Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view lisp/msw-faces.el @ 4921:17362f371cc2
add more byte-code assertions and better failure output
-------------------- ChangeLog entries follow: --------------------
src/ChangeLog addition:
2010-02-03 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
* alloc.c (Fmake_byte_code):
* bytecode.h:
* lisp.h:
* lread.c:
* lread.c (readevalloop):
* lread.c (Fread):
* lread.c (Fread_from_string):
* lread.c (read_list_conser):
* lread.c (read_list):
* lread.c (vars_of_lread):
* symbols.c:
* symbols.c (Fdefine_function):
Turn on the "compiled-function annotation hack". Implement it
properly by hooking into Fdefalias(). Note in the docstring to
`defalias' that we do this. Remove some old broken code and
change code that implemented the old kludgy way of hooking into
the Lisp reader into bracketed by `#ifdef
COMPILED_FUNCTION_ANNOTATION_HACK_OLD_WAY', which is not enabled.
Also enable byte-code metering when DEBUG_XEMACS -- this is a form
of profiling for computing histograms of which sequences of two
bytecodes are used most often.
* bytecode-ops.h:
* bytecode-ops.h (OPCODE):
New file. Extract out all the opcodes and declare them using
OPCODE(), a bit like frame slots and such. This way the file can
be included multiple times if necessary to iterate multiple times
over the byte opcodes.
* bytecode.c:
* bytecode.c (NUM_REMEMBERED_BYTE_OPS):
* bytecode.c (OPCODE):
* bytecode.c (assert_failed_with_remembered_ops):
* bytecode.c (READ_UINT_2):
* bytecode.c (READ_INT_1):
* bytecode.c (READ_INT_2):
* bytecode.c (PEEK_INT_1):
* bytecode.c (PEEK_INT_2):
* bytecode.c (JUMP_RELATIVE):
* bytecode.c (JUMP_NEXT):
* bytecode.c (PUSH):
* bytecode.c (POP_WITH_MULTIPLE_VALUES):
* bytecode.c (DISCARD):
* bytecode.c (UNUSED):
* bytecode.c (optimize_byte_code):
* bytecode.c (optimize_compiled_function):
* bytecode.c (Fbyte_code):
* bytecode.c (vars_of_bytecode):
* bytecode.c (init_opcode_table_multi_op):
* bytecode.c (reinit_vars_of_bytecode):
* emacs.c (main_1):
* eval.c (funcall_compiled_function):
* symsinit.h:
Any time we change either the instruction pointer or the stack
pointer, assert that we're going to move it to a valid location.
This should catch failures right when they occur rather than
sometime later. This requires that we pass in another couple of
parameters into some functions (only with error-checking enabled,
see below).
Also keep track, using a circular queue, of the last 100 byte
opcodes seen, and when we hit an assert failure during byte-code
execution, output the contents of the queue in a nice readable
fashion. This requires that bytecode-ops.h be included a second
time so that a table mapping opcodes to the name of their operation
can be constructed. This table is constructed in new function
reinit_vars_of_bytecode().
Everything in the last two paras happens only when
ERROR_CHECK_BYTE_CODE.
Add some longish comments describing how the arrays that hold the
stack and instructions, and the pointers used to access them, work.
* gc.c:
Import some code from my `latest-fix' workspace to mark the
staticpro's in order from lowest to highest, rather than highest to
lowest, so it's easier to debug when something goes wrong.
* lisp.h (abort_with_message): Renamed from abort_with_msg().
* symbols.c (defsymbol_massage_name_1):
* symbols.c (defsymbol_nodump):
* symbols.c (defsymbol):
* symbols.c (defkeyword):
* symeval.h (DEFVAR_SYMVAL_FWD_OBJECT):
Make the various calls to staticpro() instead call staticpro_1(),
passing in the name of the C var being staticpro'ed, so that it
shows up in staticpro_names. Otherwise staticpro_names just has
1000+ copies of the word `location'.
author | Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 03 Feb 2010 08:01:55 -0600 |
parents | 58cd1008908c |
children | 668c73e222fd |
line wrap: on
line source
;;; msw-faces.el --- mswindows-specific face stuff. ;;; Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;;; Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 2002 Ben Wing. ;; Author: Jamie Zawinski ;; Modified by: Chuck Thompson ;; Modified by: Ben Wing ;; Modified by: Martin Buchholz ;; Rewritten for mswindows by: Jonathan Harris ;; 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. ;; This file does the magic to parse mswindows font names, and make sure that ;; the default and modeline attributes of new frames are specified enough. (globally-declare-boundp '(mswindows-font-regexp mswindows-font-regexp-missing-1 mswindows-font-regexp-missing-2 mswindows-font-regexp-missing-3 mswindows-font-regexp-missing-4)) (defun mswindows-init-global-faces () (set-face-font 'gui-element "MS Sans Serif:Regular:8" nil 'mswindows)) (defun mswindows-init-device-faces (device) (let ((color-default (device-system-metric device 'color-default)) (color-3d-face (device-system-metric device 'color-3d-face))) ; Force creation of the default face font so that if it fails we get ; an error now instead of a crash at frame creation. (unless (face-font-instance 'default device) (error "Can't find a suitable default font")) ;; Don't set them on the device because then the global setting won't ;; override them. ;; #### Use device tags if we have multiple msprinter devices. (can we?) (if (car color-default) (set-face-foreground 'default (car color-default) nil (device-type device))) (if (cdr color-default) (set-face-background 'default (cdr color-default) nil (device-type device))) (if (car color-3d-face) (set-face-foreground 'gui-element (car color-3d-face) nil (device-type device))) (if (cdr color-3d-face) (set-face-background 'gui-element (cdr color-3d-face) nil (device-type device))) )) (defun mswindows-init-frame-faces (frame) ) ;; Other functions expect these regexps (let ((- ":") ;; What happens if a font family contains a colon? I can't find any ;; documentation on that, and don't have a font editor to hand to test. (fontname "\\([^:]*\\)") ; 1 (style "\\(\\(?:[a-zA-Z]+\\(?: +[a-zA-Z]+\\)*\\)?\\)") ; 2 (pointsize "\\([0-9]*\\)") ; 3 (effects "\\(\\(?:[a-zA-Z]+\\(?: +[a-zA-Z]+\\)*\\)?\\)") ; 4 ;; must match "OEM/DOS" (charset "\\([a-zA-Z/ ]*\\)") ; 5 ) (defconst mswindows-font-regexp (concat "^" fontname - style - pointsize - effects - charset "$")) (defconst mswindows-font-regexp-missing-1 (concat "^" fontname - style - pointsize - effects "$")) (defconst mswindows-font-regexp-missing-2 (concat "^" fontname - style - pointsize "$")) (defconst mswindows-font-regexp-missing-3 (concat "^" fontname - style "$")) (defconst mswindows-font-regexp-missing-4 (concat "^" fontname "$")) ) ;;; Fill in missing parts of a font spec. This is primarily intended as a ;;; helper function for the functions below. ;;; mswindows fonts look like: ;;; fontname[:[weight][ slant][:pointsize[:effects]]][:charset] ;;; A minimal mswindows font spec looks like: ;;; Courier New ;;; A maximal mswindows font spec looks like: ;;; Courier New:Bold Italic:10:underline strikeout:Western (defun mswindows-canonicalize-font-name (font) "Given a mswindows font or font name, return its name in canonical form. This adds missing colons and fills in the style field with \"Regular\". This does *NOT* fill in the point size or charset fields, because in those cases an empty field is not equivalent to any particular field value, but a wildcard allowing for any possible value (charset Western and point size 10 are chosen first, if they exist)." (if (font-instance-p font) (setq font (font-instance-name font))) ;; fill in missing colons (setq font (cond ((string-match mswindows-font-regexp font) font) ((string-match mswindows-font-regexp-missing-1 font) (concat font ":")) ((string-match mswindows-font-regexp-missing-2 font) (concat font "::")) ((string-match mswindows-font-regexp-missing-3 font) (concat font ":::")) ((string-match mswindows-font-regexp-missing-4 font) (concat font "::::")) (t "::::"))) (or (string-match mswindows-font-regexp font) (error "can't parse %S" font)) (if (equal "" (match-string 2 font)) (concat (substring font 0 (match-beginning 2)) "Regular" (substring font (match-beginning 2))) font)) (defun mswindows-parse-font-style (style) ;; Parse a style into a cons (WEIGHT . SLANT). WEIGHT will never be the ;; empty string (it may be "Regular"), but SLANT will be empty for ;; non-italic. (save-match-data (let ((case-fold-search t)) (cond ((equalp style "Italic") '("Regular" . "Italic")) ((string-match "^\\([a-zA-Z ]+?\\) +Italic$" style) (cons (match-string 1 style) "Italic")) (t (cons style "")))))) (defun mswindows-construct-font-style (weight slant) ;; Construct the style from WEIGHT and SLANT. Opposite of ;; mswindows-parse-font-style. (cond ((and (equal slant "") (equal weight "")) "Regular") ((equal slant "") weight) ((or (equalp weight "Regular") (equal weight "")) slant) (t (concat weight " " slant)))) (defun mswindows-frob-font-style (font which) ;; Given a font name or font instance, return a name with the style field ;; (which includes weight and/or slant) changed according to WHICH, a plist. ;; If no entry found, don't change. (if (null font) nil (setq font (mswindows-canonicalize-font-name font)) (or (string-match mswindows-font-regexp font) (error "can't parse %S" font)) (let* ((style (match-string 2 font)) (style-rep (save-match-data (or (loop for (x y) on which by #'cddr if (string-match (concat "^" x "$") style) return (replace-match y nil nil style)) style)))) (concat (substring font 0 (match-beginning 2)) style-rep (substring font (match-end 2)))))) (defun mswindows-frob-font-style-and-sizify (font which &optional device) (if (null font) nil (let* ((oldwidth (if (font-instance-p font) (font-instance-width font) (let ((fi (make-font-instance font device t))) (and fi (font-instance-width fi))))) (newname (mswindows-frob-font-style font which)) (newfont (make-font-instance newname device t))) ;; Hack! On MS Windows, bold fonts (even monospaced) are often wider ;; than the equivalent non-bold font. Making the bold font one point ;; smaller usually makes it the same width (maybe at the expense of ;; making it one pixel shorter). Do the same trick in both directions. (when (font-instance-p newfont) (let ((newerfont newfont)) (block nil (while (and newerfont oldwidth) (setq newfont newerfont) (cond ((< (font-instance-width newfont) oldwidth) (setq newerfont (make-font-instance (mswindows-find-larger-font newfont device) device t)) (if (and newerfont (> (font-instance-width newerfont) oldwidth)) (return nil))) ((> (font-instance-width newfont) oldwidth) (setq newerfont (make-font-instance (mswindows-find-smaller-font newfont device) device t)) (if (and newerfont (< (font-instance-width newerfont) oldwidth)) (return nil))) (t (return nil)))))) (if (font-instance-p newfont) (font-instance-name newfont) newfont))))) (defconst mswindows-nonbold-weight-regexp ;; He looked so, so cool with the ultra light dangling from his mouth as ;; his fingers spun out demisemiquavers from the keyboard ... "\\(Regular\\|Thin\\|Extra Light\\|Ultra Light\\|Light\\|Normal\\|Medium\\|Semi Bold\\|Demi Bold\\)" ) (defconst mswindows-bold-weight-regexp "\\(Semi Bold\\|Demi Bold\\|Bold\\|Extra Bold\\|Ultra Bold\\|Heavy\\|Black\\)" ) (defconst mswindows-make-font-bold-mapper `(,mswindows-nonbold-weight-regexp "Bold" "Italic" "Bold Italic" ,(concat mswindows-nonbold-weight-regexp " Italic") "Bold Italic")) (defconst mswindows-make-font-nonbold-mapper `(,mswindows-bold-weight-regexp "Regular" ,(concat mswindows-bold-weight-regexp " Italic") "Italic")) (defconst mswindows-make-font-italic-mapper '("\\(.*\\)Italic" "\\1Italic" "\\(.*\\)" "\\1 Italic")) (defconst mswindows-make-font-unitalic-mapper '("Italic" "Regular" "\\(.*\\) Italic" "\\1")) (defconst mswindows-make-font-bold-italic-mapper `(,mswindows-nonbold-weight-regexp "Bold Italic" ,(concat mswindows-nonbold-weight-regexp " Italic") "Bold Italic" "Italic" "Bold Italic" ,mswindows-bold-weight-regexp "\\1 Italic")) (defun mswindows-make-font-bold (font &optional device) "Given a mswindows font specification, this attempts to make a bold font. If it fails, it returns nil." (mswindows-frob-font-style-and-sizify font mswindows-make-font-bold-mapper device)) (defun mswindows-make-font-unbold (font &optional device) "Given a mswindows font specification, this attempts to make a non-bold font. If it fails, it returns nil." (mswindows-frob-font-style-and-sizify font mswindows-make-font-nonbold-mapper device)) (defun mswindows-make-font-italic (font &optional device) "Given a mswindows font specification, this attempts to make an `italic' font. If it fails, it returns nil." (try-font-name (mswindows-frob-font-style font mswindows-make-font-italic-mapper) device)) (defun mswindows-make-font-unitalic (font &optional device) "Given a mswindows font specification, this attempts to make a non-italic font. If it fails, it returns nil." (try-font-name (mswindows-frob-font-style font mswindows-make-font-unitalic-mapper) device)) (defun mswindows-make-font-bold-italic (font &optional device) "Given a mswindows font specification, this attempts to make a `bold-italic' font. If it fails, it returns nil." (mswindows-frob-font-style-and-sizify font mswindows-make-font-bold-italic-mapper device)) (defun mswindows-available-font-sizes (font device) (if (font-instance-p font) (setq font (font-instance-name font))) (setq font (mswindows-canonicalize-font-name font)) (or (string-match mswindows-font-regexp font) (error "Can't parse %S" font)) ;; turn pointsize into wildcard (setq font (concat (substring font 0 (match-beginning 3)) (substring font (match-end 3) (match-end 0)))) (sort (delq nil (mapcar #'(lambda (name) (and (string-match mswindows-font-regexp name) (string-to-int (substring name (match-beginning 3) (match-end 3))))) (font-list font device))) #'<)) (defun mswindows-frob-font-size (font up-p device) (if (stringp font) (setq font (make-font-instance font device))) (let* ((name (font-instance-name font)) (truename (font-instance-truename font)) (available (and truename (mswindows-available-font-sizes truename device)))) (if (null available) nil (or (string-match mswindows-font-regexp truename) (error "can't parse %S" truename)) (let ((old-size (string-to-int (substring truename (match-beginning 3) (match-end 3))))) (or (> old-size 0) (error "font truename has 0 pointsize?")) (or (string-match mswindows-font-regexp name) (error "can't parse %S" name)) (let ((newsize ;; scalable fonts: change size by 1 point. (if (= 0 (car available)) (if (and (not up-p) (= 1 old-size)) nil (if up-p (1+ old-size) (1- old-size))) ;; non-scalable fonts: take the next available size. (if up-p (loop for tail on available if (eql (car tail) old-size) return (cadr tail)) (loop for tail on available if (eql (cadr tail) old-size) return (car tail)))))) (and newsize (concat (substring name 0 (match-beginning 3)) (int-to-string newsize) (substring name (match-end 3) (match-end 0))))))))) (defun mswindows-find-smaller-font (font &optional device) "Loads a new version of the given font (or font name) 1 point smaller. Returns the font if it succeeds, nil otherwise." (mswindows-frob-font-size font nil device)) (defun mswindows-find-larger-font (font &optional device) "Loads a new version of the given font (or font name) 1 point larger. Returns the font if it succeeds, nil otherwise." (mswindows-frob-font-size font t device))