view lisp/code-init.el @ 5157:1fae11d56ad2

redo memory-usage mechanism, add way of dynamically initializing Lisp objects -------------------- ChangeLog entries follow: -------------------- lisp/ChangeLog addition: 2010-03-18 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> * diagnose.el (show-memory-usage): Rewrite to take into account API changes in memory-usage functions. src/ChangeLog addition: 2010-03-18 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> * alloc.c: * alloc.c (disksave_object_finalization_1): * alloc.c (lisp_object_storage_size): * alloc.c (listu): * alloc.c (listn): * alloc.c (Fobject_memory_usage_stats): * alloc.c (compute_memusage_stats_length): * alloc.c (Fobject_memory_usage): * alloc.c (Ftotal_object_memory_usage): * alloc.c (malloced_storage_size): * alloc.c (common_init_alloc_early): * alloc.c (reinit_alloc_objects_early): * alloc.c (reinit_alloc_early): * alloc.c (init_alloc_once_early): * alloc.c (syms_of_alloc): * alloc.c (reinit_vars_of_alloc): * buffer.c: * buffer.c (struct buffer_stats): * buffer.c (compute_buffer_text_usage): * buffer.c (compute_buffer_usage): * buffer.c (buffer_memory_usage): * buffer.c (buffer_objects_create): * buffer.c (syms_of_buffer): * buffer.c (vars_of_buffer): * console-impl.h (struct console_methods): * dynarr.c (Dynarr_memory_usage): * emacs.c (main_1): * events.c (clear_event_resource): * extents.c: * extents.c (compute_buffer_extent_usage): * extents.c (extent_objects_create): * extents.h: * faces.c: * faces.c (compute_face_cachel_usage): * faces.c (face_objects_create): * faces.h: * general-slots.h: * glyphs.c: * glyphs.c (compute_glyph_cachel_usage): * glyphs.c (glyph_objects_create): * glyphs.h: * lisp.h: * lisp.h (struct usage_stats): * lrecord.h: * lrecord.h (enum lrecord_type): * lrecord.h (struct lrecord_implementation): * lrecord.h (MC_ALLOC_CALL_FINALIZER_FOR_DISKSAVE): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_DUMPABLE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_DUMPABLE_SIZABLE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_DUMPABLE_FROB_BLOCK_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_DUMPABLE_FROB_BLOCK_SIZABLE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_DUMPABLE_INTERNAL_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_DUMPABLE_SIZABLE_INTERNAL_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_NODUMP_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_NODUMP_SIZABLE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_NODUMP_FROB_BLOCK_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_NODUMP_FROB_BLOCK_SIZABLE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_NODUMP_INTERNAL_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_NODUMP_SIZABLE_INTERNAL_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (MAKE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_DUMPABLE_MODULE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_DUMPABLE_MODULE_SIZABLE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_NODUMP_MODULE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DEFINE_NODUMP_MODULE_SIZABLE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (MAKE_MODULE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (INIT_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (INIT_MODULE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (UNDEF_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (UNDEF_MODULE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DECLARE_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DECLARE_MODULE_API_LISP_OBJECT): * lrecord.h (DECLARE_MODULE_LISP_OBJECT): * lstream.c: * lstream.c (syms_of_lstream): * lstream.c (vars_of_lstream): * marker.c: * marker.c (compute_buffer_marker_usage): * mc-alloc.c (mc_alloced_storage_size): * mc-alloc.h: * mule-charset.c: * mule-charset.c (struct charset_stats): * mule-charset.c (compute_charset_usage): * mule-charset.c (charset_memory_usage): * mule-charset.c (mule_charset_objects_create): * mule-charset.c (syms_of_mule_charset): * mule-charset.c (vars_of_mule_charset): * redisplay.c: * redisplay.c (compute_rune_dynarr_usage): * redisplay.c (compute_display_block_dynarr_usage): * redisplay.c (compute_glyph_block_dynarr_usage): * redisplay.c (compute_display_line_dynarr_usage): * redisplay.c (compute_line_start_cache_dynarr_usage): * redisplay.h: * scrollbar-gtk.c (gtk_compute_scrollbar_instance_usage): * scrollbar-msw.c (mswindows_compute_scrollbar_instance_usage): * scrollbar-x.c (x_compute_scrollbar_instance_usage): * scrollbar.c (compute_scrollbar_instance_usage): * scrollbar.h: * symbols.c: * symbols.c (reinit_symbol_objects_early): * symbols.c (init_symbols_once_early): * symbols.c (reinit_symbols_early): * symbols.c (defsymbol_massage_name_1): * symsinit.h: * ui-gtk.c: * ui-gtk.c (emacs_gtk_object_getprop): * ui-gtk.c (emacs_gtk_object_putprop): * ui-gtk.c (ui_gtk_objects_create): * unicode.c (compute_from_unicode_table_size_1): * unicode.c (compute_to_unicode_table_size_1): * unicode.c (compute_from_unicode_table_size): * unicode.c (compute_to_unicode_table_size): * window.c: * window.c (struct window_stats): * window.c (compute_window_mirror_usage): * window.c (compute_window_usage): * window.c (window_memory_usage): * window.c (window_objects_create): * window.c (syms_of_window): * window.c (vars_of_window): * window.h: Redo memory-usage mechanism, make it general; add way of dynamically initializing Lisp object types -- OBJECT_HAS_METHOD(), similar to CONSOLE_HAS_METHOD(). (1) Create OBJECT_HAS_METHOD(), OBJECT_HAS_PROPERTY() etc. for specifying that a Lisp object type has a particular method or property. Call such methods with OBJECT_METH, MAYBE_OBJECT_METH, OBJECT_METH_OR_GIVEN; retrieve properties with OBJECT_PROPERTY. Methods that formerly required a DEFINE_*GENERAL_LISP_OBJECT() to specify them (getprop, putprop, remprop, plist, disksave) now instead use the dynamic-method mechanism. The main benefit of this is that new methods or properties can be added without requiring that the declaration statements of all existing methods be modified. We have to make the `struct lrecord_implementation' non-const, but I don't think this should have any effect on speed -- the only possible method that's really speed-critical is the mark method, and we already extract those out into a separate (non-const) array for increased cache locality. Object methods need to be reinitialized after pdump, so we put them in separate functions such as face_objects_create(), extent_objects_create() and call them appropriately from emacs.c The only current object property (`memusage_stats_list') that objects can specify is a Lisp object and gets staticpro()ed so it only needs to be set during dump time, but because it references symbols that might not exist in a syms_of_() function, we initialize it in vars_of_(). There is also an object property (`num_extra_memusage_stats') that is automatically initialized based on `memusage_stats_list'; we do that in reinit_vars_of_alloc(), which is called after all vars_of_() functions are called. `disksaver' method was renamed `disksave' to correspond with the name normally given to the function (e.g. disksave_lstream()). (2) Generalize the memory-usage mechanism in `buffer-memory-usage', `window-memory-usage', `charset-memory-usage' into an object-type- specific mechanism called by a single function `object-memory-usage'. (Former function `object-memory-usage' renamed to `total-object-memory-usage'). Generalize the mechanism of different "slices" so that we can have different "classes" of memory described and different "slices" onto each class; `t' separates classes, `nil' separates slices. Currently we have three classes defined: the memory of an object itself, non-Lisp-object memory associated with the object (e.g. arrays or dynarrs stored as fields in the object), and Lisp-object memory associated with the object (other internal Lisp objects stored in the object). This isn't completely finished yet and we might need to further separate the "other internal Lisp objects" class into two classes. The memory-usage mechanism uses a `struct usage_stats' (renamed from `struct overhead_stats') to describe a malloc-view onto a set of allocated memory (listing how much was requested and various types of overhead) and a more general `struct generic_usage_stats' (with a `struct usage_stats' in it) to hold all statistics about object memory. `struct generic_usage_stats' contains an array of 32 Bytecounts, which are statistics of unspecified semantics. The intention is that individual types declare a corresponding struct (e.g. `struct window_stats') with the same structure but with specific fields in place of the array, corresponding to specific statistics. The number of such statistics is an object property computed from the list of tags (Lisp symbols describing the statistics) stored in `memusage_stats_list'. The idea here is to allow particular object types to customize the number and semantics of the statistics where completely avoiding consing. This doesn't matter so much yet, but the intention is to have the memory usage of all objects computed at the end of GC, at the same time as other statistics are currently computed. The values for all statistics for a single type would be added up to compute aggregate values for all objects of a specific type. To make this efficient, we can't allow any memory allocation at all. (3) Create some additional functions for creating lists that specify the elements directly as args rather than indirectly through an array: listn() (number of args given), listu() (list terminated by Qunbound). (4) Delete a bit of remaining unused C window_config stuff, also unused lrecord_type_popup_data.
author Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
date Thu, 18 Mar 2010 10:50:06 -0500
parents d2ec55325515
children 308d34e9f07d
line wrap: on
line source

;;; code-init.el --- Handle coding system default values

;; Copyright (C) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2010 Ben Wing.

;; 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.

;;; Commentary:

;; Author: Ben wing, 2001?

;; Placed in a separate file so it can be loaded after the various
;; coding systems have been created, because we'll be using them at
;; load time.

;; #### Issues (this discussion probably belongs elsewhere)
;; 1.  "Big" characters are unrepresentable.  Should give error, warning,
;;     not just substitute "~".
;; 2.  21.4 compatibility?
;; 3.  make-char: non-mule barfs on non-iso8859-1.

;;; Code:

(defcustom eol-detection-enabled-p (or (featurep 'mule)
				       (memq system-type '(windows-nt
							   cygwin32))
				       (featurep 'unix-default-eol-detection))
"True if XEmacs automatically detects the EOL type when reading files.
Normally, this is always the case on Windows or when international (Mule)
support is compiled into this XEmacs.  Otherwise, it is currently off by
default, but this may change.  Don't set this; nothing will happen.  Instead,
use the Options menu or `set-eol-detection'."
  :group 'encoding
  :type 'boolean
  ;; upon initialization, we don't want the whole business of
  ;; set-eol-detection to be called.  We will init everything appropriately
  ;; later in the same file, when reset-language-environment is called.
  :initialize #'(lambda (var val)
		  (setq eol-detection-enabled-p (eval val)))
  :set #'(lambda (var val)
	   (set-eol-detection val)
	   (setq eol-detection-enabled-p val)))

(defun set-eol-detection (flag)
  "Enable (if FLAG is non-nil) or disable automatic EOL detection of files.
EOL detection is enabled by default on Windows or when international (Mule)
support is compiled into this XEmacs.  Otherwise, it is currently off by
default, but this may change.  NOTE: You *REALLY* should not turn off EOL
detection on Windows!  Your files will have lots of annoying ^M's in them
if you do this."
  (dolist (x '(bfcs-for-read
	       keyboard
	       process-read
	       no-conv-cs))
    (set-coding-system-variable
     x (coding-system-change-eol-conversion (get-coding-system-variable x)
					    (if flag nil 'lf)))))

(defun coding-system-current-system-configuration ()
  "Function to decide which default coding system configuration applies."
  (cond ((featurep 'cygwin-use-utf-8) 'cygwin-utf-8)
	((memq system-type '(windows-nt cygwin32))
	 (if (featurep 'mule) 'windows-mule 'windows-no-mule))
	((featurep 'mule) 'mule)
	(eol-detection-enabled-p 'no-mule-eol-detection)
	(t 'no-mule-no-eol-detection)))

(defvar coding-system-default-configuration-table (make-hash-table))

(defun define-coding-system-default-configuration (name doc props)
  (puthash name (nconc `(doc ,doc) props)
	   coding-system-default-configuration-table))

;; NOTE NOTE NOTE: These values may get overridden when the language
;; environment is initialized (set-language-environment-coding-systems).
(define-coding-system-default-configuration
  'no-mule-no-eol-detection
  "No Mule support, EOL detection not enabled."
  '(bfcs-for-read	binary
    default-bfcs	binary
    process-read	binary
    process-write	binary
    keyboard		binary
    native		binary
    no-conv-cs		binary
    terminal		binary))

(define-coding-system-default-configuration
  'no-mule-eol-detection
  "No Mule support, EOL detection enabled."
  '(bfcs-for-read	raw-text
    default-bfcs	binary
    process-read	raw-text
    process-write	binary
    keyboard		raw-text
    native		binary
    no-conv-cs		raw-text
    terminal		binary))

(define-coding-system-default-configuration
  'mule
  "Mule support enabled."
  '(bfcs-for-read	undecided
    default-bfcs	iso-2022-8
    process-read	undecided
    process-write	binary
    keyboard		undecided-unix
    native		binary
    no-conv-cs		raw-text
    terminal		binary))

(define-coding-system-default-configuration
  'windows-no-mule
  "Microsoft Windows, no Mule support."
  '(bfcs-for-read	raw-text
    default-bfcs	raw-text-dos
    process-read	raw-text
    process-write	raw-text
    keyboard		raw-text
    native		raw-text-dos
    no-conv-cs		raw-text
    terminal		binary))

(define-coding-system-default-configuration
  'windows-mule
  "Microsoft Windows, Mule support enabled."
  '(bfcs-for-read	undecided
    default-bfcs	mswindows-multibyte-dos
    process-read	undecided
    process-write	mswindows-multibyte-system-default
    keyboard		undecided-unix
    native		mswindows-multibyte-system-default-dos
    no-conv-cs		mswindows-multibyte
    terminal		mswindows-multibyte-unix))

(define-coding-system-default-configuration
  'cygwin-utf-8
  "Mule support enabled."
  '(bfcs-for-read	undecided
    default-bfcs	utf-8
    process-read	utf-8
    process-write	utf-8
    keyboard		utf-8
    native		utf-8
    no-conv-cs		utf-8
    terminal		utf-8))

(defvar coding-system-default-variable-list
  '(bfcs-for-read
    default-bfcs
    native
    keyboard
    terminal
    process-read
    process-write
    no-conv-cs))

(defun get-coding-system-variable (var)
  "Return the value of a basic coding system variable.
This is intended as a uniform interface onto the coding system settings that
control how encoding detection and conversion works.  See
`coding-system-variable-default-value' for a list of the possible values of
VAR."
  (case var
    (bfcs-for-read buffer-file-coding-system-for-read)
    (default-bfcs
      (default-value 'buffer-file-coding-system))
    (native (coding-system-aliasee 'native))
    (keyboard (coding-system-aliasee 'keyboard))
    (terminal (coding-system-aliasee 'terminal))
    (process-read (car default-process-coding-system))
    (process-write (cdr default-process-coding-system))
    (no-conv-cs
     (coding-category-system 'no-conversion))
    (t (error 'invalid-constant "Invalid coding system variable" var))))

(defun set-coding-system-variable (var value)
  "Set a basic coding system variable to VALUE.
This is intended as a uniform interface onto the coding system settings that
control how encoding detection and conversion works.  See
`coding-system-variable-default-value' for a list of the possible values of
VAR."
  (case var
    (bfcs-for-read
     (set-buffer-file-coding-system-for-read value))
    (default-bfcs
      (set-default-buffer-file-coding-system value))
    (native (define-coding-system-alias 'native value))
    (keyboard (set-keyboard-coding-system value))
    (terminal (set-terminal-coding-system value))
    (process-read
      (setq default-process-coding-system
	    (cons value (cdr default-process-coding-system))))
    (process-write
      (setq default-process-coding-system
	    (cons (car default-process-coding-system) value)))
    (no-conv-cs
     (set-coding-category-system 'no-conversion value))
    (t (error 'invalid-constant "Invalid coding system variable" var))))

(defun coding-system-variable-default-value (var &optional config)
  "Return the appropriate default value for a coding system variable.

VAR specifies the variable, and CONFIG the configuration, defaulting
to the current system configuration (as returned by
`coding-system-current-system-configuration').

The table of default values looks like this: (see below for abbreviations)


              NoMule NoMuleEOL Mule       MSW          MSWMule       CygUTF 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
bfcs-for-read binary raw-text undecided   raw-text     undecided     undecided
default-bfcs  binary binary   iso-2022-8  raw-text-dos MSW-MB-dos    utf-8
native        binary binary   binary      raw-text-dos MSW-MB-SD-dos utf-8
keyboard      binary raw-text undecided-  raw-text     undecided-    utf-8
                                unix                     unix
terminal      binary binary   binary      binary       MSW-MB-unix   utf-8
process-read  binary raw-text undecided   raw-text     undecided     utf-8
process-write binary binary   binary      raw-text     MSW-MB-SD     utf-8
no-conv-cs    binary raw-text raw-text    raw-text     MSW-MB        utf-8


VAR can be one of:

`bfcs-for-read'

  Lisp variable of the same name; the default coding system used when
  reading in a file, in the absence of more specific settings. (See
  `insert-file-contents' for a description of exactly how a file's
  coding system is determined when it's read in.)

`default-bfcs'

  Default value of `buffer-file-coding-system', the buffer-local
  variable specifying a file's coding system to be used when it is
  written out.  Set using `set-default-buffer-file-coding-system' (or
  the primitive `setq-default').  When a file is read in,
  `buffer-file-coding-system' for that file is set from the coding
  system used to read the file in; the default value applies to newly
  created files.

`native'

  The coding system named `native'.  Changed using
  `define-coding-system-alias'.  Used internally when passing
  text to or from system API's, unless the particular
  API specifies another coding system.

`keyboard'

 #### fill in

`terminal'

 #### fill in

`process-read'

 #### fill in

`process-write'

 #### fill in

`no-conv-cs'

  Coding system used when category `no-conversion' is detected.


CONFIG is one of: (abbreviations in parens)

`no-mule-no-eol-detection' (NoMule)

Non-Windows, no Mule support, no automatic EOL detection. (Controlled by
`eol-detection-enabled-p', which is set by the command-line flag
-enable-eol-detection or the configure flag --with-default-eol-detection.)

`unix-no-mule-eol-detection' (NoMuleEOL)

Non-Windows, no Mule support, automatic EOL detection.

`unix-mule' (Mule)

Non-Windows, Mule support.

`windows-no-mule' (MSW)

MS Windows or old Cygwin, no Mule support.

`windows-mule' (MSWMule)

MS Windows or old Cygwin, Mule support.

`cygwin-utf-8' (CygUTF)

Cygwin 1.7 or later, which uses UTF-8 consistently.

The following coding system abbreviations are also used in the table:

MSW-MB = mswindows-multibyte
MSW-MB = mswindows-multibyte-system-default
"
  (setq config (or config (coding-system-current-system-configuration)))
  (or (memq var coding-system-default-variable-list)
      (error 'invalid-constant "Invalid coding system variable" var))
  (let ((props (gethash config coding-system-default-configuration-table)))
    (or props (error 'invalid-constant "Invalid coding system configuration"
		     config))
    (getf props var)))

(defun reset-coding-system-defaults (&optional config)
  "Reset all basic coding system variables are set to their default values.
See `coding-system-variable-default-value'."
  (setq config (or config (coding-system-current-system-configuration)))
  (mapcar #'(lambda (var)
	      (set-coding-system-variable
	       var (coding-system-variable-default-value var config)))
	  coding-system-default-variable-list))

(defun reset-coding-categories-to-default ()
"Reset all coding categories (used for automatic detection) to their defaults.

The order of priorities of coding categories and the coding system
bound to each category are as follows:

	coding category		  coding system
	--------------------------------------------------
        utf-16-little-endian-bom  utf-16-little-endian
	utf-16-bom		  utf-16-bom
	utf-8-bom		  utf-8-bom
	iso-7			  iso-2022-7bit
	no-conversion		  raw-text
	utf-8			  utf-8
	iso-8-1			  iso-8859-1
	iso-8-2			  ctext (iso-8859-1 alias)
	iso-8-designate		  ctext (iso-8859-1 alias)
	iso-lock-shift		  iso-2022-lock
	shift-jis		  shift-jis
	big5			  big5
        utf-16-little-endian      utf-16-little-endian
	utf-16			  utf-16
        ucs-4			  ucs-4
"
  ;; #### What a mess!  This needs to be overhauled.

  ;; The old table (from FSF synch?) was not what we use (cf mule-coding.el),
  ;; and as documented iso-8-designate is inconsistent with iso-2022-8bit-ss2.
  ;; The order of priorities of coding categories and the coding system
  ;; bound to each category are as follows:
  ;;
  ;;	coding category		coding system
  ;;	--------------------------------------------------
  ;;	iso-8-2			iso-8859-1
  ;;	iso-8-1			iso-8859-1
  ;;	iso-7			iso-2022-7bit
  ;;	iso-lock-shift		iso-2022-lock
  ;;	iso-8-designate		iso-2022-8bit-ss2
  ;;	no-conversion		raw-text
  ;;	shift-jis		shift_jis
  ;;	big5			big5
  ;;	ucs-4			----
  ;;	utf-8			----
  (when (featurep 'mule)
    (set-coding-category-system 'iso-7	'iso-2022-7)
    (set-coding-category-system 'iso-8-1 'iso-8859-1)
    (set-coding-category-system 'iso-8-2 'ctext)
    (set-coding-category-system 'iso-lock-shift	'iso-2022-lock)
    (set-coding-category-system 'iso-8-designate 'ctext)
    (if (find-coding-system 'shift-jis)
	(set-coding-category-system 'shift-jis 'shift-jis))
    (if (find-coding-system 'big5)
	(set-coding-category-system 'big5 'big5))
    )
  (set-coding-category-system
   'no-conversion
   (coding-system-variable-default-value 'no-conv-cs))
  (set-coding-category-system 'ucs-4 'ucs-4)
  (set-coding-category-system 'utf-8 'utf-8)
  (set-coding-category-system 'utf-8-bom 'utf-8-bom)
  (set-coding-category-system 'utf-16-little-endian 'utf-16-little-endian)
  (set-coding-category-system 'utf-16 'utf-16)
  (set-coding-category-system 'utf-16-little-endian-bom
			      'utf-16-little-endian-bom)
  (set-coding-category-system 'utf-16-bom 'utf-16-bom)
  (set-coding-priority-list
   (if (featurep 'mule)
       '(utf-16-little-endian-bom
	 utf-16-bom
	 utf-8-bom
	 iso-7
	 no-conversion
	 utf-8
	 iso-8-1
	 iso-8-2
	 iso-8-designate
	 iso-lock-shift
	 shift-jis
	 big5
	 utf-16-little-endian
	 utf-16
	 ucs-4)
     '(utf-16-little-endian-bom
       utf-16-bom
       utf-8-bom
       no-conversion
       utf-8
       utf-16-little-endian
       utf-16
       ucs-4))))

(defun reset-language-environment ()
  "Reset coding system environment of XEmacs to the default status.
All basic coding system variables are set to their default values, as
are the coding categories used for automatic detection and their
priority.

BE VERY CERTAIN YOU WANT TO DO THIS BEFORE DOING IT!

For more information, see `reset-coding-system-defaults' and
`reset-coding-categories-to-default'."
  (reset-coding-system-defaults)
  (reset-coding-categories-to-default))

;; Initialize everything so that the remaining Lisp files can contain
;; extended characters.  (They will be in ISO-7 format)

;; !!####!! The Lisp files should all be in UTF-8!!!  That way, all
;; special characters appear as high bits and there's no problem with
;; the Lisp parser trying to read a Mule file and getting all screwed
;; up.  The only other thing then would be characters; we just need to
;; modify the Lisp parser to read the stuff directly after a ? as
;; UTF-8 and return a 30-bit value directly, and modify the character
;; routines a bit to allow such a beast to exist.  MAKE IT A POINT TO
;; IMPLEMENT THIS AS ONE OF MY FUTURE PROJECTS. --ben

(reset-language-environment)

(coding-system-put 'raw-text 'safe-charsets '(ascii control-1 latin-iso8859-1))

;;; code-init.el ends here