1What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/attrib_bleep
2KernelVersion:	2.6
3Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
4Description:	Beeps the PC speaker when there is an attribute change such as
5		foreground or background color when using speakup review
6		commands. One = on, zero = off.
7
8What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/bell_pos
9KernelVersion:	2.6
10Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
11Description:	This works much like a typewriter bell. If for example 72 is
12		echoed to bell_pos, it will beep the PC speaker when typing on
13		a line past character 72.
14
15What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/bleeps
16KernelVersion:	2.6
17Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
18Description:	This controls whether one hears beeps through the PC speaker
19		when using speakup's review commands.
20		TODO: what values does it accept?
21
22What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/bleep_time
23KernelVersion:	2.6
24Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
25Description:	This controls the duration of the PC speaker beeps speakup
26		produces.
27		TODO: What are the units? Jiffies?
28
29What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/cursor_time
30KernelVersion:	2.6
31Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
32Description:	This controls cursor delay when using arrow keys. When a
33		connection is very slow, with the default setting, when moving
34		with  the arrows, or backspacing etc. speakup says the incorrect
35		characters. Set this to a higher value to adjust for the delay
36		and better synchronisation between cursor position and speech.
37
38What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/cur_phonetic
39KernelVersion:	6.2
40Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
41Description:	This allows speakup to speak letters phoneticaly when arrowing through
42		a word letter by letter. This doesn't affect the spelling when typing
43		the characters. When cur_phonetic=1, speakup will speak characters
44		phoneticaly when arrowing over a letter. When cur_phonetic=0, speakup
45		will speak letters as normally.
46
47What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/delimiters
48KernelVersion:	2.6
49Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
50Description:	Delimit a word from speakup.
51		TODO: add more info
52
53What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/ex_num
54KernelVersion:	2.6
55Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
56Description:	TODO:
57
58What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/key_echo
59KernelVersion:	2.6
60Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
61Description:	Controls if speakup speaks keys when they are typed. One = on,
62		zero = off or don't echo keys.
63
64What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/keymap
65KernelVersion:	2.6
66Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
67Description:	Speakup keymap remaps keys to Speakup functions.
68		It uses a binary
69		format. A special program called genmap is needed to compile a
70		textual  keymap into the binary format which is then loaded into
71		/sys/accessibility/speakup/keymap.
72
73What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/no_interrupt
74KernelVersion:	2.6
75Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
76Description:	Controls if typing interrupts output from speakup. With
77		no_interrupt set to zero, typing on the keyboard will interrupt
78		speakup if for example
79		the say screen command is used before the
80		entire screen  is read.
81
82		With no_interrupt set to one, if the say
83		screen command is used, and one then types on the keyboard,
84		speakup will continue to say the whole screen regardless until
85		it finishes.
86
87What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/punc_all
88KernelVersion:	2.6
89Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
90Description:	This is a list of all the punctuation speakup should speak when
91		punc_level is set to four.
92
93What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/punc_level
94KernelVersion:	2.6
95Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
96Description:	Controls the level of punctuation spoken as the screen is
97		displayed, not reviewed. Levels range from zero no punctuation,
98		to four, all punctuation. One corresponds to punc_some, two
99		corresponds to punc_most, and three as well as four both
100		correspond to punc_all. Some hardware synthesizers may have
101		different levels each corresponding to  three and four for
102		punc_level. Also note that if punc_level is set to zero, and
103		key_echo is set to one, typed punctuation is still spoken as it
104		is typed.
105
106What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/punc_most
107KernelVersion:	2.6
108Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
109Description:	This is a list of all the punctuation speakup should speak when
110		punc_level is set to two.
111
112What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/punc_some
113KernelVersion:	2.6
114Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
115Description:	This is a list of all the punctuation speakup should speak when
116		punc_level is set to one.
117
118What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/reading_punc
119KernelVersion:	2.6
120Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
121Description:	Almost the same as punc_level, the differences being that
122		reading_punc controls the level of punctuation when reviewing
123		the screen with speakup's screen review commands. The other
124		difference is that reading_punc set to three speaks punc_all,
125		and reading_punc set to four speaks all punctuation, including
126		spaces.
127
128What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/repeats
129KernelVersion:	2.6
130Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
131Description:	A list of characters speakup repeats. Normally, when there are
132		more than three characters in a row, speakup
133		just reads three of
134		those characters. For example, "......" would be read as dot,
135		dot, dot. If a . is added to the list of characters in repeats,
136		"......" would be read as dot, dot, dot, times six.
137
138What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/say_control
139KernelVersion:	2.6
140Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
141Description:	If set to one, speakup speaks shift, alt and control when those
142		keys are pressed. If say_control is set to zero, shift, ctrl,
143		and alt are not spoken when they are pressed.
144
145What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/say_word_ctl
146KernelVersion:	2.6
147Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
148Description:	TODO:
149
150What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/silent
151KernelVersion:	2.6
152Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
153Description:	TODO:
154
155What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/spell_delay
156KernelVersion:	2.6
157Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
158Description:	This controls how fast a word is spelled
159		when speakup's say word
160		review command is pressed twice quickly to speak the current
161		word being reviewed. Zero just speaks the letters one after
162		another, while values one through four
163		seem to introduce more of
164		a pause between the spelling of each letter by speakup.
165
166What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/synth
167KernelVersion:	2.6
168Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
169Description:	Gets or sets the synthesizer driver currently in use. Reading
170		synth returns the synthesizer driver currently in use. Writing
171		synth switches to the given synthesizer driver, provided it is
172		either built into the kernel, or already loaded as a module.
173
174What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/synth_direct
175KernelVersion:	2.6
176Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
177Description:	Sends whatever is written to synth_direct
178		directly to the speech synthesizer in use, bypassing speakup.
179		This could be used to make the synthesizer speak
180		a string, or to
181		send control sequences to the synthesizer to change how the
182		synthesizer behaves.
183
184What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/version
185KernelVersion:	2.6
186Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
187Description:	Reading version returns the version of speakup, and the version
188		of the synthesizer driver currently in use.
189
190What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/i18n/announcements
191KernelVersion:	2.6
192Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
193Description:	This file contains various general announcements, most of which
194		cannot be categorized.  You will find messages such as "You
195		killed Speakup", "I'm alive", "leaving help", "parked",
196		"unparked", and others. You will also find the names of the
197		screen edges and cursor tracking modes here.
198
199What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/i18n/chartab
200KernelVersion:	2.6
201Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
202Description:	TODO
203
204What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/i18n/ctl_keys
205KernelVersion:	2.6
206Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
207Description:	Here, you will find names of control keys.  These are used with
208		Speakup's say_control feature.
209
210What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/i18n/function_names
211KernelVersion:	2.6
212Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
213Description:	Here, you will find a list of names for Speakup functions.
214		These are used by the help system.  For example, suppose that
215		you have activated help mode, and you pressed
216		keypad 3.  Speakup
217		says: "keypad 3 is character, say next."
218		The message "character, say next" names a Speakup function, and
219		it comes from this function_names file.
220
221What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/i18n/states
222KernelVersion:	2.6
223Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
224Description:	This file contains names for key states.
225		Again, these are part of the help system.  For instance, if you
226		had pressed speakup + keypad 3, you would hear:
227		"speakup keypad 3 is go to bottom edge."
228
229		The speakup key is depressed, so the name of the key state is
230		speakup.
231
232		This part of the message comes from the states collection.
233
234What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/i18n/characters
235KernelVersion:	2.6
236Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
237Description:	Through this sys entry, Speakup gives you the ability to change
238		how Speakup pronounces a given character. You could, for
239		example, change how some punctuation characters are spoken. You
240		can even change how Speakup will pronounce certain letters. For
241		further details see '12.  Changing the Pronunciation of
242		Characters' in Speakup User's Guide (file spkguide.txt in
243		source).
244
245What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/i18n/colors
246KernelVersion:	2.6
247Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
248Description:	When you use the "say attributes" function, Speakup says the
249		name of the foreground and background colors.  These names come
250		from the i18n/colors file.
251
252What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/i18n/formatted
253KernelVersion:	2.6
254Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
255Description:	This group of messages contains embedded formatting codes, to
256		specify the type and width of displayed data.  If you change
257		these, you must preserve all of the formatting codes, and they
258		must appear in the order used by the default messages.
259
260What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/i18n/key_names
261KernelVersion:	2.6
262Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
263Description:	Again, key_names is used by Speakup's help system.  In the
264		previous example, Speakup said that you pressed "keypad 3."
265		This name came from the key_names file.
266
267What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/
268KernelVersion:	2.6
269Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
270Description:	In `/sys/accessibility/speakup` is a directory corresponding to
271		the synthesizer driver currently in use (E.G) `soft` for the
272		soft driver. This directory contains files which control the
273		speech synthesizer itself,
274		as opposed to controlling the speakup
275		screen reader. The parameters in this directory have the same
276		names and functions across all
277		supported synthesizers. The range
278		of values for freq, pitch, rate, and vol is the same for all
279		supported synthesizers, with the given range being internally
280		mapped by the driver to  more or less fit the range of values
281		supported for a given parameter by the individual synthesizer.
282		Below is a description of values and  parameters for soft
283		synthesizer, which is currently the most commonly used.
284
285What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/caps_start
286KernelVersion:	2.6
287Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
288Description:	This is the string that is sent to the synthesizer to cause it
289		to start speaking uppercase letters. For the soft synthesizer
290		and most others, this causes the pitch of the voice to rise
291		above the currently set pitch.
292
293What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/caps_stop
294KernelVersion:	2.6
295Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
296Description:	This is the string sent to the synthesizer to cause it to stop
297		speaking uppercase letters. In the case of the soft synthesizer
298		and most others, this returns the pitch of the voice
299		down to the
300		currently set pitch.
301
302What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/delay_time
303KernelVersion:	2.6
304Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
305Description:	TODO:
306
307What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/direct
308KernelVersion:	2.6
309Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
310Description:	Controls if punctuation is spoken by speakup, or by the
311		synthesizer.
312
313		For example, speakup speaks ">" as "greater", while
314		the espeak synthesizer used by the soft driver speaks "greater
315		than". Zero lets speakup speak the punctuation. One lets the
316		synthesizer itself speak punctuation.
317
318What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/freq
319KernelVersion:	2.6
320Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
321Description:	Gets or sets the frequency of the speech synthesizer. Range is
322		0-9.
323
324What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/flush_time
325KernelVersion:	5.12
326Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
327Description:	Gets or sets the timeout to wait for the synthesizer flush to
328		complete. This can be used when the cable gets faulty and flush
329		notifications are getting lost.
330
331What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/full_time
332KernelVersion:	2.6
333Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
334Description:	TODO:
335
336What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/jiffy_delta
337KernelVersion:	2.6
338Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
339Description:	This controls how many jiffys the kernel gives to the
340		synthesizer. Setting this too high can make a system unstable,
341		or even crash it.
342
343What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/pitch
344KernelVersion:	2.6
345Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
346Description:	Gets or sets the pitch of the synthesizer. The range is 0-9.
347
348What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/inflection
349KernelVersion:	5.8
350Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
351Description:	Gets or sets the inflection of the synthesizer, i.e. the pitch
352		range. The range is 0-9.
353
354What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/punct
355KernelVersion:	2.6
356Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
357Description:	Gets or sets the amount of punctuation spoken by the
358		synthesizer. The range for the soft driver seems to be 0-2.
359		TODO: How is this related to speakup's punc_level, or
360		reading_punc.
361
362What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/rate
363KernelVersion:	2.6
364Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
365Description:	Gets or sets the rate of the synthesizer. Range is from zero
366		slowest, to nine fastest.
367
368What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/tone
369KernelVersion:	2.6
370Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
371Description:	Gets or sets the tone of the speech synthesizer. The range for
372		the soft driver seems to be 0-2. This seems to make no
373		difference if using espeak and the espeakup connector.
374		TODO: does espeakup support different tonalities?
375
376What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/trigger_time
377KernelVersion:	2.6
378Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
379Description:	TODO:
380
381What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/voice
382KernelVersion:	2.6
383Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
384Description:	Gets or sets the voice used by the synthesizer if the
385		synthesizer can speak in more than one voice. The range for the
386		soft driver is 0-7. Note that while espeak supports multiple
387		voices, this parameter will not set the voice when the espeakup
388		connector is used  between speakup and espeak.
389
390What:		/sys/accessibility/speakup/<synth-name>/vol
391KernelVersion:	2.6
392Contact:	speakup@linux-speakup.org
393Description:	Gets or sets the volume of the speech synthesizer. Range is 0-9,
394		with zero being the softest, and nine being the loudest.
395
396