Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/emodules.c @ 4690:257b468bf2ca
Move the #'query-coding-region implementation to C.
This is necessary because there is no reasonable way to access the
corresponding mswindows-multibyte functionality from Lisp, and we need such
functionality if we're going to have a reliable and portable
#'query-coding-region implementation. However, this change doesn't yet
provide #'query-coding-region for the mswindow-multibyte coding systems,
there should be no functional differences between an XEmacs with this change
and one without it.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2009-09-19 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Move the #'query-coding-region implementation to C.
This is necessary because there is no reasonable way to access the
corresponding mswindows-multibyte functionality from Lisp, and we
need such functionality if we're going to have a reliable and
portable #'query-coding-region implementation. However, this
change doesn't yet provide #'query-coding-region for the
mswindow-multibyte coding systems, there should be no functional
differences between an XEmacs with this change and one without it.
* mule-coding.c (struct fixed_width_coding_system):
Add a new coding system type, fixed_width, and implement it. It
uses the CCL infrastructure but has a much simpler creation API,
and its own query_method, formerly in lisp/mule/mule-coding.el.
* unicode.c:
Move the Unicode query method implementation here from
unicode.el.
* lisp.h: Declare Fmake_coding_system_internal, Fcopy_range_table
here.
* intl-win32.c (complex_vars_of_intl_win32):
Use Fmake_coding_system_internal, not Fmake_coding_system.
* general-slots.h: Add Qsucceeded, Qunencodable, Qinvalid_sequence
here.
* file-coding.h (enum coding_system_variant):
Add fixed_width_coding_system here.
(struct coding_system_methods):
Add query_method and query_lstream_method to the coding system
methods.
Provide flags for the query methods.
Declare the default query method; initialise it correctly in
INITIALIZE_CODING_SYSTEM_TYPE.
* file-coding.c (default_query_method):
New function, the default query method for coding systems that do
not set it. Moved from coding.el.
(make_coding_system_1):
Accept new elements in PROPS in #'make-coding-system; aliases, a
list of aliases; safe-chars and safe-charsets (these were
previously accepted but not saved); and category.
(Fmake_coding_system_internal):
New function, what used to be #'make-coding-system--on Mule
builds, we've now moved some of the functionality of this to
Lisp.
(Fcoding_system_canonical_name_p):
Move this earlier in the file, since it's now called from within
make_coding_system_1.
(Fquery_coding_region):
Move the implementation of this here, from coding.el.
(complex_vars_of_file_coding):
Call Fmake_coding_system_internal, not Fmake_coding_system;
specify safe-charsets properties when we're a mule build.
* extents.h (mouse_highlight_priority, Fset_extent_priority,
Fset_extent_face, Fmap_extents):
Make these available to other C files.
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2009-09-19 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Move the #'query-coding-region implementation to C.
* coding.el:
Consolidate code that depends on the presence or absence of Mule
at the end of this file.
(default-query-coding-region, query-coding-region):
Move these functions to C.
(default-query-coding-region-safe-charset-skip-chars-map):
Remove this variable, the corresponding C variable is
Vdefault_query_coding_region_chartab_cache in file-coding.c.
(query-coding-string): Update docstring to reflect actual multiple
values, be more careful about not modifying a range table that
we're currently mapping over.
(encode-coding-char): Make the implementation of this simpler.
(featurep 'mule): Autoload #'make-coding-system from
mule/make-coding-system.el if we're a mule build; provide an
appropriate compiler macro.
Do various non-mule compatibility things if we're not a mule
build.
* update-elc.el (additional-dump-dependencies):
Add mule/make-coding-system as a dump time dependency if we're a
mule build.
* unicode.el (ccl-encode-to-ucs-2):
(decode-char):
(encode-char):
Move these earlier in the file, for the sake of some byte compile
warnings.
(unicode-query-coding-region):
Move this to unicode.c
* mule/make-coding-system.el:
New file, not dumped. Contains the functionality to rework the
arguments necessary for fixed-width coding systems, and contains
the implementation of #'make-coding-system, which now calls
#'make-coding-system-internal.
* mule/vietnamese.el (viscii):
* mule/latin.el (iso-8859-2):
(windows-1250):
(iso-8859-3):
(iso-8859-4):
(iso-8859-14):
(iso-8859-15):
(iso-8859-16):
(iso-8859-9):
(macintosh):
(windows-1252):
* mule/hebrew.el (iso-8859-8):
* mule/greek.el (iso-8859-7):
(windows-1253):
* mule/cyrillic.el (iso-8859-5):
(koi8-r):
(koi8-u):
(windows-1251):
(alternativnyj):
(koi8-ru):
(koi8-t):
(koi8-c):
(koi8-o):
* mule/arabic.el (iso-8859-6):
(windows-1256):
Move all these coding systems to being of type fixed-width, not of
type CCL. This allows the distinct query-coding-region for them to
be in C, something which will eventually allow us to implement
query-coding-region for the mswindows-multibyte coding systems.
* mule/general-late.el (posix-charset-to-coding-system-hash):
Document why we're pre-emptively persuading the byte compiler that
the ELC for this file needs to be written using escape-quoted.
Call #'set-unicode-query-skip-chars-args, now the Unicode
query-coding-region implementation is in C.
* mule/thai-xtis.el (tis-620):
Don't bother checking whether we're XEmacs or not here.
* mule/mule-coding.el:
Move the eight bit fixed-width functionality from this file to
make-coding-system.el.
tests/ChangeLog addition:
2009-09-19 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* automated/mule-tests.el:
Check a coding system's type, not an 8-bit-fixed property, for
whether that coding system should be treated as a fixed-width
coding system.
* automated/query-coding-tests.el:
Don't test the query coding functionality for mswindows-multibyte
coding systems, it's not yet implemented.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 19 Sep 2009 22:53:13 +0100 |
parents | 726060ee587c |
children | 19a72041c5ed |
line wrap: on
line source
/* emodules.c - Support routines for dynamic module loading (C) Copyright 1998, 1999 J. Kean Johnston. All rights reserved. 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. */ #include "emodules.h" #include "sysdll.h" #ifdef HAVE_LTDL #include <ltdl.h> #endif /* Load path */ static Lisp_Object Vmodule_load_path; /* Module lFile extensions */ static Lisp_Object Vmodule_extensions; #ifdef HAVE_SHLIB /* CE-Emacs version number */ Lisp_Object Vmodule_version; /* Do we do our work quietly? */ int load_modules_quietly; /* Set this while unloading a module. This should NOT be made set by users, as it allows the unbinding of symbol-value-forward variables. */ int unloading_module; Lisp_Object Qdll_error; Lisp_Object Qmodule, Qunload_module, module_tag; typedef struct _emodules_list { int used; /* Is this slot used? */ CIbyte *soname; /* Name of the shared object loaded (full path) */ CIbyte *modname; /* The name of the module */ CIbyte *modver; /* The module version string */ CIbyte *modtitle; /* How the module announces itself */ void (*unload)(void); /* Module cleanup function to run before unloading */ dll_handle dlhandle; /* Dynamic lib handle */ } emodules_list; static int emodules_depth; static dll_handle dlhandle; static emodules_list *modules; static int modnum; static int find_make_module (const CIbyte *mod, const CIbyte *name, const CIbyte *ver, int make_or_find); static Lisp_Object module_load_unwind (Lisp_Object); static void attempt_module_delete (int mod); DEFUN ("load-module", Fload_module, 1, 3, "FLoad dynamic module: ", /* Load in a C Emacs Extension module named FILE. The optional NAME and VERSION are used to identify specific modules. DO NOT USE THIS FUNCTION in your programs. Use `require' instead. This function is similar in intent to `load' except that it loads in pre-compiled C or C++ code, using dynamic shared objects. If NAME is specified, then the module is only loaded if its internal name matches the NAME specified. If VERSION is specified, then the module is only loaded if it matches that VERSION. This function will check to make sure that the same module is not loaded twice. Modules are searched for in the same way as Lisp files, except that the valid file extensions are `.so', `.dll', `.ell', or `.dylib'. All symbols in the shared module must be completely resolved in order for this function to be successful. Any modules which the specified FILE depends on will be automatically loaded. You can determine which modules have been loaded as dynamic shared objects by examining the return value of the function `list-modules'. It is possible, although unwise, to unload modules using `unload-feature'. The preferred mechanism for unloading or reloading modules is to quit XEmacs, and then reload those new or changed modules that are required. Messages informing you of the progress of the load are displayed unless the variable `load-modules-quietly' is non-NIL. */ (file, name, version)) { const CIbyte *mod, *mname, *mver; int speccount = specpdl_depth(); CHECK_STRING(file); mod = (CIbyte *) XSTRING_DATA (file); if (NILP (name)) mname = ""; else mname = (CIbyte *) XSTRING_DATA (name); if (NILP (version)) mver = ""; else mver = (CIbyte *) XSTRING_DATA (version); dlhandle = 0; record_unwind_protect (module_load_unwind, make_int(modnum)); emodules_load (mod, mname, mver); unbind_to (speccount); return Qt; } DEFUN ("unload-module", Funload_module, 1, 3, 0, /* Unload a module previously loaded with load-module. DO NOT USE THIS FUNCTION in your programs. Use `unload-feature' instead. As with load-module, this function requires at least the module FILE, and optionally the module NAME and VERSION to unload. It may not be possible for the module to be unloaded from memory, as there may be Lisp objects referring to variables inside the module code. However, once you have requested a module to be unloaded, it will be unloaded from memory as soon as the last reference to symbols within the module is destroyed. */ (file, name, version)) { int x; const CIbyte *mod, *mname, *mver; Lisp_Object foundname = Qnil; struct gcpro gcpro1; CHECK_STRING(file); GCPRO1 (foundname); if (locate_file (Vmodule_load_path, file, Vmodule_extensions, &foundname, 0) < 0) return Qt; mod = (CIbyte *) XSTRING_DATA (foundname); UNGCPRO; if (NILP (name)) mname = ""; else mname = (CIbyte *) XSTRING_DATA (name); if (NILP (version)) mver = ""; else mver = (CIbyte *) XSTRING_DATA (version); x = find_make_module (mod, mname, mver, 1); if (x != -1) { if (modules[x].unload != NULL) modules[x].unload (); attempt_module_delete (x); } return Qt; } DEFUN ("list-modules", Flist_modules, 0, 0, "", /* Produce a list of loaded dynamic modules. This function will return a list of all the loaded dynamic modules. Each element in the list is a list in the form (SONAME NAME VER DESC), where SONAME is the name of the shared object that was loaded, NAME is the internal module name, VER is the version of the module, and DESC is how the module describes itself. This function returns a list, so you will need to assign the return value to a variable and then examine the variable with `describe-variable'. For example: (setq mylist (list-modules)) (describe-variable 'mylist) NOTE: It is possible for the same module to be loaded more than once, at different versions. However, you should never see the same module, with the same name and version, loaded more than once. If you do, this is a bug, and you are encouraged to report it. */ ()) { Lisp_Object mlist = Qnil; int i; for (i = 0; i < modnum; i++) { if (modules[i].used == 1) mlist = Fcons (list4 (build_string (modules[i].soname), build_string (modules[i].modname), build_string (modules[i].modver), build_string (modules[i].modtitle)), mlist); } return mlist; } static int find_make_module (const CIbyte *mod, const CIbyte *name, const CIbyte *ver, int mof) { int i, fs = -1; for (i = 0; i < modnum; i++) { if (fs == -1 && modules[i].used == 0) fs = i; if (strcmp (modules[i].soname, mod) == 0) { if (name && name[0] && strcmp (modules[i].modname, name)) continue; if (ver && ver[0] && strcmp (modules[i].modver, ver)) continue; return i; /* Found a match */ } } if (mof) return fs; if (fs != -1) return fs; /* First free slot */ /* * We only get here if we haven't found a free slot and the module was * not previously loaded. */ if (modules == NULL) modules = xnew (emodules_list); modnum++; XREALLOC_ARRAY (modules, emodules_list, modnum); fs = modnum - 1; memset (&modules[fs], 0, sizeof (emodules_list)); return fs; } static void attempt_module_delete (int mod) { if (dll_close (modules[mod].dlhandle) == 0) { xfree (modules[mod].soname, CIbyte *); xfree (modules[mod].modname, CIbyte *); xfree (modules[mod].modver, CIbyte *); xfree (modules[mod].modtitle, CIbyte *); modules[mod].dlhandle = 0; modules[mod].used = 0; } else if (modules[mod].used > 1) modules[mod].used = 1; /* We couldn't delete it - it stays */ } static Lisp_Object module_load_unwind (Lisp_Object upto) { int x,l=0; /* * First close off the current handle if it is open. */ if (dlhandle != 0) dll_close (dlhandle); dlhandle = 0; if (CONSP (upto)) { if (INTP (XCAR (upto))) l = XINT (XCAR (upto)); free_cons (upto); } else l = XINT (upto); /* * Here we need to go through and dlclose() (IN REVERSE ORDER!) any * modules that were loaded as part of this load chain. We only mark * the slots as closed if the dlclose() succeeds. */ for (x = modnum-1; x >= l; x--) { if (modules[x].used > 1) attempt_module_delete (x); } emodules_depth = 0; return Qnil; } /* * Do the actual grunt-work of loading in a module. We first try and * dlopen() the module. If that fails, we have an error and we bail * out immediately. If the dlopen() succeeds, we need to check for the * existence of certain special symbols. * * All modules will have complete access to the variables and functions * defined within XEmacs itself. It is up to the module to declare any * variables or functions it uses, however. Modules will also have access * to other functions and variables in other loaded modules, unless they * are defined as STATIC. * * We need to be very careful with how we load modules. If we encounter an * error along the way, we need to back out completely to the point at * which the user started. Since we can be called recursively, we need to * take care with marking modules as loaded. When we first start loading * modules, we set the counter to zero. As we enter the function each time, * we increment the counter, and before we leave we decrement it. When * we get back down to 0, we know we are at the end of the chain and we * can mark all the modules in the list as loaded. * * When we signal an error, we need to be sure to unwind all modules loaded * thus far (but only for this module chain). It is assumed that if any * modules in a chain fail, then they all do. This is logical, considering * that the only time we recurse is when we have dependent modules. So in * the error handler we take great care to close off the module chain before * we call "error" and let the Fmodule_load unwind_protect() function handle * the cleaning up. */ void emodules_load (const CIbyte *module, const CIbyte *modname, const CIbyte *modver) { /* !!#### Needs serious work */ Lisp_Object old_load_list; Lisp_Object filename; Lisp_Object foundname, lisp_modname; int x, mpx; CIbyte *soname; const CIbyte **f; const long *ellcc_rev; CIbyte *mver, *mname, *mtitle, *symname; void (*modload)(void) = 0; void (*modsyms)(void) = 0; void (*modvars)(void) = 0; void (*moddocs)(void) = 0; void (*modunld)(void) = 0; emodules_list *mp; struct gcpro gcpro1, gcpro2, gcpro3, gcpro4; filename = Qnil; foundname = Qnil; emodules_depth++; dlhandle = 0; if (module == NULL || module[0] == '\0') invalid_argument ("Empty module name", Qunbound); GCPRO4(filename, foundname, old_load_list, lisp_modname); filename = build_string (module); if (locate_file (Vmodule_load_path, filename, Vmodule_extensions, &foundname, 0) < 0) signal_error (Qdll_error, "Cannot open dynamic module", filename); LISP_STRING_TO_EXTERNAL (foundname, soname, Qfile_name); lisp_modname = call1 (Qfile_name_sans_extension, Ffile_name_nondirectory (foundname)); dlhandle = dll_open (foundname); if (dlhandle == NULL) { signal_error (Qdll_error, "Opening dynamic module", dll_error ()); } ellcc_rev = (const long *)dll_variable (dlhandle, "emodule_compiler"); if (ellcc_rev == NULL || *ellcc_rev <= 0L) signal_error (Qdll_error, "Invalid dynamic module: Missing symbol `emodule_compiler'", Qunbound); if (*ellcc_rev > EMODULES_REVISION) signal_ferror (Qdll_error, "Invalid dynamic module: Unsupported version `%ld(%ld)'", *ellcc_rev, EMODULES_REVISION); f = (const CIbyte **) dll_variable (dlhandle, "emodule_name"); if (f == NULL || *f == NULL) signal_error (Qdll_error, "Invalid dynamic module: Missing symbol `emodule_name'", Qunbound); mname = (CIbyte *) ALLOCA (strlen (*f) + 1); strcpy (mname, *f); if (mname[0] == '\0') signal_error (Qdll_error, "Invalid dynamic module: Empty value for `emodule_name'", Qunbound); f = (const CIbyte **) dll_variable (dlhandle, "emodule_version"); if (f == NULL || *f == NULL) signal_error (Qdll_error, "Missing symbol `emodule_version': Invalid dynamic module", Qunbound); mver = (CIbyte *) ALLOCA (strlen (*f) + 1); strcpy (mver, *f); f = (const CIbyte **) dll_variable (dlhandle, "emodule_title"); if (f == NULL || *f == NULL) signal_error (Qdll_error, "Invalid dynamic module: Missing symbol `emodule_title'", Qunbound); mtitle = (CIbyte *) ALLOCA (strlen (*f) + 1); strcpy (mtitle, *f); symname = (CIbyte *) ALLOCA (strlen (mname) + 15); strcpy (symname, "modules_of_"); strcat (symname, mname); modload = (void (*)(void))dll_function (dlhandle, symname); /* * modload is optional. If the module doesn't require other modules it can * be left out. */ strcpy (symname, "syms_of_"); strcat (symname, mname); modsyms = (void (*)(void))dll_function (dlhandle, symname); if (modsyms == NULL) { missing_symbol: signal_error (Qdll_error, "Invalid dynamic module: Missing symbol", build_string (symname)); } strcpy (symname, "vars_of_"); strcat (symname, mname); modvars = (void (*)(void))dll_function (dlhandle, symname); if (modvars == NULL) goto missing_symbol; strcpy (symname, "docs_of_"); strcat (symname, mname); moddocs = (void (*)(void))dll_function (dlhandle, symname); if (moddocs == NULL) goto missing_symbol; /* Now look for the optional unload function. */ strcpy (symname, "unload_"); strcat (symname, mname); modunld = (void (*)(void))dll_function (dlhandle, symname); if (modname && modname[0] && strcmp (modname, mname)) signal_error (Qdll_error, "Module name mismatch", Qunbound); if (modver && modver[0] && strcmp (modver, mver)) signal_error (Qdll_error, "Module version mismatch", Qunbound); /* * Attempt to make a new slot for this module. If this really is the * first time we are loading this module, the used member will be 0. * If that is non-zero, we know that we have a previously loaded module * of the same name and version, and we don't need to go any further. */ mpx = find_make_module (soname, mname, mver, 0); mp = &modules[mpx]; if (mp->used > 0) { emodules_depth--; dll_close (dlhandle); dlhandle = 0; /* Zero this out before module_load_unwind runs */ return; } if (!load_modules_quietly) message ("Loading %s v%s (%s)", mname, mver, mtitle); /* * We have passed the basic initialization, and can now add this * module to the list of modules. */ mp->used = emodules_depth + 1; mp->soname = xstrdup (soname); mp->modname = xstrdup (mname); mp->modver = xstrdup (mver); mp->modtitle = xstrdup (mtitle); mp->dlhandle = dlhandle; mp->unload = modunld; dlhandle = 0; old_load_list = Vcurrent_load_list; Vcurrent_load_list = Qnil; LOADHIST_ATTACH (lisp_modname); LOADHIST_ATTACH (module_tag); /* * Now we need to call the module init function and perform the various * startup tasks. */ if (modload != 0) (*modload)(); /* * Now we can get the module to initialize its symbols, and then its * variables, and lastly the documentation strings. */ (*modsyms)(); (*modvars)(); (*moddocs)(); if (!load_modules_quietly) message ("Loaded module %s v%s (%s)", mname, mver, mtitle); Vload_history = Fcons (Fnreverse (Vcurrent_load_list), Vload_history); Vcurrent_load_list = old_load_list; UNGCPRO; emodules_depth--; if (emodules_depth == 0) { /* * We have reached the end of the load chain. We now go through the * list of loaded modules and mark all the valid modules as just * that. */ for (x = 0; x < modnum; x++) if (modules[x].used > 1) modules[x].used = 1; } } void emodules_doc_subr(const char *symname, const char *doc) { Bytecount len = strlen (symname); Lisp_Object sym = oblookup (Vobarray, (const Ibyte *)symname, len); Lisp_Subr *subr; /* Skip autoload cookies */ if (SYMBOLP (sym) && SUBRP (XSYMBOL (sym)->function)) { subr = XSUBR (XSYMBOL (sym)->function); subr->doc = xstrdup (doc); } /* * FIXME: I wish there was some way to avoid the xstrdup(). Is it * possible to just set a pointer to the string, or somehow create a * symbol whose value we can point to the constant string? Can someone * look into this? */ } void emodules_doc_sym (const char *symname, const char *doc) { Bytecount len = strlen (symname); Lisp_Object sym = oblookup (Vobarray, (const Ibyte *)symname, len); Lisp_Object docstr; struct gcpro gcpro1; if (SYMBOLP(sym)) { docstr = build_string (doc); GCPRO1(docstr); Fput (sym, Qvariable_documentation, docstr); UNGCPRO; } } void syms_of_module (void) { DEFERROR_STANDARD (Qdll_error, Qerror); DEFSYMBOL (Qmodule); DEFSYMBOL (Qunload_module); DEFSUBR(Fload_module); DEFSUBR(Flist_modules); DEFSUBR(Funload_module); module_tag = Fcons (Qmodule, Qnil); staticpro (&module_tag); Fput (Qunload_module, Qdisabled, Qt); } void reinit_vars_of_module (void) { emodules_depth = 0; modules = NULL; modnum = 0; } #endif /* HAVE_SHLIB */ void vars_of_module (void) { #ifdef HAVE_SHLIB Fprovide (intern ("modules")); #ifdef HAVE_LTDL lt_dlinit (); lt_dlmalloc = (lt_ptr (*) (size_t)) xmalloc; lt_dlrealloc = (lt_ptr (*) (lt_ptr, size_t)) xrealloc; lt_dlfree = (void (*) (lt_ptr)) xfree_1; #endif DEFVAR_LISP ("module-version", &Vmodule_version /* Emacs dynamic loading mechanism version, as a string. This string is in the form XX.YY.ppp, where XX is the major version number, YY is the minor version number, and ppp is the patch level. This variable can be used to distinguish between different versions of the dynamic loading technology used in Emacs, if required. It is not a given that this value will be the same as the Emacs version number. */ ); Vmodule_version = build_string (EMODULES_VERSION); DEFVAR_BOOL ("load-modules-quietly", &load_modules_quietly /* *Set to t if module loading is to be silent. Normally, when loading dynamic modules, Emacs will inform you of its progress, and will display the module name and version if the module is loaded correctly. Setting this variable to `t' will suppress these messages. This would normally only be done if `load-module' was being called by a Lisp function. */); load_modules_quietly = 0; DEFVAR_BOOL ("unloading-module", &unloading_module /* Used internally by `unload-feature'. Do not set this variable. Danger, danger, Will Robinson! */); unloading_module = 0; #endif /* HAVE_SHLIB */ DEFVAR_LISP ("module-load-path", &Vmodule_load_path /* *List of directories to search for dynamic modules to load. Each element is a string (directory name) or nil (try default directory). Note that elements of this list *may not* begin with "~", so you must call `expand-file-name' on them before adding them to this list. Initialized based on EMACSMODULEPATH environment variable, if any, otherwise to default specified the file `paths.h' when XEmacs was built. If there were no paths specified in `paths.h', then XEmacs chooses a default value for this variable by looking around in the file-system near the directory in which the XEmacs executable resides. Due to the nature of dynamic modules, the path names should almost always refer to architecture-dependent directories. It is unwise to attempt to store dynamic modules in a heterogenous environment. Some environments are similar enough to each other that XEmacs will be unable to determine the correctness of a dynamic module, which can have unpredictable results when a dynamic module is loaded. */); Vmodule_load_path = Qnil; DEFVAR_LISP ("module-extensions", &Vmodule_extensions /* *List of filename extensions to use when searching for dynamic modules. */); Vmodule_extensions = list5 (build_string (".ell"), build_string (".so"), build_string (".dll"), build_string (".dylib"), build_string ("")); }