Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
annotate src/emacs.c @ 5028:b7232de2a937
Add information about repos and VCSes to FAQ.
| author | Stephen J. Turnbull <stephen@xemacs.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Wed, 10 Feb 2010 20:51:51 +0900 |
| parents | 838630c0734f |
| children | 6f2158fa75ed b5df3737028a |
| rev | line source |
|---|---|
| 428 | 1 /* XEmacs -- Fully extensible Emacs, running on Unix and other platforms. |
| 2 Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1994 | |
| 3 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | |
| 4 Copyright (C) 1995 Sun Microsystems, Inc. | |
|
5023
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
5 Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2010 Ben Wing. |
| 428 | 6 |
| 7 This file is part of XEmacs. | |
| 8 | |
| 9 XEmacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it | |
| 10 under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the | |
| 11 Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any | |
| 12 later version. | |
| 13 | |
| 14 XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT | |
| 15 ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or | |
| 16 FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License | |
| 17 for more details. | |
| 18 | |
| 19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | |
| 20 along with XEmacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to | |
|
4802
2fc0e2f18322
Don't create any bignums before pdumping. Add bignum, ratio, and bigfloat
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
4759
diff
changeset
|
21 the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St - Fifth Floor, |
|
2fc0e2f18322
Don't create any bignums before pdumping. Add bignum, ratio, and bigfloat
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
4759
diff
changeset
|
22 Boston, MA 02111-1301, USA. */ |
| 428 | 23 |
| 24 /* Synched up with: Mule 2.0, FSF 19.28. */ | |
| 25 | |
| 2367 | 26 /* This file has been Mule-ized, Ben Wing, 10-7-04. */ |
| 27 | |
| 442 | 28 /* Capsule summary of the various releases of Lucid Emacs/XEmacs and |
| 771 | 29 FSF/GNU Emacs. (Copied from the Internals Manual, where the |
| 30 canonical version lives.) Provided here for use in cross-referencing | |
| 31 version releases and dates in comments, esp. in the authorship | |
| 32 comments at the beginning of each file. More information about | |
| 33 history can be found in the beginning of the Internals Manual and | |
| 34 in the About page. | |
| 442 | 35 |
| 36 | |
| 37 -- A time line for Lucid Emacs/XEmacs is | |
| 38 | |
| 2517 | 39 Version 19.0 shipped with Energize 1.0, April 1992. |
| 40 Version 19.1 released June 4, 1992. | |
| 41 Version 19.2 released June 19, 1992. | |
| 42 Version 19.3 released September 9, 1992. | |
| 43 Version 19.4 released January 21, 1993. | |
| 44 Version 19.5 released February 5, 1993. This was a repackaging of 19.4 with a | |
| 45 few bug fixes and shipped with Energize 2.0. It was a trade-show giveaway | |
| 46 and never released to the net. | |
| 47 Version 19.6 released April 9, 1993. | |
| 48 Version 19.7 was a repackaging of 19.6 with a few bug fixes and | |
| 442 | 49 shipped with Energize 2.1. Never released to the net. |
| 2517 | 50 Version 19.8 released September 6, 1993. (Epoch merger, preliminary I18N |
| 51 support) | |
| 52 Version 19.9 released January 12, 1994. (Scrollbars, Athena.) | |
| 53 Version 19.10 released May 27, 1994. Known as "Lucid Emacs" when | |
| 54 shipped by Lucid, and as "XEmacs" when shipped by Sun; but Lucid | |
| 55 went out of business a few days later and it's unclear very many | |
| 56 copies of 19.10 were released by Lucid. (Last release by Jamie Zawinski.) | |
| 57 Version 19.11 (first XEmacs) released September 13, 1994. | |
| 58 Version 19.12 released June 23, 1995. | |
| 59 Version 19.13 released September 1, 1995. | |
| 60 Version 19.14 released June 23, 1996. | |
| 61 Version 20.0 released February 9, 1997. | |
| 62 Version 19.15 released March 28, 1997. | |
| 63 Version 20.1 (not released to the net) April 15, 1997. | |
| 64 Version 20.2 released May 16, 1997. | |
| 65 Version 19.16 released October 31, 1997; retiring of v19 series. | |
| 66 Version 20.3 (the first stable version of XEmacs 20.x) released November 30, | |
| 67 1997. | |
| 68 Version 20.4 released February 28, 1998. (Jamie claims this version is the | |
| 69 "first reasonably stable release with MULE support" and says that "XEmacs | |
| 70 'core' and 'packages' now packaged separately.") | |
| 71 Version 21.0-pre5 released July 18, 1998. (Jamie says "Numbering scheme goes | |
| 72 wonky due to switch to stable + unstable branches.") | |
| 73 Version 21.0.60 released December 10, 1998. (The version naming scheme was | |
| 74 changed at this point: [a] the second version number is odd for stable | |
| 75 versions, even for beta versions; [b] a third version number is added, | |
| 76 replacing the "beta xxx" ending for beta versions and allowing for | |
| 77 periodic maintenance releases for stable versions. Therefore, 21.0 was | |
| 78 never "officially" released; similarly for 21.2, etc.) | |
| 79 Version 21.0.61 released January 4, 1999. | |
| 80 Version 21.0.63 released February 3, 1999. | |
| 81 Version 21.0.64 released March 1, 1999. | |
| 82 Version 21.0.65 released March 5, 1999. | |
| 83 Version 21.0.66 released March 12, 1999. | |
| 84 Version 21.0.67 released March 25, 1999. | |
| 85 Version 21.1.2 released May 14, 1999; on comp.emacs, May 28. (This is | |
| 788 | 86 the followup to 21.0.67. The second version number was bumped to indicate |
| 87 the beginning of the "stable" series.) | |
| 2517 | 88 Version 21.1.3 released June 26, 1999. |
| 89 Version 21.1.4 released July 8, 1999. | |
| 90 Version 21.1.6 released August 14, 1999. (There was no 21.1.5.) | |
| 91 Version 21.1.7 released September 26, 1999. | |
| 92 Version 21.1.8 released November 2, 1999. | |
| 93 Version 21.1.9 released February 13, 2000. | |
| 94 Version 21.1.10 released May 7, 2000. | |
| 95 Version 21.1.10a released June 24, 2000. | |
| 96 Version 21.1.11 released July 18, 2000. | |
| 97 Version 21.1.12 released August 5, 2000. | |
| 98 Version 21.1.13 released January 7, 2001. | |
| 99 Version 21.1.14 released January 27, 2001. | |
| 100 Version 21.2.9 released February 3, 1999. | |
| 101 Version 21.2.10 released February 5, 1999. | |
| 102 Version 21.2.11 released March 1, 1999. | |
| 103 Version 21.2.12 released March 5, 1999. | |
| 104 Version 21.2.13 released March 12, 1999. | |
| 105 Version 21.2.14 released May 14, 1999. | |
| 106 Version 21.2.15 released June 4, 1999. | |
| 107 Version 21.2.16 released June 11, 1999. | |
| 108 Version 21.2.17 released June 22, 1999. | |
| 109 Version 21.2.18 released July 14, 1999. | |
| 110 Version 21.2.19 released July 30, 1999. | |
| 111 Version 21.2.20 released November 10, 1999. | |
| 112 Version 21.2.21 released November 28, 1999. | |
| 113 Version 21.2.22 released November 29, 1999. | |
| 114 Version 21.2.23 released December 7, 1999. | |
| 115 Version 21.2.24 released December 14, 1999. | |
| 116 Version 21.2.25 released December 24, 1999. | |
| 117 Version 21.2.26 released December 31, 1999. | |
| 118 Version 21.2.27 released January 18, 2000. | |
| 119 Version 21.2.28 released February 7, 2000. | |
| 120 Version 21.2.29 released February 16, 2000. | |
| 121 Version 21.2.30 released February 21, 2000. | |
| 122 Version 21.2.31 released February 23, 2000. | |
| 123 Version 21.2.32 released March 20, 2000. | |
| 124 Version 21.2.33 released May 1, 2000. | |
| 125 Version 21.2.34 released May 28, 2000. | |
| 126 Version 21.2.35 released July 19, 2000. | |
| 127 Version 21.2.36 released October 4, 2000. | |
| 128 Version 21.2.37 released November 14, 2000. | |
| 129 Version 21.2.38 released December 5, 2000. | |
| 130 Version 21.2.39 released December 31, 2000. | |
| 131 Version 21.2.40 released January 8, 2001. | |
| 132 Version 21.2.41 "Polyhymnia" released January 17, 2001. | |
| 133 Version 21.2.42 "Poseidon" released January 20, 2001. | |
| 134 Version 21.2.43 "Terspichore" released January 26, 2001. | |
| 135 Version 21.2.44 "Thalia" released February 8, 2001. | |
| 136 Version 21.2.45 "Thelxepeia" released February 23, 2001. | |
| 137 Version 21.2.46 "Urania" released March 21, 2001. | |
| 138 Version 21.2.47 "Zephir" released April 14, 2001. | |
| 139 Version 21.4.0 "Solid Vapor" released April 16, 2001. | |
| 140 Version 21.4.1 "Copyleft" released April 19, 2001. | |
| 141 Version 21.4.2 "Developer-Friendly Unix APIs" released May 10, 2001. | |
| 142 Version 21.4.3 "Academic Rigor" released May 17, 2001. | |
| 143 Version 21.4.4 "Artificial Intelligence" released July 28, 2001. | |
| 144 Version 21.4.5 "Civil Service" released October 23, 2001. | |
| 145 Version 21.4.6 "Common Lisp" released December 17, 2001. | |
| 146 Version 21.4.7 "Economic Science" released May 4, 2002. | |
| 147 Version 21.4.8 "Honest Recruiter" released May 9, 2002. | |
| 148 Version 21.4.9 "Informed Management" released August 23, 2002. | |
| 149 Version 21.4.10 "Military Intelligence" released November 2, 2002. | |
| 150 Version 21.4.11 "Native Windows TTY Support" released January 3, 2003. | |
| 151 Version 21.4.12 "Portable Code" released January 15, 2003. | |
| 152 Version 21.4.13 "Rational FORTRAN" released May 25, 2003. | |
| 153 Version 21.4.14 "Reasonable Discussion" released September 3, 2003. | |
| 154 Version 21.4.15 "Security Through Obscurity" released February 2, 2004. | |
| 155 Version 21.5.0 "alfalfa" released April 18, 2001. | |
| 156 Version 21.5.1 "anise" released May 9, 2001. | |
| 157 Version 21.5.2 "artichoke" released July 28, 2001. | |
| 158 Version 21.5.3 "asparagus" released September 7, 2001. | |
| 159 Version 21.5.4 "bamboo" released January 8, 2002. | |
| 160 Version 21.5.5 "beets" released March 5, 2002. | |
| 161 Version 21.5.6 "bok choi" released April 5, 2002. | |
| 162 Version 21.5.7 "broccoflower" released July 2, 2002. | |
| 163 Version 21.5.8 "broccoli" released July 27, 2002. | |
| 164 Version 21.5.9 "brussels sprouts" released August 30, 2002. | |
| 165 Version 21.5.10 "burdock" released January 4, 2003. | |
| 166 Version 21.5.11 "cabbage" released February 16, 2003. | |
| 167 Version 21.5.12 "carrot" released April 24, 2003. | |
| 168 Version 21.5.13 "cauliflower" released May 10, 2003. | |
| 169 Version 21.5.14 "cassava" released June 1, 2003. | |
| 170 Version 21.5.15 "celery" released September 3, 2003. | |
| 171 Version 21.5.16 "celeriac" released September 26, 2003. | |
| 172 Version 21.5.17 "chayote" released March 22, 2004. | |
| 173 Version 21.5.18 "chestnut" released October 22, 2004. | |
| 442 | 174 |
| 175 | |
| 176 -- A time line for GNU Emacs version 19 is | |
| 177 | |
| 178 version 19.7 (beta) (first beta release) released ??????; prob. late May 1993. | |
| 179 version 19.8 (beta) released May 27, 1993. | |
| 180 version 19.9 (beta) released May 27, 1993. | |
| 181 version 19.10 (beta) released May 30, 1993. | |
| 182 version 19.11 (beta) released June 1, 1993. | |
| 183 version 19.12 (beta) released June 2, 1993. | |
| 184 version 19.13 (beta) released June 8, 1993. | |
| 185 version 19.14 (beta) released June 17, 1993. | |
| 186 version 19.15 (beta) released June 19, 1993. | |
| 187 version 19.16 (beta) released July 6, 1993. | |
| 188 version 19.17 (beta) released late July, 1993. | |
| 189 version 19.18 (beta) released August 9, 1993. | |
| 190 version 19.19 (beta) released August 15, 1993. | |
| 191 version 19.20 (beta) released November 17, 1993. | |
| 192 version 19.21 (beta) released November 17, 1993. | |
| 193 version 19.22 (beta) released November 28, 1993. | |
| 788 | 194 version 19.23 (beta) released on comp.emacs, May 17, 1994. |
| 442 | 195 version 19.24 (beta) released May 16, 1994. |
| 196 version 19.25 (beta) released June 3, 1994. | |
| 197 version 19.26 (beta) released September 11, 1994. | |
| 198 version 19.27 (beta) released September 14, 1994. | |
| 199 version 19.28 (first ``official'' release) released November 1, 1994. | |
| 200 version 19.29 released June 21, 1995. | |
| 201 version 19.30 released November 24, 1995. | |
| 202 version 19.31 released May 25, 1996. | |
| 203 version 19.32 released July 31, 1996. | |
| 204 version 19.33 released August 11, 1996. | |
| 788 | 205 version 19.34 released August 21, 1996; on comp.emacs, August 22. |
| 442 | 206 version 19.34b released September 6, 1996. |
| 207 | |
| 208 | |
| 788 | 209 -- A time line for GNU Emacs versions 20 and 21 is |
| 442 | 210 |
| 211 version 20.1 released September 17, 1997. | |
| 212 version 20.2 released September 20, 1997. | |
| 213 version 20.3 released August 19, 1998. | |
| 788 | 214 version 20.4 released July 12, 1999; on comp.emacs, July 27. |
| 215 version 21.1 released October 20, 2001. | |
| 2517 | 216 Version 21.2 released March 16, 2002. |
| 217 Version 21.3 released March 19, 2003. | |
| 442 | 218 |
| 219 | |
| 220 -- A time line for GNU Emacs version 18 and older is | |
| 221 | |
| 222 GNU Emacs version 15 (15.34) was released sometime in 1984 or 1985 and | |
| 223 shared some code with a version of Emacs written by James Gosling (the | |
| 224 same James Gosling who later created the Java language). | |
| 225 GNU Emacs version 16 (first released version was 16.56) was released on | |
| 226 July 15, 1985. All Gosling code was removed due to potential copyright | |
| 227 problems with the code. | |
| 228 version 16.57: released on September 16, 1985. | |
| 229 versions 16.58, 16.59: released on September 17, 1985. | |
| 230 version 16.60: released on September 19, 1985. These later version 16's | |
| 231 incorporated patches from the net, esp. for getting Emacs to work under | |
| 232 System V. | |
| 233 version 17.36 (first official v17 release) released on December 20, 1985. | |
| 234 Included a TeX-able user manual. First official unpatched version that | |
| 235 worked on vanilla System V machines. | |
| 236 version 17.43 (second official v17 release) released on January 25, 1986. | |
| 237 version 17.45 released on January 30, 1986. | |
| 238 version 17.46 released on February 4, 1986. | |
| 239 version 17.48 released on February 10, 1986. | |
| 240 version 17.49 released on February 12, 1986. | |
| 241 version 17.55 released on March 18, 1986. | |
| 242 version 17.57 released on March 27, 1986. | |
| 243 version 17.58 released on April 4, 1986. | |
| 244 version 17.61 released on April 12, 1986. | |
| 245 version 17.63 released on May 7, 1986. | |
| 246 version 17.64 released on May 12, 1986. | |
| 247 version 18.24 (a beta version) released on October 2, 1986. | |
| 248 version 18.30 (a beta version) released on November 15, 1986. | |
| 249 version 18.31 (a beta version) released on November 23, 1986. | |
| 250 version 18.32 (a beta version) released on December 7, 1986. | |
| 251 version 18.33 (a beta version) released on December 12, 1986. | |
| 252 version 18.35 (a beta version) released on January 5, 1987. | |
| 253 version 18.36 (a beta version) released on January 21, 1987. | |
| 254 January 27, 1987: The Great Usenet Renaming. net.emacs is now comp.emacs. | |
| 255 version 18.37 (a beta version) released on February 12, 1987. | |
| 256 version 18.38 (a beta version) released on March 3, 1987. | |
| 257 version 18.39 (a beta version) released on March 14, 1987. | |
| 258 version 18.40 (a beta version) released on March 18, 1987. | |
| 259 version 18.41 (the first ``official'' release) released on March 22, 1987. | |
| 260 version 18.45 released on June 2, 1987. | |
| 261 version 18.46 released on June 9, 1987. | |
| 262 version 18.47 released on June 18, 1987. | |
| 263 version 18.48 released on September 3, 1987. | |
| 264 version 18.49 released on September 18, 1987. | |
| 265 version 18.50 released on February 13, 1988. | |
| 266 version 18.51 released on May 7, 1988. | |
| 267 version 18.52 released on September 1, 1988. | |
| 268 version 18.53 released on February 24, 1989. | |
| 269 version 18.54 released on April 26, 1989. | |
| 270 version 18.55 released on August 23, 1989. This is the earliest version | |
| 271 that is still available by FTP. | |
| 272 version 18.56 released on January 17, 1991. | |
| 273 version 18.57 released late January, 1991. | |
| 274 version 18.58 released ?????. | |
| 275 version 18.59 released October 31, 1992. | |
| 276 | |
| 2517 | 277 |
| 278 -- A time line for Epoch is | |
| 279 | |
| 280 Epoch 1.0 released December 14, 1989. (by Simon Kaplan, Chris Love, et al.) | |
| 281 Epoch 2.0 released December 23, 1989. | |
| 282 Epoch 3.1 released February 6, 1990. | |
| 283 Epoch 3.2 released December[????] 11, 1990. | |
| 284 Epoch 4.0 released August 27, 1990. | |
| 285 | |
| 442 | 286 */ |
| 854 | 287 |
| 2367 | 288 /* Sources for further information: |
| 289 | |
| 290 ----------------------------------- | |
| 291 1. Using XEmacs, Programming Elisp: | |
| 292 ----------------------------------- | |
| 293 | |
| 294 ;;; -- the XEmacs User's Manual (Access using the online Info browser: | |
| 295 ;;; Use `Help->Info (Online Docs)->XEmacs User's Manual' (if | |
| 296 ;;; there is such an entry); or get to the Info contents page | |
| 297 ;;; using `Help->Info Contents' or `C-h i', and then | |
| 298 ;;; *middle-click* the XEmacs link or move the cursor into the | |
| 299 ;;; link and hit ENTER. This manual contains a great deal of | |
| 300 ;;; documentation on customization: Scroll down to the | |
| 301 ;;; Customization link and select it in the same fashion as for | |
| 302 ;;; the XEmacs link just mentioned.) | |
| 303 | |
| 304 ;;; -- the XEmacs FAQ (`C-h F' for the local version; get either the | |
| 305 ;;; local version or the very latest version off the net using | |
| 306 ;;; the Help menu) | |
| 307 | |
| 308 ;;; -- the XEmacs Lisp Reference Manual, containing detailed | |
| 309 ;;; documentation on Elisp. (Access using Info, just like for the | |
| 310 ;;; XEmacs User's Manual.) | |
| 311 | |
| 312 ;;; -- the documentation strings for specific commands, functions, | |
| 313 ;;; key sequences, and variables. NOTE: This is *not* the same | |
| 314 ;;; information as in the XEmacs User's Manual or XEmacs Lisp | |
| 315 ;;; Reference Manual! In general, the doc strings are more | |
| 316 ;;; terse and more up-to-date than what is found in the manuals. | |
| 317 ;;; Once you understand the general concepts, these doc strings | |
| 318 ;;; should be your first point of reference for further | |
| 319 ;;; info. (Access using menu entries under `Help->Commands, | |
| 320 ;;; Variables, Keys' or using the keyboard: `C-h k' for a key | |
| 321 ;;; sequence, `C-h f' for a named command or Elisp function, | |
| 322 ;;; `C-h v' for a variable. There is various other useful | |
| 323 ;;; information accessible similarly, such as `C-h a' | |
| 324 ;;; ["Apropos", i.e. search for a command, function, or variable | |
| 325 ;;; by name]; `C-h C-a' ["Apropos Docs", i.e. search through the | |
| 326 ;;; text of the doc strings]; `C-h b' to list all key bindings; | |
| 327 ;;; `C-h m' to describe the current major and minor modes; etc. | |
| 328 ;;; Type `C-h ? ?' for a complete list.) | |
| 329 | |
| 330 ;;; -- Getting Started with XEmacs [aka the "New User's Guide"], a | |
| 331 ;;; more introductory manual than the XEmacs User's Manual. | |
| 332 ;;; (Access using Info, just like for the XEmacs User's Manual. | |
| 333 ;;; There are some sections on customization here.) | |
| 334 | |
| 335 ;;; -- the XEmacs tutorial, a very simple introduction to XEmacs for | |
| 336 ;;; total beginners. (`C-h t' for English; get the version in | |
| 337 ;;; various languages from the Help menu) | |
| 338 | |
| 339 ;;; -- the XEmacs web site, www.xemacs.org. | |
| 340 | |
| 341 ;;; -- the XEmacs mailing lists (xemacs-FOO@xemacs.org; | |
| 342 ;;; see http://www.xemacs.org/Lists/ for more info. Before | |
| 343 ;;; posting, consider looking through the archives -- they go back | |
| 344 ;;; years and there is a powerful searching interface. Currently | |
| 345 ;;; the archives are at http://list-archive.xemacs.org/, but if | |
| 346 ;;; this doesn't work, you can always access them through | |
| 347 ;;; www.xemacs.org.) | |
| 348 | |
| 349 ;;; -- the XEmacs newsgroup, comp.emacs.xemacs. This is | |
| 350 ;;; bi-directionally gatewayed with xemacs@xemacs.org. WARNING: | |
| 351 ;;; The developers do not normally hang out on this newsgroup. If | |
| 352 ;;; you need to contact them, use xemacs-beta@xemacs.org. | |
| 353 | |
| 354 ;;; -- the XEmacs internals manual, for those interested in working on | |
| 355 ;;; the XEmacs C code. (Available through Info.) | |
| 356 | |
| 357 ;;; -- `Help->About XEmacs' to find out who the maintainers are. | |
| 358 | |
| 359 --------------------- | |
| 360 2. Developing XEmacs: | |
| 361 --------------------- | |
| 362 | |
| 363 -- the internals manual, man/internals/internals.texi | |
| 364 | |
| 365 -- long comments at the head of certain files: | |
| 366 | |
| 367 emacs.c | |
| 368 extents.c | |
| 369 text.c | |
| 370 text.h | |
| 371 lisp.h | |
| 372 redisplay.h | |
| 373 dynarr.c | |
| 374 blocktype.c | |
| 375 eval.c | |
| 376 event-Xt.c (sort of) | |
| 377 event-stream.c (command event queue) | |
| 378 frame.c | |
| 379 intl-encap-win32.c | |
| 380 keymap.c | |
| 381 line-number.c (a little bit) | |
| 382 menubar-msw.c (sort of) | |
| 383 menubar-x.c (sort of) | |
| 384 mule-canna.c (sort of) | |
| 385 mule-ccl.c | |
| 386 mule-coding.c (scattered in the file) | |
| 387 mule-wnn.c (in japanese) | |
| 388 ntheap.c (near the top) | |
| 389 redisplay.c (various scattered) | |
| 390 regex.c (various scattered) | |
| 391 sysdep.c (maybe; wait_for_termination) | |
| 392 unexec.c | |
| 393 unicode.c | |
| 4917 | 394 gccache-x.c (a bit) |
| 2367 | 395 |
| 396 #### review .h files; write a perl program to look for long comments | |
| 397 throughout the files, ignoring stuff inside of DEFUN's. | |
| 398 | |
| 399 #### elsewhere? | |
| 400 | |
| 401 -- comments scattered throughout the sources (#### should be grouped | |
| 402 together if feasible). For example, lrecord.h (pdump and object- | |
| 403 creation), alloc.c (fixed-type allocation), etc. #### fill in. | |
| 404 | |
| 405 -- Ben's Architecting XEmacs web site. | |
| 406 (http://www.xemacs.org/Architecting-XEmacs/index.html; #### should be | |
| 407 integrated into the sources) | |
| 408 | |
| 409 -- Back discussions on xemacs-beta (#### The juiciest tidbits, esp. | |
| 410 those with specific proposals, should be extracted and stuck in | |
| 411 the source) | |
| 412 | |
| 413 -- README.* in the src/ directory (and maybe other directories) | |
| 414 | |
| 415 -- The ChangeLog files, sometimes. | |
| 416 | |
| 417 */ | |
| 418 | |
| 419 | |
| 420 | |
| 428 | 421 /* Note: It is necessary to specify <config.h> and not "config.h" in |
| 422 order for the --srcdir type of compilation to work properly. | |
| 423 Otherwise the config.h from the srcdir, rather than the one from | |
| 424 the build dir, will be used. */ | |
| 425 | |
| 426 #include <config.h> | |
| 427 #include "lisp.h" | |
| 428 | |
| 429 #include "backtrace.h" /* run-emacs-from-temacs needs this */ | |
| 430 #include "buffer.h" | |
| 431 #include "commands.h" | |
| 432 #include "console.h" | |
| 433 #include "process.h" | |
| 434 #include "redisplay.h" | |
| 438 | 435 #include "frame.h" |
| 428 | 436 #include "sysdep.h" |
| 437 | |
| 438 #include "systty.h" | |
| 439 #include "sysfile.h" | |
| 440 #include "systime.h" | |
| 771 | 441 #include "sysproc.h" /* for qxe_getpid() */ |
| 428 | 442 |
| 443 #ifdef QUANTIFY | |
| 444 #include <quantify.h> | |
| 445 #endif | |
| 446 | |
| 447 #ifdef HAVE_SHLIB | |
| 448 #include "sysdll.h" | |
| 449 #endif | |
| 450 | |
| 451 #ifdef TOOLTALK | |
| 442 | 452 #include TT_C_H_FILE |
| 428 | 453 #endif |
| 454 | |
| 1315 | 455 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
| 872 | 456 #include "console-msw.h" |
| 428 | 457 #endif |
| 458 | |
| 2720 | 459 #ifdef DUMP_IN_EXEC |
| 2015 | 460 #ifndef WIN32_NATIVE |
| 461 #include "dump-data.h" | |
| 462 #endif | |
| 2720 | 463 #endif |
| 2015 | 464 |
| 428 | 465 /* For PATH_EXEC */ |
| 466 #include <paths.h> | |
| 467 | |
| 826 | 468 #if defined (HEAP_IN_DATA) && !defined (PDUMP) |
| 428 | 469 void report_sheap_usage (int die_if_pure_storage_exceeded); |
| 470 #endif | |
| 471 | |
| 472 #if !defined (SYSTEM_MALLOC) && !defined (DOUG_LEA_MALLOC) | |
| 473 extern void *(*__malloc_hook)(size_t); | |
| 474 extern void *(*__realloc_hook)(void *, size_t); | |
| 475 extern void (*__free_hook)(void *); | |
| 476 #endif /* not SYSTEM_MALLOC && not DOUG_LEA_MALLOC */ | |
| 477 | |
| 478 /* Command line args from shell, as list of strings */ | |
| 479 Lisp_Object Vcommand_line_args; | |
| 480 | |
| 481 /* Set nonzero after XEmacs has started up the first time. | |
| 482 Prevents reinitialization of the Lisp world and keymaps | |
| 483 on subsequent starts. */ | |
| 484 int initialized; | |
| 485 | |
| 486 #ifdef DOUG_LEA_MALLOC | |
| 487 # include <malloc.h> | |
| 488 /* Preserves a pointer to the memory allocated that copies that | |
| 489 static data inside glibc's malloc. */ | |
| 490 static void *malloc_state_ptr; | |
| 491 #endif /* DOUG_LEA_MALLOC */ | |
| 492 | |
| 493 # ifdef REL_ALLOC | |
| 494 void r_alloc_reinit (void); | |
| 495 # endif | |
| 496 | |
| 497 /* Variable whose value is symbol giving operating system type. */ | |
| 498 Lisp_Object Vsystem_type; | |
| 499 | |
| 500 /* Variable whose value is string giving configuration built for. */ | |
| 501 Lisp_Object Vsystem_configuration; | |
| 502 | |
| 503 /* Variable whose value is string containing the configuration options | |
| 504 XEmacs was built with. */ | |
| 505 Lisp_Object Vsystem_configuration_options; | |
| 506 | |
| 507 /* Version numbers and strings */ | |
| 508 Lisp_Object Vemacs_major_version; | |
| 509 Lisp_Object Vemacs_minor_version; | |
| 510 Lisp_Object Vemacs_patch_level; | |
| 511 Lisp_Object Vemacs_beta_version; | |
| 512 Lisp_Object Vxemacs_codename; | |
| 975 | 513 Lisp_Object Vxemacs_extra_name; |
| 2602 | 514 Lisp_Object Vxemacs_release_date; |
| 428 | 515 #ifdef INFODOCK |
| 516 Lisp_Object Vinfodock_major_version; | |
| 517 Lisp_Object Vinfodock_minor_version; | |
| 518 Lisp_Object Vinfodock_build_version; | |
| 519 #endif | |
| 520 | |
| 521 /* The path under which XEmacs was invoked. */ | |
| 522 Lisp_Object Vinvocation_path; | |
| 523 | |
| 524 /* The name under which XEmacs was invoked, with any leading directory | |
| 525 names discarded. */ | |
| 526 Lisp_Object Vinvocation_name; | |
| 527 | |
| 528 /* The directory name from which XEmacs was invoked. */ | |
| 529 Lisp_Object Vinvocation_directory; | |
| 530 | |
| 531 #if 0 /* FSFmacs */ | |
| 532 /* The directory name in which to find subdirs such as lisp and etc. | |
| 533 nil means get them only from PATH_LOADSEARCH. */ | |
| 534 Lisp_Object Vinstallation_directory; | |
| 535 #endif | |
| 536 | |
| 537 Lisp_Object Vemacs_program_name, Vemacs_program_version; | |
| 538 Lisp_Object Vexec_path; | |
| 539 Lisp_Object Vexec_directory, Vconfigure_exec_directory; | |
| 540 Lisp_Object Vlisp_directory, Vconfigure_lisp_directory; | |
| 460 | 541 Lisp_Object Vmule_lisp_directory, Vconfigure_mule_lisp_directory; |
| 428 | 542 Lisp_Object Vmodule_directory, Vconfigure_module_directory; |
| 543 Lisp_Object Vsite_module_directory, Vconfigure_site_module_directory; | |
| 544 Lisp_Object Vconfigure_package_path; | |
| 3179 | 545 Lisp_Object Vconfigure_early_package_directories; |
| 546 Lisp_Object Vconfigure_late_package_directories; | |
| 547 Lisp_Object Vconfigure_last_package_directories; | |
| 428 | 548 Lisp_Object Vdata_directory, Vconfigure_data_directory; |
| 549 Lisp_Object Vdoc_directory, Vconfigure_doc_directory; | |
| 550 Lisp_Object Vconfigure_lock_directory; | |
| 551 Lisp_Object Vdata_directory_list; | |
| 552 Lisp_Object Vconfigure_info_directory; | |
| 553 Lisp_Object Vsite_directory, Vconfigure_site_directory; | |
| 554 Lisp_Object Vconfigure_info_path; | |
| 555 Lisp_Object Vinternal_error_checking; | |
| 438 | 556 Lisp_Object Vmail_lock_methods, Vconfigure_mail_lock_method; |
| 428 | 557 |
| 558 /* The default base directory XEmacs is installed under. */ | |
| 559 Lisp_Object Vconfigure_exec_prefix_directory, Vconfigure_prefix_directory; | |
| 560 | |
| 561 /* If nonzero, set XEmacs to run at this priority. This is also used | |
| 562 in child_setup and sys_suspend to make sure subshells run at normal | |
| 563 priority. */ | |
| 458 | 564 Fixnum emacs_priority; |
| 428 | 565 |
| 442 | 566 /* Some FSF junk with running_asynch_code, to preserve the match |
| 567 data. Not necessary because we don't call process filters | |
| 568 asynchronously (i.e. from within QUIT). */ | |
| 428 | 569 |
| 570 /* If non-zero, a window-system was specified on the command line. */ | |
| 571 int display_arg; | |
| 572 | |
| 573 /* Type of display specified. We cannot use a Lisp symbol here because | |
| 574 Lisp symbols may not initialized at the time that we set this | |
| 575 variable. */ | |
| 2367 | 576 const Ascbyte *display_use; |
| 428 | 577 |
| 578 /* If non-zero, then the early error handler will only print the error | |
| 579 message and exit. */ | |
| 580 int suppress_early_error_handler_backtrace; | |
| 581 | |
| 582 /* An address near the bottom of the stack. | |
| 583 Tells GC how to save a copy of the stack. */ | |
| 2367 | 584 Rawbyte *stack_bottom; |
| 428 | 585 |
| 586 #ifdef USG_SHARED_LIBRARIES | |
| 587 /* If nonzero, this is the place to put the end of the writable segment | |
| 588 at startup. */ | |
| 589 | |
| 590 uintptr_t bss_end = 0; | |
| 591 #endif | |
| 592 | |
| 647 | 593 /* Number of bytes of writable memory we can expect to be able to get: |
| 594 Leave this as an unsigned int because it could potentially be 4G */ | |
| 2132 | 595 unsigned long lim_data; |
| 428 | 596 |
| 442 | 597 /* WARNING! |
| 598 | |
| 599 Some LISP-visible command-line options are set by XEmacs _before_ the | |
| 600 data is dumped in building a --pdump XEmacs, but used _after_ it is | |
| 446 | 601 restored in normal operation. Thus the dump-time values overwrite the |
| 602 values XEmacs is getting at runtime. Such variables must be saved | |
| 442 | 603 before loading the dumpfile, and restored afterward. |
| 604 | |
| 446 | 605 Therefore these variables may not be initialized in vars_of_emacs(). |
| 606 | |
| 607 The save/restore is done immediately before and after pdump_load() in | |
| 608 main_1(). See that function for the current list of protected variables. | |
| 609 | |
| 610 Note that saving/restoring is only necessary for a few variables that are | |
| 611 o command line arguments effective at runtime (as opposed to dump-time), | |
| 612 o parsed before pdump_load, and | |
| 613 o exported to Lisp via a DEFVAR. | |
| 442 | 614 */ |
| 615 | |
| 428 | 616 /* Nonzero means running XEmacs without interactive terminal. */ |
| 617 | |
| 618 int noninteractive; | |
| 619 | |
| 620 /* Value of Lisp variable `noninteractive'. | |
| 621 Normally same as C variable `noninteractive' | |
| 442 | 622 but nothing terrible happens if user sets this one. |
| 623 | |
| 624 Shadowed from the pdumper by `noninteractive'. */ | |
| 428 | 625 |
| 626 int noninteractive1; | |
| 627 | |
| 628 /* Nonzero means don't perform site-lisp searches at startup */ | |
| 629 int inhibit_site_lisp; | |
| 630 | |
| 631 /* Nonzero means don't perform site-modules searches at startup */ | |
| 632 int inhibit_site_modules; | |
| 633 | |
| 776 | 634 /* Nonzero means don't load user-init or site-start file */ |
| 635 int vanilla_inhibiting; | |
| 636 | |
| 428 | 637 /* Nonzero means don't respect early packages at startup */ |
| 638 int inhibit_early_packages; | |
| 639 | |
| 776 | 640 /* Nonzero means don't respect any packages at startup -- act as if they |
| 641 don't exist. */ | |
| 642 int inhibit_all_packages; | |
| 643 | |
| 428 | 644 /* Nonzero means don't load package autoloads at startup */ |
| 645 int inhibit_autoloads; | |
| 646 | |
| 442 | 647 /* Nonzero means don't load the dump file (ignored if not PDUMP) */ |
| 648 | |
| 649 int nodumpfile; | |
| 650 | |
| 428 | 651 /* Nonzero means print debug information about path searching */ |
| 652 int debug_paths; | |
| 653 | |
| 654 /* Save argv and argc. */ | |
| 2367 | 655 static Wexttext **initial_argv; /* #### currently unused */ |
| 444 | 656 static int initial_argc; /* #### currently unused */ |
| 428 | 657 |
| 2367 | 658 static void sort_args (int argc, Wexttext **argv); |
| 428 | 659 |
| 660 Lisp_Object Qkill_emacs_hook; | |
| 661 Lisp_Object Qsave_buffers_kill_emacs; | |
| 662 | |
| 1315 | 663 Lisp_Object Qtemacs, Qdumping, Qrestarted, Qpdump, Qbatch; |
| 664 | |
| 442 | 665 /* Nonzero if handling a fatal error already. */ |
| 666 int fatal_error_in_progress; | |
| 667 | |
| 771 | 668 /* Nonzero means we're going down, so we better not run any hooks |
| 442 | 669 or do other non-essential stuff. */ |
| 670 int preparing_for_armageddon; | |
| 671 | |
| 771 | 672 /* Nonzero means we're in an unstable situation and need to skip |
|
5014
c2e0c3af5fe3
cleanups to debug-print, try harder to make it work during GC
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5000
diff
changeset
|
673 internal->external conversions, QUIT checking and such. This gets set |
|
c2e0c3af5fe3
cleanups to debug-print, try harder to make it work during GC
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5000
diff
changeset
|
674 during early startup, during shutdown, and when debug printing |
|
c2e0c3af5fe3
cleanups to debug-print, try harder to make it work during GC
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5000
diff
changeset
|
675 (i.e. called from a debugger such as gdb to print Lisp objects or |
|
c2e0c3af5fe3
cleanups to debug-print, try harder to make it work during GC
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5000
diff
changeset
|
676 backtraces). During printing we check for this, and during conversion |
|
c2e0c3af5fe3
cleanups to debug-print, try harder to make it work during GC
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5000
diff
changeset
|
677 we abort if we see this. */ |
| 2367 | 678 int inhibit_non_essential_conversion_operations; |
| 442 | 679 |
| 680 static JMP_BUF run_temacs_catch; | |
| 681 | |
| 682 static int run_temacs_argc; | |
| 2367 | 683 static Wexttext **run_temacs_argv; |
| 442 | 684 |
| 685 #ifdef _MSC_VER | |
| 771 | 686 static DWORD mswindows_handle_hardware_exceptions (DWORD code); |
| 687 #endif | |
| 442 | 688 |
| 826 | 689 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE |
| 690 static DWORD CALLBACK wait_for_termination_signal (LPVOID handle); | |
| 691 #endif | |
| 692 | |
| 442 | 693 |
| 771 | 694 /************************************************************************/ |
| 695 /* Functions to handle arguments */ | |
| 696 /************************************************************************/ | |
| 697 | |
| 428 | 698 /* Code for dealing with Lisp access to the Unix command line */ |
| 699 | |
| 700 static Lisp_Object | |
| 2367 | 701 make_arg_list_1 (int argc, Wexttext **argv, int skip_args) |
| 428 | 702 { |
| 703 Lisp_Object result = Qnil; | |
| 704 REGISTER int i; | |
| 705 | |
| 706 for (i = argc - 1; i >= 0; i--) | |
| 707 { | |
| 708 if (i == 0 || i > skip_args) | |
| 709 { | |
| 442 | 710 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE |
| 428 | 711 if (i == 0) |
| 712 { | |
| 713 /* Do not trust to what crt0 has stuffed into argv[0] */ | |
| 814 | 714 Extbyte *full_exe_path; |
| 442 | 715 Lisp_Object fullpath; |
| 716 | |
| 814 | 717 full_exe_path = mswindows_get_module_file_name (); |
| 718 assert (full_exe_path); | |
| 771 | 719 fullpath = build_tstr_string (full_exe_path); |
|
4976
16112448d484
Rename xfree(FOO, TYPE) -> xfree(FOO)
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
720 xfree (full_exe_path); |
| 442 | 721 result = Fcons (fullpath, result); |
| 428 | 722 } |
| 723 else | |
| 724 #endif | |
| 2367 | 725 result = Fcons (build_wext_string (argv[i], |
| 726 Qcommand_argument_encoding), | |
| 440 | 727 result); |
| 428 | 728 } |
| 729 } | |
| 730 return result; | |
| 731 } | |
| 732 | |
| 733 Lisp_Object | |
| 2367 | 734 make_arg_list (int argc, Wexttext **argv) |
| 428 | 735 { |
| 736 return make_arg_list_1 (argc, argv, 0); | |
| 737 } | |
| 738 | |
| 739 /* Calling functions are also responsible for calling free_argc_argv | |
| 740 when they are done with the generated list. */ | |
| 741 void | |
| 2367 | 742 make_argc_argv (Lisp_Object argv_list, int *argc, Wexttext ***argv) |
| 428 | 743 { |
| 744 Lisp_Object next; | |
| 745 int n = XINT (Flength (argv_list)); | |
| 746 REGISTER int i; | |
| 2367 | 747 *argv = xnew_array (Wexttext *, n + 1); |
| 428 | 748 |
| 749 for (i = 0, next = argv_list; i < n; i++, next = XCDR (next)) | |
| 750 { | |
| 751 CHECK_STRING (XCAR (next)); | |
| 752 | |
|
5000
44d7bde26046
fix compile errors, fix revert-buffer bug on binary/Latin 1 files, Mule-ize some files
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4982
diff
changeset
|
753 (*argv)[i] = |
|
44d7bde26046
fix compile errors, fix revert-buffer bug on binary/Latin 1 files, Mule-ize some files
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4982
diff
changeset
|
754 (Wexttext *) LISP_STRING_TO_EXTERNAL_MALLOC |
|
44d7bde26046
fix compile errors, fix revert-buffer bug on binary/Latin 1 files, Mule-ize some files
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4982
diff
changeset
|
755 (XCAR (next), Qcommand_argument_encoding); |
| 428 | 756 } |
| 757 (*argv) [n] = 0; | |
| 758 *argc = i; | |
| 759 } | |
| 760 | |
| 761 void | |
| 2367 | 762 free_argc_argv (Wexttext **argv) |
| 428 | 763 { |
| 764 int elt = 0; | |
| 765 | |
| 766 while (argv[elt]) | |
| 767 { | |
|
4976
16112448d484
Rename xfree(FOO, TYPE) -> xfree(FOO)
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
768 xfree (argv[elt]); |
| 428 | 769 elt++; |
| 770 } | |
|
4976
16112448d484
Rename xfree(FOO, TYPE) -> xfree(FOO)
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
771 xfree (argv); |
| 428 | 772 } |
| 773 | |
| 774 static void | |
| 2367 | 775 init_cmdargs (int argc, Wexttext **argv, int skip_args) |
| 428 | 776 { |
| 777 initial_argv = argv; | |
| 778 initial_argc = argc; | |
| 779 | |
| 780 Vcommand_line_args = make_arg_list_1 (argc, argv, skip_args); | |
| 781 } | |
| 782 | |
| 783 DEFUN ("invocation-name", Finvocation_name, 0, 0, 0, /* | |
| 784 Return the program name that was used to run XEmacs. | |
| 785 Any directory names are omitted. | |
| 786 */ | |
| 787 ()) | |
| 788 { | |
| 789 return Fcopy_sequence (Vinvocation_name); | |
| 790 } | |
| 791 | |
| 792 DEFUN ("invocation-directory", Finvocation_directory, 0, 0, 0, /* | |
| 793 Return the directory name in which the Emacs executable was located. | |
| 794 */ | |
| 795 ()) | |
| 796 { | |
| 797 return Fcopy_sequence (Vinvocation_directory); | |
| 798 } | |
| 799 | |
| 800 | |
| 801 | |
| 776 | 802 /* Test whether the next argument in ARGV matches SSTR or a prefix of LSTR |
| 803 (at least MINLEN characters; if MINLEN is 0, set to size of LSTR). If | |
| 804 so, then if VALPTR is non-null (the argument is supposed to have a | |
| 805 value) store in *VALPTR either the next argument or the portion of this | |
| 806 one after the equal sign. ARGV is read starting at position *SKIPPTR; | |
| 807 this index is advanced by the number of arguments used. | |
| 428 | 808 |
| 809 Too bad we can't just use getopt for all of this, but we don't have | |
| 810 enough information to do it right. */ | |
| 811 | |
| 812 static int | |
|
4528
726060ee587c
First draft of g++ 4.3 warning removal patch. Builds. *Needs ChangeLogs.*
Stephen J. Turnbull <stephen@xemacs.org>
parents:
4522
diff
changeset
|
813 argmatch (Wexttext **argv, int argc, const Ascbyte *sstr, const Ascbyte *lstr, |
| 2367 | 814 int minlen, Wexttext **valptr, int *skipptr) |
| 428 | 815 { |
| 2367 | 816 Wexttext *p = NULL; |
| 817 Charcount arglen; | |
| 818 Wexttext *arg; | |
| 428 | 819 |
| 820 /* Don't access argv[argc]; give up in advance. */ | |
| 821 if (argc <= *skipptr + 1) | |
| 822 return 0; | |
| 823 | |
| 824 arg = argv[*skipptr+1]; | |
| 825 if (arg == NULL) | |
| 826 return 0; | |
| 2367 | 827 if (wext_strcmp_ascii (arg, sstr) == 0) |
| 428 | 828 { |
| 829 if (valptr != NULL) | |
| 830 { | |
| 831 *valptr = argv[*skipptr+2]; | |
| 832 *skipptr += 2; | |
| 833 } | |
| 834 else | |
| 835 *skipptr += 1; | |
| 836 return 1; | |
| 837 } | |
| 2367 | 838 arglen = (valptr != NULL && (p = wext_strchr (arg, '=')) != NULL |
| 839 ? p - arg : (Charcount) wext_strlen (arg)); | |
| 776 | 840 if (lstr && !minlen) |
| 841 minlen = strlen (lstr); | |
| 2367 | 842 if (lstr == 0 || arglen < minlen || |
| 843 wext_strncmp_ascii (arg, lstr, arglen) != 0) | |
| 428 | 844 return 0; |
| 845 else if (valptr == NULL) | |
| 846 { | |
| 847 *skipptr += 1; | |
| 848 return 1; | |
| 849 } | |
| 850 else if (p != NULL) | |
| 851 { | |
| 2367 | 852 *valptr = p + 1; |
| 428 | 853 *skipptr += 1; |
| 854 return 1; | |
| 855 } | |
| 2367 | 856 else if (argv[*skipptr + 2] != NULL) |
| 428 | 857 { |
| 2367 | 858 *valptr = argv[*skipptr + 2]; |
| 428 | 859 *skipptr += 2; |
| 860 return 1; | |
| 861 } | |
| 862 else | |
| 863 { | |
| 864 return 0; | |
| 865 } | |
| 866 } | |
| 867 | |
| 1315 | 868 static void |
|
4528
726060ee587c
First draft of g++ 4.3 warning removal patch. Builds. *Needs ChangeLogs.*
Stephen J. Turnbull <stephen@xemacs.org>
parents:
4522
diff
changeset
|
869 check_compatible_window_system (const Ascbyte *must) |
| 1315 | 870 { |
| 871 if (display_use && strcmp (display_use, must)) | |
| 872 fatal ("Incompatible window system type `%s': `%s' already specified", | |
| 873 must, display_use); | |
| 874 display_use = must; | |
| 875 } | |
| 876 | |
| 771 | 877 |
| 878 /************************************************************************/ | |
| 879 /* main and friends: XEmacs startup */ | |
| 880 /************************************************************************/ | |
| 881 | |
| 428 | 882 /* Make stack traces always identify version + configuration */ |
| 883 #define main_1 STACK_TRACE_EYE_CATCHER | |
| 884 | |
| 885 /* This function is not static, so that the compiler is less likely to | |
| 446 | 886 inline it, which would make it not show up in stack traces. |
| 887 | |
| 888 The restart argument is a flag that indicates that main_1 is now | |
| 771 | 889 being called for the second time in this invocation of xemacs; this |
| 890 happens as a result of using `run-temacs' in the command line, when | |
| 891 invoking a bare (without dumped data) XEmacs (i.e. `temacs' with | |
| 892 the conventional dumper or `xemacs -nd' with the pdumper). See | |
| 446 | 893 Frun_emacs_from_temacs(). |
| 894 */ | |
| 2367 | 895 DECLARE_DOESNT_RETURN (main_1 (int, Wexttext **, Wexttext **, int)); |
| 428 | 896 DOESNT_RETURN |
| 2367 | 897 main_1 (int argc, Wexttext **argv, Wexttext **UNUSED (envp), int restart) |
| 428 | 898 { |
| 2367 | 899 Rawbyte stack_bottom_variable; |
| 428 | 900 int skip_args = 0; |
| 901 Lisp_Object load_me; | |
| 902 | |
| 903 #if (!defined (SYSTEM_MALLOC) && !defined (HAVE_LIBMCHECK) \ | |
| 904 && !defined (DOUG_LEA_MALLOC)) | |
| 905 /* Make sure that any libraries we link against haven't installed a | |
| 906 hook for a gmalloc of a potentially incompatible version. */ | |
| 907 /* If we're using libmcheck, the hooks have already been initialized, */ | |
| 908 /* don't touch them. -slb */ | |
| 909 __malloc_hook = NULL; | |
| 910 __realloc_hook = NULL; | |
| 911 __free_hook = NULL; | |
| 912 #endif /* not SYSTEM_MALLOC or HAVE_LIBMCHECK or DOUG_LEA_MALLOC */ | |
| 913 | |
| 914 noninteractive = 0; | |
| 3360 | 915 display_use = NULL; |
| 2367 | 916 inhibit_non_essential_conversion_operations = 1; |
| 428 | 917 |
| 3263 | 918 #ifdef NEW_GC |
| 2720 | 919 #ifndef PDUMP |
| 920 if (!initialized) | |
| 921 #endif | |
| 922 { | |
| 2723 | 923 if (!restart) |
| 924 { | |
| 925 init_mc_allocator (); | |
| 2994 | 926 #ifdef ALLOC_TYPE_STATS |
| 2723 | 927 init_lrecord_stats (); |
| 2994 | 928 #endif /* ALLOC_TYPE_STATS */ |
| 2723 | 929 } |
| 2720 | 930 } |
| 3263 | 931 #endif /* NEW_GC */ |
| 2720 | 932 |
| 1303 | 933 #if defined (LOSING_GCC_DESTRUCTOR_FREE_BUG) |
| 428 | 934 /* Prior to XEmacs 21, this was `#if 0'ed out. */ |
| 935 /* I'm enabling this because it is the only reliable way I've found to */ | |
| 1303 | 936 /* prevent a very annoying problem where GCC will attempt to free (3) */ |
| 428 | 937 /* memory at exit() and cause a coredump. */ |
| 938 init_free_hook (); | |
| 939 #endif | |
| 940 | |
|
4448
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
941 #define SHEBANG_PROGNAME_LENGTH \ |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
942 (int)((sizeof (WEXTSTRING (SHEBANG_PROGNAME)) - sizeof (WEXTSTRING ("")))) |
| 4932 | 943 #define SHEBANG_EXE_PROGNAME_LENGTH \ |
| 4973 | 944 (int)(sizeof (WEXTSTRING (SHEBANG_PROGNAME) WEXTSTRING (".exe")) \ |
|
4448
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
945 - sizeof (WEXTSTRING (""))) |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
946 |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
947 { |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
948 int progname_len = wext_strlen (argv[0]); |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
949 if (progname_len >= SHEBANG_PROGNAME_LENGTH) |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
950 { |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
951 if (!wext_strcmp_ascii (argv[0] + |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
952 (progname_len - SHEBANG_PROGNAME_LENGTH), |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
953 SHEBANG_PROGNAME) |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
954 /* Allow trailing .exe. Don't check it, it could also be |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
955 .com. */ |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
956 || (progname_len >= SHEBANG_EXE_PROGNAME_LENGTH && |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
957 !wext_strncmp_ascii |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
958 (argv[0] + (progname_len - SHEBANG_EXE_PROGNAME_LENGTH), |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
959 SHEBANG_PROGNAME, |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
960 SHEBANG_PROGNAME_LENGTH))) |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
961 { |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
962 Wexttext **newarr = alloca_array (Wexttext *, argc + 2); |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
963 int j; |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
964 |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
965 newarr[0] = argv[0]; |
| 4932 | 966 newarr[1] = (Wexttext *) WEXTSTRING ("--script"); |
|
4448
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
967 for (j = 1; j < argc; ++j) |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
968 { |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
969 newarr[j + 1] = argv[j]; |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
970 } |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
971 argv = newarr; |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
972 argc++; |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
973 } |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
974 } |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
975 } |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
976 |
| 428 | 977 sort_args (argc, argv); |
| 978 | |
| 2367 | 979 #if 0 /* defined (_SCO_DS) |
| 980 #### Turn this off, we already have another SCO_DS hack in main(). | |
| 981 */ | |
| 428 | 982 environ = envp; |
| 983 #endif | |
| 984 | |
| 985 /* Record (approximately) where the stack begins. */ | |
| 986 stack_bottom = &stack_bottom_variable; | |
| 987 | |
| 988 #ifdef USG_SHARED_LIBRARIES | |
| 989 if (bss_end) | |
| 990 brk ((void *) bss_end); | |
| 991 #endif | |
| 992 | |
| 993 clearerr (stdin); | |
| 994 | |
| 995 #if defined (HAVE_MMAP) && defined (REL_ALLOC) | |
| 996 /* ralloc can only be used if using the GNU memory allocator. */ | |
| 997 init_ralloc (); | |
| 1303 | 998 #elif defined (REL_ALLOC) && !defined (DOUG_LEA_MALLOC) |
| 428 | 999 if (initialized) |
| 1303 | 1000 init_ralloc (); |
| 428 | 1001 #endif |
| 1002 | |
| 1003 #ifdef HAVE_SOCKS | |
| 1004 if (initialized) | |
| 1005 SOCKSinit (argv[0]); | |
| 1006 #endif /* HAVE_SOCKS */ | |
| 1007 | |
| 1008 #ifndef SYSTEM_MALLOC | |
| 1009 if (!initialized) | |
| 1010 /* Arrange to get warning messages as memory fills up. */ | |
| 1011 memory_warnings (0, malloc_warning); | |
| 1012 #endif /* not SYSTEM_MALLOC */ | |
| 1013 | |
| 1014 #ifdef SET_EMACS_PRIORITY | |
| 1015 if (emacs_priority != 0) | |
| 1016 nice (-emacs_priority); | |
| 1017 setuid (getuid ()); | |
| 1018 #endif /* SET_EMACS_PRIORITY */ | |
| 1019 | |
| 776 | 1020 /* NOTE NOTE NOTE: Keep the following args in sync with the big list of |
| 1021 arguments below in standard_args[], with the help text in startup.el, | |
| 1022 and with the list of non-clobbered variables near where pdump_load() | |
| 1023 is called! */ | |
| 854 | 1024 |
| 776 | 1025 /* Handle the -sd/--show-dump-id switch, which means show the hex dump_id |
| 1026 and quit */ | |
| 1027 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-sd", "--show-dump-id", 0, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 442 | 1028 { |
| 1029 #ifdef PDUMP | |
| 1030 printf ("%08x\n", dump_id); | |
| 1031 #else | |
| 446 | 1032 printf ("Portable dumper not configured; -sd just forces exit.\n"); |
| 442 | 1033 #endif |
| 1034 exit (0); | |
| 1035 } | |
| 854 | 1036 |
| 2015 | 1037 /* Handle the -si/--show-inline-info switch, which means show the |
| 1038 alignment and max size of the inline data and quit */ | |
| 1039 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-si", "--show-inline-info", 0, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 1040 { | |
| 2720 | 1041 #if defined (PDUMP) && defined (DUMP_IN_EXEC) && !defined (WIN32_NATIVE) |
| 3094 | 1042 /* #### We really should check for sizeof (size_t) > sizeof (long) */ |
| 1043 printf ("%lu %lu\n", (unsigned long) dumped_data_max_size (), | |
| 1044 (unsigned long) dumped_data_align_offset ()); | |
| 1045 | |
| 2015 | 1046 #else |
| 2720 | 1047 printf ("Portable dumper not configured for dumping into executable or windows native; -si just forces exit.\n"); |
| 2015 | 1048 #endif |
| 1049 exit (0); | |
| 1050 } | |
| 1051 | |
| 776 | 1052 /* Handle the --no-dump-file/-nd switch, which means don't load the dump |
| 1053 file (ignored when not using pdump) */ | |
| 1054 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-nd", "--no-dump-file", 0, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 1055 nodumpfile = 1; | |
| 442 | 1056 |
| 428 | 1057 /* Handle the -batch switch, which means don't do interactive display. */ |
| 776 | 1058 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-batch", "--batch", 0, NULL, &skip_args)) |
| 428 | 1059 { |
| 1060 #if 0 /* I don't think this is correct. */ | |
| 1061 inhibit_autoloads = 1; | |
| 1062 #endif | |
| 1063 noninteractive = 1; | |
| 1064 } | |
| 1065 | |
|
4448
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1066 { |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1067 int count_before = skip_args; |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1068 /* Handle the -script switch, which implies batch and vanilla. The -l |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1069 part of its functionality is implemented in Lisp. */ |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1070 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-script", "--script", 0, NULL, |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1071 &skip_args)) |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1072 { |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1073 noninteractive = 1; |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1074 vanilla_inhibiting = 1; |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1075 } |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1076 |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1077 /* Don't actually discard this argument. */ |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1078 skip_args = count_before; |
|
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
1079 } |
| 771 | 1080 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE |
| 826 | 1081 { |
| 1082 /* Since we aren't a console application, we can't easily be terminated | |
| 1083 using ^C. (We aren't a console application to avoid Windows from | |
| 1084 automatically and unwantedly creating a console window for us. If | |
| 1085 only the Windows designers had some sense in them and didn't create | |
| 1086 this artificial console/non-console distinction!) Therefore, we set | |
| 1087 up a communication path with i.exe so that when a ^C is sent to it | |
| 1088 (using GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent), it in turn signals us to commit | |
| 1089 suicide. (This is cleaner than using TerminateProcess()). This | |
| 1090 makes (e.g.) the "Stop Build" command from VC++ correctly terminate | |
| 1091 XEmacs. */ | |
| 854 | 1092 |
| 2367 | 1093 Wexttext *heventstr; |
| 826 | 1094 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-mswindows-termination-handle", 0, 0, |
| 1095 &heventstr, &skip_args)) | |
| 1096 { | |
| 2367 | 1097 HANDLE hevent = (HANDLE) wext_atol (heventstr); |
| 826 | 1098 DWORD unused; |
| 1099 HANDLE h_thread = CreateThread (NULL, 0, wait_for_termination_signal, | |
| 1100 (void *) hevent, 0, &unused); | |
| 1101 CloseHandle (h_thread); | |
| 1102 } | |
| 1103 } | |
| 1104 | |
| 771 | 1105 /* Handle the -nuni switch, which forces XEmacs to use the ANSI |
| 1106 versions of Unicode-split API's even on Windows NT, which has | |
| 1107 full Unicode support. This helps flush out problems in the code | |
| 1108 we've written to convert between ANSI and Unicode. */ | |
| 776 | 1109 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-nuni", "--no-unicode-lib-calls", 0, NULL, |
| 771 | 1110 &skip_args)) |
| 1111 no_mswin_unicode_lib_calls = 1; | |
| 1112 #endif /* WIN32_NATIVE */ | |
| 1113 | |
| 428 | 1114 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-debug-paths", "--debug-paths", |
| 776 | 1115 0, NULL, &skip_args)) |
| 1116 debug_paths = 1; | |
| 1117 | |
| 1118 /* Handle (maybe partially) some inhibiting flags. Packages are searched | |
| 1119 prior to the rest of the command line being parsed in startup.el. */ | |
| 1120 | |
| 1121 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-no-packages", "--no-packages", | |
| 1122 0, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 1123 { | |
| 1124 inhibit_all_packages = 1; | |
| 1125 inhibit_early_packages = 1; | |
| 1126 vanilla_inhibiting = 1; | |
| 1127 } | |
| 1128 | |
| 428 | 1129 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-no-early-packages", "--no-early-packages", |
| 776 | 1130 0, NULL, &skip_args)) |
| 1131 inhibit_early_packages = 1; | |
| 1132 | |
| 1133 #ifdef HAVE_SHLIB | |
| 1134 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-no-site-modules", "--no-site-modules", | |
| 1135 0, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 1136 #endif | |
| 1137 inhibit_site_modules = 1; | |
| 854 | 1138 |
| 776 | 1139 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-vanilla", "--vanilla", |
| 1140 0, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 428 | 1141 { |
| 1142 inhibit_early_packages = 1; | |
| 776 | 1143 vanilla_inhibiting = 1; |
| 428 | 1144 } |
| 1145 | |
| 1146 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-no-autoloads", "--no-autoloads", | |
| 776 | 1147 0, NULL, &skip_args)) |
| 428 | 1148 { |
| 1149 inhibit_autoloads = 1; | |
| 776 | 1150 inhibit_early_packages = 1; |
| 1151 vanilla_inhibiting = 1; | |
| 428 | 1152 } |
| 1153 | |
| 1154 /* Partially handle the -version and -help switches: they imply -batch, | |
| 1155 but are not removed from the list. */ | |
| 1156 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-help", "--help", 3, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 1157 noninteractive = 1, skip_args--; | |
| 1158 | |
| 1159 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-version", "--version", 3, NULL, &skip_args) || | |
| 1160 argmatch (argv, argc, "-V", 0, 2, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 1161 noninteractive = 1, skip_args--; | |
| 1162 | |
| 1163 /* Now, figure out which type of console is our first console. */ | |
| 1164 | |
| 1165 if (noninteractive) | |
| 1166 display_use = "stream"; | |
| 1315 | 1167 |
| 1168 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-nw", "--no-windows", 0, NULL, &skip_args) || | |
| 1169 argmatch (argv, argc, "-tty", "--use-tty", 0, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 1170 { | |
| 1171 check_compatible_window_system ("tty"); | |
| 428 | 1172 #ifndef HAVE_TTY |
| 1315 | 1173 fatal ("Sorry, this XEmacs was not compiled with TTY support"); |
| 1174 #endif | |
| 1175 } | |
| 1176 | |
| 1177 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-x", "--use-x", 0, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 1178 { | |
| 1179 check_compatible_window_system ("x"); | |
| 1180 #ifndef HAVE_X_WINDOWS | |
| 1181 fatal ("Sorry, this XEmacs was not compiled with X support"); | |
| 1182 #endif | |
| 1183 } | |
| 1184 | |
| 1185 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-gtk", "--use-gtk", 0, NULL, &skip_args) || | |
| 1186 argmatch (argv, argc, "-gnome", "--use-gnome", 0, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 1187 { | |
| 1188 check_compatible_window_system ("gtk"); | |
| 1189 #ifndef HAVE_GTK | |
| 1190 fatal ("Sorry, this XEmacs was not compiled with GTK support"); | |
| 1191 #endif | |
| 1192 } | |
| 1193 | |
| 1194 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-msw", "--use-ms-windows", 0, NULL, &skip_args)) | |
| 1195 { | |
| 1196 check_compatible_window_system ("mswindows"); | |
| 1197 #ifndef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS | |
| 1198 fatal ("Sorry, this XEmacs was not compiled with MS Windows support"); | |
| 1199 #endif | |
| 1200 } | |
| 1201 | |
| 1202 /* Handle other switches implying particular window systems: */ | |
| 1203 | |
| 1204 /* Handle the -t switch, which specifies filename to use as terminal */ | |
| 1205 { | |
| 2367 | 1206 Wexttext *term; |
| 1315 | 1207 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-t", "--terminal", 0, &term, &skip_args)) |
| 1208 { | |
| 2367 | 1209 int fd; |
| 1210 | |
| 1315 | 1211 check_compatible_window_system ("tty"); |
| 1212 #ifndef HAVE_TTY | |
| 1213 fatal ("Sorry, this XEmacs was not compiled with TTY support"); | |
| 1214 #endif | |
| 1215 | |
| 1216 retry_close (0); | |
| 1217 retry_close (1); | |
| 2367 | 1218 |
| 1219 fd = wext_retry_open (term, O_RDWR | OPEN_BINARY, 2); | |
| 1220 /* Conversions are not possible yet, and printing will be in | |
| 1221 external format, so strerror() and ttyname() are OK. */ | |
|
4710
3a87551bfeb5
Fixes for a number of minor warnings issued by gcc. See xemacs-patches message
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
4693
diff
changeset
|
1222 if (fd < 0 || dup (0) < 0) |
| 2367 | 1223 fatal ("%s: %s", WEXTTEXT_TO_8_BIT (term), strerror (errno)); |
| 1315 | 1224 if (! isatty (0)) |
| 2367 | 1225 fatal ("%s: not a tty", WEXTTEXT_TO_8_BIT (term)); |
| 1315 | 1226 |
| 1227 #if 0 | |
| 1228 stderr_out ("Using %s", ttyname (0)); | |
| 1229 #endif | |
| 2367 | 1230 stderr_out ("Using %s", WEXTTEXT_TO_8_BIT (term)); |
| 1315 | 1231 } |
| 1232 } | |
| 1233 | |
| 428 | 1234 /* Stupid kludge to catch command-line display spec. We can't |
| 1235 handle this argument entirely in window-system-dependent code | |
| 1236 because we don't even know which window-system-dependent code | |
| 1237 to run until we've recognized this argument. */ | |
| 1315 | 1238 { |
| 428 | 1239 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS |
| 2367 | 1240 Wexttext *dpy = 0; |
| 1315 | 1241 int count_before = skip_args; |
| 1242 | |
| 1243 if (argmatch (argv, argc, "-d", "--display", 3, &dpy, &skip_args) || | |
| 1244 argmatch (argv, argc, "-display", 0, 3, &dpy, &skip_args)) | |
| 1245 { | |
| 1246 check_compatible_window_system ("x"); | |
| 1247 display_arg = 1; | |
| 1248 } | |
| 428 | 1249 /* If we have the form --display=NAME, |
| 1250 convert it into -d name. | |
| 1251 This requires inserting a new element into argv. */ | |
| 1252 if (dpy != 0 && skip_args - count_before == 1) | |
| 1253 { | |
| 2994 | 1254 Wexttext **new_ = xnew_array (Wexttext *, argc + 2); |
| 428 | 1255 int j; |
| 1256 | |
| 1257 for (j = 0; j < count_before + 1; j++) | |
| 2994 | 1258 new_[j] = argv[j]; |
| 4932 | 1259 new_[count_before + 1] = (Wexttext *) WEXTSTRING ("-d"); |
| 2994 | 1260 new_[count_before + 2] = dpy; |
| 428 | 1261 for (j = count_before + 2; j <argc; j++) |
| 2994 | 1262 new_[j + 1] = argv[j]; |
| 1263 argv = new_; | |
| 428 | 1264 argc++; |
| 1265 } | |
| 1266 /* Change --display to -d, when its arg is separate. */ | |
| 1267 else if (dpy != 0 && skip_args > count_before | |
| 1268 && argv[count_before + 1][1] == '-') | |
| 4932 | 1269 argv[count_before + 1] = (Wexttext *) WEXTSTRING ("-d"); |
| 428 | 1270 |
| 1271 /* Don't actually discard this arg. */ | |
| 1272 skip_args = count_before; | |
| 1315 | 1273 #endif /* HAVE_X_WINDOWS */ |
| 1274 } | |
| 1275 | |
| 1276 /* If no switch telling us which window system to use, try other | |
| 1277 possibilities: */ | |
| 1278 | |
| 1279 #if defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS) || defined (HAVE_GTK) | |
| 1280 if (!display_use) | |
| 1281 { | |
| 2367 | 1282 Wexttext *dpy; |
| 1315 | 1283 /* If there is a non-empty environment var DISPLAY, assume X or GTK, |
| 1284 but don't set `display_arg', which is only to be set if the | |
| 1285 display was specified on the command line. */ | |
| 2367 | 1286 if ((dpy = wext_getenv (WEXTSTRING ("DISPLAY"))) && dpy[0]) |
| 1315 | 1287 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS |
| 1288 /* #### Who gets precedence? X or GTK? For the moment, GTK support is | |
| 1289 unstable so use X. Maybe eventually we will switch this. */ | |
| 428 | 1290 display_use = "x"; |
| 1315 | 1291 #else |
| 1292 display_use = "gtk"; | |
| 1293 #endif | |
| 1294 } | |
| 1295 #endif /* defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS) || defined (HAVE_GTK) */ | |
| 1296 | |
| 428 | 1297 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS |
| 1315 | 1298 if (!display_use) |
| 1299 display_use = "mswindows"; | |
| 428 | 1300 #endif /* HAVE_MS_WINDOWS */ |
| 1315 | 1301 |
| 1302 #ifdef HAVE_TTY | |
| 1303 if (!display_use) | |
| 1304 display_use = "tty"; | |
| 1305 #endif /* HAVE_MS_WINDOWS */ | |
| 1306 | |
| 1307 if (!display_use) | |
| 1308 fatal ("No window systems and no TTY's in this XEmacs: Must specify " | |
| 1309 "-batch"); | |
| 428 | 1310 |
| 1311 noninteractive1 = noninteractive; | |
| 1312 | |
| 1313 /****** Now initialize everything *******/ | |
| 1314 | |
| 1204 | 1315 /* NOTE NOTE NOTE: |
| 1316 | |
| 1317 In the code below, there are three different states we are concerned | |
| 1318 about: | |
| 1319 | |
| 1320 "raw-temacs" == No dumped Lisp data present. `temacs', or (with pdump) | |
| 1321 `xemacs -nd'. | |
| 1322 | |
| 1323 "run-temacs" == We are restarting. run-emacs-from-temacs is called, | |
| 1324 aka `run-temacs' on the command line. | |
| 1325 | |
| 1326 "post-dump" == We are running an unexec()ed XEmacs, or we have loaded | |
| 1327 dump data using pdump_load(). | |
| 1328 | |
| 1329 initialized==0 => raw-temacs | |
| 1330 initialized!=0 && restart!=0 => run-temacs | |
| 1331 initialized!=0 && restart==0 => post-dump | |
| 1332 | |
| 1333 When post-pdump_load(), we need to reinitialize various structures. | |
| 1334 This case is noted in the code below by | |
| 1335 | |
| 1336 initialized + | |
| 1337 !restart + | |
| 1338 ifdef PDUMP. | |
| 1339 | |
| 1340 In the comments below, "dump time" or "dumping" == raw-temacs. | |
| 1341 "run time" == run-temacs or post-dump. | |
| 1342 */ | |
| 1343 | |
| 428 | 1344 /* First, do really basic environment initialization -- catching signals |
| 1345 and the like. These functions have no dependence on any part of | |
| 1346 the Lisp engine and need to be done both at dump time and at run time. */ | |
| 1347 | |
| 1348 init_signals_very_early (); | |
| 3092 | 1349 #ifdef NEW_GC |
| 1350 vdb_install_signal_handler (); | |
| 3263 | 1351 #endif /* NEW_GC */ |
| 428 | 1352 init_data_very_early (); /* Catch math errors. */ |
| 1353 init_floatfns_very_early (); /* Catch floating-point math errors. */ | |
| 1354 init_process_times_very_early (); /* Initialize our process timers. | |
| 1355 As early as possible, of course, | |
| 1356 so we can be fairly accurate. */ | |
| 771 | 1357 |
| 657 | 1358 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS |
| 2367 | 1359 /* Depends on XEUNICODE_P */ |
| 771 | 1360 init_mswindows_dde_very_early (); /* DDE needs to be initialized early so |
| 1361 that the client doesn't give up | |
| 1362 waiting. */ | |
| 657 | 1363 #endif |
| 428 | 1364 |
| 1365 /* Now initialize the Lisp engine and the like. Done only during | |
| 1366 dumping. No dependence on anything that may be in the user's | |
| 1367 environment when the dumped XEmacs is run. | |
| 1368 | |
| 1369 We try to do things in an order that minimizes the non-obvious | |
| 1370 dependencies between functions. */ | |
| 1371 | |
| 1330 | 1372 /* purify_flag is set to indicate we are dumping (its name refers to |
| 1373 purespace, which no longer exists and was a way of marking some | |
| 1374 areas read-only so they could be shared among many processes). | |
| 1375 | |
| 1376 loadup.el will set to nil at end. */ | |
| 428 | 1377 |
| 1378 purify_flag = 0; | |
| 1379 #ifdef PDUMP | |
| 1204 | 1380 in_pdump = 0; |
| 428 | 1381 if (restart) |
| 1382 initialized = 1; | |
| 771 | 1383 else if (nodumpfile) |
| 1384 { | |
| 1385 initialized = 0; | |
| 442 | 1386 purify_flag = 1; |
| 771 | 1387 } |
| 1388 else | |
| 1389 { | |
| 1390 | |
| 1391 /* Keep command options from getting stomped. | |
| 1392 | |
| 1393 Some LISP-visible options are changed by XEmacs _after_ the data is | |
| 1394 dumped in building a --pdump XEmacs, but _before_ it is restored in | |
| 1395 normal operation. Thus the restored values overwrite the values | |
| 1396 XEmacs is getting at run-time. Such variables must be saved here, | |
| 1397 and restored after loading the dumped data. | |
| 1398 | |
| 776 | 1399 (Remember: Only LISP-visible options that are set up to this point |
| 1400 need to be listed here.) | |
| 771 | 1401 */ |
| 1402 | |
| 1403 /* noninteractive1 is saved in noninteractive, which isn't | |
| 1404 LISP-visible */ | |
| 1405 int inhibit_early_packages_save = inhibit_early_packages; | |
| 1406 int inhibit_autoloads_save = inhibit_autoloads; | |
| 776 | 1407 int inhibit_all_packages_save = inhibit_all_packages; |
| 1408 int vanilla_inhibiting_save = vanilla_inhibiting; | |
| 771 | 1409 int debug_paths_save = debug_paths; |
| 776 | 1410 int inhibit_site_lisp_save = inhibit_site_lisp; |
| 771 | 1411 int inhibit_site_modules_save = inhibit_site_modules; |
| 1412 | |
| 1413 initialized = pdump_load (argv[0]); | |
| 1414 | |
| 1415 /* Now unstomp everything */ | |
| 1416 noninteractive1 = noninteractive; | |
| 1417 inhibit_early_packages = inhibit_early_packages_save; | |
| 1418 inhibit_autoloads = inhibit_autoloads_save; | |
| 776 | 1419 inhibit_all_packages = inhibit_all_packages_save; |
| 1420 vanilla_inhibiting = vanilla_inhibiting_save; | |
| 771 | 1421 debug_paths = debug_paths_save; |
| 776 | 1422 inhibit_site_lisp = inhibit_site_lisp_save; |
| 771 | 1423 inhibit_site_modules = inhibit_site_modules_save; |
| 1424 | |
| 1425 if (initialized) | |
| 3466 | 1426 run_temacs_argc = -1; |
| 771 | 1427 else |
| 1428 purify_flag = 1; | |
| 1429 } | |
| 2367 | 1430 #else /* not PDUMP */ |
| 428 | 1431 if (!initialized) |
| 1432 purify_flag = 1; | |
| 1433 #endif | |
| 1434 | |
| 1204 | 1435 init_alloc_early (); |
| 1436 | |
| 3092 | 1437 init_gc_early (); |
| 1438 | |
| 428 | 1439 if (!initialized) |
| 1440 { | |
| 1441 /* Initialize things so that new Lisp objects | |
| 1442 can be created and objects can be staticpro'd. | |
| 1443 Must be basically the very first thing done | |
| 1444 because pretty much all of the initialization | |
| 1445 routines below create new objects. */ | |
| 1446 init_alloc_once_early (); | |
| 1447 | |
| 3092 | 1448 init_gc_once_early (); |
| 1449 | |
| 428 | 1450 /* Initialize Qnil, Qt, Qunbound, and the |
| 1451 obarray. After this, symbols can be | |
| 442 | 1452 interned. This depends on init_alloc_once_early(). */ |
| 428 | 1453 init_symbols_once_early (); |
| 1454 | |
| 1455 /* Declare the basic symbols pertaining to errors, | |
| 442 | 1456 So that DEFERROR*() can be called. */ |
| 428 | 1457 init_errors_once_early (); |
| 1458 | |
| 1459 /* Make sure that opaque pointers can be created. */ | |
| 1460 init_opaque_once_early (); | |
| 1461 | |
| 771 | 1462 /* Make sure that hash tables can be created. */ |
| 1463 init_elhash_once_early (); | |
| 1464 | |
| 1465 /* Make sure that eistrings can be created. */ | |
| 1466 init_eistring_once_early (); | |
| 1204 | 1467 |
| 428 | 1468 /* Now declare all the symbols and define all the Lisp primitives. |
| 1469 | |
| 1470 The *only* thing that the syms_of_*() functions are allowed to do | |
| 442 | 1471 is call one of the following: |
| 1472 | |
| 1473 INIT_LRECORD_IMPLEMENTATION() | |
| 1474 defsymbol(), DEFSYMBOL(), or DEFSYMBOL_MULTIWORD_PREDICATE() | |
| 428 | 1475 defsubr() (i.e. DEFSUBR) |
| 442 | 1476 deferror(), DEFERROR(), or DEFERROR_STANDARD() |
| 1477 defkeyword() or DEFKEYWORD() | |
| 563 | 1478 Fput() |
| 428 | 1479 |
| 1480 Order does not matter in these functions. | |
| 1481 */ | |
| 1482 | |
| 1483 syms_of_abbrev (); | |
| 1484 syms_of_alloc (); | |
| 3263 | 1485 #ifdef NEW_GC |
| 2720 | 1486 syms_of_mc_alloc (); |
| 3263 | 1487 #endif /* NEW_GC */ |
| 3092 | 1488 syms_of_gc (); |
| 1489 #ifdef NEW_GC | |
| 1490 syms_of_vdb (); | |
| 1491 #endif /* NEW_GC */ | |
| 428 | 1492 syms_of_buffer (); |
| 1493 syms_of_bytecode (); | |
| 1494 syms_of_callint (); | |
| 1495 syms_of_casefiddle (); | |
| 1496 syms_of_casetab (); | |
| 1497 syms_of_chartab (); | |
| 1498 syms_of_cmdloop (); | |
| 1499 syms_of_cmds (); | |
| 1500 syms_of_console (); | |
| 1501 syms_of_data (); | |
| 1502 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS | |
| 1503 syms_of_debug (); | |
| 440 | 1504 syms_of_tests (); |
| 428 | 1505 #endif /* DEBUG_XEMACS */ |
| 1506 syms_of_device (); | |
| 1507 #ifdef HAVE_DIALOGS | |
| 1508 syms_of_dialog (); | |
| 1509 #endif | |
| 1510 syms_of_dired (); | |
| 1511 syms_of_doc (); | |
| 1512 syms_of_editfns (); | |
| 1513 syms_of_elhash (); | |
| 1514 syms_of_emacs (); | |
| 1515 syms_of_eval (); | |
| 1516 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS | |
| 1517 syms_of_event_Xt (); | |
| 1518 #endif | |
| 462 | 1519 #ifdef HAVE_GTK |
| 1520 syms_of_event_gtk (); | |
| 1521 #endif | |
| 428 | 1522 #ifdef HAVE_DRAGNDROP |
| 1523 syms_of_dragdrop (); | |
| 1524 #endif | |
| 1525 syms_of_event_stream (); | |
| 1526 syms_of_events (); | |
| 1527 syms_of_extents (); | |
| 1528 syms_of_faces (); | |
| 1529 syms_of_fileio (); | |
| 1530 #ifdef CLASH_DETECTION | |
| 1531 syms_of_filelock (); | |
| 1532 #endif /* CLASH_DETECTION */ | |
| 1533 syms_of_floatfns (); | |
| 1534 syms_of_fns (); | |
| 826 | 1535 #ifdef USE_C_FONT_LOCK |
| 428 | 1536 syms_of_font_lock (); |
| 826 | 1537 #endif /* USE_C_FONT_LOCK */ |
| 428 | 1538 syms_of_frame (); |
| 1539 syms_of_general (); | |
| 1540 syms_of_glyphs (); | |
| 1541 syms_of_glyphs_eimage (); | |
| 563 | 1542 syms_of_glyphs_shared (); |
| 428 | 1543 syms_of_glyphs_widget (); |
| 1544 syms_of_gui (); | |
| 1545 syms_of_gutter (); | |
| 1546 syms_of_indent (); | |
| 1547 syms_of_intl (); | |
| 1548 syms_of_keymap (); | |
| 1549 syms_of_lread (); | |
| 1550 syms_of_macros (); | |
| 1551 syms_of_marker (); | |
| 1552 syms_of_md5 (); | |
| 1553 #ifdef HAVE_DATABASE | |
| 1554 syms_of_database (); | |
| 1555 #endif | |
| 1556 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 1557 syms_of_menubar (); | |
| 1558 #endif | |
| 1559 syms_of_minibuf (); | |
| 1560 #ifdef HAVE_SHLIB | |
| 1561 syms_of_module (); | |
| 1562 #endif | |
| 1983 | 1563 #ifdef WITH_NUMBER_TYPES |
| 1564 syms_of_number (); | |
| 1565 #endif | |
| 428 | 1566 syms_of_objects (); |
| 1567 syms_of_print (); | |
| 1568 syms_of_process (); | |
| 1569 #ifdef HAVE_WIN32_PROCESSES | |
| 1570 syms_of_process_nt (); | |
| 1571 #endif | |
| 1572 syms_of_profile (); | |
| 1303 | 1573 #if defined (HAVE_MMAP) && defined (REL_ALLOC) && !defined (DOUG_LEA_MALLOC) |
| 428 | 1574 syms_of_ralloc (); |
| 1575 #endif /* HAVE_MMAP && REL_ALLOC */ | |
| 1576 syms_of_rangetab (); | |
| 1577 syms_of_redisplay (); | |
| 1578 syms_of_search (); | |
| 1579 syms_of_select (); | |
| 1580 syms_of_signal (); | |
| 1581 syms_of_sound (); | |
| 1582 syms_of_specifier (); | |
| 1583 syms_of_symbols (); | |
| 1584 syms_of_syntax (); | |
| 1585 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS | |
| 1586 syms_of_scrollbar (); | |
| 1587 #endif | |
| 771 | 1588 syms_of_text (); |
| 428 | 1589 #ifdef HAVE_TOOLBARS |
| 1590 syms_of_toolbar (); | |
| 1591 #endif | |
| 1592 syms_of_undo (); | |
| 1593 syms_of_widget (); | |
| 1594 syms_of_window (); | |
| 1595 | |
| 1596 #ifdef HAVE_TTY | |
| 1597 syms_of_console_tty (); | |
| 1598 syms_of_device_tty (); | |
| 771 | 1599 syms_of_frame_tty (); |
| 428 | 1600 syms_of_objects_tty (); |
| 1601 #endif | |
| 1602 | |
| 462 | 1603 #ifdef HAVE_GTK |
| 1604 syms_of_device_gtk (); | |
| 1605 syms_of_frame_gtk (); | |
| 1606 syms_of_glyphs_gtk (); | |
| 1607 syms_of_objects_gtk (); | |
| 1608 syms_of_ui_gtk (); | |
| 1609 syms_of_select_gtk (); | |
| 1610 #ifdef HAVE_DIALOGS | |
| 1611 syms_of_dialog_gtk (); | |
| 1612 #endif | |
| 1613 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 1614 syms_of_menubar_gtk (); | |
| 1615 #endif | |
| 1616 syms_of_select_gtk (); | |
| 854 | 1617 |
| 771 | 1618 #ifdef HAVE_GUI_OBJECTS |
| 462 | 1619 syms_of_gui_gtk (); |
| 1620 #endif | |
| 1621 #endif /* HAVE_GTK */ | |
| 1622 | |
| 428 | 1623 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS |
| 442 | 1624 #ifdef HAVE_BALLOON_HELP |
| 440 | 1625 syms_of_balloon_x (); |
| 442 | 1626 #endif |
| 428 | 1627 syms_of_device_x (); |
| 771 | 1628 #ifdef HAVE_X_DIALOGS |
| 428 | 1629 syms_of_dialog_x (); |
| 1630 #endif | |
| 1631 syms_of_frame_x (); | |
| 1632 syms_of_glyphs_x (); | |
| 1633 syms_of_objects_x (); | |
| 1634 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 1635 syms_of_menubar_x (); | |
| 1636 #endif | |
| 440 | 1637 syms_of_select_x (); |
| 771 | 1638 #ifdef HAVE_GUI_OBJECTS |
| 428 | 1639 syms_of_gui_x (); |
| 1640 #endif | |
| 771 | 1641 syms_of_intl_x (); |
| 428 | 1642 #ifdef HAVE_XIM |
| 1643 #ifdef XIM_XLIB | |
| 1644 syms_of_input_method_xlib (); | |
| 1645 #endif | |
| 1646 #endif /* HAVE_XIM */ | |
| 3094 | 1647 |
|
4916
a6c778975d7d
split USE_XFT into HAVE_XFT/USE_XFT
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4871
diff
changeset
|
1648 #ifdef HAVE_XFT |
| 3354 | 1649 syms_of_font_mgr(); |
| 3094 | 1650 #endif |
| 1651 | |
| 428 | 1652 #endif /* HAVE_X_WINDOWS */ |
| 1653 | |
| 1654 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS | |
| 1655 syms_of_console_mswindows (); | |
| 1656 syms_of_device_mswindows (); | |
| 903 | 1657 syms_of_event_mswindows (); |
| 771 | 1658 #ifdef HAVE_DIALOGS |
| 442 | 1659 syms_of_dialog_mswindows (); |
| 771 | 1660 #endif |
| 428 | 1661 syms_of_frame_mswindows (); |
| 1662 syms_of_objects_mswindows (); | |
| 1663 syms_of_select_mswindows (); | |
| 1664 syms_of_glyphs_mswindows (); | |
| 771 | 1665 #ifdef HAVE_GUI_OBJECTS |
| 440 | 1666 syms_of_gui_mswindows (); |
| 771 | 1667 #endif |
| 428 | 1668 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS |
| 1669 syms_of_menubar_mswindows (); | |
| 1670 #endif | |
| 1671 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS | |
| 1672 syms_of_scrollbar_mswindows (); | |
| 1673 #endif | |
| 442 | 1674 #endif /* HAVE_MS_WINDOWS */ |
| 902 | 1675 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE |
| 428 | 1676 syms_of_dired_mswindows (); |
| 771 | 1677 syms_of_nt (); |
| 428 | 1678 #endif |
| 1315 | 1679 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
| 442 | 1680 syms_of_win32 (); |
| 1681 #endif | |
| 428 | 1682 |
| 771 | 1683 syms_of_file_coding (); |
| 1684 syms_of_unicode (); | |
| 428 | 1685 #ifdef MULE |
| 1686 syms_of_mule_ccl (); | |
| 1687 syms_of_mule_charset (); | |
| 771 | 1688 syms_of_mule_coding (); |
| 428 | 1689 #ifdef HAVE_WNN |
| 1690 syms_of_mule_wnn (); | |
| 1691 #endif | |
| 2973 | 1692 #if defined(HAVE_CANNA) && !defined (HAVE_SHLIB) |
| 1693 syms_of_canna_api (); | |
| 428 | 1694 #endif /* HAVE_CANNA */ |
| 1695 #endif /* MULE */ | |
| 1696 | |
| 1315 | 1697 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
| 771 | 1698 syms_of_intl_win32 (); |
| 1699 #endif | |
| 1700 | |
| 428 | 1701 #ifdef SYMS_SYSTEM |
| 1702 SYMS_SYSTEM; | |
| 1703 #endif | |
| 1704 | |
| 1705 #ifdef SYMS_MACHINE | |
| 1706 SYMS_MACHINE; | |
| 1707 #endif | |
| 1708 | |
| 1709 /* Prior to XEmacs 21, this was `#if 0'ed out. -slb */ | |
| 1710 #if defined (LOSING_GCC_DESTRUCTOR_FREE_BUG) | |
| 1711 syms_of_free_hook (); | |
| 1712 #endif | |
| 1713 | |
| 1714 #ifdef TOOLTALK | |
| 1715 syms_of_tooltalk (); | |
| 1716 #endif | |
| 1717 | |
| 1718 #ifdef SUNPRO | |
| 1719 syms_of_sunpro (); | |
| 1720 #endif | |
| 1721 | |
| 996 | 1722 #if defined (HAVE_LDAP) && !defined (HAVE_SHLIB) |
| 428 | 1723 syms_of_eldap (); |
| 1724 #endif | |
| 1725 | |
| 1726 #ifdef HAVE_GPM | |
| 442 | 1727 syms_of_gpmevent (); |
| 1728 #endif | |
| 1729 | |
| 996 | 1730 #if defined (HAVE_POSTGRESQL) && !defined (HAVE_SHLIB) |
| 442 | 1731 syms_of_postgresql (); |
| 428 | 1732 #endif |
| 1733 | |
| 1734 /* Now create the subtypes for the types that have them. | |
| 1735 We do this before the vars_*() because more symbols | |
| 1736 may get initialized here. */ | |
| 1737 | |
| 1738 /* Now initialize the console types and associated symbols. | |
| 1739 Other than the first function below, the functions may | |
| 1740 make exactly the following function/macro calls: | |
| 1741 | |
| 1742 INITIALIZE_CONSOLE_TYPE() | |
| 1743 CONSOLE_HAS_METHOD() | |
| 1744 | |
| 1745 For any given console type, the former macro must be called | |
| 1746 before the any calls to the latter macro. */ | |
| 1747 | |
| 1748 console_type_create (); | |
| 1749 | |
| 1750 console_type_create_stream (); | |
| 1751 | |
| 1752 #ifdef HAVE_TTY | |
| 1753 console_type_create_tty (); | |
| 1754 console_type_create_device_tty (); | |
| 1755 console_type_create_frame_tty (); | |
| 1756 console_type_create_objects_tty (); | |
| 1757 console_type_create_redisplay_tty (); | |
| 1758 #endif | |
| 1759 | |
| 462 | 1760 #ifdef HAVE_GTK |
| 1761 console_type_create_gtk (); | |
| 1762 console_type_create_select_gtk (); | |
| 1763 console_type_create_device_gtk (); | |
| 1764 console_type_create_frame_gtk (); | |
| 1765 console_type_create_objects_gtk (); | |
| 1766 console_type_create_glyphs_gtk (); | |
| 1767 console_type_create_redisplay_gtk (); | |
| 1768 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 1769 console_type_create_menubar_gtk (); | |
| 1770 #endif | |
| 1771 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS | |
| 1772 console_type_create_scrollbar_gtk (); | |
| 1773 #endif | |
| 1774 #ifdef HAVE_TOOLBARS | |
| 1775 console_type_create_toolbar_gtk (); | |
| 1776 #endif | |
| 1777 #ifdef HAVE_DIALOGS | |
| 1778 console_type_create_dialog_gtk (); | |
| 1779 #endif | |
| 1780 #endif /* HAVE_GTK */ | |
| 1781 | |
| 428 | 1782 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS |
| 1783 console_type_create_x (); | |
| 1784 console_type_create_device_x (); | |
| 1785 console_type_create_frame_x (); | |
| 1786 console_type_create_glyphs_x (); | |
| 1787 console_type_create_select_x (); | |
| 1788 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 1789 console_type_create_menubar_x (); | |
| 1790 #endif | |
| 1791 console_type_create_objects_x (); | |
| 1792 console_type_create_redisplay_x (); | |
| 1793 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS | |
| 1794 console_type_create_scrollbar_x (); | |
| 1795 #endif | |
| 1796 #ifdef HAVE_TOOLBARS | |
| 1797 console_type_create_toolbar_x (); | |
| 1798 #endif | |
| 771 | 1799 #ifdef HAVE_X_DIALOGS |
| 428 | 1800 console_type_create_dialog_x (); |
| 1801 #endif | |
| 1802 #endif /* HAVE_X_WINDOWS */ | |
| 1803 | |
| 1804 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS | |
| 1805 console_type_create_mswindows (); | |
| 1806 console_type_create_device_mswindows (); | |
| 1807 console_type_create_frame_mswindows (); | |
| 1808 console_type_create_objects_mswindows (); | |
| 1809 console_type_create_redisplay_mswindows (); | |
| 1810 console_type_create_glyphs_mswindows (); | |
| 1811 console_type_create_select_mswindows (); | |
| 1812 # ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS | |
| 1813 console_type_create_scrollbar_mswindows (); | |
| 1814 # endif | |
| 1815 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 1816 console_type_create_menubar_mswindows (); | |
| 1817 #endif | |
| 1818 #ifdef HAVE_TOOLBARS | |
| 1819 console_type_create_toolbar_mswindows (); | |
| 1820 #endif | |
| 1821 #ifdef HAVE_DIALOGS | |
| 1822 console_type_create_dialog_mswindows (); | |
| 1823 #endif | |
| 1824 #endif | |
| 1825 | |
| 1826 /* Now initialize the specifier types and associated symbols. | |
| 1827 Other than the first function below, the functions may | |
| 1828 make exactly the following function/macro calls: | |
| 1829 | |
| 1830 INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE() | |
| 1831 SPECIFIER_HAS_METHOD() | |
| 1832 | |
| 1833 For any given specifier type, the former macro must be called | |
| 1834 before the any calls to the latter macro. */ | |
| 1835 | |
| 1836 specifier_type_create (); | |
| 1837 | |
| 1838 specifier_type_create_image (); | |
| 1839 specifier_type_create_gutter (); | |
| 1840 specifier_type_create_objects (); | |
| 1841 #ifdef HAVE_TOOLBARS | |
| 1842 specifier_type_create_toolbar (); | |
| 1843 #endif | |
| 1844 | |
| 771 | 1845 /* Now initialize the coding system types and associated symbols. |
| 1846 Other than the first function below, the functions may | |
| 1847 make exactly the following function/macro calls: | |
| 1848 | |
| 1849 INITIALIZE_CODING_SYSTEM_TYPE() | |
| 1850 CODING_SYSTEM_HAS_METHOD() | |
| 1851 | |
| 1852 For any given coding system type, the former macro must be called | |
| 1853 before the any calls to the latter macro. */ | |
| 1854 | |
| 1855 coding_system_type_create (); | |
| 1856 coding_system_type_create_unicode (); | |
| 1315 | 1857 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
| 771 | 1858 coding_system_type_create_intl_win32 (); |
| 1859 #endif | |
| 1860 #ifdef MULE | |
| 1861 coding_system_type_create_mule_coding (); | |
| 1862 #endif | |
| 1863 | |
| 428 | 1864 /* Now initialize the image instantiator formats and associated symbols. |
| 1865 Other than the first function below, the functions may | |
| 1866 make exactly the following function/macro calls: | |
| 1867 | |
| 1868 INITIALIZE_IMAGE_INSTANTIATOR_FORMAT() | |
| 1869 IIFORMAT_HAS_METHOD() | |
| 1870 IIFORMAT_VALID_KEYWORD() | |
| 1871 | |
| 1872 For any given image instantiator format, the first macro must be | |
| 1873 called before the any calls to the other macros. */ | |
| 1874 | |
| 1875 image_instantiator_format_create (); | |
| 1876 image_instantiator_format_create_glyphs_eimage (); | |
| 1877 image_instantiator_format_create_glyphs_widget (); | |
| 1878 #ifdef HAVE_TTY | |
| 1879 image_instantiator_format_create_glyphs_tty (); | |
| 1880 #endif | |
| 1881 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS | |
| 1882 image_instantiator_format_create_glyphs_x (); | |
| 1883 #endif /* HAVE_X_WINDOWS */ | |
| 1884 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS | |
| 1885 image_instantiator_format_create_glyphs_mswindows (); | |
| 1204 | 1886 #endif /* HAVE_MS_WINDOWS */ |
| 462 | 1887 #ifdef HAVE_GTK |
| 1888 image_instantiator_format_create_glyphs_gtk (); | |
| 1889 #endif | |
| 2367 | 1890 } |
| 1891 #ifdef PDUMP | |
| 1892 else if (!restart) /* after successful pdump_load() | |
| 1893 (note, we are inside ifdef PDUMP) */ | |
| 1894 { | |
| 1895 reinit_alloc_early (); | |
| 3092 | 1896 reinit_gc_early (); |
| 2367 | 1897 reinit_symbols_early (); |
| 3263 | 1898 #ifndef NEW_GC |
| 2367 | 1899 reinit_opaque_early (); |
| 3263 | 1900 #endif /* not NEW_GC */ |
| 2367 | 1901 reinit_eistring_early (); |
|
4804
3be2c7c0ef4b
Unbreak the non-bignum build by only calling reinit_vars_of_number() if
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
4802
diff
changeset
|
1902 #ifdef WITH_NUMBER_TYPES |
|
4802
2fc0e2f18322
Don't create any bignums before pdumping. Add bignum, ratio, and bigfloat
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
4759
diff
changeset
|
1903 reinit_vars_of_number (); |
|
4804
3be2c7c0ef4b
Unbreak the non-bignum build by only calling reinit_vars_of_number() if
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
4802
diff
changeset
|
1904 #endif |
| 2367 | 1905 |
| 1906 reinit_console_type_create_stream (); | |
| 1907 #ifdef HAVE_TTY | |
| 1908 reinit_console_type_create_tty (); | |
| 1909 #endif | |
| 1910 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS | |
| 1911 reinit_console_type_create_x (); | |
| 1912 reinit_console_type_create_device_x (); | |
| 1913 #endif | |
| 1914 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS | |
| 1915 reinit_console_type_create_mswindows (); | |
| 1916 #endif | |
| 1917 #ifdef HAVE_GTK | |
| 1918 reinit_console_type_create_gtk (); | |
| 1919 #endif | |
| 1920 | |
| 1921 reinit_specifier_type_create (); | |
| 1922 reinit_specifier_type_create_image (); | |
| 1923 reinit_specifier_type_create_gutter (); | |
| 1924 reinit_specifier_type_create_objects (); | |
| 1925 #ifdef HAVE_TOOLBARS | |
| 1926 reinit_specifier_type_create_toolbar (); | |
| 1927 #endif | |
| 1928 | |
| 1929 reinit_coding_system_type_create (); | |
| 1930 reinit_coding_system_type_create_unicode (); | |
| 1931 #ifdef WIN32_ANY | |
| 1932 reinit_coding_system_type_create_intl_win32 (); | |
| 1933 #endif | |
| 1934 #ifdef MULE | |
| 1935 reinit_coding_system_type_create_mule_coding (); | |
| 1936 #endif | |
| 1937 } | |
| 1938 #endif /* PDUMP */ | |
| 1939 | |
| 1940 if (!initialized | |
| 1941 #ifdef PDUMP | |
| 1942 || !restart | |
| 1943 #endif | |
| 1944 ) | |
| 1945 { | |
| 1946 /* Now initialize the structure types and associated symbols. | |
| 1947 Other than the first function below, the functions may | |
| 1948 make exactly the following function/macro calls: | |
| 1949 | |
| 1950 define_structure_type() | |
| 1951 define_structure_type_keyword() | |
| 1952 | |
| 1953 */ | |
| 1954 | |
| 1955 structure_type_create (); | |
| 1956 | |
| 1957 structure_type_create_chartab (); | |
| 1958 structure_type_create_faces (); | |
| 1959 structure_type_create_rangetab (); | |
| 1960 structure_type_create_hash_table (); | |
| 428 | 1961 |
| 1962 /* Now initialize the lstream types and associated symbols. | |
| 1963 Other than the first function below, the functions may | |
| 1964 make exactly the following function/macro calls: | |
| 1965 | |
| 1966 LSTREAM_HAS_METHOD() | |
| 1967 | |
| 1968 */ | |
| 1969 | |
| 1970 lstream_type_create (); | |
| 1971 lstream_type_create_file_coding (); | |
| 853 | 1972 #if defined (HAVE_MS_WINDOWS) && !defined (HAVE_MSG_SELECT) |
| 428 | 1973 lstream_type_create_mswindows_selectable (); |
| 1974 #endif | |
| 1975 | |
| 1976 /* Initialize processes implementation. | |
| 1977 The functions may make exactly the following function/macro calls: | |
| 1978 | |
| 1979 PROCESS_HAS_METHOD() | |
| 1980 */ | |
| 1981 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_PROCESSES | |
| 1982 process_type_create_unix (); | |
| 1983 #endif | |
| 1984 #ifdef HAVE_WIN32_PROCESSES | |
| 1985 process_type_create_nt (); | |
| 1986 #endif | |
| 2367 | 1987 } |
| 1988 | |
| 1989 if (!initialized) | |
| 1990 { | |
| 428 | 1991 /* Now initialize most variables. |
| 1992 | |
| 1993 These functions may do exactly the following: | |
| 1994 | |
| 771 | 1995 -- assigning a symbol or constant value to a variable |
| 1996 -- using a global variable that has been initialized | |
| 1997 earlier on in the same function | |
| 1998 -- DEFVAR_INT() | |
| 1999 -- DEFVAR_LISP() | |
| 2000 -- DEFVAR_BOOL() | |
| 2001 -- DEFER_GETTEXT() | |
| 2002 -- staticpro*() | |
| 2003 -- xmalloc*(), xnew*(), and friends | |
| 2004 -- Dynarr_*() | |
| 2005 -- Blocktype_*() | |
| 1303 | 2006 -- Fprovide (symbol) |
| 771 | 2007 -- intern() |
| 2008 -- Fput() | |
| 2009 -- dump_add_*() | |
| 2010 -- C library functions with no external dependencies, e.g. str*() | |
| 2011 -- defsymbol(), if it's absolutely necessary and you're sure that | |
| 2012 the symbol isn't referenced anywhere else in the initialization | |
| 2013 code | |
| 2014 -- Fset() on a symbol that is unbound | |
| 2015 -- Any of the object-creating functions in alloc.c: e.g. | |
| 2016 - make_string() | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
2017 - build_istring() |
|
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
2018 - build_cistring() |
|
4952
19a72041c5ed
Mule-izing, various fixes related to char * arguments
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4932
diff
changeset
|
2019 - build_ascstring() |
| 771 | 2020 - make_vector() |
| 2021 - make_int() | |
| 2022 - make_char() | |
| 2023 - make_extent() | |
| 3024 | 2024 - BASIC_ALLOC_LCRECORD() |
| 2025 - ALLOC_LCRECORD_TYPE() | |
| 771 | 2026 - Fcons() |
| 2027 - listN() | |
| 2028 - make_lcrecord_list() | |
| 2029 -- make_opaque_ptr() | |
| 2030 -- make_lisp_hash_table() (not allowed in 21.4!) | |
| 2031 -- certain specifier creation functions (but be careful; see | |
| 2032 glyphs.c for examples) | |
| 428 | 2033 |
| 2034 perhaps a few others. | |
| 446 | 2035 |
| 771 | 2036 NO EXTERNAL-FORMAT CONVERSIONS. |
| 2037 | |
| 446 | 2038 NB: Initialization or assignment should not be done here to certain |
| 2039 variables settable from the command line. See the comment above | |
| 2040 the call to pdump_load() in main_1(). This caveat should only | |
| 2041 apply to vars_of_emacs(). | |
| 2367 | 2042 |
| 2043 Order should not matter in these functions. | |
| 428 | 2044 */ |
| 2045 | |
| 2046 /* Now allow Fprovide() statements to be made. */ | |
| 2047 init_provide_once (); | |
| 2048 | |
| 2049 /* Do that before any specifier creation (esp. vars_of_glyphs()) */ | |
| 2050 vars_of_specifier (); | |
| 2051 | |
| 2052 vars_of_abbrev (); | |
| 2053 vars_of_alloc (); | |
| 2054 vars_of_buffer (); | |
| 2055 vars_of_bytecode (); | |
| 2056 vars_of_callint (); | |
| 2057 vars_of_chartab (); | |
| 2058 vars_of_cmdloop (); | |
| 2059 vars_of_cmds (); | |
| 2060 vars_of_console (); | |
| 2061 vars_of_data (); | |
| 2062 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS | |
| 2063 vars_of_debug (); | |
| 440 | 2064 vars_of_tests (); |
| 428 | 2065 #endif |
| 2066 vars_of_console_stream (); | |
| 2067 vars_of_device (); | |
| 2068 #ifdef HAVE_DIALOGS | |
| 2069 vars_of_dialog (); | |
| 2070 #endif | |
| 2071 vars_of_dired (); | |
| 2072 vars_of_doc (); | |
| 2073 #ifdef HAVE_DRAGNDROP | |
| 2074 vars_of_dragdrop (); | |
| 2075 #endif | |
| 2076 vars_of_editfns (); | |
| 2077 vars_of_emacs (); | |
| 2078 vars_of_eval (); | |
| 2079 | |
| 2080 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS | |
| 2081 vars_of_event_Xt (); | |
| 2082 #endif | |
| 1303 | 2083 #if defined (HAVE_TTY) && (defined (DEBUG_TTY_EVENT_STREAM) || !defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS)) |
| 428 | 2084 vars_of_event_tty (); |
| 2085 #endif | |
| 2086 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS | |
| 2087 vars_of_event_mswindows (); | |
| 2088 #endif | |
| 2089 vars_of_event_stream (); | |
| 2090 | |
| 2091 vars_of_events (); | |
| 2092 vars_of_extents (); | |
| 2093 vars_of_faces (); | |
| 771 | 2094 vars_of_file_coding (); |
| 428 | 2095 vars_of_fileio (); |
| 444 | 2096 #ifdef CLASH_DETECTION |
| 2097 vars_of_filelock (); | |
| 2098 #endif | |
| 428 | 2099 vars_of_floatfns (); |
| 771 | 2100 vars_of_fns (); |
| 826 | 2101 #ifdef USE_C_FONT_LOCK |
| 428 | 2102 vars_of_font_lock (); |
| 826 | 2103 #endif /* USE_C_FONT_LOCK */ |
| 428 | 2104 vars_of_frame (); |
| 3092 | 2105 vars_of_gc (); |
| 428 | 2106 vars_of_glyphs (); |
| 2107 vars_of_glyphs_eimage (); | |
| 2108 vars_of_glyphs_widget (); | |
| 2109 vars_of_gui (); | |
| 2110 vars_of_gutter (); | |
| 2111 vars_of_indent (); | |
| 2112 vars_of_insdel (); | |
| 2113 vars_of_intl (); | |
| 1315 | 2114 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
| 771 | 2115 vars_of_intl_win32 (); |
| 2116 #endif | |
| 428 | 2117 #ifdef HAVE_XIM |
| 2118 #ifdef XIM_MOTIF | |
| 2119 vars_of_input_method_motif (); | |
| 2120 #else /* XIM_XLIB */ | |
| 2121 vars_of_input_method_xlib (); | |
| 2122 #endif | |
| 2123 #endif /* HAVE_XIM */ | |
| 2124 vars_of_keymap (); | |
| 2125 vars_of_lread (); | |
| 2126 vars_of_lstream (); | |
| 2127 vars_of_macros (); | |
| 2128 vars_of_md5 (); | |
| 2129 #ifdef HAVE_DATABASE | |
| 2130 vars_of_database (); | |
| 2131 #endif | |
| 2132 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 2133 vars_of_menubar (); | |
| 2134 #endif | |
| 2135 vars_of_minibuf (); | |
| 2136 vars_of_module (); | |
| 442 | 2137 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE |
| 902 | 2138 vars_of_dired_mswindows (); |
| 440 | 2139 vars_of_nt (); |
| 428 | 2140 #endif |
| 1983 | 2141 #ifdef WITH_NUMBER_TYPES |
| 2142 vars_of_number (); | |
| 2143 #endif | |
| 428 | 2144 vars_of_objects (); |
| 2145 vars_of_print (); | |
| 2146 | |
| 2147 vars_of_process (); | |
| 2148 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_PROCESSES | |
| 2149 vars_of_process_unix (); | |
| 2150 #endif | |
| 2151 #ifdef HAVE_WIN32_PROCESSES | |
| 2152 vars_of_process_nt (); | |
| 2153 #endif | |
| 2154 | |
| 2155 vars_of_profile (); | |
| 1303 | 2156 #if defined (HAVE_MMAP) && defined (REL_ALLOC) && !defined (DOUG_LEA_MALLOC) |
| 428 | 2157 vars_of_ralloc (); |
| 2158 #endif /* HAVE_MMAP && REL_ALLOC */ | |
| 2526 | 2159 vars_of_realpath (); |
| 428 | 2160 vars_of_redisplay (); |
| 814 | 2161 vars_of_regex (); |
| 428 | 2162 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS |
| 2163 vars_of_scrollbar (); | |
| 2164 #endif | |
| 2165 vars_of_search (); | |
| 2166 vars_of_select (); | |
| 2167 vars_of_sound (); | |
| 2168 vars_of_symbols (); | |
| 2169 vars_of_syntax (); | |
| 771 | 2170 vars_of_text (); |
| 428 | 2171 #ifdef HAVE_TOOLBARS |
| 2172 vars_of_toolbar (); | |
| 2173 #endif | |
| 2174 vars_of_undo (); | |
| 2175 vars_of_window (); | |
| 1315 | 2176 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
| 771 | 2177 vars_of_win32 (); |
| 2178 #endif | |
| 428 | 2179 |
| 2180 #ifdef HAVE_TTY | |
| 2181 vars_of_console_tty (); | |
| 2182 vars_of_frame_tty (); | |
| 2183 vars_of_objects_tty (); | |
| 2184 #endif | |
| 2185 | |
| 462 | 2186 #ifdef HAVE_GTK |
| 2187 vars_of_device_gtk (); | |
|
4380
461fdb92f3b6
Correct the perhaps_init_unseen_key_defaults GTK code; don't override X11 fonts.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
3466
diff
changeset
|
2188 vars_of_console_gtk (); |
| 462 | 2189 #ifdef HAVE_DIALOGS |
| 2190 vars_of_dialog_gtk (); | |
| 2191 #endif | |
| 2192 vars_of_event_gtk (); | |
| 2193 vars_of_frame_gtk (); | |
| 2194 vars_of_glyphs_gtk (); | |
| 2195 vars_of_ui_gtk (); | |
| 2196 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 2197 vars_of_menubar_gtk (); | |
| 2198 #endif | |
| 2199 vars_of_objects_gtk (); | |
| 2200 vars_of_select_gtk (); | |
| 2201 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS | |
| 2202 vars_of_scrollbar_gtk (); | |
| 2203 #endif | |
| 2204 #if defined (HAVE_MENUBARS) || defined (HAVE_SCROLLBARS) || defined (HAVE_DIALOGS) || defined (HAVE_TOOLBARS) | |
| 2205 vars_of_gui_gtk (); | |
| 2206 #endif | |
| 2207 #endif /* HAVE_GTK */ | |
| 2208 | |
| 428 | 2209 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS |
| 442 | 2210 #ifdef HAVE_BALLOON_HELP |
| 440 | 2211 vars_of_balloon_x (); |
| 442 | 2212 #endif |
| 3381 | 2213 vars_of_console_x (); |
| 428 | 2214 vars_of_device_x (); |
| 771 | 2215 #ifdef HAVE_X_DIALOGS |
| 428 | 2216 vars_of_dialog_x (); |
| 2217 #endif | |
| 2218 vars_of_frame_x (); | |
| 2219 vars_of_glyphs_x (); | |
| 2220 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 2221 vars_of_menubar_x (); | |
| 2222 #endif | |
| 2223 vars_of_objects_x (); | |
| 440 | 2224 vars_of_select_x (); |
| 428 | 2225 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS |
| 2226 vars_of_scrollbar_x (); | |
| 2227 #endif | |
| 771 | 2228 #if defined (HAVE_MENUBARS) || defined (HAVE_SCROLLBARS) || defined (HAVE_X_DIALOGS) || defined (HAVE_TOOLBARS) |
| 428 | 2229 vars_of_gui_x (); |
| 2230 #endif | |
| 3094 | 2231 |
|
4916
a6c778975d7d
split USE_XFT into HAVE_XFT/USE_XFT
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4871
diff
changeset
|
2232 #ifdef HAVE_XFT |
| 3354 | 2233 vars_of_font_mgr (); |
| 3094 | 2234 #endif |
| 2235 | |
| 440 | 2236 #endif /* HAVE_X_WINDOWS */ |
| 428 | 2237 |
| 462 | 2238 |
| 428 | 2239 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS |
| 2240 vars_of_device_mswindows (); | |
| 2241 vars_of_console_mswindows (); | |
| 2242 vars_of_frame_mswindows (); | |
| 2243 vars_of_objects_mswindows (); | |
| 2244 vars_of_select_mswindows (); | |
| 2245 vars_of_glyphs_mswindows (); | |
| 2246 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS | |
| 2247 vars_of_scrollbar_mswindows (); | |
| 2248 #endif | |
| 2249 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 2250 vars_of_menubar_mswindows (); | |
| 2251 #endif | |
| 2252 #ifdef HAVE_DIALOGS | |
| 2253 vars_of_dialog_mswindows (); | |
| 2254 #endif | |
| 2255 #endif /* HAVE_MS_WINDOWS */ | |
| 2256 | |
| 2257 #ifdef MULE | |
| 2258 vars_of_mule_ccl (); | |
| 2259 vars_of_mule_charset (); | |
| 2260 #endif | |
| 2261 vars_of_file_coding (); | |
| 771 | 2262 vars_of_unicode (); |
| 428 | 2263 #ifdef MULE |
| 771 | 2264 vars_of_mule_coding (); |
| 428 | 2265 #ifdef HAVE_WNN |
| 2266 vars_of_mule_wnn (); | |
| 2267 #endif | |
| 2973 | 2268 #if defined(HAVE_CANNA) && !defined (HAVE_SHLIB) |
| 2269 vars_of_canna_api (); | |
| 428 | 2270 #endif /* HAVE_CANNA */ |
| 2271 #endif /* MULE */ | |
| 2272 | |
| 2273 #ifdef TOOLTALK | |
| 2274 vars_of_tooltalk (); | |
| 2275 #endif | |
| 2276 | |
| 2277 #ifdef SUNPRO | |
| 2278 vars_of_sunpro (); | |
| 2279 #endif | |
| 2280 | |
| 996 | 2281 #if defined (HAVE_LDAP) && !defined (HAVE_SHLIB) |
| 428 | 2282 vars_of_eldap (); |
| 2283 #endif | |
| 2284 | |
| 996 | 2285 #if defined (HAVE_POSTGRESQL) && !defined (HAVE_SHLIB) |
| 771 | 2286 vars_of_postgresql (); |
| 442 | 2287 #endif |
| 2288 | |
| 428 | 2289 #ifdef HAVE_GPM |
| 442 | 2290 vars_of_gpmevent (); |
| 428 | 2291 #endif |
| 2367 | 2292 } |
| 2293 | |
| 2294 if (!initialized | |
| 2295 #ifdef PDUMP | |
| 2296 || !restart | |
| 2297 #endif | |
| 2298 ) | |
| 2299 { | |
| 2300 /* Now do additional vars_of_*() initialization that happens both | |
| 2301 at dump time and after pdump load. */ | |
| 2302 reinit_vars_of_buffer (); | |
|
4921
17362f371cc2
add more byte-code assertions and better failure output
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4871
diff
changeset
|
2303 reinit_vars_of_bytecode (); |
| 2367 | 2304 reinit_vars_of_console (); |
| 2305 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS | |
| 2306 reinit_vars_of_debug (); | |
| 2307 #endif | |
| 2308 reinit_vars_of_device (); | |
| 2309 reinit_vars_of_eval (); | |
| 2310 #if defined (HAVE_TTY) && (defined (DEBUG_TTY_EVENT_STREAM) || !defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS)) | |
| 2311 reinit_vars_of_event_tty (); | |
| 2312 #endif | |
| 2313 reinit_vars_of_event_stream (); | |
| 2314 reinit_vars_of_events (); | |
| 2315 reinit_vars_of_extents (); | |
| 2316 reinit_vars_of_file_coding (); | |
| 2317 reinit_vars_of_fileio (); | |
| 2318 #ifdef USE_C_FONT_LOCK | |
| 2319 reinit_vars_of_font_lock (); | |
| 2320 #endif /* USE_C_FONT_LOCK */ | |
| 2321 reinit_vars_of_glyphs (); | |
| 2322 reinit_vars_of_glyphs_widget (); | |
| 2323 reinit_vars_of_insdel (); | |
| 2324 reinit_vars_of_lread (); | |
| 3263 | 2325 #ifndef NEW_GC |
| 2367 | 2326 reinit_vars_of_lstream (); |
| 3263 | 2327 #endif /* not NEW_GC */ |
| 2367 | 2328 reinit_vars_of_minibuf (); |
| 2329 #ifdef HAVE_SHLIB | |
| 2330 reinit_vars_of_module (); | |
| 2331 #endif | |
| 2332 reinit_vars_of_objects (); | |
| 2333 reinit_vars_of_print (); | |
| 2334 reinit_vars_of_search (); | |
| 2335 reinit_vars_of_text (); | |
| 2336 reinit_vars_of_undo (); | |
| 2337 reinit_vars_of_window (); | |
| 2338 | |
| 2339 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS | |
| 2340 reinit_vars_of_event_mswindows (); | |
| 2341 reinit_vars_of_frame_mswindows (); | |
| 2342 reinit_vars_of_object_mswindows (); | |
| 2343 #endif | |
| 2344 | |
| 2345 #ifdef HAVE_GTK | |
| 2346 reinit_vars_of_event_gtk (); | |
| 2347 reinit_vars_of_menubar_gtk (); | |
| 2348 #endif | |
| 2349 | |
| 2350 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS | |
| 2351 reinit_vars_of_device_x (); | |
| 2352 reinit_vars_of_event_Xt (); | |
| 2353 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS | |
| 2354 reinit_vars_of_scrollbar_x (); | |
| 2355 #endif | |
| 2356 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 2357 reinit_vars_of_menubar_x (); | |
| 2358 #endif | |
| 2359 reinit_vars_of_select_x (); | |
| 2360 #if defined (HAVE_MENUBARS) || defined (HAVE_SCROLLBARS) || defined (HAVE_X_DIALOGS) || defined (HAVE_TOOLBARS) | |
| 2361 reinit_vars_of_gui_x (); | |
| 2362 #endif | |
|
4916
a6c778975d7d
split USE_XFT into HAVE_XFT/USE_XFT
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4871
diff
changeset
|
2363 #ifdef HAVE_XFT |
| 3354 | 2364 reinit_vars_of_font_mgr (); |
| 3094 | 2365 #endif |
| 2367 | 2366 #endif /* HAVE_X_WINDOWS */ |
| 2367 | |
| 2368 #ifdef MULE | |
| 2369 reinit_vars_of_mule_coding (); | |
| 2370 #endif | |
| 2371 #if defined (MULE) && defined (HAVE_WNN) | |
| 2372 reinit_vars_of_mule_wnn (); | |
| 2373 #endif | |
| 2374 } | |
| 2375 | |
| 2376 if (!initialized) | |
| 2377 { | |
| 428 | 2378 /* Now initialize any specifier variables. We do this later |
| 2379 because it has some dependence on the vars initialized | |
| 2380 above. | |
| 2381 | |
| 2382 These functions should *only* initialize specifier variables, | |
| 2383 and may make use of the following functions/macros in addition | |
| 2384 to the ones listed above: | |
| 2385 | |
| 2386 DEFVAR_SPECIFIER() | |
| 2387 Fmake_specifier() | |
| 2388 set_specifier_fallback() | |
| 2389 set_specifier_caching() | |
| 2390 */ | |
| 2391 | |
| 2392 specifier_vars_of_glyphs (); | |
| 863 | 2393 specifier_vars_of_glyphs_widget (); |
| 428 | 2394 specifier_vars_of_gutter (); |
| 2395 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 2396 specifier_vars_of_menubar (); | |
| 2397 #endif | |
| 2398 specifier_vars_of_redisplay (); | |
| 2399 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS | |
| 2400 specifier_vars_of_scrollbar (); | |
| 2401 #endif | |
| 2402 #ifdef HAVE_TOOLBARS | |
| 2403 specifier_vars_of_toolbar (); | |
| 2404 #endif | |
| 2405 specifier_vars_of_window (); | |
| 2406 | |
| 2407 /* Now comes all the rest of the variables that couldn't | |
| 2408 be handled above. There may be dependencies on variables | |
| 2409 initialized above, and dependencies between one complex_vars_() | |
| 2410 function and another. */ | |
| 2411 | |
| 2412 #ifdef MULE | |
| 814 | 2413 /* This depends on vars initialized in vars_of_unicode(). */ |
| 428 | 2414 complex_vars_of_mule_charset (); |
| 2415 #endif | |
| 814 | 2416 /* This one doesn't depend on anything really, and could go into |
| 2417 vars_of_(), but lots of lots of code gets called and it's easily | |
| 2418 possible that it could get changed to require being a | |
| 2419 complex_vars_of_(), for example if a charset appears anywhere, | |
| 2420 then we suddenly have dependence on the previous call. */ | |
| 428 | 2421 complex_vars_of_file_coding (); |
| 1315 | 2422 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
|
4834
b3ea9c582280
Use new cygwin_conv_path API with Cygwin 1.7 for converting names between Win32 and POSIX, UTF-8-aware, with attendant changes elsewhere
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4804
diff
changeset
|
2423 /* Define MS-Windows Unicode coding systems */ |
| 771 | 2424 complex_vars_of_intl_win32 (); |
| 428 | 2425 #endif |
|
4834
b3ea9c582280
Use new cygwin_conv_path API with Cygwin 1.7 for converting names between Win32 and POSIX, UTF-8-aware, with attendant changes elsewhere
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4804
diff
changeset
|
2426 /* Define UTF-8 coding system */ |
|
b3ea9c582280
Use new cygwin_conv_path API with Cygwin 1.7 for converting names between Win32 and POSIX, UTF-8-aware, with attendant changes elsewhere
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4804
diff
changeset
|
2427 complex_vars_of_unicode (); |
| 428 | 2428 |
| 2367 | 2429 /* At this point we should be able to do conversion operations. |
| 2430 We have initialized things to the point that we can create Lisp | |
| 2431 objects and we have defined the basic coding systems (in the | |
| 2432 just-previous complex-vars calls). We will in fact do conversion | |
| 2433 quite soon, e.g. in complex_vars_of_glyphs_x(). */ | |
| 2434 inhibit_non_essential_conversion_operations = 0; | |
| 2435 | |
|
4916
a6c778975d7d
split USE_XFT into HAVE_XFT/USE_XFT
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4871
diff
changeset
|
2436 #ifdef HAVE_XFT |
| 3094 | 2437 /* This uses coding systems. Must be done before faces are init'ed. */ |
| 2438 /* not in xft reloaded #3 */ | |
| 3354 | 2439 complex_vars_of_font_mgr (); |
| 3094 | 2440 #endif |
| 2441 | |
| 771 | 2442 /* Depends on specifiers. */ |
| 2443 complex_vars_of_faces (); | |
| 2444 | |
| 428 | 2445 /* This calls allocate_glyph(), which creates specifiers |
| 2446 and also relies on a variable (Vthe_nothing_vector) initialized | |
| 771 | 2447 above. */ |
| 428 | 2448 complex_vars_of_glyphs (); |
| 2449 | |
| 2450 /* These rely on the glyphs just created in the previous function, | |
| 2451 and call Fadd_spec_to_specifier(), which relies on various | |
| 2452 variables initialized above. */ | |
| 462 | 2453 #ifdef HAVE_GTK |
| 2454 complex_vars_of_glyphs_gtk (); | |
| 2455 #endif | |
| 428 | 2456 #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS |
| 2457 complex_vars_of_glyphs_x (); | |
| 2458 #endif | |
| 2459 #ifdef HAVE_MS_WINDOWS | |
| 2460 complex_vars_of_glyphs_mswindows (); | |
| 2461 #endif | |
| 2462 | |
| 2463 /* This calls Fmake_glyph_internal(). */ | |
| 2464 #ifdef HAVE_MENUBARS | |
| 2465 complex_vars_of_menubar (); | |
| 2466 #endif | |
| 2467 | |
| 617 | 2468 #ifdef HAVE_SCROLLBARS |
| 428 | 2469 /* This calls Fmake_glyph_internal(). */ |
| 2470 complex_vars_of_scrollbar (); | |
| 2471 #endif | |
| 2472 | |
| 2473 /* This calls allocate_glyph(). */ | |
| 2474 complex_vars_of_frame (); | |
| 2475 | |
| 2476 /* This calls Fcopy_category_table() under Mule, which calls who | |
| 2477 knows what. */ | |
| 2478 complex_vars_of_chartab (); | |
| 2479 | |
| 826 | 2480 /* This calls Fput_char_table(), which (under Mule) depends on the |
| 428 | 2481 charsets being initialized. */ |
| 2482 complex_vars_of_casetab (); | |
| 2483 | |
| 2484 /* This calls Fcopy_syntax_table(), which relies on char tables. */ | |
| 2485 complex_vars_of_syntax (); | |
| 2486 | |
| 2487 /* This initializes buffer-local variables, sets things up so | |
| 2488 that buffers can be created, and creates a couple of basic | |
| 2489 buffers. This depends on Vstandard_syntax_table and | |
| 2490 Vstandard_category_table (initialized in the previous | |
| 2491 functions), as well as a whole horde of variables that may | |
| 2492 have been initialized above. */ | |
| 2493 complex_vars_of_buffer (); | |
| 2494 | |
| 2495 /* This initializes console-local variables. */ | |
| 2496 complex_vars_of_console (); | |
| 2497 | |
| 2498 /* This creates a couple more buffers, and depends on the | |
| 2499 previous function. */ | |
| 2500 complex_vars_of_minibuf (); | |
| 2501 | |
| 2502 /* These two might call Ffile_name_as_directory(), which | |
| 2503 might depend on all sorts of things; I'm not sure. */ | |
| 2504 complex_vars_of_emacs (); | |
| 2505 | |
| 3092 | 2506 complex_vars_of_gc (); |
| 2507 | |
| 428 | 2508 /* This creates a couple of basic keymaps and depends on Lisp |
| 2509 hash tables and Ffset() (both of which depend on some variables | |
| 2510 initialized in the vars_of_*() section) and possibly other | |
| 2511 stuff. */ | |
| 2512 complex_vars_of_keymap (); | |
| 2513 | |
| 2514 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_GC | |
| 2515 { | |
| 2516 extern int always_gc; | |
| 2517 if (always_gc) /* purification debugging hack */ | |
| 3092 | 2518 #ifdef NEW_GC |
| 2519 gc_full (); | |
| 2520 #else /* not NEW_GC */ | |
| 428 | 2521 garbage_collect_1 (); |
| 3092 | 2522 #endif /* not NEW_GC */ |
| 428 | 2523 } |
| 2524 #endif | |
| 1204 | 2525 } |
| 2367 | 2526 else |
| 2527 { | |
| 2528 /* We are at the equivalent place where we reset this in the | |
| 2529 non-initialized case. */ | |
| 2530 inhibit_non_essential_conversion_operations = 0; | |
| 1204 | 2531 |
| 428 | 2532 #ifdef PDUMP |
| 2367 | 2533 if (!restart) /* after successful pdump_load() |
| 2534 (note, we are inside ifdef PDUMP) */ | |
| 2535 { | |
| 2536 reinit_complex_vars_of_buffer_runtime_only (); | |
| 2537 reinit_complex_vars_of_console_runtime_only (); | |
| 2538 reinit_complex_vars_of_minibuf (); | |
| 2539 } | |
| 2540 #endif /* PDUMP */ | |
| 1204 | 2541 } |
| 2367 | 2542 |
| 2543 if (initialized) | |
| 2544 init_eval_semi_early (); | |
| 428 | 2545 |
| 2546 /* CONGRATULATIONS!!! We have successfully initialized the Lisp | |
| 2547 engine. */ | |
| 2548 | |
| 2549 /* Now do further initialization/setup of stuff that is not needed by the | |
| 2550 syms_of_() routines. This involves stuff that only is enabled in | |
| 2551 an interactive run (redisplay, user input, etc.) and stuff that is | |
| 2552 not needed until we start loading Lisp code (the reader). A lot | |
| 2553 of this stuff involves querying the current environment and needs | |
| 771 | 2554 to be done both at dump time and at run time. Some will be done |
| 2367 | 2555 only at run time, by querying the `initialized' variable. |
| 2556 | |
| 2557 The ordering of these functions is critical, especially the early ones, | |
| 2558 where there is typically a dependency from each to the previous. | |
| 2559 */ | |
| 771 | 2560 |
| 1315 | 2561 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
| 771 | 2562 init_intl_win32 (); /* Under Windows, determine whether we use Unicode |
| 2563 or ANSI to call the system routines -- i.e. | |
| 2564 determine what the coding system `mswindows-tstr' | |
| 2565 is aliased to */ | |
| 2566 #endif | |
| 2567 init_buffer_1 (); /* Create *scratch* buffer; init_intl() is going to | |
| 2568 call Lisp code (the very first code we call), | |
| 2569 and needs a current buffer */ | |
| 2570 #ifdef MULE | |
| 2571 init_intl (); /* Figure out the locale and set native and | |
| 2572 file-name coding systems, initialize the Unicode tables | |
| 2573 so that we will be able to process non-ASCII from here | |
| 2574 on out! */ | |
| 428 | 2575 #endif |
| 2576 | |
| 814 | 2577 init_xemacs_process (); /* Set up the process environment (so that |
| 2578 egetenv works), the basic directory variables | |
| 2579 (exec-directory and so on), and stuff related | |
| 2580 to subprocesses. This should be first because | |
| 2581 many of the functions below call egetenv() to | |
| 2582 get environment variables. */ | |
| 771 | 2583 |
| 2584 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE | |
| 2585 /* | |
| 2586 * For Win32, call init_environment() to properly enter environment/registry | |
| 2587 * variables into Vprocess_environment. | |
| 2588 */ | |
| 814 | 2589 init_mswindows_environment (); |
| 771 | 2590 #endif |
| 2591 | |
| 2592 init_initial_directory (); /* get the directory to use for the | |
| 2593 "*scratch*" buffer, etc. */ | |
| 2594 | |
| 1983 | 2595 #ifdef WITH_NUMBER_TYPES |
| 2596 /* Set up bignums, ratios, bigfloats, complex numbers. | |
| 2597 This must be done before the Lisp reader is set up. */ | |
| 2598 init_number (); | |
| 2599 #endif | |
| 2600 | |
| 428 | 2601 init_lread (); /* Set up the Lisp reader. */ |
| 2367 | 2602 init_cmdargs (argc, argv, skip_args); /* Create list Vcommand_line_args */ |
| 771 | 2603 init_buffer_2 (); /* Set default directory of *scratch* buffer */ |
| 428 | 2604 |
| 442 | 2605 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE |
| 814 | 2606 init_nt (); |
| 771 | 2607 init_select_mswindows (); |
| 428 | 2608 #endif |
| 2609 | |
| 2610 init_redisplay (); /* Determine terminal type. | |
| 2611 init_sys_modes uses results */ | |
| 438 | 2612 init_frame (); |
| 428 | 2613 init_event_stream (); /* Set up so we can get user input. */ |
| 2614 init_macros (); /* set up so we can run macros. */ | |
| 2615 init_editfns (); /* Determine the name of the user we're running as */ | |
| 2616 #ifdef SUNPRO | |
| 2617 init_sunpro (); /* Set up Sunpro usage tracking */ | |
| 2618 #endif | |
| 1315 | 2619 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
| 442 | 2620 init_win32 (); |
| 2621 #endif | |
| 428 | 2622 #if defined (HAVE_NATIVE_SOUND) && defined (hp9000s800) |
| 2623 init_hpplay (); | |
| 2624 #endif | |
| 996 | 2625 #if defined (HAVE_POSTGRESQL) && !defined (HAVE_SHLIB) |
| 771 | 2626 /* Set some values taken from environment variables */ |
| 2627 init_postgresql_from_environment (); | |
| 2628 #endif | |
| 428 | 2629 #ifdef HAVE_TTY |
| 2630 init_device_tty (); | |
| 2631 #endif | |
| 442 | 2632 init_console_stream (restart); /* Create the first console */ |
| 428 | 2633 |
| 2634 /* try to get the actual pathname of the exec file we are running */ | |
| 2635 if (!restart) | |
| 771 | 2636 { |
| 2637 Vinvocation_name = Fcar (Vcommand_line_args); | |
| 1303 | 2638 if (XSTRING_DATA (Vinvocation_name)[0] == '-') |
| 771 | 2639 { |
| 2640 /* XEmacs as a login shell, oh goody! */ | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
2641 Vinvocation_name = build_istring (egetenv ("SHELL")); |
| 771 | 2642 } |
| 428 | 2643 Vinvocation_directory = Vinvocation_name; |
| 2644 | |
| 771 | 2645 if (!NILP (Ffile_name_directory (Vinvocation_name))) |
| 2646 { | |
| 2647 /* invocation-name includes a directory component -- presumably it | |
| 2648 is relative to cwd, not $PATH */ | |
| 2649 Vinvocation_directory = Fexpand_file_name (Vinvocation_name, | |
| 2650 Qnil); | |
| 2651 Vinvocation_path = Qnil; | |
| 2652 } | |
| 2653 else | |
| 2654 { | |
| 2655 Vinvocation_path = split_env_path ("PATH", NULL); | |
| 2656 locate_file (Vinvocation_path, Vinvocation_name, | |
| 2657 Vlisp_EXEC_SUFFIXES, | |
| 2658 &Vinvocation_directory, X_OK); | |
| 2659 } | |
| 2660 | |
| 2661 if (NILP (Vinvocation_directory)) | |
| 2662 Vinvocation_directory = Vinvocation_name; | |
| 2663 | |
| 2664 Vinvocation_name = Ffile_name_nondirectory (Vinvocation_directory); | |
| 2665 Vinvocation_directory = Ffile_name_directory (Vinvocation_directory); | |
| 2666 } | |
| 428 | 2667 |
| 2668 #if defined (LOCALTIME_CACHE) && defined (HAVE_TZSET) | |
| 2669 /* sun's localtime() has a bug. it caches the value of the time | |
| 2670 zone rather than looking it up every time. Since localtime() is | |
| 2671 called to bolt the undumping time into the undumped emacs, this | |
| 2672 results in localtime() ignoring the TZ environment variable. | |
| 2673 This flushes the new TZ value into localtime(). */ | |
| 2674 tzset (); | |
| 2675 #endif /* LOCALTIME_CACHE and TZSET */ | |
| 2676 | |
| 2677 load_me = Qnil; | |
| 2678 if (!initialized) | |
| 2679 { | |
| 2680 /* Handle -l loadup-and-dump, args passed by Makefile. */ | |
| 2367 | 2681 if (argc > 2 + skip_args && |
| 2682 !wext_strcmp_ascii (argv[1 + skip_args], "-l")) | |
| 2683 load_me = build_wext_string (argv[2 + skip_args], | |
| 2684 Qcommand_argument_encoding); | |
| 428 | 2685 } |
| 2686 | |
| 2687 #ifdef QUANTIFY | |
| 2688 if (initialized) | |
| 2689 quantify_start_recording_data (); | |
| 2690 #endif /* QUANTIFY */ | |
| 2691 | |
| 2692 initialized = 1; | |
| 2693 | |
| 2694 /* This never returns. */ | |
| 2695 initial_command_loop (load_me); | |
| 2696 /* NOTREACHED */ | |
| 2697 } | |
| 2698 | |
| 2699 | |
| 2700 /* Sort the args so we can find the most important ones | |
| 2701 at the beginning of argv. */ | |
| 2702 | |
| 2703 /* First, here's a table of all the standard options. */ | |
| 2704 | |
| 2705 struct standard_args | |
| 2706 { | |
| 2367 | 2707 const Ascbyte *name; |
| 2708 const Ascbyte *longname; | |
| 428 | 2709 int priority; |
| 2710 int nargs; | |
| 2711 }; | |
| 2712 | |
| 442 | 2713 static const struct standard_args standard_args[] = |
| 428 | 2714 { |
| 776 | 2715 /* Handled by main_1 above: Each must have its own priority and must be |
| 2716 in the order mentioned in main_1. */ | |
| 442 | 2717 { "-sd", "--show-dump-id", 105, 0 }, |
| 2718 { "-nd", "--no-dump-file", 95, 0 }, | |
| 826 | 2719 { "-batch", "--batch", 88, 0 }, |
|
4448
fd8a9a4d81d9
Support #!, to allow XEmacs to be called as a script interpreter.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
2720 { "-script", "--script", 89, 1 }, |
| 771 | 2721 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE |
| 826 | 2722 { "-mswindows-termination-handle", 0, 84, 1 }, |
| 771 | 2723 { "-nuni", "--no-unicode-lib-calls", 83, 0 }, |
| 2724 #endif /* WIN32_NATIVE */ | |
| 428 | 2725 { "-debug-paths", "--debug-paths", 82, 0 }, |
| 776 | 2726 { "-no-packages", "--no-packages", 81, 0 }, |
| 2727 { "-no-early-packages", "--no-early-packages", 80, 0 }, | |
| 2728 { "-no-site-modules", "--no-site-modules", 78, 0 }, | |
| 2729 { "-vanilla", "--vanilla", 76, 0 }, | |
| 2730 { "-no-autoloads", "--no-autoloads", 74, 0 }, | |
| 2731 { "-help", "--help", 72, 0 }, | |
| 2732 { "-version", "--version", 70, 0 }, | |
| 2733 { "-V", 0, 68, 0 }, | |
| 1315 | 2734 { "-nw", "--no-windows", 66, 0 }, |
| 2735 { "-tty", "--use-tty", 65, 0 }, | |
| 2736 { "-x", "--use-x", 64, 0 }, | |
| 2737 { "-gtk", "--use-gtk", 63, 0 }, | |
| 2738 { "-gnome", "--use-gnome", 62, 0 }, | |
| 2739 { "-msw", "--use-ms-windows", 61, 0 }, | |
| 2740 { "-t", "--terminal", 58, 1 }, | |
| 2741 { "-d", "--display", 57, 1 }, | |
| 2742 { "-display", 0, 56, 1 }, | |
| 428 | 2743 |
| 2744 /* Handled by command-line-early in startup.el: */ | |
| 2745 { "-q", "--no-init-file", 50, 0 }, | |
| 2746 { "-no-init-file", 0, 50, 0 }, | |
| 776 | 2747 { "-no-site-file", "--no-site-file", 50, 0 }, |
| 2748 { "-unmapped", "--unmapped", 50, 0 }, | |
| 2749 { "-u", "--user", 50, 1 }, | |
| 2750 { "-user", 0, 50, 1 }, | |
| 2751 { "-user-init-file", "--user-init-file", 50, 1 }, | |
| 2752 { "-user-init-directory", "--user-init-directory", 50, 1 }, | |
| 2753 { "-debug-init", "--debug-init", 50, 0 }, | |
| 428 | 2754 |
| 2755 /* Xt options: */ | |
| 2756 { "-i", "--icon-type", 15, 0 }, | |
| 2757 { "-itype", 0, 15, 0 }, | |
| 2758 { "-iconic", "--iconic", 15, 0 }, | |
| 2759 { "-bg", "--background-color", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2760 { "-background", 0, 10, 1 }, | |
| 2761 { "-fg", "--foreground-color", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2762 { "-foreground", 0, 10, 1 }, | |
| 2763 { "-bd", "--border-color", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2764 { "-bw", "--border-width", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2765 { "-ib", "--internal-border", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2766 { "-ms", "--mouse-color", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2767 { "-cr", "--cursor-color", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2768 { "-fn", "--font", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2769 { "-font", 0, 10, 1 }, | |
| 2770 { "-g", "--geometry", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2771 { "-geometry", 0, 10, 1 }, | |
| 2772 { "-T", "--title", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2773 { "-title", 0, 10, 1 }, | |
| 2774 { "-name", "--name", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2775 { "-xrm", "--xrm", 10, 1 }, | |
| 2776 { "-r", "--reverse-video", 5, 0 }, | |
| 2777 { "-rv", 0, 5, 0 }, | |
| 2778 { "-reverse", 0, 5, 0 }, | |
| 2779 { "-hb", "--horizontal-scroll-bars", 5, 0 }, | |
| 2780 { "-vb", "--vertical-scroll-bars", 5, 0 }, | |
| 2781 | |
| 776 | 2782 { "-eol", "--enable-eol-detection", 2, 0 }, |
| 2783 { "-enable-eol-detection", 0, 2, 0 }, | |
| 428 | 2784 /* These have the same priority as ordinary file name args, |
| 2785 so they are not reordered with respect to those. */ | |
| 2786 { "-L", "--directory", 0, 1 }, | |
| 2787 { "-directory", 0, 0, 1 }, | |
| 2788 { "-l", "--load", 0, 1 }, | |
| 2789 { "-load", 0, 0, 1 }, | |
| 2790 { "-f", "--funcall", 0, 1 }, | |
| 2791 { "-funcall", 0, 0, 1 }, | |
| 2792 { "-eval", "--eval", 0, 1 }, | |
| 2793 { "-insert", "--insert", 0, 1 }, | |
| 2794 /* This should be processed after ordinary file name args and the like. */ | |
| 2795 { "-kill", "--kill", -10, 0 }, | |
| 2796 }; | |
| 2797 | |
| 2798 /* Reorder the elements of ARGV (assumed to have ARGC elements) | |
| 2799 so that the highest priority ones come first. | |
| 2800 Do not change the order of elements of equal priority. | |
| 2801 If an option takes an argument, keep it and its argument together. */ | |
| 2802 | |
| 2803 static void | |
| 2367 | 2804 sort_args (int argc, Wexttext **argv) |
| 428 | 2805 { |
| 2367 | 2806 Wexttext **new_argv = xnew_array (Wexttext *, argc); |
| 428 | 2807 /* For each element of argv, |
| 2808 the corresponding element of options is: | |
| 2809 0 for an option that takes no arguments, | |
| 2810 1 for an option that takes one argument, etc. | |
| 2811 -1 for an ordinary non-option argument. */ | |
| 2812 int *options = xnew_array (int, argc); | |
| 2813 int *priority = xnew_array (int, argc); | |
| 2814 int to = 1; | |
| 2815 int from; | |
| 2816 int i; | |
| 2817 int end_of_options_p = 0; | |
| 2818 | |
| 2819 /* Categorize all the options, | |
| 2820 and figure out which argv elts are option arguments. */ | |
| 2821 for (from = 1; from < argc; from++) | |
| 2822 { | |
| 2823 options[from] = -1; | |
| 2824 priority[from] = 0; | |
| 2825 /* Pseudo options "--" and "run-temacs" indicate end of options */ | |
| 2367 | 2826 if (!wext_strcmp_ascii (argv[from], "--") || |
| 2827 !wext_strcmp_ascii (argv[from], "run-temacs")) | |
| 428 | 2828 end_of_options_p = 1; |
| 2829 if (!end_of_options_p && argv[from][0] == '-') | |
| 2830 { | |
| 2367 | 2831 int match; |
| 2832 Charcount thislen; | |
| 2833 Wexttext *equals; | |
| 428 | 2834 |
| 2835 /* Look for a match with a known old-fashioned option. */ | |
| 2836 for (i = 0; i < countof (standard_args); i++) | |
| 2367 | 2837 if (!wext_strcmp_ascii (argv[from], standard_args[i].name)) |
| 428 | 2838 { |
| 2839 options[from] = standard_args[i].nargs; | |
| 2840 priority[from] = standard_args[i].priority; | |
| 2841 if (from + standard_args[i].nargs >= argc) | |
| 2367 | 2842 fatal ("Option `%s' requires an argument\n", |
| 2843 WEXTTEXT_TO_8_BIT (argv[from])); | |
| 428 | 2844 from += standard_args[i].nargs; |
| 2845 goto done; | |
| 2846 } | |
| 2847 | |
| 2848 /* Look for a match with a known long option. | |
| 2849 MATCH is -1 if no match so far, -2 if two or more matches so far, | |
| 2850 >= 0 (the table index of the match) if just one match so far. */ | |
| 2851 if (argv[from][1] == '-') | |
| 2852 { | |
| 2853 match = -1; | |
| 2367 | 2854 thislen = wext_strlen (argv[from]); |
| 2855 equals = wext_strchr (argv[from], '='); | |
| 428 | 2856 if (equals != 0) |
| 2857 thislen = equals - argv[from]; | |
| 2858 | |
| 2859 for (i = 0; i < countof (standard_args); i++) | |
| 2860 if (standard_args[i].longname | |
| 2367 | 2861 && !wext_strncmp_ascii (argv[from], |
| 2862 standard_args[i].longname, | |
| 2863 thislen)) | |
| 428 | 2864 { |
| 2865 if (match == -1) | |
| 2866 match = i; | |
| 2867 else | |
| 2868 match = -2; | |
| 2869 } | |
| 2870 | |
| 2871 /* If we found exactly one match, use that. */ | |
| 2872 if (match >= 0) | |
| 2873 { | |
| 2874 options[from] = standard_args[match].nargs; | |
| 2875 priority[from] = standard_args[match].priority; | |
| 2876 /* If --OPTION=VALUE syntax is used, | |
| 2877 this option uses just one argv element. */ | |
| 2878 if (equals != 0) | |
| 2879 options[from] = 0; | |
| 2880 if (from + options[from] >= argc) | |
| 2367 | 2881 fatal ("Option `%s' requires an argument\n", |
| 2882 WEXTTEXT_TO_8_BIT (argv[from])); | |
| 428 | 2883 from += options[from]; |
| 2884 } | |
| 2885 } | |
| 2886 done: ; | |
| 2887 } | |
| 2888 } | |
| 2889 | |
| 2890 /* Copy the arguments, in order of decreasing priority, to NEW_ARGV. */ | |
| 2891 new_argv[0] = argv[0]; | |
| 2892 while (to < argc) | |
| 2893 { | |
| 2894 int best = -1; | |
| 2895 int best_priority = -9999; | |
| 2896 | |
| 2897 /* Find the highest priority remaining option. | |
| 2898 If several have equal priority, take the first of them. */ | |
| 2899 for (from = 1; from < argc; from++) | |
| 2900 { | |
| 2901 if (argv[from] != 0 && priority[from] > best_priority) | |
| 2902 { | |
| 2903 best_priority = priority[from]; | |
| 2904 best = from; | |
| 2905 } | |
| 2906 /* Skip option arguments--they are tied to the options. */ | |
| 2907 if (options[from] > 0) | |
| 2908 from += options[from]; | |
| 2909 } | |
| 2910 | |
| 2911 if (best < 0) | |
| 2500 | 2912 ABORT (); |
| 428 | 2913 |
| 1315 | 2914 /* Copy the highest priority remaining option, with its args, to |
| 2915 NEW_ARGV. */ | |
| 428 | 2916 new_argv[to++] = argv[best]; |
| 2917 for (i = 0; i < options[best]; i++) | |
| 2918 new_argv[to++] = argv[best + i + 1]; | |
| 2919 | |
| 2920 /* Clear out this option in ARGV. */ | |
| 2921 argv[best] = 0; | |
| 2922 for (i = 0; i < options[best]; i++) | |
| 2923 argv[best + i + 1] = 0; | |
| 2924 } | |
| 2925 | |
| 2367 | 2926 memcpy (argv, new_argv, sizeof (Wexttext *) * argc); |
|
4976
16112448d484
Rename xfree(FOO, TYPE) -> xfree(FOO)
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
2927 xfree (new_argv); |
|
16112448d484
Rename xfree(FOO, TYPE) -> xfree(FOO)
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
2928 xfree (options); |
|
16112448d484
Rename xfree(FOO, TYPE) -> xfree(FOO)
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
2929 xfree (priority); |
| 428 | 2930 } |
| 2931 | |
| 2932 DEFUN ("running-temacs-p", Frunning_temacs_p, 0, 0, 0, /* | |
| 2933 True if running temacs. This means we are in the dumping stage. | |
| 2934 This is false during normal execution of the `xemacs' program, and | |
| 2935 becomes false once `run-emacs-from-temacs' is run. | |
| 2936 */ | |
| 2937 ()) | |
| 2938 { | |
| 2939 return run_temacs_argc >= 0 ? Qt : Qnil; | |
| 2940 } | |
| 2941 | |
| 1315 | 2942 DEFUN ("emacs-run-status", Femacs_run_status, 0, 0, 0, /* |
| 2943 Plist of values indicating the current run status of this XEmacs. | |
| 2944 Currently defined values: | |
| 2945 | |
| 2946 `temacs' | |
| 2947 If non-nil, we are running a "raw temacs" (no dump data is present | |
| 2948 and `run-emacs-from-temacs' not called). (same as `running-temacs-p') | |
| 2949 | |
| 2950 `dumping' | |
| 2951 If non-nil, we are in the process of creating dump data. (same as | |
| 2952 `purify-flag') | |
| 2953 | |
| 2954 `restarted' | |
| 2955 If non-nil, `run-emacs-from-temacs' was called. | |
| 2956 | |
| 2957 `pdump' | |
| 2958 If non-nil, we were compiled with pdump (portable dumping) support. | |
| 2959 | |
| 2960 `batch' | |
| 2961 If non-nil, we are running non-interactively. (same as `noninteractive') | |
| 2962 */ | |
| 2963 ()) | |
| 2964 { | |
| 2965 Lisp_Object plist = Qnil; | |
| 2966 | |
| 2967 #define ADD_PLIST(key, val) plist = Fcons (val, Fcons (key, plist)) | |
| 2968 if (run_temacs_argc >= 0) | |
| 2969 ADD_PLIST (Qtemacs, Qt); | |
| 2970 if (purify_flag) | |
| 2971 ADD_PLIST (Qdumping, Qt); | |
| 2972 if (run_temacs_argc == -2) | |
| 2973 ADD_PLIST (Qrestarted, Qt); | |
| 2974 #ifdef PDUMP | |
| 2975 ADD_PLIST (Qpdump, Qt); | |
| 2976 #endif | |
| 2977 if (noninteractive) | |
| 2978 ADD_PLIST (Qbatch, Qt); | |
| 2979 | |
| 2980 #undef ADD_PLIST | |
| 2981 return Fnreverse (plist); | |
| 2982 } | |
| 2983 | |
| 2268 | 2984 DEFUN_NORETURN ("run-emacs-from-temacs", Frun_emacs_from_temacs, 0, MANY, 0, /* |
| 428 | 2985 Do not call this. It will reinitialize your XEmacs. You'll be sorry. |
|
4693
80cd90837ac5
Add argument information to remaining MANY or UNEVALLED C subrs.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4528
diff
changeset
|
2986 |
|
80cd90837ac5
Add argument information to remaining MANY or UNEVALLED C subrs.
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4528
diff
changeset
|
2987 arguments: (&rest ARGS) |
| 428 | 2988 */ |
| 2989 /* If this function is called from startup.el, it will be possible to run | |
|
4477
e34711681f30
Don't determine whether to call general device-type code at startup,
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4458
diff
changeset
|
2990 temacs as an editor using `temacs -batch -l ../lisp/loadup.el |
|
e34711681f30
Don't determine whether to call general device-type code at startup,
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4458
diff
changeset
|
2991 run-temacs', instead of having to dump an emacs and then run that (when |
|
e34711681f30
Don't determine whether to call general device-type code at startup,
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4458
diff
changeset
|
2992 debugging emacs itself, this can be much faster)). [Actually, the speed |
|
e34711681f30
Don't determine whether to call general device-type code at startup,
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4458
diff
changeset
|
2993 difference isn't that much as long as your filesystem is local, and you |
|
e34711681f30
Don't determine whether to call general device-type code at startup,
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4458
diff
changeset
|
2994 don't end up with a dumped version in case you want to rerun it. This |
|
e34711681f30
Don't determine whether to call general device-type code at startup,
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4458
diff
changeset
|
2995 function is most useful when used as part of the `make all-elc' |
|
e34711681f30
Don't determine whether to call general device-type code at startup,
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4458
diff
changeset
|
2996 command. --ben] This will "restart" emacs with the specified command-line |
|
e34711681f30
Don't determine whether to call general device-type code at startup,
Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
parents:
4458
diff
changeset
|
2997 arguments. |
| 428 | 2998 |
| 2999 Martin thinks this function is most useful when using debugging | |
| 3000 tools like Purify or tcov that get confused by XEmacs' dumping. */ | |
| 3001 (int nargs, Lisp_Object *args)) | |
| 3002 { | |
| 2367 | 3003 int i; |
| 428 | 3004 |
| 3092 | 3005 #ifdef NEW_GC |
| 3006 if (gc_in_progress) gc_full (); | |
| 3007 #else /* not NEW_GC */ | |
| 428 | 3008 assert (!gc_in_progress); |
| 3092 | 3009 #endif /* not NEW_GC */ |
| 428 | 3010 |
| 3011 if (run_temacs_argc < 0) | |
| 2367 | 3012 invalid_operation ("I've lost my temacs-hood", Qunbound); |
| 3013 | |
| 3014 run_temacs_argc = nargs + 1; | |
| 3015 run_temacs_argv = xnew_array (Wexttext *, nargs + 2); | |
| 3016 | |
|
4981
4aebb0131297
Cleanups/renaming of EXTERNAL_TO_C_STRING and friends
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
3017 run_temacs_argv[0] = |
|
5000
44d7bde26046
fix compile errors, fix revert-buffer bug on binary/Latin 1 files, Mule-ize some files
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4982
diff
changeset
|
3018 (Wexttext *) LISP_STRING_TO_EXTERNAL_MALLOC (Fcar (Vcommand_line_args), |
|
44d7bde26046
fix compile errors, fix revert-buffer bug on binary/Latin 1 files, Mule-ize some files
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4982
diff
changeset
|
3019 Qcommand_argument_encoding); |
| 2367 | 3020 for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++) |
| 428 | 3021 { |
| 2367 | 3022 CHECK_STRING (args[i]); |
| 3023 | |
|
4981
4aebb0131297
Cleanups/renaming of EXTERNAL_TO_C_STRING and friends
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
3024 run_temacs_argv[i + 1] = |
|
5000
44d7bde26046
fix compile errors, fix revert-buffer bug on binary/Latin 1 files, Mule-ize some files
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4982
diff
changeset
|
3025 (Wexttext *) |
|
4981
4aebb0131297
Cleanups/renaming of EXTERNAL_TO_C_STRING and friends
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
3026 LISP_STRING_TO_EXTERNAL_MALLOC (args[i], Qcommand_argument_encoding); |
| 428 | 3027 } |
| 2367 | 3028 run_temacs_argv[nargs + 1] = 0; |
| 3029 | |
| 428 | 3030 catchlist = NULL; /* Important! Otherwise free_cons() calls in |
| 3031 condition_case_unwind() may lead to GC death. */ | |
| 771 | 3032 unbind_to (0); /* this closes loadup.el */ |
| 428 | 3033 purify_flag = 0; |
| 1303 | 3034 #if defined (HEAP_IN_DATA) && !defined (PDUMP) |
| 428 | 3035 report_sheap_usage (0); |
| 3036 #endif | |
| 1315 | 3037 |
| 3038 /* run-temacs usually only occurs as a result of building, and in all such | |
| 3039 cases we want a backtrace, even if it occurs very early. */ | |
| 3040 if (NILP (Vstack_trace_on_error)) | |
| 3041 Vstack_trace_on_error = Qt; | |
| 3042 | |
| 428 | 3043 LONGJMP (run_temacs_catch, 1); |
| 1204 | 3044 RETURN_NOT_REACHED (Qnil); |
| 428 | 3045 } |
| 3046 | |
| 3047 /* ARGSUSED */ | |
| 3048 int | |
| 2367 | 3049 main (int argc, Extbyte **argv, Extbyte **UNUSED (envp)) |
| 428 | 3050 { |
| 442 | 3051 |
| 3052 #ifdef _MSC_VER | |
| 3053 /* Under VC++, access violations and the like are not sent through | |
| 3054 the standard signal() mechanism. Rather, they need to be handled | |
| 3055 using the Microsoft "structured exception handling" mechanism, | |
| 3056 which vaguely resembles the C++ mechanisms. */ | |
| 3057 __try | |
| 3058 { | |
| 3059 #endif | |
| 3060 | |
| 428 | 3061 int volatile vol_argc = argc; |
| 2367 | 3062 Wexttext ** volatile vol_argv; |
| 428 | 3063 /* This is hairy. We need to compute where the XEmacs binary was invoked |
| 3064 from because temacs initialization requires it to find the lisp | |
| 3065 directories. The code that recomputes the path is guarded by the | |
| 3066 restarted flag. There are three possible paths I've found so far | |
| 3067 through this: | |
| 3068 | |
| 3069 temacs -- When running temacs for basic build stuff, the first main_1 | |
| 3070 will be the only one invoked. It must compute the path else there | |
| 3071 will be a very ugly bomb in startup.el (can't find obvious location | |
| 3072 for doc-directory data-directory, etc.). | |
| 3073 | |
| 3074 temacs w/ run-temacs on the command line -- This is run to bytecompile | |
| 3075 all the out of date dumped lisp. It will execute both of the main_1 | |
| 3076 calls and the second one must not touch the first computation because | |
| 3077 argc/argv are hosed the second time through. | |
| 3078 | |
| 3079 xemacs -- Only the second main_1 is executed. The invocation path must | |
| 3080 computed but this only matters when running in place or when running | |
| 3081 as a login shell. | |
| 3082 | |
| 3083 As a bonus for straightening this out, XEmacs can now be run in place | |
| 3084 as a login shell. This never used to work. | |
| 3085 | |
| 3086 As another bonus, we can now guarantee that | |
| 3087 (concat invocation-directory invocation-name) contains the filename | |
| 3088 of the XEmacs binary we are running. This can now be used in a | |
| 3089 definite test for out of date dumped files. -slb */ | |
| 3090 int restarted = 0; | |
| 3091 #ifdef QUANTIFY | |
| 3092 quantify_stop_recording_data (); | |
| 3093 quantify_clear_data (); | |
| 3094 #endif /* QUANTIFY */ | |
| 3095 | |
| 2367 | 3096 inhibit_non_essential_conversion_operations = 1; |
| 428 | 3097 suppress_early_error_handler_backtrace = 0; |
| 3098 lim_data = 0; /* force reinitialization of this variable */ | |
| 3099 | |
| 3100 /* Lisp_Object must fit in a word; check VALBITS and GCTYPEBITS */ | |
| 3101 assert (sizeof (Lisp_Object) == sizeof (void *)); | |
| 3102 | |
| 3103 #ifdef LINUX_SBRK_BUG | |
| 3104 sbrk (1); | |
| 3105 #endif | |
| 3106 | |
| 2367 | 3107 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
| 3108 /* Figure out which version we're running so XEUNICODE_P works */ | |
| 3109 init_win32_very_very_early (); | |
| 3110 #endif | |
| 3111 | |
| 3112 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE | |
| 3113 #if 0 | |
| 3114 /* !!#### We should be doing something like this, but this messes up | |
| 3115 globbing. I tried using wmain() and linking with WSETARGV, but the | |
| 3116 routines for WSETARGV are left out of MSVCRT.DLL! | |
| 3117 | |
| 3118 To fix this we need to copy the argument-expanding and globbing code | |
| 3119 from Cygwin and Unicode-ize it. Yuck. */ | |
| 3120 if (XEUNICODE_P) | |
| 3121 /* Set up Unicode versions of the arguments. */ | |
| 3122 vol_argv = CommandLineToArgvW (GetCommandLineW (), &vol_argc); | |
| 3123 #else | |
| 3124 { | |
| 3125 int i; | |
| 3126 | |
| 3127 vol_argv = alloca_array (Wexttext *, argc); | |
| 3128 for (i = 0; i < argc; i++) | |
| 3129 vol_argv[i] = MULTIBYTE_TO_WEXTTEXT (argv[i]); | |
| 3130 } | |
| 3131 #endif | |
| 3132 #else | |
| 3133 vol_argv = (Wexttext **) argv; | |
| 3134 #endif /* WIN32_NATIVE */ | |
| 3135 | |
| 428 | 3136 if (!initialized) |
| 3137 { | |
| 3138 #ifdef DOUG_LEA_MALLOC | |
| 3139 mallopt (M_MMAP_MAX, 0); | |
| 3140 #endif | |
| 3141 run_temacs_argc = 0; | |
| 3142 if (! SETJMP (run_temacs_catch)) | |
| 3143 { | |
| 2367 | 3144 main_1 (vol_argc, vol_argv, NULL, 0); |
| 428 | 3145 } |
| 3146 /* run-emacs-from-temacs called */ | |
| 3147 restarted = 1; | |
| 3148 vol_argc = run_temacs_argc; | |
| 3149 vol_argv = run_temacs_argv; | |
| 3150 #ifdef _SCO_DS | |
| 3151 /* This makes absolutely no sense to anyone involved. There are | |
| 3152 several people using this stuff. We've compared versions on | |
| 3153 everything we can think of. We can find no difference. | |
| 3154 However, on both my systems environ is a plain old global | |
| 3155 variable initialized to zero. _environ is the one that | |
| 3156 contains pointers to the actual environment. | |
| 3157 | |
| 3158 Since we can't figure out the difference (and we're hours | |
| 3159 away from a release), this takes a very cowardly approach and | |
| 3160 is bracketed with both a system specific preprocessor test | |
| 3161 and a runtime "do you have this problem" test | |
| 3162 | |
| 3163 06/20/96 robertl@dgii.com */ | |
| 3164 { | |
| 2367 | 3165 extern Extbyte *_environ; |
| 3166 if (environ == NULL) | |
| 1315 | 3167 environ = _environ; |
| 428 | 3168 } |
| 3169 #endif /* _SCO_DS */ | |
| 3170 } | |
| 456 | 3171 #if defined (RUN_TIME_REMAP) && ! defined (PDUMP) |
| 428 | 3172 else |
| 3173 /* obviously no-one uses this because where it was before initialized was | |
| 3174 *always* true */ | |
| 3175 run_time_remap (argv[0]); | |
| 3176 #endif | |
| 3177 | |
| 3178 #ifdef DOUG_LEA_MALLOC | |
| 3179 if (initialized && (malloc_state_ptr != NULL)) | |
| 3180 { | |
| 3181 int rc = malloc_set_state (malloc_state_ptr); | |
| 3182 if (rc != 0) | |
| 3183 { | |
| 442 | 3184 stderr_out ("malloc_set_state failed, rc = %d\n", rc); |
| 2500 | 3185 ABORT (); |
| 428 | 3186 } |
| 3187 #if 0 | |
| 3188 free (malloc_state_ptr); | |
| 3189 #endif | |
| 3190 /* mmap works in glibc-2.1, glibc-2.0 (Non-Mule only) and Linux libc5 */ | |
| 1303 | 3191 #if (defined (__GLIBC__) && __GLIBC_MINOR__ >= 1) || \ |
| 3192 defined (_NO_MALLOC_WARNING_) || \ | |
| 3193 (defined (__GLIBC__) && __GLIBC_MINOR__ < 1 && !defined (MULE)) || \ | |
| 3194 defined (DEBUG_DOUG_LEA_MALLOC) | |
| 428 | 3195 mallopt (M_MMAP_MAX, 64); |
| 3196 #endif | |
| 3197 #ifdef REL_ALLOC | |
| 3198 r_alloc_reinit (); | |
| 3199 #endif | |
| 3200 } | |
| 3201 #endif /* DOUG_LEA_MALLOC */ | |
| 3202 | |
| 1315 | 3203 run_temacs_argc = -2; |
| 428 | 3204 |
| 2367 | 3205 main_1 (vol_argc, vol_argv, NULL, restarted); |
| 442 | 3206 |
| 3207 #ifdef _MSC_VER | |
| 3208 } | |
| 3209 /* VC++ documentation says that | |
| 3210 GetExceptionCode() cannot be called inside the filter itself. */ | |
| 3211 __except (mswindows_handle_hardware_exceptions (GetExceptionCode ())) {} | |
| 3212 #endif | |
| 3213 | |
| 1204 | 3214 RETURN_NOT_REACHED (0); |
| 428 | 3215 } |
| 3216 | |
| 3217 | |
| 771 | 3218 /************************************************************************/ |
| 3219 /* dumping XEmacs (to a new EXE file) */ | |
| 3220 /************************************************************************/ | |
| 3221 | |
| 1204 | 3222 #if !defined (PDUMP) || !defined (SYSTEM_MALLOC) |
| 2367 | 3223 extern Rawbyte my_edata[]; |
| 428 | 3224 #endif |
| 771 | 3225 |
| 3226 extern void disable_free_hook (void); | |
| 3227 | |
| 3228 DEFUN ("dump-emacs", Fdump_emacs, 2, 2, 0, /* | |
| 3229 Dump current state of XEmacs into executable file FILENAME. | |
| 3230 Take symbols from SYMFILE (presumably the file you executed to run XEmacs). | |
| 3231 This is used in the file `loadup.el' when building XEmacs. | |
| 3232 | |
| 3233 Remember to set `command-line-processed' to nil before dumping | |
| 3234 if you want the dumped XEmacs to process its command line | |
| 3235 and announce itself normally when it is run. | |
| 428 | 3236 */ |
| 771 | 3237 (filename, symfile)) |
| 428 | 3238 { |
| 3239 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 771 | 3240 struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2; |
| 3241 int opurify; | |
| 3242 | |
| 3243 GCPRO2 (filename, symfile); | |
| 3244 | |
| 3245 #ifdef FREE_CHECKING | |
| 3246 Freally_free (Qnil); | |
| 3247 | |
| 3248 /* When we're dumping, we can't use the debugging free() */ | |
| 3249 disable_free_hook (); | |
| 3250 #endif | |
| 3251 | |
| 3252 CHECK_STRING (filename); | |
| 3253 filename = Fexpand_file_name (filename, Qnil); | |
| 3254 if (!NILP (symfile)) | |
| 428 | 3255 { |
| 771 | 3256 CHECK_STRING (symfile); |
| 3257 if (XSTRING_LENGTH (symfile) > 0) | |
| 3258 symfile = Fexpand_file_name (symfile, Qnil); | |
| 3259 else | |
| 3260 symfile = Qnil; | |
| 428 | 3261 } |
| 3262 | |
| 771 | 3263 opurify = purify_flag; |
| 3264 purify_flag = 0; | |
| 3265 | |
| 1303 | 3266 #if defined (HEAP_IN_DATA) && !defined (PDUMP) |
| 771 | 3267 report_sheap_usage (1); |
| 3268 #endif | |
| 3269 | |
| 3270 clear_message (); | |
| 3271 | |
| 3272 fflush (stderr); | |
| 3273 fflush (stdout); | |
| 3274 | |
| 3275 disksave_object_finalization (); | |
| 3263 | 3276 #ifndef NEW_GC |
| 771 | 3277 release_breathing_space (); |
| 3263 | 3278 #endif /* not NEW_GC */ |
| 771 | 3279 |
| 3280 /* Tell malloc where start of impure now is */ | |
| 3281 /* Also arrange for warnings when nearly out of space. */ | |
| 3282 #ifndef SYSTEM_MALLOC | |
| 3283 memory_warnings (my_edata, malloc_warning); | |
| 3284 #endif | |
| 3285 | |
| 3092 | 3286 #ifdef NEW_GC |
| 3287 gc_full (); | |
| 3288 #else /* not NEW_GC */ | |
| 814 | 3289 garbage_collect_1 (); |
| 3092 | 3290 #endif /* not NEW_GC */ |
| 814 | 3291 |
| 3292 #ifdef PDUMP | |
| 3293 pdump (); | |
| 3294 #elif defined (WIN32_NATIVE) | |
| 3295 unexec (XSTRING_DATA (filename), | |
| 3296 STRINGP (symfile) ? XSTRING_DATA (symfile) : 0, | |
| 3297 (uintptr_t) my_edata, 0, 0); | |
| 3298 #else | |
| 771 | 3299 { |
| 3300 Extbyte *filename_ext; | |
| 3301 Extbyte *symfile_ext; | |
| 3302 | |
|
4981
4aebb0131297
Cleanups/renaming of EXTERNAL_TO_C_STRING and friends
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
3303 LISP_PATHNAME_CONVERT_OUT (filename, filename_ext); |
| 771 | 3304 |
| 3305 if (STRINGP (symfile)) | |
|
4981
4aebb0131297
Cleanups/renaming of EXTERNAL_TO_C_STRING and friends
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4969
diff
changeset
|
3306 LISP_PATHNAME_CONVERT_OUT (symfile, symfile_ext); |
| 771 | 3307 else |
| 3308 symfile_ext = 0; | |
| 3309 | |
| 814 | 3310 # ifdef DOUG_LEA_MALLOC |
| 771 | 3311 malloc_state_ptr = malloc_get_state (); |
| 814 | 3312 # endif |
| 771 | 3313 /* here we break our rule that the filename conversion should |
| 3314 be performed at the actual time that the system call is made. | |
| 3315 It's a whole lot easier to do the conversion here than to | |
| 3316 modify all the unexec routines to ensure that filename | |
| 3317 conversion is applied everywhere. Don't worry about memory | |
| 3318 leakage because this call only happens once. */ | |
| 3319 unexec (filename_ext, symfile_ext, (uintptr_t) my_edata, 0, 0); | |
| 814 | 3320 # ifdef DOUG_LEA_MALLOC |
| 771 | 3321 free (malloc_state_ptr); |
| 814 | 3322 # endif |
| 771 | 3323 } |
| 814 | 3324 #endif /* not PDUMP, not WIN32_NATIVE */ |
| 771 | 3325 |
| 3326 purify_flag = opurify; | |
| 3327 | |
| 814 | 3328 UNGCPRO; |
| 771 | 3329 return Qnil; |
| 3330 } | |
| 3331 | |
| 3332 | |
| 3333 /************************************************************************/ | |
| 3334 /* exiting XEmacs (intended or not) */ | |
| 3335 /************************************************************************/ | |
| 3336 | |
|
5023
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3337 /* Do we need to pause with a message box so that messages can be read |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3338 at shutdown? We do this is we have support for native Windows frames |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3339 and if we are native Windows. The first part is because only when compiled |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3340 for native Windows frames do we have Fmswindows_message_box(), and |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3341 the second part is because we don't want to do this under Cygwin, where |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3342 we have a Unix-like environment and a working stderr where the messages |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3343 go. The two conditions sound somewhat redundant (maybe we could just |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3344 use the second?) but they aren't completely: Theoretically (maybe with |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3345 MinGW?) we could imagine compiling under native Windows as the OS |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3346 but e.g. targetting only X Windows as the window system. --ben */ |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3347 |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3348 #if defined (HAVE_MS_WINDOWS) && defined (WIN32_NATIVE) |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3349 # define NEED_WINDOWS_MESSAGE_PAUSE |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3350 #endif |
|
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3351 |
| 2367 | 3352 /* |
| 3353 | |
| 3354 Info on intended/unintended exits: | |
| 3355 | |
| 3356 (Info-goto-node "(internals)Exiting") | |
| 771 | 3357 */ |
| 3358 | |
| 3359 /* ------------------------------- */ | |
| 3360 /* low-level debugging functions */ | |
| 3361 /* ------------------------------- */ | |
| 3362 | |
| 3363 #if defined (WIN32_NATIVE) && defined (DEBUG_XEMACS) | |
| 3364 #define debugging_breakpoint() DebugBreak () | |
| 3365 #else | |
| 3366 #define debugging_breakpoint() | |
| 3367 #endif | |
| 3368 | |
| 3369 void | |
| 3370 debug_break (void) | |
| 3371 { | |
| 3372 debugging_breakpoint (); | |
| 3373 } | |
| 3374 | |
| 1315 | 3375 #ifdef WIN32_ANY |
| 771 | 3376 |
| 3377 /* Return whether all bytes in the specified memory block can be read. */ | |
| 3378 int | |
| 4854 | 3379 debug_can_access_memory (const void *ptr, Bytecount len) |
| 771 | 3380 { |
| 3381 return !IsBadReadPtr (ptr, len); | |
| 3382 } | |
| 3383 | |
| 1315 | 3384 #else /* !WIN32_ANY */ |
| 771 | 3385 |
| 3386 /* #### There must be a better way!!!! */ | |
| 3387 | |
| 3388 static JMP_BUF memory_error_jump; | |
| 3389 | |
| 3390 static SIGTYPE | |
| 3391 debug_memory_error (int signum) | |
| 3392 { | |
| 3393 EMACS_REESTABLISH_SIGNAL (signum, debug_memory_error); | |
| 3394 EMACS_UNBLOCK_SIGNAL (signum); | |
| 3395 LONGJMP (memory_error_jump, 1); | |
| 3396 } | |
| 3397 | |
|
4871
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3398 /* Used in debug_can_access_memory(). Made into a global, externally |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3399 accessible variable to make absolutely sure that no compiler will |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3400 optimize away the memory-read function in debug_can_access_memory(); |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3401 see comments there. */ |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3402 |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3403 volatile int dcam_saveval; |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3404 |
| 771 | 3405 /* Return whether all bytes in the specified memory block can be read. */ |
| 3406 int | |
| 4854 | 3407 debug_can_access_memory (const void *ptr, Bytecount len) |
| 771 | 3408 { |
| 3409 /* Use volatile to protect variables from being clobbered by longjmp. */ | |
| 3410 SIGTYPE (*volatile old_sigbus) (int); | |
| 3411 SIGTYPE (*volatile old_sigsegv) (int); | |
| 3412 volatile int old_errno = errno; | |
| 3413 volatile int retval = 1; | |
| 3414 | |
|
4871
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3415 assert (len > 0); |
| 771 | 3416 if (!SETJMP (memory_error_jump)) |
| 3417 { | |
| 3418 old_sigbus = | |
| 3419 (SIGTYPE (*) (int)) EMACS_SIGNAL (SIGBUS, debug_memory_error); | |
| 3420 old_sigsegv = | |
| 3421 (SIGTYPE (*) (int)) EMACS_SIGNAL (SIGSEGV, debug_memory_error); | |
| 3422 | |
|
4871
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3423 /* We could just do memcmp (ptr, ptr, len), but we want to avoid any |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3424 possibility that a super-optimizing compiler might optimize away such |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3425 a call by concluding that its result is always 1. */ |
| 771 | 3426 if (len > 1) |
|
4871
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3427 /* Instead, if length is > 1, do off-by-one comparison. |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3428 We save the value somewhere that is externally accessible to |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3429 make absolutely sure that a compiler won't optimize away the |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3430 call by concluding that the return value isn't really used. |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3431 */ |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3432 dcam_saveval = memcmp (ptr, (Rawbyte *) ptr + 1, len - 1); |
| 771 | 3433 else |
|
4871
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3434 { |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3435 /* We can't do the off-by-one trick with only one byte, so instead, |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3436 we compare to a fixed-sized buffer. */ |
|
5000
44d7bde26046
fix compile errors, fix revert-buffer bug on binary/Latin 1 files, Mule-ize some files
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4982
diff
changeset
|
3437 Rawbyte randval[1]; |
|
4871
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3438 randval[0] = 0; |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3439 dcam_saveval = memcmp (randval, ptr, len); |
|
d8d92ad084b8
rewrite check for bad memory in debug_can_save_memory
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4854
diff
changeset
|
3440 } |
| 771 | 3441 } |
| 3442 else | |
| 3443 retval = 0; | |
| 3444 EMACS_SIGNAL (SIGBUS, old_sigbus); | |
| 3445 EMACS_SIGNAL (SIGSEGV, old_sigsegv); | |
| 3446 errno = old_errno; | |
| 854 | 3447 |
| 771 | 3448 return retval; |
| 3449 } | |
| 3450 | |
| 1315 | 3451 #endif /* WIN32_ANY */ |
| 771 | 3452 |
| 3453 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS | |
| 3454 | |
| 3455 DEFUN ("force-debugging-signal", Fforce_debugging_signal, 0, 1, 0, /* | |
| 3456 Cause XEmacs to enter the debugger. | |
| 3457 On some systems, there may be no way to do this gracefully; if so, | |
| 3458 nothing happens unless ABORT is non-nil, in which case XEmacs will | |
| 2500 | 3459 ABORT() -- a sure-fire way to immediately get back to the debugger, |
| 771 | 3460 but also a sure-fire way to kill XEmacs (and dump core on Unix |
| 3461 systems)! | |
| 3462 */ | |
| 3463 (abort_)) | |
| 3464 { | |
| 3465 debugging_breakpoint (); | |
| 3466 if (!NILP (abort_)) | |
| 2500 | 3467 ABORT (); |
| 771 | 3468 return Qnil; |
| 3469 } | |
| 3470 | |
| 3471 #endif /* DEBUG_XEMACS */ | |
| 3472 | |
| 3473 /* ------------------------------- */ | |
| 3474 /* some helper functions */ | |
| 3475 /* ------------------------------- */ | |
| 3476 | |
| 3477 static void | |
| 3478 ensure_no_quitting_from_now_on (void) | |
| 3479 { | |
| 3480 /* make sure no quitting from now on!! */ | |
| 3481 dont_check_for_quit = 1; | |
| 3482 Vinhibit_quit = Qt; | |
| 3483 Vquit_flag = Qnil; | |
| 3484 } | |
| 3485 | |
|
5023
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3486 #ifdef NEED_WINDOWS_MESSAGE_PAUSE |
| 771 | 3487 static void |
| 3488 pause_so_user_can_read_messages (int allow_further) | |
| 3489 { | |
| 3490 static int already_paused; | |
| 3491 | |
| 1315 | 3492 if (already_paused) |
| 771 | 3493 return; |
| 3494 if (!allow_further) | |
| 3495 already_paused = 1; | |
| 442 | 3496 /* If we displayed a message on the console, then we must allow the |
| 3497 user to see this message. This may be unnecessary, but can't hurt, | |
| 3498 and we can't necessarily check arg; e.g. xemacs --help kills with | |
| 3499 argument 0. */ | |
| 1315 | 3500 if (mswindows_message_outputted && |
| 3501 /* noninteractive, we always show the box. Else, | |
| 3502 do it when there is not yet an initial frame -- in such case, | |
| 3503 XEmacs will just die immediately and we wouldn't see anything. */ | |
| 3504 (noninteractive || NILP (Fselected_frame (Qnil)))) | |
| 771 | 3505 Fmswindows_message_box |
| 3506 (build_msg_string ("Messages outputted. XEmacs is exiting."), | |
| 3507 Qnil, Qnil); | |
| 3508 } | |
| 442 | 3509 #endif |
| 3510 | |
| 826 | 3511 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE |
| 3512 | |
| 3513 static DWORD CALLBACK | |
| 3514 wait_for_termination_signal (LPVOID handle) | |
| 3515 { | |
| 3516 HANDLE hevent = (HANDLE) handle; | |
| 3517 WaitForSingleObject (hevent, INFINITE); | |
| 3518 ExitProcess (0); | |
| 3519 return 0; /* not reached */ | |
| 3520 } | |
| 3521 | |
| 3522 #endif | |
| 771 | 3523 /* -------------------------------- */ |
| 3524 /* a (more-or-less) normal shutdown */ | |
| 3525 /* -------------------------------- */ | |
| 428 | 3526 |
| 3527 /* Perform an orderly shutdown of XEmacs. Autosave any modified | |
| 3528 buffers, kill any child processes, clean up the terminal modes (if | |
| 3529 we're in the foreground), and other stuff like that. Don't perform | |
| 3530 any redisplay; this may be called when XEmacs is shutting down in | |
| 3531 the background, or after its X connection has died. | |
| 3532 | |
| 3533 If SIG is a signal number, print a message for it. | |
| 3534 | |
| 442 | 3535 This is called by fatal signal handlers and Fkill_emacs. It used to |
| 3536 be called by X protocol error handlers, but instead they now call | |
| 3537 Fkill_emacs. */ | |
| 771 | 3538 |
| 428 | 3539 static void |
| 442 | 3540 shut_down_emacs (int sig, Lisp_Object stuff, int no_auto_save) |
| 428 | 3541 { |
| 3542 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 3543 /* Prevent running of hooks and other non-essential stuff | |
| 3544 from now on. */ | |
| 3545 preparing_for_armageddon = 1; | |
| 3546 | |
| 442 | 3547 ensure_no_quitting_from_now_on (); |
| 428 | 3548 |
| 3549 #ifdef QUANTIFY | |
| 3550 quantify_stop_recording_data (); | |
| 3551 #endif /* QUANTIFY */ | |
| 3552 | |
| 3553 /* This is absolutely the most important thing to do, so make sure | |
| 3554 we do it now, before anything else. We might have crashed and | |
| 3555 be in a weird inconsistent state, and potentially anything could | |
| 3556 set off another protection fault and cause us to bail out | |
| 3557 immediately. */ | |
| 442 | 3558 /* Steve writes the following: |
| 3559 | |
| 3560 [[I'm not removing the code entirely, yet. We have run up against | |
| 428 | 3561 a spate of problems in diagnosing crashes due to crashes within |
| 3562 crashes. It has very definitely been determined that code called | |
| 3563 during auto-saving cannot work if XEmacs crashed inside of GC. | |
| 3564 We already auto-save on an itimer so there cannot be too much | |
| 3565 unsaved stuff around, and if we get better crash reports we might | |
| 442 | 3566 be able to get more problems fixed so I'm disabling this. -slb]] |
| 3567 | |
| 3568 and DISABLES AUTO-SAVING ENTIRELY during crashes! Way way bad idea. | |
| 3569 | |
| 3570 Instead let's just be more intelligent about avoiding crashing | |
| 3571 when possible, esp. nested crashes. | |
| 3572 */ | |
| 3573 if (!no_auto_save) | |
| 3574 Fdo_auto_save (Qt, Qnil); /* do this before anything hazardous */ | |
| 428 | 3575 |
| 3576 fflush (stdout); | |
| 3577 reset_all_consoles (); | |
| 3578 if (sig && sig != SIGTERM) | |
| 3579 { | |
| 442 | 3580 if (sig == -1) |
| 3581 stderr_out ("\nFatal error.\n\n"); | |
| 3582 else | |
| 3583 stderr_out ("\nFatal error (%d).\n\n", sig); | |
| 428 | 3584 stderr_out |
| 3585 ("Your files have been auto-saved.\n" | |
| 1204 | 3586 "Use `M-x recover-session' to recover them.\n" |
| 3587 "\n" | |
| 3588 "Your version of XEmacs was distributed with a PROBLEMS file that may describe\n" | |
| 3589 "your crash, and with luck a workaround. Please check it first, but do report\n" | |
| 3590 "the crash anyway.\n\n" | |
| 428 | 3591 #ifdef INFODOCK |
| 1204 | 3592 "Please report this bug by selecting `Report-Bug' in the InfoDock menu, or\n" |
| 2994 | 3593 "(last resort) by emailing `xemacs-beta@xemacs.org' -- note that this is for\n" |
| 3594 "XEmacs in general, not just Infodock." | |
| 428 | 3595 #else |
| 1204 | 3596 "Please report this bug by invoking M-x report-emacs-bug, or by selecting\n" |
| 3597 "`Send Bug Report' from the Help menu. If that won't work, send ordinary\n" | |
| 2994 | 3598 "email to `xemacs-beta@xemacs.org'." |
| 3599 #endif | |
| 3600 " *MAKE SURE* to include this entire\n" | |
| 3601 "output from this crash, especially including the Lisp backtrace, as well as\n" | |
| 3602 "the XEmacs configuration from M-x describe-installation (or equivalently,\n" | |
| 3603 "the file `Installation' in the top of the build tree).\n" | |
| 1204 | 3604 #ifdef _MSC_VER |
| 3605 "\n" | |
| 3606 "If you are fortunate enough to have some sort of debugging aid installed\n" | |
| 3607 "on your system, for example Visual C++, and you can get a C stack backtrace,\n" | |
| 3608 "*please* include it, as it will make our life far easier.\n" | |
| 3609 "\n" | |
| 3610 #else | |
| 3611 "\n" | |
| 3612 "*Please* try *hard* to obtain a C stack backtrace; without it, we are unlikely\n" | |
| 3613 "to be able to analyze the problem. Locate the core file produced as a result\n" | |
| 3614 "of this crash (often called `core' or `core.<process-id>', and located in\n" | |
| 3615 "the directory in which you started XEmacs or your home directory), and type\n" | |
| 3616 "\n" | |
| 3617 " gdb " | |
| 442 | 3618 #endif |
| 3619 ); | |
| 3620 #ifndef _MSC_VER | |
| 428 | 3621 { |
| 2367 | 3622 const Ibyte *name; |
| 3623 Ibyte *dir = 0; | |
| 428 | 3624 |
| 3625 /* Now try to determine the actual path to the executable, | |
| 3626 to try to make the backtrace-determination process as foolproof | |
| 3627 as possible. */ | |
| 3628 if (STRINGP (Vinvocation_name)) | |
| 2367 | 3629 name = XSTRING_DATA (Vinvocation_name); |
| 428 | 3630 else |
| 2367 | 3631 name = (const Ibyte *) "xemacs"; |
| 428 | 3632 if (STRINGP (Vinvocation_directory)) |
| 2367 | 3633 dir = XSTRING_DATA (Vinvocation_directory); |
| 428 | 3634 if (!dir || dir[0] != '/') |
| 3635 stderr_out ("`which %s`", name); | |
| 2367 | 3636 else if (dir[qxestrlen (dir) - 1] != '/') |
| 428 | 3637 stderr_out ("%s/%s", dir, name); |
| 3638 else | |
| 3639 stderr_out ("%s%s", dir, name); | |
| 3640 } | |
| 3641 stderr_out | |
| 1097 | 3642 (" core\n" |
| 3643 "\n" | |
| 1204 | 3644 "then type `where' at the debugger prompt. No GDB on your system? You may\n" |
| 3645 "have DBX, or XDB, or SDB. (Ask your system administrator if you need help.)\n" | |
| 3646 "If no core file was produced, enable them (often with `ulimit -c unlimited')\n" | |
| 3647 "in case of future recurrance of the crash.\n"); | |
| 442 | 3648 #endif /* _MSC_VER */ |
| 428 | 3649 } |
| 3650 | |
| 3651 stuff_buffered_input (stuff); | |
| 3652 | |
| 3653 kill_buffer_processes (Qnil); | |
| 3654 | |
| 3655 #ifdef CLASH_DETECTION | |
| 3656 unlock_all_files (); | |
| 3657 #endif | |
| 3658 | |
| 3659 #ifdef TOOLTALK | |
| 3660 tt_session_quit (tt_default_session ()); | |
| 3661 #if 0 | |
| 3662 /* The following crashes when built on X11R5 and run on X11R6 */ | |
| 3663 tt_close (); | |
| 3664 #endif | |
| 3665 #endif /* TOOLTALK */ | |
| 3666 } | |
| 3667 | |
| 771 | 3668 /* Dumping apparently isn't supported by versions of GCC >= 2.8. */ |
| 3669 /* The following needs conditionalization on whether either XEmacs or */ | |
| 3670 /* various system shared libraries have been built and linked with */ | |
| 3671 /* GCC >= 2.8. -slb */ | |
|
4735
80d74fed5399
Remove "old" GNU malloc in src/malloc.c, and all references to it. Drop the
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
4710
diff
changeset
|
3672 #ifndef SYSTEM_MALLOC |
| 771 | 3673 static void |
| 2286 | 3674 voodoo_free_hook (void *UNUSED (mem)) |
| 771 | 3675 { |
| 3676 /* Disable all calls to free() when XEmacs is exiting and it doesn't */ | |
| 3677 /* matter. */ | |
| 3678 __free_hook = | |
| 2286 | 3679 #if defined (TYPEOF) && !defined (UNO) |
| 1792 | 3680 /* prototype of __free_hook varies with glibc version */ |
| 1799 | 3681 (TYPEOF (__free_hook)) |
| 440 | 3682 #endif |
| 771 | 3683 voodoo_free_hook; |
| 3684 } | |
|
4735
80d74fed5399
Remove "old" GNU malloc in src/malloc.c, and all references to it. Drop the
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
4710
diff
changeset
|
3685 #endif /* SYSTEM_MALLOC */ |
| 771 | 3686 |
| 2268 | 3687 DEFUN_NORETURN ("kill-emacs", Fkill_emacs, 0, 1, "P", /* |
| 771 | 3688 Exit the XEmacs job and kill it. Ask for confirmation, without argument. |
| 3689 If ARG is an integer, return ARG as the exit program code. | |
| 3690 If ARG is a string, stuff it as keyboard input. | |
| 3691 | |
| 3692 The value of `kill-emacs-hook', if not void, | |
| 3693 is a list of functions (of no args), | |
| 3694 all of which are called before XEmacs is actually killed. | |
| 428 | 3695 */ |
| 771 | 3696 (arg)) |
| 428 | 3697 { |
| 3698 /* This function can GC */ | |
| 771 | 3699 struct gcpro gcpro1; |
| 3700 | |
| 3701 GCPRO1 (arg); | |
| 3702 | |
| 3703 if (feof (stdin)) | |
| 3704 arg = Qt; | |
| 3705 | |
| 3706 if (!preparing_for_armageddon && !noninteractive) | |
| 3707 run_hook (Qkill_emacs_hook); | |
| 3708 | |
| 3709 ensure_no_quitting_from_now_on (); | |
| 3710 | |
| 3711 if (!preparing_for_armageddon) | |
| 428 | 3712 { |
| 771 | 3713 Lisp_Object concons, nextcons; |
| 3714 | |
| 3715 /* Normally, go ahead and delete all the consoles now. | |
| 3716 Some unmentionably lame window systems (MS Wwwww...... eek, | |
| 3717 I can't even say it) don't properly clean up after themselves, | |
| 3718 and even for those that do, it might be cleaner this way. | |
| 3719 If we're going down, however, we don't do this (might | |
| 3720 be too dangerous), and if we get a crash somewhere within | |
| 3721 this loop, we'll still autosave and won't try this again. */ | |
| 3722 | |
| 3723 LIST_LOOP_DELETING (concons, nextcons, Vconsole_list) | |
| 3724 { | |
| 3725 /* There is very little point in deleting the stream console. | |
| 3726 It uses stdio, which should flush any buffered output and | |
| 3727 something can only go wrong. -slb */ | |
| 3728 /* I changed my mind. There's a stupid hack in close to add | |
| 3729 a trailing newline. */ | |
| 3730 /*if (!CONSOLE_STREAM_P (XCONSOLE (XCAR (concons))))*/ | |
| 3731 delete_console_internal (XCONSOLE (XCAR (concons)), 1, 1, 0); | |
| 3732 } | |
| 428 | 3733 } |
| 3734 | |
| 3735 UNGCPRO; | |
| 3736 | |
|
5023
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3737 #ifdef NEED_WINDOWS_MESSAGE_PAUSE |
| 771 | 3738 pause_so_user_can_read_messages (1); |
| 428 | 3739 #endif |
| 854 | 3740 |
| 771 | 3741 shut_down_emacs (0, STRINGP (arg) ? arg : Qnil, 0); |
| 3742 | |
|
4735
80d74fed5399
Remove "old" GNU malloc in src/malloc.c, and all references to it. Drop the
Jerry James <james@xemacs.org>
parents:
4710
diff
changeset
|
3743 #ifndef SYSTEM_MALLOC |
| 771 | 3744 __free_hook = |
| 2286 | 3745 #if defined (TYPEOF) && !defined (UNO) |
| 1792 | 3746 /* prototype of __free_hook varies with glibc version */ |
| 1799 | 3747 (TYPEOF (__free_hook)) |
| 771 | 3748 #endif |
| 3749 voodoo_free_hook; | |
| 428 | 3750 #endif |
| 771 | 3751 |
| 3752 exit (INTP (arg) ? XINT (arg) : 0); | |
| 2268 | 3753 RETURN_NOT_REACHED (Qnil); |
| 428 | 3754 } |
| 3755 | |
| 771 | 3756 /* -------------------------------- */ |
| 3757 /* abnormal shutdowns: GP faults */ | |
| 3758 /* -------------------------------- */ | |
| 3759 | |
| 814 | 3760 /* This is somewhat ad-hoc ... figure out whether the user is developing |
| 3761 XEmacs, which means (under MS Windows) they have a system debugger | |
| 3762 installed that catches GP faults in any application and lets them open | |
| 3763 up MS Dev Studio and start debugging the application -- similar to | |
| 3764 producing a core dump and then going back with a debugger to investigate | |
| 3765 the core dump, except that the program is still running. When this is | |
| 3766 installed, it's better not to "pause so user gets messages" because the | |
| 3767 debugger will pause anyway; and in case we're currently with a menu | |
| 3768 popped up or somewhere else inside of an internal modal loop, we will | |
| 3769 get wedged when we output the "pause". (It seems that the two modal | |
| 3770 loops will fight each other and the return key will never be passed to | |
| 3771 the "pause" handler so that XEmacs's GPF handler can return, resignal | |
| 3772 the GPF, and properly go into the debugger.) */ | |
|
5023
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3773 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_ANY |
| 814 | 3774 #define USER_IS_DEVELOPING_XEMACS |
| 3775 #endif | |
| 3776 | |
| 854 | 3777 |
| 771 | 3778 /* Handle bus errors, illegal instruction, etc: actual implementation. */ |
| 3779 static void | |
| 3780 guts_of_fatal_error_signal (int sig) | |
| 428 | 3781 { |
| 771 | 3782 fatal_error_in_progress++; |
| 2367 | 3783 inhibit_non_essential_conversion_operations = 1; |
| 771 | 3784 preparing_for_armageddon = 1; |
| 3785 | |
| 3786 ensure_no_quitting_from_now_on (); | |
| 3787 | |
| 3788 /* Only try auto-saving first time through. If we crash in auto-saving, | |
| 3789 don't do it again. */ | |
| 3790 if (fatal_error_in_progress == 1) | |
| 428 | 3791 { |
| 771 | 3792 Fdo_auto_save (Qt, Qnil); /* do this before anything hazardous */ |
| 3793 /* Do this so that the variable has the same value of 2 regardless of | |
| 3794 whether we made it through auto-saving correctly. */ | |
| 3795 fatal_error_in_progress++; | |
| 428 | 3796 } |
| 771 | 3797 else if (fatal_error_in_progress == 2) |
| 3798 stderr_out ("WARNING: Unable to auto-save your files properly.\n" | |
| 3799 "Some or all may in fact have been auto-saved.\n" | |
| 3800 "\n"); | |
| 3801 | |
| 3802 /* Now, reset our signal handler, so the next time, we just die. | |
| 3803 Don't do this before auto-saving. */ | |
| 3804 if (sig >= 0) | |
| 3805 EMACS_SIGNAL (sig, SIG_DFL); | |
| 3806 | |
| 3807 /* Keep in mind that there's more than one signal that we can crash | |
| 3808 on. */ | |
| 3809 /* If fatal error occurs in code below, avoid infinite recursion. */ | |
| 3810 if (fatal_error_in_progress <= 2) | |
| 3811 { | |
| 3812 shut_down_emacs (sig, Qnil, 1); | |
| 3813 stderr_out ("\nLisp backtrace follows:\n\n"); | |
| 3814 debug_backtrace (); | |
| 3815 # if 0 /* This is evil, rarely useful, and causes grief in some cases. */ | |
| 3816 /* Check for Sun-style stack printing via /proc */ | |
| 3817 { | |
| 2367 | 3818 const Ascbyte *pstack = "/usr/proc/bin/pstack"; |
| 771 | 3819 if (access (pstack, X_OK) == 0) |
| 3820 { | |
| 2367 | 3821 Ascbyte buf[100]; |
| 771 | 3822 stderr_out ("\nC backtrace follows:\n" |
| 3823 "(A real debugger may provide better information)\n\n"); | |
| 2367 | 3824 sprintf (buf, "%s %d >&2", pstack, (int) getpid()); |
| 771 | 3825 system (buf); |
| 3826 } | |
| 3827 } | |
| 3828 # endif | |
|
5023
838630c0734f
error-checking, Windows shutdown changes
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5014
diff
changeset
|
3829 #if defined (NEED_WINDOWS_MESSAGE_PAUSE) && !defined (USER_IS_DEVELOPING_XEMACS) |
| 771 | 3830 pause_so_user_can_read_messages (0); |
| 3831 #endif | |
| 3832 } | |
| 428 | 3833 } |
| 3834 | |
| 771 | 3835 /* This is called when a fatal signal (SIGBUS aka "bus error", SIGSEGV aka |
| 3836 "segmentation violation", SIGILL aka "illegal instruction", and many | |
| 3837 others) is sent to the program. This generally happens under Unix, | |
| 3838 not MS Windows. */ | |
| 3839 SIGTYPE | |
| 3840 fatal_error_signal (int sig) | |
| 428 | 3841 { |
| 771 | 3842 /* Unblock the signal so that if the same signal gets sent in the |
| 3843 code below, we avoid a deadlock. */ | |
| 3844 EMACS_UNBLOCK_SIGNAL (sig); | |
| 3845 | |
| 3846 guts_of_fatal_error_signal (sig); | |
| 3847 | |
| 3092 | 3848 #ifdef NEW_GC |
| 3849 /* This time the signal will really be fatal. To be able to debug | |
| 3850 SIGSEGV and SIGBUS also during write barrier, send SIGABRT. */ | |
| 3851 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE | |
| 3852 if (sig == SIGSEGV) | |
| 3853 raise (SIGABRT); | |
| 3854 else | |
| 3855 raise (sig); | |
| 3856 #else | |
| 3857 if ((sig == SIGSEGV) || (sig == SIGBUS)) | |
| 3858 kill (qxe_getpid (), SIGABRT); | |
| 3859 else | |
| 3860 kill (qxe_getpid (), sig); | |
| 3861 #endif | |
| 3862 #else /* not NEW_GC */ | |
| 771 | 3863 /* Signal the same code; this time it will really be fatal. */ |
| 3864 #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE | |
| 3865 raise (sig); | |
| 3866 #else | |
| 3867 kill (qxe_getpid (), sig); | |
| 3868 #endif | |
| 3092 | 3869 #endif /* not NEW_GC */ |
| 771 | 3870 SIGRETURN; |
| 428 | 3871 } |
| 3872 | |
| 771 | 3873 #ifdef _MSC_VER |
| 3874 | |
| 3875 #define STATUS_ASSERTION_FAILURE 0xE0000001 | |
| 3876 | |
| 3877 static DWORD | |
| 3878 mswindows_handle_hardware_exceptions_1 (void) | |
| 428 | 3879 { |
| 2367 | 3880 inhibit_non_essential_conversion_operations = 1; |
| 793 | 3881 preparing_for_armageddon = 1; |
| 814 | 3882 #if !defined (USER_IS_DEVELOPING_XEMACS) |
| 771 | 3883 pause_so_user_can_read_messages (0); |
| 814 | 3884 #endif |
| 771 | 3885 return EXCEPTION_EXECUTE_HANDLER; |
| 428 | 3886 } |
| 3887 | |
| 771 | 3888 /* This is called under MS Windows when an exception (this encompasses both |
| 3889 user-defined exceptions and hardware exceptions such as GP faults aka | |
| 3890 SIGBUS or SIGSEGV) is triggered. */ | |
| 3891 | |
| 3892 static DWORD | |
| 3893 mswindows_handle_hardware_exceptions (DWORD code) | |
| 428 | 3894 { |
| 771 | 3895 if (code != STATUS_ACCESS_VIOLATION && code != STATUS_ILLEGAL_INSTRUCTION |
| 3896 && code != STATUS_PRIVILEGED_INSTRUCTION | |
| 3897 && code != STATUS_DATATYPE_MISALIGNMENT | |
| 3898 && code != STATUS_ASSERTION_FAILURE) | |
| 3899 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH; | |
| 3900 | |
| 3901 /* I don't know if this filter is still wrapped in the outer __try, but | |
| 3902 it doesn't hurt to have another one, and it lets us control more | |
| 3903 exactly what we really want to do in such a situation. What we do is | |
| 3904 pause, if we haven't already done so, so that the user can see what's | |
| 3905 output. This is critical because otherwise the output is gone. */ | |
| 3906 __try | |
| 3907 { | |
| 3908 guts_of_fatal_error_signal (-1); | |
| 3909 } | |
| 3910 /* VC++ documentation says that | |
| 3911 GetExceptionCode() cannot be called inside the filter itself. */ | |
| 3912 | |
| 3913 /* __except (mswindows_handle_hardware_exceptions (GetExceptionCode ())) {} | |
| 3914 | |
| 3915 The line above is original. Unfortunately, when an error is tripped | |
| 3916 inside of the handler (e.g. during Fbacktrace()), and the handler for | |
| 3917 the handler is invoked, it correctly notices that something is amiss | |
| 3918 and it should just return -- but it returns EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH, | |
| 3919 which causes the debugger to be invoked debugging the handler code in | |
| 3920 this function -- and WITH THE STACK UNWOUND so that you see main() | |
| 3921 calling mswindows_handle_hardware_exceptions(), calling Fbacktrace(), | |
| 3922 and a crash a couple of frames in -- AND NO SIGN OF THE ORIGINAL CRASH! | |
| 3923 | |
| 3924 There's some real weirdness going on in the stack handling -- unlike | |
| 3925 in Unix, where further crashes just keep adding to the stack, it seems | |
| 3926 that under the structured-exception-handling, the stack can actually | |
| 3927 bounce back and forth between the full stack at the location of the | |
| 3928 exception and the unwound stack at the place where the __try clause was | |
| 3929 established. I don't completely understand it. What I do know is that | |
| 3930 returning EXCEPTION_EXECUTE_HANDLER on nested crash has the effect of | |
| 3931 aborting execution of the handler and going back to the outer filter | |
| 3932 function, which returns EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH and everything is | |
| 3933 hunky-dorey -- your debugger sees a crash at the right location with | |
| 3934 the right stack. | |
| 3935 | |
| 3936 I'm leaving in the trickier Unix-like code in the handler; someone who | |
| 3937 understands better than me how the stack works in these handlers could | |
| 3938 fix it up more. As it is, it works pretty well, so I'm not likely to | |
| 3939 touch it more. --ben | |
| 3940 */ | |
| 3941 | |
| 3942 __except (mswindows_handle_hardware_exceptions_1 ()) {} | |
| 3943 | |
| 3944 /* pretend we didn't handle this, so that the debugger is invoked and/or | |
| 3945 the normal GPF box appears. */ | |
| 3946 return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH; | |
| 428 | 3947 } |
| 3948 | |
| 771 | 3949 #endif /* _MSC_VER */ |
| 3950 | |
| 3951 /* -------------------------------------- */ | |
| 3952 /* abnormal shutdowns: assertion failures */ | |
| 3953 /* -------------------------------------- */ | |
| 428 | 3954 |
| 3955 /* This flag is useful to define if you're under a debugger; this way, you | |
| 3956 can put a breakpoint of assert_failed() and debug multiple problems | |
| 3957 in one session without having to recompile. */ | |
| 3958 /* #define ASSERTIONS_DONT_ABORT */ | |
| 3959 | |
| 3960 /* This highly dubious kludge ... shut up Jamie, I'm tired of your slagging. */ | |
| 3961 | |
| 771 | 3962 /* Nonzero if handling an assertion failure. (Bumped by one each time |
| 3963 we recursively hit such a failure.) */ | |
| 442 | 3964 static int in_assert_failed; |
| 771 | 3965 |
| 2367 | 3966 static const Ascbyte *assert_failed_file; |
| 442 | 3967 static int assert_failed_line; |
| 2367 | 3968 static const Ascbyte *assert_failed_expr; |
| 442 | 3969 |
| 3970 #ifdef fprintf | |
| 3971 #undef fprintf | |
| 3972 #endif | |
| 3973 | |
| 2500 | 3974 /* This is called when an assert() fails or when ABORT() is called -- both |
| 771 | 3975 of those are defined in the preprocessor to an expansion involving |
| 3976 assert_failed(). */ | |
| 442 | 3977 void |
| 2367 | 3978 assert_failed (const Ascbyte *file, int line, const Ascbyte *expr) |
| 428 | 3979 { |
| 442 | 3980 /* If we're already crashing, let's not crash again. This might be |
| 3981 critical to getting auto-saving working properly. */ | |
| 3982 if (fatal_error_in_progress) | |
| 3983 return; | |
| 3984 | |
| 3985 /* We are extremely paranoid so we sensibly deal with recursive | |
| 3986 assertion failures. */ | |
| 3987 in_assert_failed++; | |
|
5014
c2e0c3af5fe3
cleanups to debug-print, try harder to make it work during GC
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5000
diff
changeset
|
3988 inhibit_non_essential_conversion_operations++; |
| 442 | 3989 |
| 3990 if (in_assert_failed >= 4) | |
| 3991 _exit (-1); | |
| 3992 else if (in_assert_failed == 3) | |
| 3993 { | |
| 771 | 3994 debugging_breakpoint (); |
| 442 | 3995 _exit (-1); |
| 3996 } | |
| 3997 else if (in_assert_failed == 2) | |
| 3998 { | |
| 771 | 3999 /* Ultra-paranoia. stderr_out() tries very hard not to do |
| 4000 anything during assertion failures that might trigger more | |
| 4001 failures; but we might have messed up somewhere. fprintf was | |
| 4002 undeffed above, in case it was encapsulated. */ | |
| 442 | 4003 fprintf (stderr, |
| 4004 "Fatal error: recursive assertion failure, " | |
| 4005 "file %s, line %d, %s\n", | |
| 4006 file, line, expr); | |
| 4007 fprintf (stderr, | |
| 4008 "Original assertion failure: file %s, line %d, %s\n", | |
| 4009 assert_failed_file, assert_failed_line, assert_failed_expr); | |
| 4010 } | |
| 4011 else | |
| 4012 { | |
| 4013 assert_failed_file = file; | |
| 4014 assert_failed_line = line; | |
| 4015 assert_failed_expr = expr; | |
| 4016 | |
| 771 | 4017 stderr_out ("\nFatal error: assertion failed, file %s, line %d, %s\n", |
| 4018 file, line, expr); | |
| 442 | 4019 } |
| 4020 | |
| 771 | 4021 /* Enable the following if you want a breakpoint right away to the |
| 4022 debugger, without the whole shutdown processing first. This can be | |
| 4023 useful if you're afraid the shutdown processing will modify state that | |
| 4024 you're trying to debug (generally fairly unlikely); but you then don't | |
| 4025 get the auto-save behavior, which may be extremely important if you | |
| 4026 were in the middle of doing something */ | |
| 4027 /* debugging_breakpoint (); */ | |
| 442 | 4028 #if !defined (ASSERTIONS_DONT_ABORT) |
| 1346 | 4029 #if defined (_MSC_VER) || defined (CYGWIN) |
| 4030 /* In VC++, calling abort() directly just seems to exit, in a way we can't | |
| 1303 | 4031 trap. (#### The docs say it does raise (SIGABRT), which we should be |
| 771 | 4032 able to trap. Perhaps we're messing up somewhere? Or perhaps MS is |
| 4033 messed up.) | |
| 4034 | |
| 4035 So, instead we cause an exception and enter into the structured | |
| 4036 exception-handling mechanism, which is just like what happens when a | |
| 4037 GPF occurs, and is cleaner anyway. (If we entered into one of the | |
| 4038 signal handlers, a crash in there would enter anyway into the | |
| 4039 structured exception stuff, and you'd get some weird mixture. Cleaner | |
| 4040 to keep it all in the expected way.) | |
| 4041 */ | |
| 4042 /* Either of the following work in terms of causing an exception. The | |
| 4043 second one looks cleaner but you get an odd message about "Unknown | |
| 4044 software exception ..." without the obvious "OK to terminate", "Cancel | |
| 4045 to debug"; instead, you just get OK/Cancel, which in fact do those | |
| 4046 same things. */ | |
| 1346 | 4047 /* In Cygwin, abort() doesn't get trapped properly in gdb but seg faults |
| 4048 do, so we resort to the same trick. */ | |
| 771 | 4049 * ((int *) 0) = 666; |
| 4050 /* RaiseException (STATUS_ASSERTION_FAILURE, EXCEPTION_NONCONTINUABLE, 0, | |
| 4051 0); */ | |
| 4052 #else | |
| 4053 really_abort (); | |
| 1346 | 4054 #endif /* defined (_MSC_VER) || defined (CYGWIN) */ |
| 771 | 4055 #endif /* !defined (ASSERTIONS_DONT_ABORT) */ |
|
5014
c2e0c3af5fe3
cleanups to debug-print, try harder to make it work during GC
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5000
diff
changeset
|
4056 inhibit_non_essential_conversion_operations--; |
|
c2e0c3af5fe3
cleanups to debug-print, try harder to make it work during GC
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
5000
diff
changeset
|
4057 in_assert_failed--; |
| 428 | 4058 } |
| 4059 | |
| 771 | 4060 /* -------------------------------------- */ |
| 4061 /* low-memory notification */ | |
| 4062 /* -------------------------------------- */ | |
| 4063 | |
| 4064 #ifdef SIGDANGER | |
| 4065 | |
| 4066 /* Handler for SIGDANGER. */ | |
| 4067 SIGTYPE | |
| 4068 memory_warning_signal (int sig) | |
| 4069 { | |
| 4070 /* #### bad bad bad; this function shouldn't do anything except | |
| 4071 set a flag, or weird corruption could happen. */ | |
| 4072 EMACS_SIGNAL (sig, memory_warning_signal); | |
| 4073 | |
| 4074 malloc_warning | |
| 4075 (GETTEXT ("Operating system warns that virtual memory is running low.\n")); | |
| 4076 | |
| 4077 /* It might be unsafe to call do_auto_save now. */ | |
| 4078 force_auto_save_soon (); | |
| 4079 } | |
| 4080 #endif /* SIGDANGER */ | |
| 4081 | |
| 4082 | |
| 4083 /************************************************************************/ | |
| 4084 /* Miscellaneous */ | |
| 4085 /************************************************************************/ | |
| 4086 | |
| 4087 DEFUN ("noninteractive", Fnoninteractive, 0, 0, 0, /* | |
| 4088 Non-nil return value means XEmacs is running without interactive terminal. | |
| 528 | 4089 */ |
| 771 | 4090 ()) |
| 528 | 4091 { |
| 771 | 4092 return noninteractive ? Qt : Qnil; |
| 528 | 4093 } |
| 4094 | |
| 428 | 4095 #ifdef QUANTIFY |
| 4096 DEFUN ("quantify-start-recording-data", Fquantify_start_recording_data, | |
| 4097 0, 0, "", /* | |
| 4098 Start recording Quantify data. | |
| 4099 */ | |
| 4100 ()) | |
| 4101 { | |
| 4102 quantify_start_recording_data (); | |
| 4103 return Qnil; | |
| 4104 } | |
| 4105 | |
| 4106 DEFUN ("quantify-stop-recording-data", Fquantify_stop_recording_data, | |
| 4107 0, 0, "", /* | |
| 4108 Stop recording Quantify data. | |
| 4109 */ | |
| 4110 ()) | |
| 4111 { | |
| 4112 quantify_stop_recording_data (); | |
| 4113 return Qnil; | |
| 4114 } | |
| 4115 | |
| 4116 DEFUN ("quantify-clear-data", Fquantify_clear_data, 0, 0, "", /* | |
| 4117 Clear all Quantify data. | |
| 4118 */ | |
| 4119 ()) | |
| 4120 { | |
| 4121 quantify_clear_data (); | |
| 4122 return Qnil; | |
| 4123 } | |
| 4124 #endif /* QUANTIFY */ | |
| 4125 | |
| 4126 void | |
| 4127 syms_of_emacs (void) | |
| 4128 { | |
| 4129 DEFSUBR (Fdump_emacs); | |
| 4130 | |
| 4131 DEFSUBR (Frun_emacs_from_temacs); | |
| 4132 DEFSUBR (Frunning_temacs_p); | |
| 1315 | 4133 DEFSUBR (Femacs_run_status); |
| 428 | 4134 DEFSUBR (Finvocation_name); |
| 4135 DEFSUBR (Finvocation_directory); | |
| 4136 DEFSUBR (Fkill_emacs); | |
| 4137 DEFSUBR (Fnoninteractive); | |
| 4138 | |
| 528 | 4139 #ifdef DEBUG_XEMACS |
| 4140 DEFSUBR (Fforce_debugging_signal); | |
| 4141 #endif | |
| 4142 | |
| 428 | 4143 #ifdef QUANTIFY |
| 4144 DEFSUBR (Fquantify_start_recording_data); | |
| 4145 DEFSUBR (Fquantify_stop_recording_data); | |
| 4146 DEFSUBR (Fquantify_clear_data); | |
| 4147 #endif /* QUANTIFY */ | |
| 4148 | |
| 563 | 4149 DEFSYMBOL (Qkill_emacs_hook); |
| 4150 DEFSYMBOL (Qsave_buffers_kill_emacs); | |
| 1315 | 4151 |
| 4152 DEFSYMBOL (Qtemacs); | |
| 4153 DEFSYMBOL (Qdumping); | |
| 4154 DEFSYMBOL (Qrestarted); | |
| 4155 DEFSYMBOL (Qpdump); | |
| 4156 DEFSYMBOL (Qbatch); | |
| 428 | 4157 } |
| 4158 | |
| 776 | 4159 /* Yuck! These variables may get set from command-line options when |
| 4160 dumping; if we don't clear them, they will still be on once the dumped | |
| 4161 XEmacs reloads. (not an issue with pdump, as we kludge around this in | |
| 4162 main_1().) */ | |
| 4163 | |
| 4164 void | |
| 4165 zero_out_command_line_status_vars (void) | |
| 4166 { | |
| 4167 vanilla_inhibiting = 0; | |
| 4168 inhibit_early_packages = 0; | |
| 4169 inhibit_all_packages = 0; | |
| 4170 inhibit_autoloads = 0; | |
| 4171 debug_paths = 0; | |
| 4172 #ifndef INHIBIT_SITE_LISP | |
| 4173 inhibit_site_lisp = 0; | |
| 4174 #else | |
| 4175 inhibit_site_lisp = 1; | |
| 4176 #endif | |
| 4177 #ifndef INHIBIT_SITE_MODULES | |
| 4178 inhibit_site_modules = 0; | |
| 4179 #else | |
| 4180 inhibit_site_modules = 1; | |
| 4181 #endif | |
| 4182 } | |
| 4183 | |
| 428 | 4184 void |
| 4185 vars_of_emacs (void) | |
| 4186 { | |
| 4187 DEFVAR_BOOL ("suppress-early-error-handler-backtrace", | |
| 4188 &suppress_early_error_handler_backtrace /* | |
| 4189 Non-nil means early error handler shouldn't print a backtrace. | |
| 4190 */ ); | |
| 4191 | |
| 4192 DEFVAR_LISP ("command-line-args", &Vcommand_line_args /* | |
| 4193 Args passed by shell to XEmacs, as a list of strings. | |
| 4194 */ ); | |
| 4195 | |
| 4196 DEFVAR_LISP ("invocation-name", &Vinvocation_name /* | |
| 4197 The program name that was used to run XEmacs. | |
| 4198 Any directory names are omitted. | |
| 4199 */ ); | |
| 4200 | |
| 4201 DEFVAR_LISP ("invocation-directory", &Vinvocation_directory /* | |
| 4202 The directory in which the XEmacs executable was found, to run it. | |
| 4203 The value is simply the program name if that directory's name is not known. | |
| 4204 */ ); | |
| 4205 | |
| 4206 DEFVAR_LISP ("invocation-path", &Vinvocation_path /* | |
| 4207 The path in which the XEmacs executable was found, to run it. | |
| 4208 The value is simply the value of environment variable PATH on startup | |
| 4209 if XEmacs was found there. | |
| 4210 */ ); | |
| 4211 | |
| 4212 #if 0 /* FSFmacs */ | |
| 776 | 4213 xxDEFVAR_LISP ("installation-directory", &Vinstallation_directory /* |
| 4214 A directory within which to look for the `lib-src' and `etc' directories. | |
| 4215 This is non-nil when we can't find those directories in their standard | |
| 4216 installed locations, but we can find them ear where the XEmacs executable | |
| 4217 was found. | |
| 4218 */ ); | |
| 428 | 4219 #endif |
| 4220 | |
| 4221 DEFVAR_LISP ("system-type", &Vsystem_type /* | |
| 4222 Symbol indicating type of operating system you are using. | |
| 4223 */ ); | |
| 4224 Vsystem_type = intern (SYSTEM_TYPE); | |
| 771 | 4225 Fprovide (Vsystem_type); |
| 428 | 4226 |
| 4227 #ifndef EMACS_CONFIGURATION | |
| 4228 # define EMACS_CONFIGURATION "UNKNOWN" | |
| 4229 #endif | |
| 4230 DEFVAR_LISP ("system-configuration", &Vsystem_configuration /* | |
| 4231 String naming the configuration XEmacs was built for. | |
| 4232 */ ); | |
|
4952
19a72041c5ed
Mule-izing, various fixes related to char * arguments
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4932
diff
changeset
|
4233 Vsystem_configuration = build_ascstring (EMACS_CONFIGURATION); |
| 428 | 4234 |
| 4235 #ifndef EMACS_CONFIG_OPTIONS | |
| 4236 # define EMACS_CONFIG_OPTIONS "UNKNOWN" | |
| 4237 #endif | |
| 4238 DEFVAR_LISP ("system-configuration-options", &Vsystem_configuration_options /* | |
| 4239 String containing the configuration options XEmacs was built with. | |
| 4240 */ ); | |
|
4952
19a72041c5ed
Mule-izing, various fixes related to char * arguments
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4932
diff
changeset
|
4241 Vsystem_configuration_options = build_ascstring (EMACS_CONFIG_OPTIONS); |
| 428 | 4242 |
| 4243 DEFVAR_LISP ("emacs-major-version", &Vemacs_major_version /* | |
| 4244 Major version number of this version of Emacs, as an integer. | |
| 4245 Warning: this variable did not exist in Emacs versions earlier than: | |
| 4246 FSF Emacs: 19.23 | |
| 4247 XEmacs: 19.10 | |
| 4248 */ ); | |
| 4249 Vemacs_major_version = make_int (EMACS_MAJOR_VERSION); | |
| 4250 | |
| 4251 DEFVAR_LISP ("emacs-minor-version", &Vemacs_minor_version /* | |
| 4252 Minor version number of this version of Emacs, as an integer. | |
| 4253 Warning: this variable did not exist in Emacs versions earlier than: | |
| 4254 FSF Emacs: 19.23 | |
| 4255 XEmacs: 19.10 | |
| 4256 */ ); | |
| 4257 Vemacs_minor_version = make_int (EMACS_MINOR_VERSION); | |
| 4258 | |
| 4259 DEFVAR_LISP ("emacs-patch-level", &Vemacs_patch_level /* | |
| 4260 The patch level of this version of Emacs, as an integer. | |
| 4261 The value is non-nil if this version of XEmacs is part of a series of | |
| 4262 stable XEmacsen, but has bug fixes applied. | |
| 4263 Warning: this variable does not exist in FSF Emacs or in XEmacs versions | |
| 4264 earlier than 21.1.1 | |
| 4265 */ ); | |
| 4266 #ifdef EMACS_PATCH_LEVEL | |
| 4267 Vemacs_patch_level = make_int (EMACS_PATCH_LEVEL); | |
| 4268 #else | |
| 4269 Vemacs_patch_level = Qnil; | |
| 4270 #endif | |
| 4271 | |
| 4272 DEFVAR_LISP ("emacs-beta-version", &Vemacs_beta_version /* | |
| 4273 Beta number of this version of Emacs, as an integer. | |
| 4274 The value is nil if this is an officially released version of XEmacs. | |
| 4275 Warning: this variable does not exist in FSF Emacs or in XEmacs versions | |
| 4276 earlier than 20.3. | |
| 4277 */ ); | |
| 4278 #ifdef EMACS_BETA_VERSION | |
| 4279 Vemacs_beta_version = make_int (EMACS_BETA_VERSION); | |
| 4280 #else | |
| 4281 Vemacs_beta_version = Qnil; | |
| 4282 #endif | |
| 4283 | |
| 4284 #ifdef INFODOCK | |
| 4285 DEFVAR_LISP ("infodock-major-version", &Vinfodock_major_version /* | |
| 4286 Major version number of this InfoDock release. | |
| 4287 */ ); | |
| 4288 Vinfodock_major_version = make_int (INFODOCK_MAJOR_VERSION); | |
| 4289 | |
| 4290 DEFVAR_LISP ("infodock-minor-version", &Vinfodock_minor_version /* | |
| 4291 Minor version number of this InfoDock release. | |
| 4292 */ ); | |
| 4293 Vinfodock_minor_version = make_int (INFODOCK_MINOR_VERSION); | |
| 4294 | |
| 4295 DEFVAR_LISP ("infodock-build-version", &Vinfodock_build_version /* | |
| 4296 Build version of this InfoDock release. | |
| 4297 */ ); | |
| 4298 Vinfodock_build_version = make_int (INFODOCK_BUILD_VERSION); | |
| 4299 #endif | |
| 4300 | |
| 4301 DEFVAR_LISP ("xemacs-codename", &Vxemacs_codename /* | |
| 4302 Codename of this version of Emacs (a string). | |
| 4303 */ ); | |
| 4304 #ifndef XEMACS_CODENAME | |
| 4305 #define XEMACS_CODENAME "Noname" | |
| 4306 #endif | |
|
4952
19a72041c5ed
Mule-izing, various fixes related to char * arguments
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4932
diff
changeset
|
4307 Vxemacs_codename = build_ascstring (XEMACS_CODENAME); |
| 428 | 4308 |
| 975 | 4309 DEFVAR_LISP ("xemacs-extra-name", &Vxemacs_extra_name /* |
| 2602 | 4310 Arbitrary string to place in the version string after the codename. |
| 4311 | |
| 4312 Appropriate surrounding whitespace will be added, but typically looks best | |
| 4313 if enclosed in parentheses. | |
| 4314 | |
|
4419
eb82fbb675ea
Use Mercurial changeset hash to identify build version.
Mike Sperber <sperber@deinprogramm.de>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
4315 A standard use is to indicate the topmost hash id of the Mercurial |
|
eb82fbb675ea
Use Mercurial changeset hash to identify build version.
Mike Sperber <sperber@deinprogramm.de>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
4316 changeset from which XEmacs was compiled. Developers may also use it |
|
eb82fbb675ea
Use Mercurial changeset hash to identify build version.
Mike Sperber <sperber@deinprogramm.de>
parents:
4380
diff
changeset
|
4317 to indicate particular branches, etc. |
| 975 | 4318 */ ); |
| 4319 #ifdef XEMACS_EXTRA_NAME | |
|
4952
19a72041c5ed
Mule-izing, various fixes related to char * arguments
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4932
diff
changeset
|
4320 Vxemacs_extra_name = build_ascstring (XEMACS_EXTRA_NAME); |
| 975 | 4321 #endif |
| 4322 | |
| 2602 | 4323 DEFVAR_LISP ("xemacs-release-date", &Vxemacs_release_date /* |
| 4324 ISO 8601 format date string giving the date of latest release in series. | |
| 4325 | |
| 4326 The time may optionally be given. The time zone may not be given, and | |
| 4327 is (implicitly) UTC. Currently not included in the version string. | |
| 4328 */ ); | |
| 4329 #ifndef XEMACS_RELEASE_DATE | |
| 4330 #define XEMACS_RELEASE_DATE "2005-02-18 (defaulted in emacs.c)" | |
| 4331 #endif | |
|
4952
19a72041c5ed
Mule-izing, various fixes related to char * arguments
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4932
diff
changeset
|
4332 Vxemacs_release_date = build_ascstring (XEMACS_RELEASE_DATE); |
| 2602 | 4333 |
| 442 | 4334 /* Lisp variables which contain command line flags. |
| 4335 | |
| 4336 The portable dumper stomps on these; they must be saved and restored | |
| 4337 if they are processed before the call to pdump_load() in main_1(). | |
| 4338 */ | |
| 428 | 4339 DEFVAR_BOOL ("noninteractive", &noninteractive1 /* |
| 4340 Non-nil means XEmacs is running without interactive terminal. | |
| 4341 */ ); | |
| 4342 | |
| 776 | 4343 DEFVAR_BOOL ("vanilla-inhibiting", &vanilla_inhibiting /* |
| 4344 Set to non-nil when the user-init and site-start files should not be loaded. | |
| 4345 */ ); | |
| 4346 | |
| 428 | 4347 DEFVAR_BOOL ("inhibit-early-packages", &inhibit_early_packages /* |
| 2602 | 4348 Set to non-nil when the early packages should be ignored at startup. |
| 4349 Early package directories will not be added to `load-path', nor set up as | |
| 4350 autoloads, nothing. | |
| 428 | 4351 */ ); |
| 4352 | |
| 776 | 4353 DEFVAR_BOOL ("inhibit-all-packages", &inhibit_all_packages /* |
| 2602 | 4354 Set to non-nil when all packages should be ignored at startup. |
| 4355 Package directories will not be added to `load-path', nor set up as | |
| 776 | 4356 autoloads, nothing. |
| 4357 */ ); | |
| 4358 | |
| 428 | 4359 DEFVAR_BOOL ("inhibit-autoloads", &inhibit_autoloads /* |
| 4360 Set to non-nil when autoloads should not be loaded at startup. | |
| 4361 */ ); | |
| 4362 | |
| 4363 DEFVAR_BOOL ("debug-paths", &debug_paths /* | |
| 4364 Set to non-nil when debug information about paths should be printed. | |
| 4365 */ ); | |
| 4366 | |
| 4367 DEFVAR_BOOL ("inhibit-site-lisp", &inhibit_site_lisp /* | |
| 4368 Set to non-nil when the site-lisp should not be searched at startup. | |
| 4369 */ ); | |
| 4370 #ifdef INHIBIT_SITE_LISP | |
| 4371 inhibit_site_lisp = 1; | |
| 4372 #endif | |
| 4373 | |
| 4374 DEFVAR_BOOL ("inhibit-site-modules", &inhibit_site_modules /* | |
| 4375 Set to non-nil when site-modules should not be searched at startup. | |
| 4376 */ ); | |
| 4377 #ifdef INHIBIT_SITE_MODULES | |
| 4378 inhibit_site_modules = 1; | |
| 4379 #endif | |
| 4380 | |
| 4381 DEFVAR_INT ("emacs-priority", &emacs_priority /* | |
| 4382 Priority for XEmacs to run at. | |
| 4383 This value is effective only if set before XEmacs is dumped, | |
| 4384 and only if the XEmacs executable is installed with setuid to permit | |
| 4385 it to change priority. (XEmacs sets its uid back to the real uid.) | |
| 4386 Currently, you need to define SET_EMACS_PRIORITY in `config.h' | |
| 4387 before you compile XEmacs, to enable the code for this feature. | |
| 4388 */ ); | |
| 4389 emacs_priority = 0; | |
| 4390 | |
| 4391 DEFVAR_CONST_LISP ("internal-error-checking", &Vinternal_error_checking /* | |
| 4392 Internal error checking built-in into this instance of XEmacs. | |
| 4393 This is a list of symbols, initialized at build-time. Legal symbols | |
| 4394 are: | |
| 4395 | |
| 4396 extents - check extents prior to each extent change; | |
| 800 | 4397 types - check types strictly; |
| 428 | 4398 malloc - check operation of malloc; |
| 4399 gc - check garbage collection; | |
| 800 | 4400 text - check text and buffer positions; |
| 4401 display - check redisplay structure consistency; | |
| 4402 glyphs - check glyph structure consistency; | |
| 4403 byte-code - check byte-code consistency;. | |
| 4404 structures - check other structure consistency. | |
| 442 | 4405 |
| 4406 quick-build - user has requested the "quick-build" configure option. | |
| 428 | 4407 */ ); |
| 4408 Vinternal_error_checking = Qnil; | |
| 4409 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_EXTENTS | |
| 4410 Vinternal_error_checking = Fcons (intern ("extents"), | |
| 4411 Vinternal_error_checking); | |
| 4412 #endif | |
| 800 | 4413 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_TYPES |
| 4414 Vinternal_error_checking = Fcons (intern ("types"), | |
| 428 | 4415 Vinternal_error_checking); |
| 4416 #endif | |
| 4417 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_MALLOC | |
| 4418 Vinternal_error_checking = Fcons (intern ("malloc"), | |
| 4419 Vinternal_error_checking); | |
| 4420 #endif | |
| 4421 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_GC | |
| 4422 Vinternal_error_checking = Fcons (intern ("gc"), | |
| 4423 Vinternal_error_checking); | |
| 4424 #endif | |
| 800 | 4425 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_TEXT |
| 4426 Vinternal_error_checking = Fcons (intern ("text"), | |
| 4427 Vinternal_error_checking); | |
| 4428 #endif | |
| 4429 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_DISPLAY | |
| 4430 Vinternal_error_checking = Fcons (intern ("display"), | |
| 4431 Vinternal_error_checking); | |
| 4432 #endif | |
| 4433 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_GLYPHS | |
| 4434 Vinternal_error_checking = Fcons (intern ("glyphs"), | |
| 4435 Vinternal_error_checking); | |
| 4436 #endif | |
| 4437 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_BYTE_CODE | |
| 4438 Vinternal_error_checking = Fcons (intern ("byte-code"), | |
| 4439 Vinternal_error_checking); | |
| 4440 #endif | |
| 4441 #ifdef ERROR_CHECK_STRUCTURES | |
| 4442 Vinternal_error_checking = Fcons (intern ("structures"), | |
| 428 | 4443 Vinternal_error_checking); |
| 4444 #endif | |
| 442 | 4445 #ifdef QUICK_BUILD |
| 4446 Vinternal_error_checking = Fcons (intern ("quick-build"), | |
| 4447 Vinternal_error_checking); | |
| 4448 #endif | |
| 428 | 4449 |
| 438 | 4450 DEFVAR_CONST_LISP ("mail-lock-methods", &Vmail_lock_methods /* |
| 4451 Mail spool locking methods supported by this instance of XEmacs. | |
| 4452 This is a list of symbols. Each of the symbols is one of the | |
| 4453 following: dot, lockf, flock, locking, mmdf. | |
| 4454 */ ); | |
| 4455 { | |
| 4456 Vmail_lock_methods = Qnil; | |
| 4457 Vmail_lock_methods = Fcons (intern ("dot"), Vmail_lock_methods); | |
| 4458 #ifdef HAVE_LOCKF | |
| 4459 Vmail_lock_methods = Fcons (intern ("lockf"), Vmail_lock_methods); | |
| 4460 #endif | |
| 4461 #ifdef HAVE_FLOCK | |
| 4462 Vmail_lock_methods = Fcons (intern ("flock"), Vmail_lock_methods); | |
| 4463 #endif | |
| 4464 #ifdef HAVE_MMDF | |
| 4465 Vmail_lock_methods = Fcons (intern ("mmdf"), Vmail_lock_methods); | |
| 4466 #endif | |
| 4467 #ifdef HAVE_LOCKING | |
| 4468 Vmail_lock_methods = Fcons (intern ("locking"), Vmail_lock_methods); | |
| 4469 #endif | |
| 4470 } | |
| 442 | 4471 |
| 438 | 4472 DEFVAR_CONST_LISP ("configure-mail-lock-method", &Vconfigure_mail_lock_method /* |
| 4473 Mail spool locking method suggested by configure. This is one | |
| 4474 of the symbols in MAIL-LOCK-METHODS. | |
| 4475 */ ); | |
| 4476 { | |
| 1303 | 4477 #if defined (MAIL_LOCK_FLOCK) && defined (HAVE_FLOCK) |
| 771 | 4478 Vconfigure_mail_lock_method = intern ("flock"); |
| 1303 | 4479 #elif defined (MAIL_LOCK_LOCKF) && defined (HAVE_LOCKF) |
| 771 | 4480 Vconfigure_mail_lock_method = intern ("lockf"); |
| 1303 | 4481 #elif defined (MAIL_LOCK_MMDF) && defined (HAVE_MMDF) |
| 771 | 4482 Vconfigure_mail_lock_method = intern ("mmdf"); |
| 1303 | 4483 #elif defined (MAIL_LOCK_LOCKING) && defined (HAVE_LOCKING) |
| 771 | 4484 Vconfigure_mail_lock_method = intern ("locking"); |
| 438 | 4485 #else |
| 771 | 4486 Vconfigure_mail_lock_method = intern ("dot"); |
| 438 | 4487 #endif |
| 4488 } | |
| 428 | 4489 } |
| 4490 | |
| 4491 void | |
| 4492 complex_vars_of_emacs (void) | |
| 4493 { | |
| 4494 /* This is all related to path searching. */ | |
| 4495 | |
| 4496 DEFVAR_LISP ("emacs-program-name", &Vemacs_program_name /* | |
| 4497 *Name of the Emacs variant. | |
| 4498 For example, this may be \"xemacs\" or \"infodock\". | |
| 4499 This is mainly meant for use in path searching. | |
| 4500 */ ); | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4501 Vemacs_program_name = build_extstring (PATH_PROGNAME, Qfile_name); |
| 428 | 4502 |
| 4503 DEFVAR_LISP ("emacs-program-version", &Vemacs_program_version /* | |
| 4504 *Version of the Emacs variant. | |
| 444 | 4505 This typically has the form NN.NN-bNN. |
| 428 | 4506 This is mainly meant for use in path searching. |
| 4507 */ ); | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4508 Vemacs_program_version = build_extstring (PATH_VERSION, Qfile_name); |
| 428 | 4509 |
| 4510 DEFVAR_LISP ("exec-path", &Vexec_path /* | |
| 4511 *List of directories to search programs to run in subprocesses. | |
| 4512 Each element is a string (directory name) or nil (try default directory). | |
| 4513 */ ); | |
| 4514 Vexec_path = Qnil; | |
| 4515 | |
| 4516 DEFVAR_LISP ("exec-directory", &Vexec_directory /* | |
| 4517 *Directory of architecture-dependent files that come with XEmacs, | |
| 4518 especially executable programs intended for XEmacs to invoke. | |
| 4519 */ ); | |
| 4520 Vexec_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4521 | |
| 4522 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-exec-directory", &Vconfigure_exec_directory /* | |
| 4523 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 444 | 4524 configure's idea of what `exec-directory' will be. |
| 428 | 4525 */ ); |
| 4526 #ifdef PATH_EXEC | |
| 4527 Vconfigure_exec_directory = Ffile_name_as_directory | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4528 (build_extstring (PATH_EXEC, Qfile_name)); |
| 428 | 4529 #else |
| 4530 Vconfigure_exec_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4531 #endif | |
| 4532 | |
| 4533 DEFVAR_LISP ("lisp-directory", &Vlisp_directory /* | |
| 4534 *Directory of core Lisp files that come with XEmacs. | |
| 4535 */ ); | |
| 4536 Vlisp_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4537 | |
| 4538 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-lisp-directory", &Vconfigure_lisp_directory /* | |
| 4539 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 444 | 4540 configure's idea of what `lisp-directory' will be. |
| 428 | 4541 */ ); |
| 4542 #ifdef PATH_LOADSEARCH | |
| 4543 Vconfigure_lisp_directory = Ffile_name_as_directory | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4544 (build_extstring (PATH_LOADSEARCH, Qfile_name)); |
| 428 | 4545 #else |
| 4546 Vconfigure_lisp_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4547 #endif | |
| 4548 | |
| 460 | 4549 DEFVAR_LISP ("mule-lisp-directory", &Vmule_lisp_directory /* |
| 4550 *Directory of Mule Lisp files that come with XEmacs. | |
| 4551 */ ); | |
| 4552 Vmule_lisp_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4553 | |
| 4554 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-mule-lisp-directory", &Vconfigure_mule_lisp_directory /* | |
| 4555 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 4556 configure's idea of what `mule-lisp-directory' will be. | |
| 4557 */ ); | |
| 4558 #ifdef PATH_MULELOADSEARCH | |
| 4559 Vconfigure_mule_lisp_directory = Ffile_name_as_directory | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4560 (build_extstring (PATH_MULELOADSEARCH, Qfile_name); |
| 460 | 4561 #else |
| 4562 Vconfigure_mule_lisp_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4563 #endif | |
| 4564 | |
| 428 | 4565 DEFVAR_LISP ("module-directory", &Vmodule_directory /* |
| 4566 *Directory of core dynamic modules that come with XEmacs. | |
| 4567 */ ); | |
| 4568 Vmodule_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4569 | |
| 4570 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-module-directory", &Vconfigure_module_directory /* | |
| 4571 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 444 | 4572 configure's idea of what `module-directory' will be. |
| 428 | 4573 */ ); |
| 4574 #ifdef PATH_MODULESEARCH | |
| 4575 Vconfigure_module_directory = Ffile_name_as_directory | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4576 (build_extstring (PATH_MODULESEARCH, Qfile_name)); |
| 428 | 4577 #else |
| 4578 Vconfigure_module_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4579 #endif | |
| 4580 | |
| 3179 | 4581 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-early-package-directories", &Vconfigure_early_package_directories /* |
| 4582 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 4583 configure's idea of what the early package directories will be. | |
| 4584 */ ); | |
| 4585 #ifdef PATH_EARLY_PACKAGE_DIRECTORIES | |
| 4586 Vconfigure_early_package_directories = split_external_path (PATH_EARLY_PACKAGE_DIRECTORIES); | |
| 4587 #else | |
| 4588 Vconfigure_early_package_directories = Qnil; | |
| 4589 #endif | |
| 4590 | |
| 4591 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-late-package-directories", &Vconfigure_late_package_directories /* | |
| 4592 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 4593 configure's idea of what the late package directories will be. | |
| 4594 */ ); | |
| 4595 #ifdef PATH_LATE_PACKAGE_DIRECTORIES | |
| 4596 Vconfigure_late_package_directories = split_external_path (PATH_LATE_PACKAGE_DIRECTORIES); | |
| 4597 #else | |
| 4598 Vconfigure_late_package_directories = Qnil; | |
| 4599 #endif | |
| 4600 | |
| 4601 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-last-package-directories", &Vconfigure_last_package_directories /* | |
| 4602 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 4603 configure's idea of what the last package directories will be. | |
| 4604 */ ); | |
| 4605 #ifdef PATH_LAST_PACKAGE_DIRECTORIES | |
| 4606 Vconfigure_last_package_directories = split_external_path (PATH_LAST_PACKAGE_DIRECTORIES); | |
| 4607 #else | |
| 4608 Vconfigure_last_package_directories = Qnil; | |
| 4609 #endif | |
| 4610 | |
| 428 | 4611 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-package-path", &Vconfigure_package_path /* |
| 4612 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 4613 configure's idea of what the package path will be. | |
| 4614 */ ); | |
| 4615 #ifdef PATH_PACKAGEPATH | |
| 771 | 4616 Vconfigure_package_path = split_external_path (PATH_PACKAGEPATH); |
| 428 | 4617 #else |
| 4618 Vconfigure_package_path = Qnil; | |
| 4619 #endif | |
| 4620 | |
| 4621 DEFVAR_LISP ("data-directory", &Vdata_directory /* | |
| 4622 *Directory of architecture-independent files that come with XEmacs, | |
| 4623 intended for XEmacs to use. | |
| 4624 Use of this variable in new code is almost never correct. See the | |
| 442 | 4625 functions `locate-data-file' and `locate-data-directory' and the variable |
| 4626 `data-directory-list'. | |
| 428 | 4627 */ ); |
| 4628 Vdata_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4629 | |
| 4630 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-data-directory", &Vconfigure_data_directory /* | |
| 4631 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 444 | 4632 configure's idea of what `data-directory' will be. |
| 428 | 4633 */ ); |
| 4634 #ifdef PATH_DATA | |
| 4635 Vconfigure_data_directory = Ffile_name_as_directory | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4636 (build_extstring (PATH_DATA, Qfile_name)); |
| 428 | 4637 #else |
| 4638 Vconfigure_data_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4639 #endif | |
| 4640 | |
| 4641 DEFVAR_LISP ("data-directory-list", &Vdata_directory_list /* | |
| 4642 *List of directories of architecture-independent files that come with XEmacs | |
| 4643 or were installed as packages, and are intended for XEmacs to use. | |
| 4644 */ ); | |
| 4645 Vdata_directory_list = Qnil; | |
| 4646 | |
| 4647 DEFVAR_LISP ("site-directory", &Vsite_directory /* | |
| 4648 *Directory of site-specific Lisp files that come with XEmacs. | |
| 4649 */ ); | |
| 4650 Vsite_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4651 | |
| 4652 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-site-directory", &Vconfigure_site_directory /* | |
| 4653 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 444 | 4654 configure's idea of what `site-directory' will be. |
| 428 | 4655 */ ); |
| 4656 #ifdef PATH_SITE | |
| 4657 Vconfigure_site_directory = Ffile_name_as_directory | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4658 (build_extstring (PATH_SITE, Qfile_name)); |
| 428 | 4659 #else |
| 4660 Vconfigure_site_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4661 #endif | |
| 4662 | |
| 4663 DEFVAR_LISP ("site-module-directory", &Vsite_module_directory /* | |
| 4664 *Directory of site-specific loadable modules that come with XEmacs. | |
| 4665 */ ); | |
| 4666 Vsite_module_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4667 | |
| 4668 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-site-module-directory", &Vconfigure_site_module_directory /* | |
| 4669 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 444 | 4670 configure's idea of what `site-directory' will be. |
| 428 | 4671 */ ); |
| 4672 #ifdef PATH_SITE_MODULES | |
| 4673 Vconfigure_site_module_directory = Ffile_name_as_directory | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4674 (build_extstring (PATH_SITE_MODULES, Qfile_name)); |
| 428 | 4675 #else |
| 4676 Vconfigure_site_module_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4677 #endif | |
| 4678 | |
| 4679 DEFVAR_LISP ("doc-directory", &Vdoc_directory /* | |
| 4680 *Directory containing the DOC file that comes with XEmacs. | |
| 444 | 4681 This is usually the same as `exec-directory'. |
| 428 | 4682 */ ); |
| 4683 Vdoc_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4684 | |
| 4685 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-doc-directory", &Vconfigure_doc_directory /* | |
| 4686 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 444 | 4687 configure's idea of what `doc-directory' will be. |
| 428 | 4688 */ ); |
| 4689 #ifdef PATH_DOC | |
| 4690 Vconfigure_doc_directory = Ffile_name_as_directory | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4691 (build_extstring (PATH_DOC, Qfile_name)); |
| 428 | 4692 #else |
| 4693 Vconfigure_doc_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4694 #endif | |
| 4695 | |
| 4696 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-exec-prefix-directory", &Vconfigure_exec_prefix_directory /* | |
| 4697 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 444 | 4698 configure's idea of what `exec-prefix-directory' will be. |
| 428 | 4699 */ ); |
| 4700 #ifdef PATH_EXEC_PREFIX | |
| 4701 Vconfigure_exec_prefix_directory = Ffile_name_as_directory | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4702 (build_extstring (PATH_EXEC_PREFIX, Qfile_name)); |
| 428 | 4703 #else |
| 4704 Vconfigure_exec_prefix_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4705 #endif | |
| 4706 | |
| 4707 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-prefix-directory", &Vconfigure_prefix_directory /* | |
| 4708 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 444 | 4709 configure's idea of what `prefix-directory' will be. |
| 428 | 4710 */ ); |
| 4711 #ifdef PATH_PREFIX | |
| 4712 Vconfigure_prefix_directory = Ffile_name_as_directory | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4713 (build_extstring (PATH_PREFIX, Qfile_name)); |
| 428 | 4714 #else |
| 4715 Vconfigure_prefix_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4716 #endif | |
| 4717 | |
| 4718 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-info-directory", &Vconfigure_info_directory /* | |
| 4719 For internal use by the build procedure only. | |
| 4720 This is the name of the directory in which the build procedure installed | |
| 4721 Emacs's info files; the default value for Info-default-directory-list | |
| 4722 includes this. | |
| 4723 */ ); | |
| 4724 #ifdef PATH_INFO | |
| 4725 Vconfigure_info_directory = | |
|
4953
304aebb79cd3
function renamings to track names of char typedefs
Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
parents:
4952
diff
changeset
|
4726 Ffile_name_as_directory (build_extstring (PATH_INFO, Qfile_name)); |
| 428 | 4727 #else |
| 4728 Vconfigure_info_directory = Qnil; | |
| 4729 #endif | |
| 4730 | |
| 4731 DEFVAR_LISP ("configure-info-path", &Vconfigure_info_path /* | |
| 4732 The configured initial path for info documentation. | |
| 4733 */ ); | |
| 4734 #ifdef PATH_INFOPATH | |
| 771 | 4735 Vconfigure_info_path = split_external_path (PATH_INFOPATH); |
| 428 | 4736 #else |
| 4737 Vconfigure_info_path = Qnil; | |
| 4738 #endif | |
| 4739 } | |
| 4740 | |
| 1303 | 4741 #if defined (__sgi) && !defined (PDUMP) |
| 428 | 4742 /* This is so tremendously ugly I'd puke. But then, it works. |
| 4743 * The target is to override the static constructor from the | |
| 442 | 4744 * libiflPNG.so library which is masquerading as libz, and |
| 428 | 4745 * cores on us when re-started from the dumped executable. |
| 4746 * This will have to go for 21.1 -- OG. | |
| 4747 */ | |
| 446 | 4748 void __sti__iflPNGFile_c___ (void); |
| 4749 void | |
| 4750 __sti__iflPNGFile_c___ (void) | |
| 428 | 4751 { |
| 4752 } | |
| 4753 | |
| 4754 #endif | |
| 771 | 4755 |
| 2210 | 4756 DOESNT_RETURN |
| 771 | 4757 really_abort (void) |
| 4758 { | |
| 4759 abort (); | |
| 4760 } |
