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view src/s/sunos4-1-4.h @ 4407:4ee73bbe4f8e
Always use boyer_moore in ASCII or Latin-1 buffers with ASCII search strings.
2007-12-26 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* casetab.c:
Extend and correct some case table documentation.
* search.c (search_buffer):
Correct a bug where only the first entry for a character in the
case equivalence table was examined in determining if the
Boyer-Moore search algorithm is appropriate.
If there are case mappings outside of the charset and row of the
characters specified in the search string, those case mappings can
be safely ignored (and Boyer-Moore search can be used) if we know
from the buffer statistics that the corresponding characters cannot
occur.
* search.c (boyer_moore):
Assert that we haven't been passed a string with varying
characters sets or rows within character sets. That's what
simple_search is for.
In the very rare event that a character in the search string has a
canonical case mapping that is not in the same character set and
row, don't try to search for the canonical character, search for
some other character that is in the the desired character set and
row. Assert that the case table isn't corrupt.
Do not search for any character case mappings that cannot possibly
occur in the buffer, given the buffer metadata about its
contents.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 26 Dec 2007 17:30:16 +0100 |
parents | e04119814345 |
children |
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/* Synched up with: FSF 19.31. */ #include "sunos4-1.h" #if 0 /* XEmacs: FSF 19.31 removes this. Let's just comment it out. */ /* TERMIOS is broken under SunOS?? Someone says: This causes failure in process_send_signal (tcgetattr loses) and may also cause hanging at Emacs startup when parent is not a job control shell. */ /* murray@chemical-eng.edinburgh.ac.uk says this works, and avoids the problem of spurious ^M in subprocess output. */ #undef HAVE_TERMIOS #endif #if 0 /* XEmacs: FSF 19.31 mistakenly reenables this. */ /* jik@gza.com says this works now. */ /* The bug that corrupts GNU malloc's memory pool is fixed in SunOS 4.1.3. */ #undef SYSTEM_MALLOC #endif /* 0 */ /* barrie@calvin.demon.co.uk says memmove is missing. */ #ifndef SYSTEM_MALLOC #define MEMMOVE_MISSING #endif /* A reliable source says this is broken through SunOS 4.1.3 */ /* but not SunOS 4.1.4 */ #ifdef BROKEN_SIGIO #undef BROKEN_SIGIO #endif