view src/font-mgr.h @ 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 75975fd0b7fc
children a6c778975d7d e0db3c197671
line wrap: on
line source

/* Lisp font data structures for X and Xft.

Copyright (C) 2003 Eric Knauel and Matthias Neubauer
Copyright (C) 2005 Eric Knauel
Copyright (C) 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

Authors:	Eric Knauel <knauel@informatik.uni-tuebingen.de>
		Matthias Neubauer <neubauer@informatik.uni-freiburg.de>
		Stephen J. Turnbull <stephen@xemacs.org>
Created:	27 Oct 2003
Updated:	05 Mar 2005 by Stephen J. Turnbull

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 GNU Emacs. */

/* This module provides the Lisp interface to fonts in X11, including Xft,
   but (at least at first) not GTK+ or Qt.

   It should be renamed to fonts-x.h.

   Sealevel code should be in ../lwlib/lwlib-fonts.h or
   ../lwlib/lwlib-colors.h.
*/


#ifndef INCLUDED_font_mgr_h_
#define INCLUDED_font_mgr_h_

#include "../lwlib/lwlib-fonts.h"
#include "../lwlib/lwlib-colors.h"

extern Fixnum debug_xft;

/* Standard for fontconfig.  Use a macro to show we're not guessing. */
#define Qfc_font_name_encoding Qutf_8

#define XE_XLFD_MAKE_LISP_STRING(s) (make_string(s, strlen(s)))

struct fc_pattern
{
  struct LCRECORD_HEADER header;
  FcPattern *fcpatPtr;
};

typedef struct fc_pattern fc_pattern;

DECLARE_LRECORD(fc_pattern, struct fc_pattern);
#define XFCPATTERN(x) XRECORD (x, fc_pattern, struct fc_pattern)
#define wrap_fcpattern(p) wrap_record (p, fc_pattern)
#define FCPATTERNP(x) RECORDP (x, fc_pattern)
#define CHECK_FCPATTERN(x) CHECK_RECORD (x, fc_pattern)
#define CONCHECK_FCPATTERN(x) CONCHECK_RECORD (x, fc_pattern)
#define XFCPATTERN_PTR(x) (XFCPATTERN(x)->fcpatPtr)

#define FONTCONFIG_EXPOSE_CONFIG
#ifdef FONTCONFIG_EXPOSE_CONFIG

struct fc_config
{
  struct LCRECORD_HEADER header;
  FcConfig *fccfgPtr;
};

typedef struct fc_config fc_config;

DECLARE_LRECORD(fc_config, struct fc_config);
#define XFCCONFIG(x) XRECORD (x, fc_config, struct fc_config)
#define wrap_fcconfig(p) wrap_record (p, fc_config)
#define FCCONFIGP(x) RECORDP (x, fc_config)
#define CHECK_FCCONFIG(x) CHECK_RECORD (x, fc_config)
#define CONCHECK_FCCONFIG(x) CONCHECK_RECORD (x, fc_config)
#define XFCCONFIG_PTR(x) (XFCCONFIG(x)->fccfgPtr)

#endif /* FONTCONFIG_EXPOSE_CONFIG */

#ifdef USE_XFT

#ifndef HAVE_FCCONFIGGETRESCANINTERVAL
/* Older fontconfig versions misspell this function name. */
#define FcConfigGetRescanInterval FcConfigGetRescanInverval 
#endif /* */

#ifndef HAVE_FCCONFIGSETRESCANINTERVAL
/* Older fontconfig versions misspell this function name. */
#define FcConfigSetRescanInterval FcConfigSetRescanInverval 
#endif /* */

/*
  The format of a fontname (as returned by fontconfig) is not well-documented,
  But the character repertoire is represented in an ASCII-compatible way.  See
  fccharset.c (FcCharSetUnparse).  So we can use UTF-8 for long names.

  Currently we have a hack where different versions of the unparsed name are
  used in different contexts fairly arbitrarily.  I don't think this is close
  to coherency; even without the charset and lang properties fontconfig names
  are too unwieldy to use.  We need to rethink the approach here.  I think
  probably Lisp_Font_Instance.name should contain the font name as specified
  to Lisp (almost surely much shorter than shortname, even, and most likely
  wildcarded), while Lisp_Font_Instance.truename should contain the longname.
  For now, I'm going to #ifdef the return values defaulting to short. -- sjt
*/

/*                DEBUGGING STUFF                */

/* print message to stderr: one internal-format string argument */
#define DEBUG_XFT0(level,s)		\
  if (debug_xft > level) stderr_out (s)

/* print message to stderr: one formatted argument */
#define DEBUG_XFT1(level,format,x1)		\
  if (debug_xft > level) stderr_out (format, x1)

/* print message to stderr: two formatted arguments */
#define DEBUG_XFT2(level,format,x1,x2)			\
  if (debug_xft > level) stderr_out (format, x1, x2)

/* print message to stderr: three formatted arguments */
#define DEBUG_XFT3(level,format,x1,x2,x3)			\
  if (debug_xft > level) stderr_out (format, x1, x2, x3)

/* print message to stderr: four formatted arguments */
#define DEBUG_XFT4(level,format,x1,x2,x3,x4)			\
  if (debug_xft > level) stderr_out (format, x1, x2, x3, x4)

/* print an Xft pattern to stderr
   LEVEL is the debug level (to compare to debug_xft)
   FORMAT is a newline-terminated printf format with one %s for the pattern
     and must be internal format (eg, pure ASCII)
   PATTERN is an FcPattern *. */
#define PRINT_XFT_PATTERN(level,format,pattern)			\
  do {								\
    DECLARE_EISTRING (eistrpxft_name);				\
    Extbyte *name = (Extbyte *) FcNameUnparse (pattern);	\
								\
    eicpy_ext(eistrpxft_name,					\
              name ? name : "FONT WITH NULL NAME",		\
              Qfc_font_name_encoding);				\
    DEBUG_XFT1 (level, format, eidata(eistrpxft_name));		\
    free (name);						\
  } while (0)

/* print a progress message
   LEVEL is the debug level (to compare to debug_xft)
   FONT is the Xft font name in Mule internal encoding (from an eistring).
   LANG is the language being checked for support (must be ASCII). */
#define CHECKING_LANG(level,font,lang)					\
  do {									\
    DEBUG_XFT2 (level, "checking if %s handles %s\n", font, lang);	\
  } while (0)

#else /* USE_XFT */

#endif /* USE_XFT */

#endif /* INCLUDED_font_mgr_h_ */