The Intelligent Input Bus (IBus, pronounced as I-Bus) is an input method (IM) framework for multilingual input in Unix-like operating-systems. The name "Bus" comes from its bus-like architecture.
Goals
The main goals of the IBus project include:[promotion?]
Providing full-featured and user-friendly input-method user interfaces
Employing authentication measures to improve security
Providing a universal interface and library for input-method developers
Fitting the need of users from different regions and customs
Motivation
The draft Specification of IM engine Service Provider Interface[2] document from the Northeast Asia OSS Forum[3] Work Group 3 recommends bus-centric IM framework architectures with a bus implementation (similar to dbus). According to the specification, SCIM-1.4 is not considered suitable for further development as it is developed in C++, which usually causes ABI transition problems.[4]
Since then, succeeding projects like IM-BUS (led by James Su) and SCIM-2 (led by Zheng Hu) were started. However, both projects are suspended. Therefore, Huang Peng from Red Hat established the IBus project to prove the idea of IM-BUS by using Python, D-Bus and GLib rather than implementing the functions recommended by CJK OSS forum. In spite of that, IBus has already gained community acceptance, and FreeBSD and many Linux distribution such as Fedora and Ubuntu already have IBus in their package repositories. IBus became the new default input method framework in Fedora 11,[5] and replaced SCIM in Ubuntu 9.10.[6]
Architecture
IBus is developed in C and Python, thus avoiding the C++ABI transition problem of SCIM <1.4.14.
IBus provides most of its functionality through services. There are three kinds of services:
Input method engine (IME): Actual input method
Configuration: Handles the configuration for IBus and other services such as IME
Panel: User interface such as language bar and candidate selection table
IBus employs D-Bus to communicate among ibus-daemon, services, and IM clients such as terminal emulators, editors and web browsers. ibus-daemon manages all clients and services by receiving registrations from services, and sending D-Bus message to corresponding services and IM client.
It implements XIM protocol, and has GTK and Qt input method modules.
ibus-chewing: An intelligent Chinese Phonetic IME for Zhùyīn users. It is based on libChewing.
ibus-hangul: A Korean IME
ibus-libpinyin: A newer Chinese IME for Pinyin users. Designed by Huang Peng and Peng Wu.
ibus-libthai: A Thai IME based on libthai
ibus-libzhuyin:[12] An engine for the Zhùyīn ("bopomofo") input method (an alternative to ibus-chewing)
ibus-m17n: A multilingualism IME which allows input of many languages using the input methods from m17n-db. See more details in #ibus-m17n.
ibus-mozc: A plugin to the Japanese IME "mozc" developed by Google[13]
ibus-pinyin: An intelligent Chinese Phonetic IME for Hanyu pinyin users. Designed by Huang Peng (main author of IBus) and has many advanced features such as English spell checking. Deprecated and replaced with ibus-libpinyin (see above)
ibus-table: An IME that accommodates table-based IMs. See more details in #ibus-table.
ibus-unikey: An IME for typing Vietnamese characters
ibus-m17n
ibus-m17n is an IME that uses input methods and corresponding icons in the multinationalization database, abbreviated to the numeronym "m17n". Unlike ibus-table which supports plain tables, m17n input methods also support states, whose labels are displayed on the IBus panel (language bar). M17n input methods also support surrounding text, consequently, languages such as Thai and IMs such as plain Zhuyin that require this feature are supported through ibus-m17n, as is pinyin with diacritics for the four tones.
ibus-table
ibus-table, developed by Yu Wei Yu, is an IME that loads tables of input methods which do not need complicated logic to select words.[14] Many structure-based Chinese input methods such as Cangjie and Wubi are supported this way.
^"Releases/11/FeatureList". The Fedora Project. 8 April 2009. Archived from the original on 8 April 2009. Retrieved 26 October 2019. A new default input method framework under active development which is designed to overcome the limitations of SCIM.
^"KarmicKoala/TechnicalOverview - Ubuntu Wiki". Ubuntu. 28 October 2009. Archived from the original on 21 November 2011. Retrieved 26 October 2019. Ubuntu has switched to IBus as preferred input method framework. Unlike the previously used SCIM, IBus is under active development and fixes a number of SCIM's design limitations.
^"Mozc - a Japanese Input Method Editor designed for multi-platform". GitHub. 25 February 2018. Archived from the original on 26 September 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019. Mozc is a Japanese Input Method Editor (IME) designed for multi-platform such as Android OS, Apple OS X, Chromium OS, GNU/Linux and Microsoft Windows. This OpenSource project originates from Google Japanese Input.