance
;; moving them around can cause inexact monitors calibration
;; or other unwanted effects. But it could perhaps also do
;; something wonderful.
; ICC profile for video filtering (monitor calibration will be later.)
; Replace `nil` with the pathname of the profile. It is assumed to not be
; already applied and it is assumed that it should not be applied on exit.
#(icc:filter nil) ### --- MODERATE LEVEL ---
; If you have three monitors: (icc:filter (nil nil nil))
; On all the monitors but time dependent: (icc:filter nil nil)
; The two above combined: (icc:filter (nil nil nil) (nil nil nil))
; Negative image settings.
(negative no) ; Does nothing
; (negative yes) ; Inverts the colours on the encoding axes
; (negative (yes no no)) ; Inverts the red colour on the encoding axis
; (negative yes no) ; Inverts the colours on the encoding axes on the first monitor
; ; but not the second monitor selected by (monitors)
; (invert yes) ; Inverts the colours on the output axes using the sRGB colour space
; (invert (yes no no)) ; Inverts the red colour on the output axes using the sRGB colour space
; (invert:cie yes) ; Inverts the colours on the output axes using the CIE xyY colour space
; These cannot be time dependent.
; Colour temperature at high day and high night, respectively.
(temperature 6500 3700)
; If you the second monitor selected by (monitors) to always be at 6500K you can use
; (temperature (6500 6500) (3700 6500))
### --- EXPERT LEVEL ---
; If you want a more advance calculation of the correlated colour
; temperature you can replace (temperature) in the step about with
; (temperature') and add the following *before* it:
; (compose temperature' as-is (divide_by_maximum cmf_10deg))
; This is the default, but you can also use for example and of the following:
; (compose temperature' as-is (divide_by_maximum series_d))
; (compose temperature' as-is (clip_whitepoint simple_whitepoint))
; (compose temperature' as-is (divide_by_maximum cmf_2deg))
; (compose temperature' as-is redshift')
; Where Redshift' needs to be composed by temperature':
; (compose redshift' as-is yes) ; as in redshift<=1.8
; (compose redshift' as-is no) ; as in redshift>1.8
; (compose redshift' as-is yes yes) ; as in redshift<=1.8 but interpolating in linear RGB
; (compose redshift' as-is no yes) ; as in redshift>1.8 but interpolating in linear RGB
; See `info blueshift 'configuration api' 'colour curve manipulators'`
; and look for ‘temperature’ for details.
; It is possible to calibrations that were applied when Blueshift started.
#(current nil) ### --- EXPERT LEVEL ---
; This is ignored if --panicgate is used (it is assumed that Blueshift
; crashed if --panicgate is used). It also has no effect in one shot mode.
; `nil` means that it does nothing, but you can also use `randr` or
; `vidmode`, but `vidmode` is restricted to primary monitors:
; (current randr) ; of using randr
; (current vidmode) ; of using vidmode
; You can also controll the monitors individually:
; (current randr nil) ; does this only for the first monitor
; Colour brightness at high day and high night, respectively.
; This setting uses the CIE xyY colour space for calculating values.
(brightness:cie 1 1)
; If you have multiple monitors, they can be configured indiviudally.
; For example if you have two monitors, we can keep the first monitor
; on full brightness all day long, but make the second monitor be
; at 75 % during the night:
; (brightness:cie (1 1) (1 0.75))
; Colour brightness of the red, green and blue components,
; respectively, at high day and high night, respectively.
; This settings uses the sRGB colour space for calculating values.
(brightness (1 1 1) (1 1 1)) ### --- MODERATE LEVEL ---
; Because red, green and blue are identical in this example,
; writting (brightness 1 1) instead with do the same thing.
; If you want the second monitor selected by (monitors) to always
; be at 100 % but the primary to shift between 100 % and 75 % you can use
; (brightness ((1) (1)) ((1) (0.75)))
; As this indicates you use the following if you want only the blue
; part to shift to 75 %:
; (brightness ((1) (1)) ((1) (0.75 1 1)))
; Or alternatively:
; (brightness:red (1 1) (1 0.75))
; Colour contrast at high day and high night, respectively.
; This setting uses the CIE xyY colour space for calculating values.
#(contrast:cie 1 1) ### --- MODERATE LEVEL ---
; This can be done monitors dependently as in (brightness:cie).
; Colour contrast of the red, green and blue components,
; respectively, at high day and high night, respectively.
; This settings uses the sRGB colour space for calculating values.
#(contrast (1 1 1) (1 1 1)) ### --- MODERATE LEVEL ---
; Because red, green and blue are identical in this example,
; writting (contrast 1 1) instead with do the same thing.
; This can be done monitors dependently as in (brightness).
;; Note: brightness and contrast is not intended for colour
;; calibration, it should be calibrated on the monitors'
;; control panels.
; These are fun curve manipulator settings that lowers the
; colour resolution ont encoding and output axes respectively.
; In this example (resolution:encoding) only has one argument,
; it applies all day long on each colour curve.
#(resolution:encoding :eval i_size) ### -- ADVANCED LEVEL --
; This evaluated into:
; (resolution:encoding 256)
; (resolution:output) in this example one argument that is
; a tuple of three values which represent red, green, and
; blue respectively. Because it is only one argument it
; applies all day long as well.
#(resolution:output (:eval (o_size o_size o_size))) ### -- ADVANCED LEVEL --
; This evaluated into:
; (resolution:output (65535 65535 65535))
; As always you can control the monitors individually:
; (resolution:output (:eval ((o_size o_size o_size) (o_size o_size o_size))))
; This evaluated into:
; (resolution:output ((65535 65535 65535) (65535 65535 65535)))
; Gamma correction for the red, green and blue components, respectively,
; at high day, high night and monitor default, respectively.
; This settings uses the sRGB colour space for calculating values.
#(gamma (1 1 1) (1 1 1)) ### --- MODERATE LEVEL ---
(gamma:default (1 1 1))
; All configurations can use :default, but it only makes since
; for gamma because it is the only actual monitors calibration
; configurations, with the exception of ICC profiles and white
; point and black point calibration and sigmoid curve correction.
; (gamma) automatically run (clip) to avoid mathematical errors,
; If you prefer not to run (clip) you can use
; ('gamma (1 1 1) (1 1 1))
; ('gamma:default (1 1 1))
; You can also run clip manually:
; (clip)
; Or for the first but not second monitor:
; (clip yes no)
; Clipping cannot time dependent.
;; Note: gamma is supposted to be static, it purpose is to
;; correct the colours on the monitors the monitor's gamma
;; is exactly 2,2 and the colours look correct in relation
;; too each other. It is supported to have different settings
;; at day and night because there are no technical limitings
;; and it can presumable increase readability on text when
;; the colour temperature is low.
; If you have an LCD monitor you can use (well you could on CRT as
; well but it would not make since) sigmoid curve correction to
; calibrate your monitor. 4.5 is a good value to start testing at,
; but be aware, it is very difficult to get right is it depens on
; other calibrations as well. For now we have `nil` which means that
; no sigmoid curve correction will take place.
#(sigmoid:default (nil nil nil)) ### -- EXPERT LEVEL --
; This three `nil`:s are for red, green and blue respectively,
; but you can just one argument instead of a tuple of three, if
; the colour curves should have the same sigmoid curve correction.
; If you have two monitors you can use (and replace nil with
; your correction parameters):
; (sigmoid:default (nil nil nil) (nil nil nil))
; or
; (sigmoid:default nil nil)
; You can also so time dependent correction:
#(sigmoid (nil nil nil) (nil nil nil)) ### -- EXPERT LEVEL --
; (sigmoid ((nil nil nil) (nil nil nil)) ((nil nil nil) (nil nil nil)))
; (sigmoid (nil nil) (nil nil))
; If you have require software level brightness and contract
; calibration (needed to calibrate most LCD monitors), you and
; use (limits) and (limits:cie). These will calibrate the
; black point (brightness) and the white point (contrast). This
; brightness and contrast is not the same thing as the settings
; (brightness) and (contrast). (brightness) is more similar to
; backlight and (contrast) is a flattening of the colour curves
; towards 50 %. In (limits:cie) and first argument (for each time)
; is the brightness [black point] and the second is the [white point].
#(cie_limits:default 0 1) ### -- ADVANCED LEVEL --
; If you have three monitors they can be controlled individually:
; (cie_limits:default (0 1) (0 1) (0 1))
; You can so also do time dependent correction:
;(cie_limits (0 1) (0 1))
; (cie_limits ((0 1) (0 1) (0 1)) ((0 1) (0 1) (0 1)))
; ICC profile for monitor calibration will be later.
; Replace `nil` with the pathname of the profile. It is assumed to
; already be applied and that it should be applied on exit.
#(icc:calib nil) ### -- MODERATE LEVEL --
; If you have three monitors: (icc (nil nil nil))
; On all the monitors but time dependent: (icc nil nil)
; The two above combined: (icc (nil nil nil) (nil nil nil))
; (icc) is a synonym for (icc:calib).
### -- EXPERT LEVEL --
; It is also possible to some of your own manipulations:
; where is an example that temporary switches to linear RGB
; change makes the colour curves logarithmical:
; (linearise)
; (manipulate 'lambda x : math.log(x + 1, 2)')
; Or for the colour colurves individually:
; (manipulate 'lambda x : math.log(x + 1, 2)'
; 'lambda x : math.log(x + 1, 2)'
; 'lambda x : math.log(x + 1, 2)'
; )
; (standardise)
; As with (clip) (linearise) and (standardise) can depend
; on the monitor, so can (manipulate):
; (linearise yes no)
; (manipulate 'lambda x : math.log(x + 1, 2)')
; Or for the colour colurves individually:
; (manipulate ('lambda x : math.log(x + 1, 2)'
; 'lambda x : math.log(x + 1, 2)'
; 'lambda x : math.log(x + 1, 2)'
; )
; nil ; Do nothing on the second monitor
; )
; (standardise yes no)
)