Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/syssignal.h @ 872:79c6ff3eef26
[xemacs-hg @ 2002-06-20 21:18:01 by ben]
font changes etc.; some 21.4 changes
mule/mule-msw-init-late.el: Specify charset->windows-registry conversion.
mule/mule-x-init.el: Delete extra mule font additions here. Put them in faces.c.
cl-macs.el: Document better.
font-lock.el: Move Lisp function regexp to lisp-mode.el.
lisp-mode.el: Various indentation fixes:
Handle flet functions better.
Handle argument lists in defuns and flets.
Handle quoted lists, e.g. property lists -- don't indent like
function calls. Distinguish between lambdas and other lists.
lisp-mode.el: Handle this form.
faces.el, font-menu.el, font.el, gtk-faces.el, msw-faces.el, msw-font-menu.el, x-faces.el, x-init.el: Major overhaul of face-handling code:
-- Fix lots of bogus code in msw-faces.el, msw-font-menu.el,
font-menu.el that was "truenaming" font specs -- i.e. in the
process of frobbing a particular field in a general user-specified
font spec with wildcarded fields, sticking in particular values
for all the remaining wildcarded fields. This bug was rampant
everywhere except in x-faces.el (the oldest and only correctly
written code). This also means that we need to work with font
names at all times and not font instances, because a font instance
is essentially a truenamed font.
-- Total rewrite of extremely junky code in msw-faces.el. Work
with names as well as font instances, and return names; stop
truenaming when canonicalizing and frobbing; fix handling of the
combined style field, i.e. weight/slant (also fixed in font.el).
-- Totally rewrite the frobbing functions in faces.el. This time,
we frob all the instantiators rather than just computing a single
instance value and working backwards. That way, e.g., `bold' will
work for all charsets that have bold available, rather than only
for whatever charset was part of the computed font instance
(another example of the truename virus). Also fix up code to look
at the fallbacks (all of them) when no global value present, so we
don't need to put something in the global value. Intelligently
handle a request to frob a buffer locale, rather than signalling
an error. When frobbing instantiators, try hard to figure out
what device type is associated with them, and frob each according
to its own proper device type. Correctly handle inheritance
vectors given as instantiators. Preserve existing tags when
putting back frobbed instantiators. Extract out general
specifier-frobbing code into specifier.el. Document everything
cleanly. Do lots of other things better, etc.
-- Don't duplicatively set a global specification for the default
font -- it's already in the fallback and we no longer need a
default global specification present. Delete various code in
x-faces.el and msw-faces.el that duplicated the lists of fonts in
faces.c.
-- init-global-faces was not being called at all under MS Windows!
Major bogosity. That caused device-specific values to get stuck
into all the fonts, making it very hard to change them -- setting
global specs caused nothing to happen.
-- Correct weight names in font.el.
-- Lots more font fixups in objects*.c.
Printer.el: Warning fix.
specifier.el: Add more args to map-specifier.
Add various "heuristic" specifier functions to aid in creation of
specifier-munging code such as in faces.el.
subr.el: New functions.
lwlib.c: Fix warning.
config.inc.samp: Clean up, add args to control fastcall (not yet supported! the
changes needed are in another ws of mine), profile support, vc6
support, union-type.
xemacs.dsp, xemacs.mak: Semi-major overhaul.
Fix bug where dump-id was always getting recomputed, forcing a
redump even when nothing changed.
Add support for fastcall. Support edit-and-continue (on by
default) with vc6. Use incremental linking when doing a debug
compilation. Add support for profiling.
Consolidate the various debug flags.
Partial support for "batch-compiling" -- compiling many files on a
single invocation of the compiler. Doesn't seem to help that much
for me, so it's not finished or enabled by default.
Remove HAVE_MSW_C_DIRED, we always do.
Correct some sloppy use of directories.
s/cygwin32.h: Allow pdump to work under Cygwin (mmap is broken, so need to undefine
HAVE_MMAP).
s/win32-common.h, s/windowsnt.h: Support for fastcall. Add WIN32_ANY for identifying all Win32
variants (Cygwin, native, MinGW). Both of these are properly used
in another ws.
alloc.c, balloon-x.c, buffer.c, bytecode.c, callint.c, cm.c, cmdloop.c, cmds.c, console-gtk.c, console-gtk.h, console-msw.c, console-msw.h, console-stream.c, console-stream.h, console-tty.c, console-tty.h, console-x.c, console-x.h, console.c, console.h, device-gtk.c, device-msw.c, device-tty.c, device-x.c, device.c, device.h, devslots.h, dialog-gtk.c, dialog-msw.c, dialog-x.c, dialog.c, dired-msw.c, editfns.c, emacs.c, event-Xt.c, event-gtk.c, event-msw.c, event-stream.c, event-tty.c, event-unixoid.c, events.c, extents.c, extents.h, faces.c, fileio.c, fns.c, frame-gtk.c, frame-msw.c, frame-tty.c, frame-x.c, frame.c, frame.h, glyphs-eimage.c, glyphs-gtk.c, glyphs-msw.c, glyphs-widget.c, glyphs-x.c, glyphs.c, glyphs.h, gui-gtk.c, gui-msw.c, gui-x.c, gui.c, gutter.c, input-method-xlib.c, intl-encap-win32.c, intl-win32.c, keymap.c, lisp.h, macros.c, menubar-gtk.c, menubar-msw.c, menubar-x.c, menubar.c, menubar.h, minibuf.c, mule-charset.c, nt.c, objects-gtk.c, objects-gtk.h, objects-msw.c, objects-msw.h, objects-tty.c, objects-tty.h, objects-x.c, objects-x.h, objects.c, objects.h, postgresql.c, print.c, process.h, redisplay-gtk.c, redisplay-msw.c, redisplay-output.c, redisplay-tty.c, redisplay-x.c, redisplay.c, redisplay.h, scrollbar-gtk.c, scrollbar-msw.c, scrollbar-x.c, scrollbar.c, select-gtk.c, select-msw.c, select-x.c, select.c, signal.c, sound.c, specifier.c, symbols.c, syntax.c, sysdep.c, syssignal.h, syswindows.h, toolbar-common.c, toolbar-gtk.c, toolbar-msw.c, toolbar-x.c, toolbar.c, unicode.c, window.c, window.h: The following are the major changes made:
(1) Separation of various header files into an external and an
internal version, similar to the existing separation of process.h
and procimpl.h. Eventually this should be done for all Lisp
objects. The external version has the same name as currently; the
internal adds -impl. The external file has XFOO() macros for
objects, but the structure is opaque and defined only in the
internal file. It's now reasonable to move all prototypes in
lisp.h into the appropriate external file, and this should be
done. Currently, separation has been done on extents.h,
objects*.h, console.h, device.h, frame.h, and window.h.
For c/d/f/w, the most basic properties are available in the
external header file, with the macros resolving to functions. In
the internal header file, the macros are redefined to directly
access the structure. Also, the global MARK_FOO_CHANGED macros
have been made into functions so that they can be accessed without
needing to include lots of -impl headers -- they are used in
almost exclusively in non-time-critical functions, and take up
enough time that the function overhead will be negligible.
Similarly, the function overhead from making the basic properties
mentioned above into functions is negligible, and code that does
heavy accessing of c/d/f/w structures inevitably ends up needing
the internal header files, anyway.
(2) More face changes.
-- Major rewrite of objects-msw.c. Now handles wildcard specs
properly, rather than "truenaming" (or even worse, signalling an
error, which previously happened with some of the fallbacks if you
tried to use them in make-font-instance!).
-- Split charset matching of fonts into two stages -- one to find
a font specifically designed for a particular charset (by
examining its registry), the second to find a Unicode font that
can support the charset. This needs to proceed as two complete,
separate instantiations in order to work properly (otherwise many
of the fonts in the HELLO page look wrong). This should also make
it easy to support iso10646 (Unicode) fonts under X.
-- All default values for fonts are now completely specified in
the fallbacks. Stuff from mule-x-init.el has all been moved here,
merged with the existing specs, and totally rethought so you get
sensible results. (HELLO now looks much better!).
-- Generalize the "default X/GTK device" stuff into a
per-device-type "default device".
-- Add mswindows-{set-}charset-registry. In time,
charset<->code-page conversion functions will be removed.
-- Wrap protective code around calls to compute device specifier tags,
and do this computation before calling the face initialization code
because the latter may need these tags to be correctly updated.
(3) Other changes.
EmacsFrame.c, glyphs-msw.c, eval.c, gui-x.c, intl-encap-win32.c, search.c, signal.c, toolbar-msw.c, unicode.c: Warning fixes.
config.h.in: #undefs meant to be frobbed by configure *MUST* go inside of
#ifndef WIN32_NO_CONFIGURE, and everything else *MUST* go outside!
eval.c: Let detailed backtraces be detailed.
specifier.c: Don't override user's print-string-length/print-length settings.
glyphs.c: New function image-instance-instantiator.
config.h.in, sysdep.c: Changes for fastcall.
sysdep.c, nt.c: Fix up a previous botched patch that tried to add support for both
EEXIST and EACCES. IF THE BOTCHED PATCH WENT INTO 21.4, THIS FIXUP
NEEDS TO GO IN, TOO.
search.c: Fix *evil* crash due to incorrect synching of syntax-cache code
with 21.1. THIS SHOULD GO INTO 21.4.
author | ben |
---|---|
date | Thu, 20 Jun 2002 21:19:10 +0000 |
parents | a634e3b7acc8 |
children | 13e47461d509 |
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/* syssignal.h - System-dependent definitions for signals. Copyright (C) 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copyright (C) 1996 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: FSF 19.30. */ #ifndef INCLUDED_syssignal_h_ #define INCLUDED_syssignal_h_ /* In the old world, one could not #include <signal.h> here. The party line was that that header should always be #included before <config.h>, because some configuration files (like s/hpux.h) indicate that SIGIO doesn't work by #undef-ing SIGIO, and if this file #includes <signal.h>, then that will re-#define SIGIO and confuse things. This was, however, a completely fucked up state of affairs, because on some systems it's necessary for the s/m files to #define things in order to get <signal.h> to provide the right typedefs, etc. And it's generally a broken concept for <config.h> to not be the very very first file included. So instead of #undef'ing SIGIO in the various s/m files, I've changed them to define BROKEN_SIGIO instead, then we (syssignal.h) do an #undef SIGIO at the end, after including signal.h. Therefore, it's important that <signal.h> not be included after "syssignal.h", but that's the normal state: nothing should be directly including <signal.h> these days. -- jwz, 29-nov-93 */ #include <signal.h> #include <errno.h> /* SIGPOLL is the SVR4 signal. Those systems generally define SIGIO as an alias for SIGPOLL, but just in case ... */ #if defined (BROKEN_SIGIO) # if defined (SIGIO) && defined (SIGPOLL) # if SIGIO == SIGPOLL # undef SIGIO # undef SIGPOLL # else # undef SIGIO # endif # endif #else /* Not BROKEN_SIGIO */ # if !defined (SIGIO) && defined (SIGPOLL) # define SIGIO SIGPOLL # endif #endif /* Define SIGCHLD as an alias for SIGCLD. There are many conditionals testing SIGCHLD. */ #if defined (SIGCLD) && !defined (SIGCHLD) # define SIGCHLD SIGCLD #endif /* SIGCHLD */ #ifdef BROKEN_SIGCHLD #undef SIGCHLD #endif #ifdef SIGCHLD #define EMACS_BLOCK_SIGCHLD EMACS_BLOCK_SIGNAL (SIGCHLD) #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_SIGCHLD EMACS_UNBLOCK_SIGNAL (SIGCHLD) #else #define EMACS_BLOCK_SIGCHLD #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_SIGCHLD #endif /* According to W.R. Stevens __Advanced Programming in the Unix Environment__, there are four different paradigms for handling signals. We use autoconf to tell us which one applies. Note that on some systems, more than one paradigm is implemented (typically, the POSIX sigaction/sigprocmask and either the older SYSV or BSD way). In such a case, we prefer the POSIX way. We used to say this: [[ NOTE: We use EMACS_* macros for most signal operations, but just signal() for the standard signal-setting operation. Perhaps we should change this to EMACS_SIGNAL(), but that runs the risk of someone forgetting this convention and calling signal() directly. ]] But current policy is to avoid playing with macros as much as possible, since in the long run it really just ends up creating unmaintainable code -- someone newly reading the code is never going to realize exactly which calls are redirected, and on which systems, and where the redirection occurs. Possibly we should use the new "qxe" convention. */ #ifndef NeXT typedef RETSIGTYPE (XCDECL * signal_handler_t) (int); #endif #if defined (HAVE_SIGPROCMASK) /* The POSIX way (sigaction, sigprocmask, sigpending, sigsuspend) */ signal_handler_t qxe_reliable_signal (int signal_number, signal_handler_t action); #define EMACS_SIGNAL qxe_reliable_signal #define EMACS_BLOCK_SIGNAL(sig) do \ { \ sigset_t ES_mask; \ sigemptyset (&ES_mask); \ sigaddset (&ES_mask, sig); \ sigprocmask (SIG_BLOCK, &ES_mask, NULL); \ } while (0) #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_SIGNAL(sig) do \ { \ sigset_t ES_mask; \ sigemptyset (&ES_mask); \ sigaddset (&ES_mask, sig); \ sigprocmask (SIG_UNBLOCK, &ES_mask, NULL); \ } while (0) #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_ALL_SIGNALS() do \ { \ sigset_t ES_mask; \ sigemptyset (&ES_mask); \ sigprocmask (SIG_SETMASK, &ES_mask, NULL); \ } while (0) #define EMACS_WAIT_FOR_SIGNAL(sig) do \ { \ sigset_t ES_mask; \ sigprocmask (0, NULL, &ES_mask); \ sigdelset (&ES_mask, sig); \ sigsuspend (&ES_mask); \ } while (0) #define EMACS_REESTABLISH_SIGNAL(sig, handler) #elif defined (HAVE_SIGBLOCK) /* The older BSD way (signal/sigvec, sigblock, sigsetmask, sigpause) */ /* It's OK to use signal() here directly. No unreliable signal problems. However, we use sigvec() because it allows us to request interruptible I/O. */ #define EMACS_SIGNAL qxe_reliable_signal /* Is it necessary to define sigmask like this? */ #ifndef sigmask # define sigmask(no) (1L << ((no) - 1)) #endif #define EMACS_BLOCK_SIGNAL(sig) sigblock (sigmask (sig)) #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_SIGNAL(sig) sigsetmask (sigblock (0) & ~sigmask (sig)) #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_ALL_SIGNALS() sigsetmask (0) #define EMACS_WAIT_FOR_SIGNAL(sig) do \ { \ int ES_mask = sigblock (0); \ sigpause (ES_mask & ~sigmask (sig)); \ } while (0) #define EMACS_REESTABLISH_SIGNAL(sig, handler) #elif defined (HAVE_SIGHOLD) /* The older SYSV way (signal/sigset, sighold, sigrelse, sigignore, sigpause) */ #define EMACS_SIGNAL sigset #define EMACS_BLOCK_SIGNAL(sig) sighold (sig) #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_SIGNAL(sig) sigrelse (sig) /* #### There's not really any simple way to implement this. Since EMACS_UNBLOCK_ALL_SIGNALS() is only called once (at startup), it's probably OK to just ignore it. */ #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_ALL_SIGNALS() 0 #define EMACS_WAIT_FOR_SIGNAL(sig) sigpause (sig) #define EMACS_REESTABLISH_SIGNAL(sig, handler) #elif defined (WIN32_NATIVE) /* MS Windows signal emulation (in turns emulates the sigset/sighold paradigm) */ #define EMACS_SIGNAL mswindows_sigset #define EMACS_BLOCK_SIGNAL(sig) mswindows_sighold (sig) #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_SIGNAL(sig) mswindows_sigrelse (sig) /* #### There's not really any simple way to implement this. Since EMACS_UNBLOCK_ALL_SIGNALS() is only called once (at startup), it's probably OK to just ignore it. */ #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_ALL_SIGNALS() 0 #define EMACS_WAIT_FOR_SIGNAL(sig) mswindows_sigpause (sig) #define EMACS_REESTABLISH_SIGNAL(sig, handler) /* Defines that we need that aren't in the standard signal.h */ #define SIGHUP 1 /* Hang up */ #define SIGQUIT 3 /* Quit process */ #define SIGKILL 9 /* Die, die die */ #define SIGALRM 14 /* Alarm */ #define SIGPROF 29 /* Profiling timer exp */ #else /* The oldest SYSV way (signal only; unreliable signals) */ /* Old USG systems don't really have signal blocking. We indicate this by not defining EMACS_BLOCK_SIGNAL or EMACS_WAIT_FOR_SIGNAL. */ #define EMACS_SIGNAL signal #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_SIGNAL(sig) 0 #define EMACS_UNBLOCK_ALL_SIGNALS() 0 #define EMACS_REESTABLISH_SIGNAL(sig, handler) do \ { \ int old_errno = errno; \ signal (sig, handler); \ errno = old_errno; \ } while (0) /* Under SYSV, setting a signal handler for SIGCLD causes SIGCLD to immediately be sent if there any unwaited processes out there. This means that the SIGCLD handler *must* call wait() to reap the status of all processes -- it cannot simply set a flag and then reestablish the handler, because it will get called again, infinitely. We only need to worry about this on systems where signals need to be reestablished (SYSV Release 2 and earlier). */ #define OBNOXIOUS_SYSV_SIGCLD_BEHAVIOR #endif /* different signalling methods */ /* On bsd, [man says] kill does not accept a negative number to kill a pgrp. Must do that using the killpg call. */ #ifdef HAVE_KILLPG #define EMACS_KILLPG(pid, signo) killpg (pid, signo) #elif defined (WIN32_NATIVE) #define EMACS_KILLPG(pid, signo) should never be called #else #define EMACS_KILLPG(pid, signo) kill (-(pid), signo) #endif #ifndef NSIG # define NSIG (SIGUSR2+1) /* guess how many elements are in sys_siglist... */ #endif /* SYS_SIGLIST_DECLARED is determined by configure. On Linux, it seems, configure incorrectly fails to find it, so s/linux.h defines HAVE_SYS_SIGLIST. */ #if !defined (SYS_SIGLIST_DECLARED) && !defined (HAVE_SYS_SIGLIST) extern const char *sys_siglist[]; #endif #ifdef SIGDANGER SIGTYPE memory_warning_signal (int sig); #endif #if defined (WIN32_NATIVE) || defined (CYGWIN_BROKEN_SIGNALS) typedef void (__cdecl *mswindows_sighandler) (int); /* Prototypes for signal functions, see win32.c */ int mswindows_sighold (int nsig); int mswindows_sigrelse (int nsig); int mswindows_sigpause (int nsig); int mswindows_raise (int nsig); mswindows_sighandler mswindows_sigset (int sig, mswindows_sighandler handler); #endif /* defined (WIN32_NATIVE) || defined (CYGWIN_BROKEN_SIGNALS) */ signal_handler_t set_timeout_signal (int signal_number, signal_handler_t action); #endif /* INCLUDED_syssignal_h_ */