Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view lisp/multicast.el @ 801:2b676dc88c66
[xemacs-hg @ 2002-04-01 03:58:02 by ben]
bug fixes (e.g. ballooning on X windows)
Makefile.in.in: Try to make the Makefile notice if its source Makefile.in.in is
changed, and regenerate and run itself.
Use a bigger default SHEAP_ADJUSTMENT on Cygwin; otherwise you
can't compile under Mule if a Lisp file has changed. (can't run
temacs)
TODO.ben-mule-21-5: update.
mule/mule-cmds.el: Hash the result of mswindows-get-language-environment-from-locale,
since it's very expensive (and causes huge ballooning of memory
under X Windows, since it's called from x-get-resource).
cl-extra.el, code-files.el, files.el, simple.el, subr.el, x-faces.el: Create new string-equal-ignore-case, based on built-in
compare-strings -- compare strings ignoring case without the need
to generate garbage by calling downcase. Use it in equalp and
elsewhere.
alloc.c, bytecode.c, chartab.c, data.c, elhash.c, emacs.c, eval.c, event-Xt.c, event-unixoid.c, extents.c, file-coding.c, fileio.c, fns.c, glyphs.c, gutter.c, lisp-union.h, lisp.h, mule-charset.c, nt.c, process-unix.c, process.c, specifier.c, symbols.c, sysdep.c, sysdep.h, text.c, toolbar.c: Try to implement GC triggering based on percentage of total memory
usage. Not currently activated (percentage set to 0) because not
quite working. Add `memory-usage' primitive to return XEmacs'
idea of its memory usage.
Add primitive compare-strings, compatible with FSF 21.1 -- can
compare any part of two strings, optionally ignoring case.
Improve qxe() functions in text.c for text comparison.
Use RETURN_NOT_REACHED to try to avoid warnings about unreachable
code.
Add volatile_make_int() to fix warning in unix_send_process().
author | ben |
---|---|
date | Mon, 01 Apr 2002 03:59:04 +0000 |
parents | 7039e6323819 |
children | 2b6fa2618f76 |
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;;; multicast.el --- lisp frontend for multicast connections in XEmacs ;; Copyright (C) 1997-2000 Didier Verna. ;; Author: Didier Verna <didier@xemacs.org> ;; Maintainer: Didier Verna <didier@xemacs.org> ;; Created: Thu Dec 4 16:37:39 1997 ;; Last Revision: Mon Jan 19 19:10:50 1998 ;; Current Version: 0.4 ;; Keywords: dumped comm processes ;; 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 of the License, 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 this program; if not, write to the Free Software ;; Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. ;;; Commentary: ;; This file just contains a lisp frontend to the internal function ;; open-multicast-group-internal written in C and belonging to process.c ;; Well, nothing much to say about it ... read the doc string. ;;; Change Log: ;; Rev. of Mon Jan 19 19:04:44 1998 : packaging cleanup ;; Rev. of Thu Dec 11 13:54:26 1997 : updated the docstring ;; Rev. of Mon Dec 8 15:28:47 1997 : Improved the doc string ;; Rev. of Thu Dec 4 16:38:09 1997 : Initial Version. ;;; Code: (defun open-multicast-group (name buffer address) "Open a multicast connection on the specified address. Returns a process object to represent the connection. Input and output work as for subprocesses; `delete-process' closes it. Args are NAME BUFFER ADDRESS. NAME is a name for the process. It is modified if necessary to make it unique. BUFFER is the buffer (or buffer-name) to associate with the process. Process output goes at the end of that buffer, unless you specify an output stream or filter function to handle the output. BUFFER may be also nil, meaning that this process is not associated with any buffer ADDRESS specifies a standard multicast address \"dest/port/ttl\": dest is an internet address between 224.0.0.0 and 239.255.255.255 port is a communication port like in traditional unicast ttl is the time-to-live (15 for site, 63 for region and 127 for world). WARNING: it is *strongly* recommended to avoid using groups beginning with 224 or 239. Such groups are considered 'admin' groups, and may behave in a surprising way ..." (let (dest port ttl) ;; We check only the general form of the multicast address. ;; The rest will be handled by the internal function. (string-match "^\\([0-9\\.]+\\)/\\([0-9]+\\)/\\([0-9]+\\)$" address) (and (not (and (= (match-beginning 0) 0) (= (match-end 0) (length address)))) (error "malformed multicast address: %s" address)) (and (not (setq dest (match-string 1 address))) (error "invalid destination specification.")) (and (= 0 (setq port (string-to-int (match-string 2 address)))) (error "invalid port specification.")) (and (= 0 (setq ttl (string-to-int (match-string 3 address)))) (error "invalid ttl specification.")) (declare-fboundp (open-multicast-group-internal name buffer dest port ttl)) )) ;;; multicast.el ends here