Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/termcap.c @ 853:2b6fa2618f76
[xemacs-hg @ 2002-05-28 08:44:22 by ben]
merge my stderr-proc ws
make-docfile.c: Fix places where we forget to check for EOF.
code-init.el: Don't use CRLF conversion by default on process output. CMD.EXE and
friends work both ways but Cygwin programs don't like the CRs.
code-process.el, multicast.el, process.el: Removed.
Improvements to call-process-internal:
-- allows a buffer to be specified for input and stderr output
-- use it on all systems
-- implement C-g as documented
-- clean up and comment
call-process-region uses new call-process facilities; no temp file.
remove duplicate funs in process.el.
comment exactly how coding systems work and fix various problems.
open-multicast-group now does similar coding-system frobbing to
open-network-stream.
dumped-lisp.el, faces.el, msw-faces.el: Fix some hidden errors due to code not being defined at the right time.
xemacs.mak: Add -DSTRICT.
================================================================
ALLOW SEPARATION OF STDOUT AND STDERR IN PROCESSES
================================================================
Standard output and standard error can be processed separately in
a process. Each can have its own buffer, its own mark in that buffer,
and its filter function. You can specify a separate buffer for stderr
in `start-process' to get things started, or use the new primitives:
set-process-stderr-buffer
process-stderr-buffer
process-stderr-mark
set-process-stderr-filter
process-stderr-filter
Also, process-send-region takes a 4th optional arg, a buffer.
Currently always uses a pipe() under Unix to read the error output.
(#### Would a PTY be better?)
sysdep.h, sysproc.h, unexfreebsd.c, unexsunos4.c, nt.c, emacs.c, callproc.c, symsinit.h, sysdep.c, Makefile.in.in, process-unix.c: Delete callproc.c. Move child_setup() to process-unix.c.
wait_for_termination() now only needed on a few really old systems.
console-msw.h, event-Xt.c, event-msw.c, event-stream.c, event-tty.c, event-unixoid.c, events.h, process-nt.c, process-unix.c, process.c, process.h, procimpl.h: Rewrite the process methods to handle a separate channel for
error input. Create Lstreams for reading in the error channel.
Many process methods need change. In general the changes are
fairly clear as they involve duplicating what's used for reading
the normal stdout and changing for stderr -- although tedious,
as such changes are required throughout the entire process code.
Rewrote the code that reads process output to do two loops, one
for stdout and one for stderr.
gpmevent.c, tooltalk.c: set_process_filter takes an argument for stderr.
================================================================
NEW ERROR-TRAPPING MECHANISM
================================================================
Totally rewrite error trapping code to be unified and support more
features. Basic function is call_trapping_problems(), which lets
you specify, by means of flags, what sorts of problems you want
trapped. these can include
-- quit
-- errors
-- throws past the function
-- creation of "display objects" (e.g. buffers)
-- deletion of already-existing "display objects" (e.g. buffers)
-- modification of already-existing buffers
-- entering the debugger
-- gc
-- errors->warnings (ala suspended errors)
etc. All other error funs rewritten in terms of this one.
Various older mechanisms removed or rewritten.
window.c, insdel.c, console.c, buffer.c, device.c, frame.c: When creating a display object, added call to
note_object_created(), for use with trapping_problems mechanism.
When deleting, call check_allowed_operation() and note_object
deleted().
The trapping-problems code records the objects created since the
call-trapping-problems began. Those objects can be deleted, but
none others (i.e. previously existing ones).
bytecode.c, cmdloop.c: internal_catch takes another arg.
eval.c: Add long comments describing the "five lists" used to maintain
state (backtrace, gcpro, specbind, etc.) in the Lisp engine.
backtrace.h, eval.c: Implement trapping-problems mechanism, eliminate old mechanisms or
redo in terms of new one.
frame.c, gutter.c: Flush out the concept of "critical display section", defined by
the in_display() var. Use an internal_bind() to get it reset,
rather than just doing it at end, because there may be a non-local
exit.
event-msw.c, event-stream.c, console-msw.h, device.c, dialog-msw.c, frame.c, frame.h, intl.c, toolbar.c, menubar-msw.c, redisplay.c, alloc.c, menubar-x.c: Make use of new trapping-errors stuff and rewrite code based on
old mechanisms.
glyphs-widget.c, redisplay.h: Protect calling Lisp in redisplay.
insdel.c: Protect hooks against deleting existing buffers.
frame-msw.c: Use EQ, not EQUAL in hash tables whose keys are just numbers.
Otherwise we run into stickiness in redisplay because
internal_equal() can QUIT.
================================================================
SIGNAL, C-G CHANGES
================================================================
Here we change the way that C-g interacts with event reading. The
idea is that a C-g occurring while we're reading a user event
should be read as C-g, but elsewhere should be a QUIT. The former
code did all sorts of bizarreness -- requiring that no QUIT occurs
anywhere in event-reading code (impossible to enforce given the
stuff called or Lisp code invoked), and having some weird system
involving enqueue/dequeue of a C-g and interaction with Vquit_flag
-- and it didn't work.
Now, we simply enclose all code where we want C-g read as an event
with {begin/end}_dont_check_for_quit(). This completely turns off
the mechanism that checks (and may remove or alter) C-g in the
read-ahead queues, so we just get the C-g normal.
Signal.c documents this very carefully.
cmdloop.c: Correct use of dont_check_for_quit to new scheme, remove old
out-of-date comments.
event-stream.c: Fix C-g handling to actually work.
device-x.c: Disable quit checking when err out.
signal.c: Cleanup. Add large descriptive comment.
process-unix.c, process-nt.c, sysdep.c: Use QUIT instead of REALLY_QUIT.
It's not necessary to use REALLY_QUIT and just confuses the issue.
lisp.h: Comment quit handlers.
================================================================
CONS CHANGES
================================================================
free_cons() now takes a Lisp_Object not the result of XCONS().
car and cdr have been renamed so that they don't get used directly;
go through XCAR(), XCDR() instead.
alloc.c, dired.c, editfns.c, emodules.c, fns.c, glyphs-msw.c, glyphs-x.c, glyphs.c, keymap.c, minibuf.c, search.c, eval.c, lread.c, lisp.h: Correct free_cons calling convention: now takes Lisp_Object,
not Lisp_Cons
chartab.c: Eliminate direct use of ->car, ->cdr, should be black box.
callint.c: Rewrote using EXTERNAL_LIST_LOOP to avoid use of Lisp_Cons.
================================================================
USE INTERNAL-BIND-*
================================================================
eval.c: Cleanups of these funs.
alloc.c, fileio.c, undo.c, specifier.c, text.c, profile.c, lread.c, redisplay.c, menubar-x.c, macros.c: Rewrote to use internal_bind_int() and internal_bind_lisp_object()
in place of whatever varied and cumbersome mechanisms were
formerly there.
================================================================
SPECBIND SANITY
================================================================
backtrace.h: - Improved comments
backtrace.h, bytecode.c, eval.c: Add new mechanism check_specbind_stack_sanity() for sanity
checking code each time the catchlist or specbind stack change.
Removed older prototype of same mechanism.
================================================================
MISC
================================================================
lisp.h, insdel.c, window.c, device.c, console.c, buffer.c: Fleshed out authorship.
device-msw.c: Correct bad Unicode-ization.
print.c: Be more careful when not initialized or in fatal error handling.
search.c: Eliminate running_asynch_code, an FSF holdover.
alloc.c: Added comments about gc-cons-threshold.
dialog-x.c: Use begin_gc_forbidden() around code to build up a widget value
tree, like in menubar-x.c.
gui.c: Use Qunbound not Qnil as the default for
gethash.
lisp-disunion.h, lisp-union.h: Added warnings on use of VOID_TO_LISP().
lisp.h: Use ERROR_CHECK_STRUCTURES to turn on
ERROR_CHECK_TRAPPING_PROBLEMS and ERROR_CHECK_TYPECHECK
lisp.h: Add assert_with_message.
lisp.h: Add macros for gcproing entire arrays. (You could do this before
but it required manual twiddling the gcpro structure.)
lisp.h: Add prototypes for new functions defined elsewhere.
author | ben |
---|---|
date | Tue, 28 May 2002 08:45:36 +0000 |
parents | 943eaba38521 |
children | 804517e16990 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Work-alike for termcap, plus extra features. Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright (C) 2001 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. */ /* Synched up with: Not synched with FSF. */ /* config.h may rename various library functions such as malloc. */ #ifdef emacs #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" /* For encapsulated open, close, read */ #include "device.h" /* For DEVICE_BAUD_RATE */ #else /* not emacs */ #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> #ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H #include <unistd.h> #endif #ifdef _POSIX_VERSION #include <fcntl.h> #endif #endif /* not emacs */ /* BUFSIZE is the initial size allocated for the buffer for reading the termcap file. It is not a limit. Make it large normally for speed. Make it variable when debugging, so can exercise increasing the space dynamically. */ #ifndef BUFSIZE #ifdef DEBUG #define BUFSIZE bufsize int bufsize = 128; #else #define BUFSIZE 2048 #endif #endif #ifndef emacs static void memory_out () { retry_write (2, "virtual memory exhausted\n", 25); exit (1); } static char * xmalloc (size) unsigned int size; { char *tem = malloc (size); if (!tem) memory_out (); return tem; } static char * xrealloc (ptr, size) char *ptr; unsigned size; { char *tem = realloc (ptr, size); if (!tem) memory_out (); return tem; } #endif /* not emacs */ /* Looking up capabilities in the entry already found. */ /* The pointer to the data made by tgetent is left here for tgetnum, tgetflag and tgetstr to find. */ static char *term_entry; static const char *tgetst1 (const char *ptr, char **area); /* Search entry BP for capability CAP. Return a pointer to the capability (in BP) if found, 0 if not found. */ static const char * find_capability (bp, cap) const char *bp; const char *cap; { for (; *bp; bp++) if (bp[0] == ':' && bp[1] == cap[0] && bp[2] == cap[1]) return &bp[4]; return 0; } int tgetnum (cap) const char *cap; { const char *ptr = find_capability (term_entry, cap); if (!ptr || ptr[-1] != '#') return -1; return atoi (ptr); } int tgetflag (cap) const char *cap; { const char *ptr = find_capability (term_entry, cap); return 0 != ptr && ptr[-1] == ':'; } /* Look up a string-valued capability CAP. If AREA is nonzero, it points to a pointer to a block in which to store the string. That pointer is advanced over the space used. If AREA is zero, space is allocated with `malloc'. */ const char * tgetstr (cap, area) const char *cap; char **area; { const char *ptr = find_capability (term_entry, cap); if (!ptr || (ptr[-1] != '=' && ptr[-1] != '~')) return 0; return tgetst1 (ptr, area); } /* Table, indexed by a character in range 0100 to 0140 with 0100 subtracted, gives meaning of character following \, or a space if no special meaning. Eight characters per line within the string. */ static char esctab[] = " \007\010 \033\014 " " \012 " " \015 \011 \013 " " "; /* PTR points to a string value inside a termcap entry. Copy that value, processing \ and ^ abbreviations, into the block that *AREA points to, or to newly allocated storage if AREA is 0. */ static const char * tgetst1 (ptr, area) const char *ptr; char **area; { const char *p; char *r; int c; int size; char *ret; int c1; if (!ptr) return 0; /* `ret' gets address of where to store the string. */ if (!area) { /* Compute size of block needed (may overestimate). */ p = ptr; while ((c = *p++) && c != ':' && c != '\n') ; ret = (char *) xmalloc (p - ptr + 1); } else ret = *area; /* Copy the string value, stopping at null or colon. Also process ^ and \ abbreviations. */ p = ptr; r = ret; while ((c = *p++) && c != ':' && c != '\n') { if (c == '^') c = *p++ & 037; else if (c == '\\') { c = *p++; if (c >= '0' && c <= '7') { c -= '0'; size = 0; while (++size < 3 && (c1 = *p) >= '0' && c1 <= '7') { c *= 8; c += c1 - '0'; p++; } } else if (c >= 0100 && c < 0200) { c1 = esctab[(c & ~040) - 0100]; if (c1 != ' ') c = c1; } } *r++ = c; } *r = 0; /* Update *AREA. */ if (area) *area = r + 1; return ret; } /* Outputting a string with padding. */ #ifdef LINUX speed_t ospeed; #else short ospeed; #endif /* If `ospeed' is 0, we use `tputs_baud_rate' as the actual baud rate. */ int tputs_baud_rate; char PC; /* Actual baud rate if positive; - baud rate / 100 if negative. */ static short speeds[] = { 0, 50, 75, 110, 135, 150, -2, -3, -6, -12, -18, -24, -48, -96, -192, -288, -384, -576, -1152 }; void tputs (string, nlines, outfun) const char *string; int nlines; void (*outfun) (int); { int padcount = 0; int speed; #ifdef emacs speed = DEVICE_BAUD_RATE (XDEVICE (Fselected_device (Qnil))); #else if (ospeed == 0) speed = tputs_baud_rate; else speed = speeds[ospeed]; #endif if (string == (char *) 0) return; while (isdigit (* (const unsigned char *) string)) { padcount += *string++ - '0'; padcount *= 10; } if (*string == '.') { string++; padcount += *string++ - '0'; } if (*string == '*') { string++; padcount *= nlines; } while (*string) (*outfun) (*string++); /* padcount is now in units of tenths of msec. */ padcount *= speeds[ospeed]; padcount += 500; padcount /= 1000; if (speeds[ospeed] < 0) padcount = -padcount; else { padcount += 50; padcount /= 100; } while (padcount-- > 0) (*outfun) (PC); } /* Finding the termcap entry in the termcap data base. */ struct buffer { char *beg; int size; char *ptr; int ateof; int full; }; /* Forward declarations of static functions. */ static int scan_file (); static char *gobble_line (); static int compare_contin (); static int name_match (); /* Find the termcap entry data for terminal type NAME and store it in the block that BP points to. Record its address for future use. If BP is zero, space is dynamically allocated. */ int tgetent (bp, name) char *bp; const char *name; { char *tem; int fd; struct buffer buf; char *bp1; char *bp2; const char *term; int malloc_size = 0; int c; char *tcenv; /* TERMCAP value, if it contains :tc=. */ const char *indirect = 0; /* Terminal type in :tc= in TERMCAP value. */ tem = egetenv ("TERMCAP"); if (tem && *tem == 0) tem = 0; /* If tem is non-null and starts with / (in the un*x case, that is), it is a file name to use instead of /etc/termcap. If it is non-null and does not start with /, it is the entry itself, but only if the name the caller requested matches the TERM variable. */ if (tem && !IS_DIRECTORY_SEP (*tem) && !strcmp (name, egetenv ("TERM"))) { indirect = tgetst1 (find_capability (tem, "tc"), 0); if (!indirect) { if (!bp) bp = tem; else strcpy (bp, tem); goto ret; } else { /* We will need to read /etc/termcap. */ tcenv = tem; tem = 0; } } else indirect = (char *) 0; if (!tem) tem = "/etc/termcap"; /* Here we know we must search a file and tem has its name. */ fd = qxe_open ((Intbyte *) tem, 0, 0); if (fd < 0) return -1; buf.size = BUFSIZE; /* Add 1 to size to ensure room for terminating null. */ buf.beg = (char *) xmalloc (buf.size + 1); term = indirect ? indirect : name; if (!bp) { malloc_size = indirect ? strlen (tcenv) + 1 : buf.size; bp = (char *) xmalloc (malloc_size); } bp1 = bp; if (indirect) /* Copy the data from the environment variable. */ { strcpy (bp, tcenv); bp1 += strlen (tcenv); } while (term) { /* Scan the file, reading it via buf, till find start of main entry. */ if (scan_file (term, fd, &buf) == 0) return 0; /* Free old `term' if appropriate. */ if (term != name) xfree (term); /* If BP is malloc'd by us, make sure it is big enough. */ if (malloc_size) { malloc_size = bp1 - bp + buf.size; tem = (char *) xrealloc (bp, malloc_size); bp1 += tem - bp; bp = tem; } bp2 = bp1; /* Copy the line of the entry from buf into bp. */ tem = buf.ptr; while ((*bp1++ = c = *tem++) && c != '\n') /* Drop out any \ newline sequence. */ if (c == '\\' && *tem == '\n') { bp1--; tem++; } *bp1 = 0; /* Does this entry refer to another terminal type's entry? If something is found, copy it into heap and null-terminate it. */ term = tgetst1 (find_capability (bp2, "tc"), 0); } retry_close (fd); xfree (buf.beg); if (malloc_size) { bp = (char *) xrealloc (bp, bp1 - bp + 1); } ret: term_entry = bp; if (malloc_size) /* #### yuck, why the hell are we casting a pointer to an int? */ return (int) (long) bp; return 1; } /* Given file open on FD and buffer BUFP, scan the file from the beginning until a line is found that starts the entry for terminal type STRING. Returns 1 if successful, with that line in BUFP, or returns 0 if no entry found in the file. */ static int scan_file (string, fd, bufp) char *string; int fd; struct buffer *bufp; { char *end; bufp->ptr = bufp->beg; bufp->full = 0; bufp->ateof = 0; *bufp->ptr = 0; lseek (fd, 0L, 0); while (!bufp->ateof) { /* Read a line into the buffer. */ end = 0; do { /* if it is continued, append another line to it, until a non-continued line ends. */ end = gobble_line (fd, bufp, end); } while (!bufp->ateof && end[-2] == '\\'); if (*bufp->ptr != '#' && name_match (bufp->ptr, string)) return 1; /* Discard the line just processed. */ bufp->ptr = end; } return 0; } /* Return nonzero if NAME is one of the names specified by termcap entry LINE. */ static int name_match (line, name) char *line, *name; { char *tem; if (!compare_contin (line, name)) return 1; /* This line starts an entry. Is it the right one? */ for (tem = line; *tem && *tem != '\n' && *tem != ':'; tem++) if (*tem == '|' && !compare_contin (tem + 1, name)) return 1; return 0; } static int compare_contin (str1, str2) char *str1, *str2; { int c1, c2; while (1) { c1 = *str1++; c2 = *str2++; while (c1 == '\\' && *str1 == '\n') { str1++; while ((c1 = *str1++) == ' ' || c1 == '\t'); } if (c2 == '\0') { /* End of type being looked up. */ if (c1 == '|' || c1 == ':') /* If end of name in data base, we win. */ return 0; else return 1; } else if (c1 != c2) return 1; } } /* Make sure that the buffer <- BUFP contains a full line of the file open on FD, starting at the place BUFP->ptr points to. Can read more of the file, discard stuff before BUFP->ptr, or make the buffer bigger. Returns the pointer to after the newline ending the line, or to the end of the file, if there is no newline to end it. Can also merge on continuation lines. If APPEND_END is nonzero, it points past the newline of a line that is continued; we add another line onto it and regard the whole thing as one line. The caller decides when a line is continued. */ static char * gobble_line (fd, bufp, append_end) int fd; struct buffer *bufp; char *append_end; { char *end; int nread; char *buf = bufp->beg; char *tem; if (append_end == 0) append_end = bufp->ptr; while (1) { end = append_end; while (*end && *end != '\n') end++; if (*end) break; if (bufp->ateof) return buf + bufp->full; if (bufp->ptr == buf) { if (bufp->full == bufp->size) { bufp->size *= 2; /* Add 1 to size to ensure room for terminating null. */ tem = (char *) xrealloc (buf, bufp->size + 1); bufp->ptr = (bufp->ptr - buf) + tem; append_end = (append_end - buf) + tem; bufp->beg = buf = tem; } } else { append_end -= bufp->ptr - buf; memcpy (buf, bufp->ptr, bufp->full -= bufp->ptr - buf); bufp->ptr = buf; } if (!(nread = retry_read (fd, buf + bufp->full, bufp->size - bufp->full))) bufp->ateof = 1; bufp->full += nread; buf[bufp->full] = 0; } return end + 1; } #ifdef TEST #include <stdio.h> main (argc, argv) int argc; char **argv; { char *term; char *buf; term = argv[1]; printf ("TERM: %s\n", term); buf = (char *) tgetent (0, term); if ((int) buf <= 0) { printf ("No entry.\n"); return 0; } printf ("Entry: %s\n", buf); tprint ("cm"); tprint ("AL"); printf ("co: %d\n", tgetnum ("co")); printf ("am: %d\n", tgetflag ("am")); } tprint (cap) const char *cap; { char *x = tgetstr (cap, 0); char *y; printf ("%s: ", cap); if (x) { for (y = x; *y; y++) if (*y <= ' ' || *y == 0177) printf ("\\%0o", *y); else putchar (*y); xfree (x); } else printf ("none"); putchar ('\n'); } #endif /* TEST */