view src/gccache-gtk.c @ 844:047d37eb70d7

[xemacs-hg @ 2002-05-16 13:30:23 by ben] ui fixes for things that were bothering me bytecode.c, editfns.c, lisp.h, lread.c: Fix save-restriction to use markers rather than pseudo-markers (integers representing the amount of text on either side of the region). That way, all inserts are handled correctly, not just those inside old restriction. Add buffer argument to save_restriction_save(). process.c: Clean up very dirty and kludgy code that outputs into a buffer -- use proper unwind protects, etc. font-lock.c: Do save-restriction/widen around the function -- otherwise, incorrect results will ensue when a buffer has been narrowed before a call to e.g. `buffer-syntactic-context' -- something that happens quite often. fileio.c: Look for a handler for make-temp-name. window.c, winslots.h: Try to solve this annoying problem: have two frames displaying the buffer, in different places; in one, temporarily switch away to another buffer and then back -- and you've lost your position; it's reset to the other one in the other frame. My current solution involves window-level caches of buffers and points (also a cache for window-start); when set-window-buffer is called, it looks to see if the buffer was previously visited in the window, and if so, uses the most recent point at that time. (It's a marker, so it handles changes.) #### Note: It could be argued that doing it on the frame level would be better -- e.g. if you visit a buffer temporarily through a grep, and then go back to that buffer, you presumably want the grep's position rather than some previous position provided everything was in the same frame, even though the grep was in another window in the frame. However, doing it on the frame level fails when you have two windows on the same frame. Perhaps we keep both a window and a frame cache, and use the frame cache if there are no other windows on the frame showing the buffer, else the window's cache? This is probably something to be configurable using a specifier. Suggestions please please please? window.c: Clean up a bit code that deals with the annoyance of window-point vs. point. dialog.el: Function to ask a multiple-choice question, automatically choosing a dialog box or minibuffer representation as necessary. Generalized version of yes-or-no-p, y-or-n-p. files.el: Use get-user-response to ask "yes/no/diff" question when recovering. "diff" means that a diff is displayed between the current file and the autosave. (Converts/deconverts escape-quoted as necessary. No more complaints from you, Mr. Turnbull!) One known problem: when a dialog is used, it's modal, so you can't scroll the diff. Will fix soon. lisp-mode.el: If we're filling a string, don't treat semicolon as a comment, which would give very unfriendly results. Uses `buffer-syntactic-context'. simple.el: all changes back to the beginning. (Useful if you've saved the file in the middle of the changes.) simple.el: Add option kill-word-into-kill-ring, which controls whether words deleted with kill-word, backward-kill-word, etc. are "cut" into the kill ring, or "cleared" into nothingness. (My preference is the latter, by far. I'd almost go so far as suggesting we make it the default, as you can always select a word and then cut it if you want it cut.) menubar-items.el: Add option corresponding to kill-word-into-kill-ring.
author ben
date Thu, 16 May 2002 13:30:58 +0000
parents 2923009caf47
children a8d8f419b459
line wrap: on
line source

/* Efficient caching of Gtk GCs (graphics contexts).
   Copyright (C) 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
   Copyright (C) 1994, 1995 Board of Trustees, University of Illinois.

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, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.  */

/* Synched up with: Not in FSF. */

/* Emacs uses a lot of different display attributes; for example, assume
   that only four fonts are in use (normal, bold, italic, and bold-italic).
   Then assume that one stipple or background is used for text selections,
   and another is used for highlighting mousable regions.  That makes 16
   GCs already.  Add in the fact that another GC may be needed to display
   the text cursor in any of those regions, and you've got 32.  Add in
   more fonts, and it keeps increasing exponentially.

   We used to keep these GCs in a cache of merged (fully qualified) faces.
   However, a lot of other code in xterm.c used XChangeGC of existing GCs,
   which is kind of slow and kind of random.  Also, managing the face cache
   was tricky because it was hard to know when a face was no longer visible
   on the frame -- we had to mark all frames as garbaged whenever a face
   was changed, which caused an unpleasant amount of flicker (since faces are
   created/destroyed (= changed) whenever a frame is created/destroyed.

   So this code maintains a cache at the GC level instead of at the face
   level.  There is an upper limit on the size of the cache, after which we
   will stop creating GCs and start reusing them (reusing the least-recently-
   used ones first).  So if faces get changed, their GCs will eventually be
   recycled.  Also more sharing of GCs is possible.

   This code uses hashtables.  It could be that, if the cache size is small
   enough, a linear search might be faster; but I doubt it, since we need
   `equal' comparisons, not `eq', and I expect that the optimal cache size
   will be ~100.

   Written by jwz, 14 jun 93
   Hacked by William Perry, apr 2000
 */

#include <config.h>
#include <gtk/gtk.h>
#include "lisp.h"
#include "gccache-gtk.h"

#define GC_CACHE_SIZE 100

#define GCCACHE_HASH

#ifdef GCCACHE_HASH
#include "lisp.h"
#include "hash.h"
#endif

struct gcv_and_mask {
	GdkGCValues gcv;
	GdkGCValuesMask mask;
};

struct gc_cache_cell {
  GdkGC *gc;
  struct gcv_and_mask gcvm;
  struct gc_cache_cell *prev, *next;
};

struct gc_cache {
  GdkWindow *window;	/* used only as arg to XCreateGC */
  int size;
  struct gc_cache_cell *head;
  struct gc_cache_cell *tail;
#ifdef GCCACHE_HASH
  struct hash_table * table;
#endif

  int create_count;
  int delete_count;
};

#ifdef GCCACHE_HASH
static unsigned long
gc_cache_hash (const void *arg)
{
  const struct gcv_and_mask *gcvm = (const struct gcv_and_mask *) arg;
  unsigned long *longs = (unsigned long *) &gcvm->gcv;
  unsigned long hash = gcvm->mask;
  unsigned int i;
  /* This could look at the mask and only use the used slots in the
     hash code.  That would win in that we wouldn't have to initialize
     every slot of the gcv when calling gc_cache_lookup.  But we need
     the hash function to be as fast as possible; some timings should
     be done. */
  for (i = 0; i < (sizeof (GdkGCValues) / sizeof (unsigned long)); i++)
    hash = (hash<<1) ^ *longs++;
  return hash;
}

#endif /* GCCACHE_HASH */

static int
gc_cache_eql (const void *arg1, const void *arg2)
{
  /* See comment in gc_cache_hash */
  const struct gcv_and_mask *gcvm1 = (const struct gcv_and_mask *) arg1;
  const struct gcv_and_mask *gcvm2 = (const struct gcv_and_mask *) arg2;

  return !memcmp(&gcvm1->gcv, &gcvm2->gcv, sizeof(gcvm1->gcv))
    && gcvm1->mask == gcvm2->mask;
}

struct gc_cache *
make_gc_cache (GtkWidget *widget)
{
  struct gc_cache *cache = xnew (struct gc_cache);
  cache->window = widget->window;
  cache->size = 0;
  cache->head = cache->tail = 0;
  cache->create_count = cache->delete_count = 0;
#ifdef GCCACHE_HASH
  cache->table =
    make_general_hash_table (GC_CACHE_SIZE, gc_cache_hash, gc_cache_eql);
#endif
  return cache;
}

void
free_gc_cache (struct gc_cache *cache)
{
  struct gc_cache_cell *rest, *next;
  rest = cache->head;
  while (rest)
    {
      gdk_gc_destroy(rest->gc);
      next = rest->next;
      xfree (rest);
      rest = next;
    }
#ifdef GCCACHE_HASH
  free_hash_table (cache->table);
#endif
  xfree (cache);
}

GdkGC *
gc_cache_lookup (struct gc_cache *cache, GdkGCValues *gcv, GdkGCValuesMask mask)
{
  struct gc_cache_cell *cell, *next, *prev;
  struct gcv_and_mask gcvm;

  if ((!!cache->head) != (!!cache->tail)) abort ();
  if (cache->head && (cache->head->prev || cache->tail->next)) abort ();

  /* Gdk does not have the equivalent of 'None' for the clip_mask, so
     we need to check it carefully, or gdk_gc_new_with_values will
     coredump */
  if ((mask & GDK_GC_CLIP_MASK) && !gcv->clip_mask)
  {
      mask &= ~GDK_GC_CLIP_MASK;
  }

  gcvm.mask = mask;
  gcvm.gcv = *gcv;	/* this copies... */

#ifdef GCCACHE_HASH

  if (gethash (&gcvm, cache->table, (const void **) &cell))

#else /* !GCCACHE_HASH */

  cell = cache->tail;	/* start at the end (most recently used) */
  while (cell)
    {
      if (gc_cache_eql (&gcvm, &cell->gcvm))
	break;
      else
	cell = cell->prev;
    }

  /* #### This whole file needs some serious overhauling. */
  if (!(mask | GDK_GC_TILE) && cell->gcvm.gcv.tile)
    cell = 0;
  else if (!(mask | GDK_GC_STIPPLE) && cell->gcvm.gcv.stipple)
    cell = 0;

  if (cell)

#endif /* !GCCACHE_HASH */

    {
      /* Found a cell.  Move this cell to the end of the list, so that it
	 will be less likely to be collected than a cell that was accessed
	 less recently.
       */
      if (cell == cache->tail)
	return cell->gc;

      next = cell->next;
      prev = cell->prev;
      if (prev) prev->next = next;
      if (next) next->prev = prev;
      if (cache->head == cell) cache->head = next;
      cell->next = 0;
      cell->prev = cache->tail;
      cache->tail->next = cell;
      cache->tail = cell;
      if (cache->head == cell) abort ();
      if (cell->next) abort ();
      if (cache->head->prev) abort ();
      if (cache->tail->next) abort ();
      return cell->gc;
    }

  /* else, cache miss. */

  if (cache->size == GC_CACHE_SIZE)
    /* Reuse the first cell on the list (least-recently-used).
       Remove it from the list, and unhash it from the table.
     */
    {
      cell = cache->head;
      cache->head = cell->next;
      cache->head->prev = 0;
      if (cache->tail == cell) cache->tail = 0; /* only one */
      gdk_gc_destroy (cell->gc);
      cache->delete_count++;
#ifdef GCCACHE_HASH
      remhash (&cell->gcvm, cache->table);
#endif
    }
  else if (cache->size > GC_CACHE_SIZE)
    abort ();
  else
    {
      /* Allocate a new cell (don't put it in the list or table yet). */
      cell = xnew (struct gc_cache_cell);
      cache->size++;
    }

  /* Now we've got a cell (new or reused).  Fill it in. */
  memcpy (&cell->gcvm.gcv, gcv, sizeof (GdkGCValues));
  cell->gcvm.mask = mask;

  /* Put the cell on the end of the list. */
  cell->next = 0;
  cell->prev = cache->tail;
  if (cache->tail) cache->tail->next = cell;
  cache->tail = cell;
  if (! cache->head) cache->head = cell;

  cache->create_count++;
#ifdef GCCACHE_HASH
  /* Hash it in the table */
  puthash (&cell->gcvm, cell, cache->table);
#endif

  /* Now make and return the GC. */
  cell->gc = gdk_gc_new_with_values (cache->window, gcv, mask);

  /* debug */
  assert (cell->gc == gc_cache_lookup (cache, gcv, mask));

  return cell->gc;
}