view lisp/paths.el @ 788:026c5bf9c134

[xemacs-hg @ 2002-03-21 07:29:57 by ben] chartab.c: Fix bugs in implementation and doc strings. config.h.in: Add foo_checking_assert_at_line() macros. Not clear whether these are actually useful, though; I'll take them out if not. symsinit.h, emacs.c: Some improvements to the timeline. Rearrange a bit the init calls. Add call for reinit_vars_of_object_mswindows() and declare in symsinit.h. event-Xt.c, event-gtk.c, event-msw.c, event-stream.c, event-tty.c, events.c, events.h: Introduce new event methods for printing, comparing, and hashing magic events, to avoid event-type-specific stuff that had crept into events.c. (And was crashing, since the channel in MS Windows magic events may be nil.) Implement the methods in event-{tty,gtk,Xt,mswindows}.c. Make wrapping functions event_stream_{compare,hash,format}_magic_event() to check if everything's OK and call the actual callback. Fix events.c to use the new methods. Add a new event-stream-operation EVENT_STREAM_NOTHING -- event stream not actually required to be able to do anything, just be open. (#### This event-stream-operation stuff needs to be rethought.) Fixed describe_event() in event-Xt.c to print its output to a stream, not always to stderr, so it can be used elsewhere. (e.g. in print-event when a magic event is encountered?) lisp.h, lrecord.h: Define new assert_at_line(), for use in asserts inside of inline functions. The assert will report the line and file of the inline function, which is almost certainly not what you want as it's useless. what you want to see is where the pseudo-macro was called from. So, when error-checking is on, we pass in the line and file into the macros, for accurate printout using assert_at_line(). Happens only when error-checking is defined so doesn't slow down non-error-checking builds. Fix XCHAR, XINT, XCHAR_OR_INT, XFOO, and wrap_foo() in this fashion. lstream.c, lstream.h: Add resizing_buffer_to_lisp_string(). objects-gtk.c: Fix typo. objects-msw.c: Implement a smarter way of determining whether a font matches a charset. Formerly we just looked at the "script" element of the font spec, converted it to a code page, and compared it with the code page derived from the charset. Now, as well as doing this, we ask the font for the list of unicode ranges it supports, see what range the charset falls into (#### bogus! need to do this char-by-char), and see if any of the font's supported ranges include the charset's range. also do some caching in Vfont_signature_data of previous inquiries. charset.h, text.c, mule-charset.c: New fun; extracted out of Fmake_char() and declare prototype in charset.h. text.h: introduce assert_by_line() to make REP_BYTES_BY_FIRST_BYTE report the file and line more accurately in an assertion failure. unicode.c: make non-static (used in objects-msw.c), declare in charset.h. mule\mule-category.el: Start implementing a category API compatible with FSF. Not there yet. We need improvements to char-tables. mule\mule-charset.el: Copy translation table code from FSF 21.1 and fix up. Eventually we'll have them in XEmacs. (used in ccl) Not here quite yet, and we need some improvements to char-tables. mule\cyril-util.el, mule\cyrillic.el, mule\devan-util.el, mule\ethio-util.el, mule\korea-util.el, mule\mule-tty-init.el, mule\tibet-util.el, mule\viet-util.el, mule\vietnamese.el: Fix numerous compilation warnings. Fix up code related to translation tables and other types of char-tables. menubar-items.el: Move the frame commands from the View menu to the File menu, to be consistent with how most other programs do things. Move less-used revert/recover items to a submenu. Make "recover" not prompt for a file, but recover the current buffer. TODO.ben-mule-21-5: Create bug list for latest problems.
author ben
date Thu, 21 Mar 2002 07:31:30 +0000
parents 576fb035e263
children aa5ed11f473b
line wrap: on
line source

;;; paths.el --- define pathnames for use by various Emacs commands.

;; Copyright (C) 1986, 1988, 1993, 1994, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

;; Maintainer: FSF
;; Keywords: internal, dumped

;; This file is part of XEmacs.

;; XEmacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
;; under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
;; any later version.

;; XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
;; WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU
;; General Public License for more details.

;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with XEmacs; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to the Free
;; Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

;;; Synched up with: FSF 19.30.

;;; Commentary:

;; This file is dumped with XEmacs.

;; These are default settings for names of certain files and directories
;; that Emacs needs to refer to from time to time.

;; If these settings are not right, override them with `setq'
;; in site-start.el.  Do not change this file.

;;; Code:

;Note: FSF's version is:
;(defvar Info-default-directory-list
;  (let ((start (list "/usr/local/lib/info/"
;		      ;; This comes second so that, if it is the same
;		      ;; as configure-info-directory (which is usually true)
;		      ;; and Emacs has been installed (also usually true)
;		      ;; then the list will end with two copies of this;
;		      ;; which means that the last dir file Info-insert-dir
;		      ;; finds will be the one in this directory.
;		      "/usr/local/info/"))
;	 (configdir (file-name-as-directory configure-info-directory)))
;    (setq start (nconc start (list configdir)))
;    start)
;  "List of directories to search for Info documentation files.
;They are searched in the order they are given in this list.
;Therefore, the directory of Info files that come with Emacs
;normally should come last (so that local files override standard ones).")

;Our commented-out version is:
;(defvar Info-default-directory-list
;  (let ((start (list "/usr/local/info/"
;		     "/usr/local/lib/info/"))
;	(configdir (file-name-as-directory configure-info-directory)))
;    (or (member configdir start)
;	(setq start (nconc start (list configdir))))
;    (or (member (expand-file-name "../info/" data-directory) start)
;	(setq start
;	      (nconc start
;		     (list (expand-file-name "../info/" data-directory)))))
;    start)
;  "List of directories to search for Info documentation files.")

(defvar news-path "/usr/spool/news/"
  "The root directory below which all news files are stored.")

(defvar news-inews-program nil
  "Program to post news.")

;(defvar gnus-default-nntp-server ""
;  ;; set this to your local server
;  "The name of the host running an NNTP server.
;If it is a string such as \":DIRECTORY\", then ~/DIRECTORY
;is used as a news spool.  `gnus-nntp-server' is initialized from NNTPSERVER
;environment variable or, if none, this value.")

;(defvar gnus-nntp-service "nntp"
;  "NNTP service name, usually \"nntp\" or 119).
;Go to a local news spool if its value is nil, in which case `gnus-nntp-server'
;should be set to `(system-name)'.")

(defvar mh-progs nil
  "Directory containing MH commands.")

(defvar mh-lib nil
  "Directory of MH library.")

(defvar rmail-file-name "~/RMAIL"
  "Name of user's primary mail file.")

(defconst rmail-spool-directory nil
  "Name of directory used by system mailer for delivering new mail.
Its name should end with a slash.")

(defconst sendmail-program nil
  "Program used to send messages.")

(defconst remote-shell-program nil
  "Program used to execute shell commands on a remote machine.")

(defconst term-file-prefix "term/"
  "If non-nil, Emacs startup does (load (concat term-file-prefix (getenv \"TERM\")))
You may set this variable to nil in your `.emacs' file if you do not wish
the terminal-initialization file to be loaded.")

(defconst manual-program nil
  "Program to run to print man pages.")

(defconst abbrev-file-name "~/.abbrev_defs"
  "*Default name of file to read abbrevs from.")

(defconst directory-abbrev-alist nil)

;; Formerly, the values of these variables were computed once
;; (at dump time).  However, with the advent of pre-compiled binaries
;; and homebrewed systems such as Linux where who knows where the
;; hell the various programs may be located (if they even exist at all),
;; it's clear that we need to recompute these values at run time.
;; In typical short-sightedness, site administrators have been told up
;; till now to do `setq's in site-init.el, which is run only once --
;; at dump time.  So we have to do contortions to make sure we don't
;; override values set in site-init.el.

(defun initialize-xemacs-paths ()
  "Initialize the XEmacs path variables from the environment.
Called automatically at dump time and run time.  Do not call this.
Will not override settings in site-init.el or site-run.el."
  (let ((l #'(lambda (var value)
	       (let ((origsym (intern (concat "paths-el-original-"
					      (symbol-name var)))))
		 (if (running-temacs-p)
		     (progn
		       (set var value)
		       (set origsym value))
		   (and (eq (symbol-value var) (symbol-value origsym))
			(set var value)))))))
    (funcall
     l 'news-inews-program
     (cond ((file-exists-p "/usr/bin/inews") "/usr/bin/inews")
	   ((file-exists-p "/usr/local/inews") "/usr/local/inews")
	   ((file-exists-p "/usr/local/bin/inews") "/usr/local/bin/inews")
	   ((file-exists-p "/usr/lib/news/inews") "/usr/lib/news/inews")
	   (t "inews")))

    (funcall
     l 'mh-progs
     (cond ((file-directory-p "/usr/bin/mh") "/usr/bin/mh/") ;Ultrix 4.2
	   ((file-directory-p "/usr/new/mh") "/usr/new/mh/") ;Ultrix <4.2
	   ((file-directory-p "/usr/local/bin/mh") "/usr/local/bin/mh/")
	   ((file-directory-p "/usr/local/mh") "/usr/local/mh/")
	   (t "/usr/local/bin/")))

    (funcall
     l 'mh-libs
     (cond ((file-directory-p "/usr/lib/mh") "/usr/lib/mh/") ;Ultrix 4.2
	   ((file-directory-p "/usr/new/lib/mh")
	    "/usr/new/lib/mh/") ;Ultrix <4.2
	   ((file-directory-p "/usr/local/lib/mh") "/usr/local/lib/mh/")
	   (t "/usr/local/bin/mh/")))

    (funcall
     l 'rmail-spool-directory
     (cond ((string-match "^[^-]+-[^-]+-sco3.2v4" system-configuration)
	    "/usr/spool/mail/")
	   ;; On The Bull DPX/2 /usr/spool/mail is used although
	   ;; it is usg-unix-v.
	   ((string-match "^m68k-bull-sysv3" system-configuration)
	    "/usr/spool/mail/")
	   ;; SVR4 and recent BSD are said to use this.
	   ;; Rather than trying to know precisely which systems use it,
	   ;; let's assume this dir is never used for anything else.
	   ((file-exists-p "/var/mail")
	    "/var/mail/")
	   ((memq system-type '(dgux hpux usg-unix-v unisoft-unix rtu irix))
	    "/usr/mail/")
	   ((memq system-type '(linux))
	    "/var/spool/mail/")
	   (t "/usr/spool/mail/")))

    (funcall
     l 'sendmail-program
     (cond
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/lib/sendmail") "/usr/lib/sendmail")
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/sbin/sendmail") "/usr/sbin/sendmail")
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/ucblib/sendmail") "/usr/ucblib/sendmail")
      (t "fakemail")))		;In ../etc, to interface to /bin/mail.

    (funcall
     l 'remote-shell-program
     (cond
      ;; Some systems use rsh for the remote shell; others use that
      ;; name for the restricted shell and use remsh for the remote
      ;; shell.  Let's try to guess based on what we actually find
      ;; out there.  The restricted shell is almost certainly in
      ;; /bin or /usr/bin, so it's probably safe to assume that an
      ;; rsh found elsewhere is the remote shell program.  The
      ;; converse is not true: /usr/bin/rsh could be either one, so
      ;; check that last.
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/ucb/remsh") "/usr/ucb/remsh")
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/bsd/remsh") "/usr/bsd/remsh")
      ((file-exists-p "/bin/remsh") "/bin/remsh")
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/bin/remsh") "/usr/bin/remsh")
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/local/bin/remsh") "/usr/local/bin/remsh")
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/ucb/rsh") "/usr/ucb/rsh")
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/bsd/rsh") "/usr/bsd/rsh")
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/local/bin/rsh") "/usr/local/bin/rsh")
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/bin/rcmd") "/usr/bin/rcmd")
      ((file-exists-p "/bin/rcmd") "/bin/rcmd")
      ((file-exists-p "/bin/rsh") "/bin/rsh")
      ((file-exists-p "/usr/bin/rsh") "/usr/bin/rsh")
      (t "rsh")))

    (funcall
     l 'manual-program
     ;; Solaris 2 has both of these files; prefer /usr/ucb/man
     ;; because the other has nonstandard argument conventions.
     (if (file-exists-p "/usr/ucb/man")
	 "/usr/ucb/man" "/usr/bin/man"))

    (funcall
     l 'directory-abbrev-alist
     ;; Try to match various conventions for automounter temporary
     ;; mount points.  These temporary mount points may go away, so
     ;; it's important that we only try to read files under the
     ;; "advertised" mount point, rather than the temporary one, or it
     ;; will look like files have been deleted on us.  Whoever came up
     ;; with this design is clearly a moron of the first order, but
     ;; now we're stuck with it, no doubt until the end of time.
     ;;
     ;; For best results, automounter junk should go near the front of this
     ;; list, and other user translations should come after it.
     ;;
     ;; Our code handles the following empirically observed conventions:
     ;; /net is an actual directory! (some systems are not broken!)
     ;; /net/HOST -> /tmp_mnt/net/HOST (`standard' old Sun automounter)
     ;; /net/HOST -> /tmp_mnt/HOST (BSDI 4.0)
     ;; /net/HOST -> /a/HOST (Freebsd 2.2.x)
     ;; /net/HOST -> /amd/HOST (seen in amd sample config files)
     ;;
     ;; If your system has a different convention, you may have to change this.
     ;; Don't forget to send in a patch!
     (when (file-directory-p "/net")
       (append
	(when (file-directory-p "/tmp_mnt")
	  (if (file-directory-p "/tmp_mnt/net")
	      '(("\\`/tmp_mnt/net/" . "/net/"))
	    '(("\\`/tmp_mnt/" . "/net/"))))
	(when (file-directory-p "/a")
	  '(("\\`/a/" . "/net/")))
	(when (file-directory-p "/amd")
	  '(("\\`/amd/" . "/net/")))
	)))
))

(if (running-temacs-p)
    (initialize-xemacs-paths))

;;; paths.el ends here