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view src/sysproc.h @ 4885:6772ce4d982b
Fix hash tables, #'member*, #'assoc*, #'eql compiler macros if bignums
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2010-01-24 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Correct the semantics of #'member*, #'eql, #'assoc* in the
presence of bignums; change the integerp byte code to fixnump
semantics.
* bytecomp.el (fixnump, integerp, byte-compile-integerp):
Change the integerp byte code to fixnump; add a byte-compile
method to integerp using fixnump and numberp and avoiding a
funcall most of the time, since in the non-core contexts where
integerp is used, it's mostly distinguishing between fixnums and
things that are not numbers at all.
* byte-optimize.el (side-effect-free-fns, byte-after-unbind-ops)
(byte-compile-side-effect-and-error-free-ops):
Replace the integerp bytecode with fixnump; add fixnump to the
side-effect-free-fns. Add the other extended number type
predicates to the list in passing.
* obsolete.el (floatp-safe): Mark this as obsolete.
* cl.el (eql): Go into more detail in the docstring here. Don't
bother checking whether both arguments are numbers; one is enough,
#'equal will fail correctly if they have distinct types.
(subst): Replace a call to #'integerp (deciding whether to use
#'memq or not) with one to #'fixnump.
Delete most-positive-fixnum, most-negative-fixnum from this file;
they're now always in C, so they can't be modified from Lisp.
* cl-seq.el (member*, assoc*, rassoc*):
Correct these functions in the presence of bignums.
* cl-macs.el (cl-make-type-test): The type test for a fixnum is
now fixnump. Ditch floatp-safe, use floatp instead.
(eql): Correct this compiler macro in the presence of bignums.
(assoc*): Correct this compiler macro in the presence of bignums.
* simple.el (undo):
Change #'integerp to #'fixnump here, since we use #'delq with the
same value as ELT a few lines down.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2010-01-24 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Fix problems with #'eql, extended number types, and the hash table
implementation; change the Bintegerp bytecode to fixnump semantics
even on bignum builds, since #'integerp can have a fast
implementation in terms of #'fixnump for most of its extant uses,
but not vice-versa.
* lisp.h: Always #include number.h; we want the macros provided in
it, even if the various number types are not available.
* number.h (NON_FIXNUM_NUMBER_P): New macro, giving 1 when its
argument is of non-immediate number type. Equivalent to FLOATP if
WITH_NUMBER_TYPES is not defined.
* elhash.c (lisp_object_eql_equal, lisp_object_eql_hash):
Use NON_FIXNUM_NUMBER_P in these functions, instead of FLOATP,
giving more correct behaviour in the presence of the extended
number types.
* bytecode.c (Bfixnump, execute_optimized_program):
Rename Bintegerp to Bfixnump; change its semantics to reflect the
new name on builds with bignum support.
* data.c (Ffixnump, Fintegerp, syms_of_data, vars_of_data):
Always make #'fixnump available, even on non-BIGNUM builds;
always implement #'integerp in this file, even on BIGNUM builds.
Move most-positive-fixnum, most-negative-fixnum here from
number.c, so they are Lisp constants even on builds without number
types, and attempts to change or bind them error.
Use the NUMBERP and INTEGERP macros even on builds without
extended number types.
* data.c (fixnum_char_or_marker_to_int):
Rename this function from integer_char_or_marker_to_int, to better
reflect the arguments it accepts.
* number.c (Fevenp, Foddp, syms_of_number):
Never provide #'integerp in this file. Remove #'oddp,
#'evenp; their implementations are overridden by those in cl.el.
* number.c (vars_of_number):
most-positive-fixnum, most-negative-fixnum are no longer here.
man/ChangeLog addition:
2010-01-23 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Generally: be careful to say fixnum, not integer, when talking
about fixed-precision integral types. I'm sure I've missed
instances, both here and in the docstrings, but this is a decent
start.
* lispref/text.texi (Columns):
Document where only fixnums, not integers generally, are accepted.
(Registers):
Remove some ancient char-int confoundance here.
* lispref/strings.texi (Creating Strings, Creating Strings):
Be more exact in describing where fixnums but not integers in
general are accepted.
(Creating Strings): Use a more contemporary example to illustrate
how concat deals with lists including integers about #xFF. Delete
some obsolete documentation on same.
(Char Table Types): Document that only fixnums are accepted as
values in syntax tables.
* lispref/searching.texi (String Search, Search and Replace):
Be exact in describing where fixnums but not integers in general
are accepted.
* lispref/range-tables.texi (Range Tables): Be exact in describing
them; only fixnums are accepted to describe ranges.
* lispref/os.texi (Killing XEmacs, User Identification)
(Time of Day, Time Conversion):
Be more exact about using fixnum where only fixed-precision
integers are accepted.
* lispref/objects.texi (Integer Type): Be more exact (and
up-to-date) about the possible values for
integers. Cross-reference to documentation of the bignum extension.
(Equality Predicates):
(Range Table Type):
(Array Type): Use fixnum, not integer, to describe a
fixed-precision integer.
(Syntax Table Type): Correct some English syntax here.
* lispref/numbers.texi (Numbers): Change the phrasing here to use
fixnum to mean the fixed-precision integers normal in emacs.
Document that our terminology deviates from that of Common Lisp,
and that we're working on it.
(Compatibility Issues): Reiterate the Common Lisp versus Emacs
Lisp compatibility issues.
(Comparison of Numbers, Arithmetic Operations):
* lispref/commands.texi (Command Loop Info, Working With Events):
* lispref/buffers.texi (Modification Time):
Be more exact in describing where fixnums but not integers in
general are accepted.
| author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
|---|---|
| date | Sun, 24 Jan 2010 15:21:27 +0000 |
| parents | aa5ed11f473b |
| children | 308d34e9f07d |
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/* Copyright (C) 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright (C) 2000, 2002 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 really in FSF. */ #ifndef INCLUDED_sysproc_h_ #define INCLUDED_sysproc_h_ #include "systime.h" /* necessary for sys/resource.h; also gets the FD_* defines on some systems. */ #ifndef WIN32_NATIVE #include <sys/resource.h> #endif #ifdef MINGW #include <../mingw/process.h> #elif defined (CYGWIN) #include <../include/process.h> #elif defined (WIN32_NATIVE) /* <process.h> should not conflict with "process.h", as per ANSI definition. This is not true with visual c though. The trick below works with VC4.2b, 5.0 and 6.0. It assumes that VC is installed in a kind of standard way, so include path ends with /include. */ #include <../include/process.h> #endif #ifdef HAVE_SOCKETS /* TCP connection support, if kernel can do it */ # include <sys/types.h> /* AJK */ # ifndef WIN32_NATIVE # include <sys/socket.h> # include <netdb.h> # include <netinet/in.h> # include <arpa/inet.h> # endif #endif /* HAVE_SOCKETS */ #ifdef WIN32_NATIVE /* Note: winsock.h already included in systime.h above */ /* map winsock error codes to standard names */ #define EWOULDBLOCK WSAEWOULDBLOCK #define EINPROGRESS WSAEINPROGRESS #define EALREADY WSAEALREADY #define ENOTSOCK WSAENOTSOCK #define EDESTADDRREQ WSAEDESTADDRREQ #define EMSGSIZE WSAEMSGSIZE #define EPROTOTYPE WSAEPROTOTYPE #define ENOPROTOOPT WSAENOPROTOOPT #define EPROTONOSUPPORT WSAEPROTONOSUPPORT #define ESOCKTNOSUPPORT WSAESOCKTNOSUPPORT #define EOPNOTSUPP WSAEOPNOTSUPP #define EPFNOSUPPORT WSAEPFNOSUPPORT #define EAFNOSUPPORT WSAEAFNOSUPPORT #define EADDRINUSE WSAEADDRINUSE #define EADDRNOTAVAIL WSAEADDRNOTAVAIL #define ENETDOWN WSAENETDOWN #define ENETUNREACH WSAENETUNREACH #define ENETRESET WSAENETRESET #define ECONNABORTED WSAECONNABORTED #define ECONNRESET WSAECONNRESET #define ENOBUFS WSAENOBUFS #define EISCONN WSAEISCONN #define ENOTCONN WSAENOTCONN #define ESHUTDOWN WSAESHUTDOWN #define ETOOMANYREFS WSAETOOMANYREFS #define ETIMEDOUT WSAETIMEDOUT #define ECONNREFUSED WSAECONNREFUSED #define ELOOP WSAELOOP /* #define ENAMETOOLONG WSAENAMETOOLONG */ #define EHOSTDOWN WSAEHOSTDOWN #define EHOSTUNREACH WSAEHOSTUNREACH /* #define ENOTEMPTY WSAENOTEMPTY */ #define EPROCLIM WSAEPROCLIM #define EUSERS WSAEUSERS #define EDQUOT WSAEDQUOT #define ESTALE WSAESTALE #define EREMOTE WSAEREMOTE #endif /* WIN32_NATIVE */ /* On some systems, e.g. DGUX, inet_addr returns a `struct in_addr'. */ #ifdef HAVE_BROKEN_INET_ADDR # define IN_ADDR struct in_addr # define NUMERIC_ADDR_ERROR (numeric_addr.s_addr == -1) #else # if (LONGBITS > 32) # define IN_ADDR unsigned int # else # define IN_ADDR unsigned long # endif # define NUMERIC_ADDR_ERROR (numeric_addr == (IN_ADDR) -1) #endif /* Define first descriptor number available for subprocesses. */ #define FIRST_PROC_DESC 3 #ifdef AIX #include <sys/select.h> #endif #ifdef HAVE_STROPTS_H #include <stropts.h> /* isastream(), I_PUSH */ #endif #ifdef HAVE_STRTIO_H #include <strtio.h> /* TIOCSIGNAL */ #endif #ifdef HAVE_PTY_H #include <pty.h> /* openpty() on Tru64, Linux */ #endif #ifdef HAVE_LIBUTIL_H #include <libutil.h> /* openpty() on FreeBSD */ #endif #ifdef HAVE_UTIL_H #include <util.h> /* openpty() on NetBSD */ #endif /* The FD_* macros expand to __extension__ forms on glibc-based systems. Uno does not understand such forms, so let's help it out. */ #ifdef UNO #undef FD_SET #undef FD_CLR #undef FD_ISSET #undef FD_ZERO #undef MAXDESC #undef SELECT_TYPE #endif /* UNO */ #ifdef FD_SET /* We could get this from param.h, but better not to depend on finding that. And better not to risk that it might define other symbols used in this file. */ # ifdef FD_SETSIZE # define MAXDESC FD_SETSIZE # else # define MAXDESC 64 # endif /* FD_SETSIZE */ # define SELECT_TYPE fd_set #else /* no FD_SET */ # define MAXDESC 32 # define SELECT_TYPE int /* Define the macros to access a single-int bitmap of descriptors. */ # define FD_SET(n, p) (*(p) |= (1 << (n))) # define FD_CLR(n, p) (*(p) &= ~(1 << (n))) # define FD_ISSET(n, p) (*(p) & (1 << (n))) # define FD_ZERO(p) (*(p) = 0) #endif /* no FD_SET */ int poll_fds_for_input (SELECT_TYPE mask); int qxe_execve (const Ibyte *filename, Ibyte * const argv[], Ibyte * const envp[]); pid_t qxe_getpid (void); /* #### I would really like to delete the remaining synchronous code entirely. We are now using it only for *REALLY* old systems -- how many systems nowadays (a) lack job control, or (b) lack mkdir() or rmdir() ????? --ben */ #include "syssignal.h" /* needed for SIGTSTP */ #if !defined (WIN32_NATIVE) && (!defined (SIGTSTP) || !defined (HAVE_MKDIR) || !defined (HAVE_RMDIR)) #define NEED_SYNC_PROCESS_CODE /* True iff we are about to fork off a synchronous process or if we are waiting for it. */ extern volatile int synch_process_alive; /* Nonzero => this is a string explaining death of synchronous subprocess. */ extern const char *synch_process_death; /* If synch_process_death is zero, this is exit code of synchronous subprocess. */ extern int synch_process_retcode; #endif #endif /* INCLUDED_sysproc_h_ */
