view lib-src/i.c @ 1296:87084e8445a7

[xemacs-hg @ 2003-02-14 09:50:15 by ben] syntax-table fixes 1. the updating of mirror tables every time a syntax table was modified was taking up huge amounts of time so i added a dirty flag and made the updating "just-in-time". 2. no-longer-used char-table-entries were not getting "freed", generating tons of garbage. 3. syntax_match() was being incorrectly called on mirror tables in the cache, not the original syntax table. buffer.c, syntax.c: Move syntax table description from buffer.c to syntax.c. chartab.c, chartab.h: Free extra char table entries to avoid excessive garbage. Add flags for dirty and mirror_table_p to char tables. Add a back pointer from mirror tables to the original syntax table. When modifying a syntax table, don't update the mirror table right away, just mark as dirty. Add various asserts to make sure we are dealing with the right type of table (mirror or non-mirror). font-lock.c, syntax.c, syntax.h: Add entry to syntax caches for the non-mirror table. Set it appropriately when initializing the syntax table. Use it, not the mirror table, for calls to syntax_match(). Don't create a bogus float each time, just once at startup. Add some asserts, as in chartab.c. syntax.h: When retrieving the syntax code, check the dirty flag and update the mirror tables as appropriate. Add some asserts, as above.
author ben
date Fri, 14 Feb 2003 09:50:17 +0000
parents 6728e641994e
children 01c57eb70ae9
line wrap: on
line source

/* I-connector utility
   Copyright (C) 2000 Kirill M. Katsnelson
   Copyright (C) 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.  */

/* When run with an argument, i treats it as a command line, and pipes
command stdin, stdout and stderr to its own respective streams. How
silly it should sound, but windowed program in Win32 cannot do output
to the console from which it has been started, and should be run using
this utility.

This utility is for running [tx]emacs as part of make process so that
its output goes to the same console as the rest of the make output
does.  It can be used also when xemacs should be run as a batch
command ina script, especially when its standart output should be
obtained programmatically. */

#include <windows.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <tchar.h>

typedef struct
{
  HANDLE source;
  HANDLE drain;
} I_connector;

/* 
 * Make new handle as that pointed to by PH but
 * inheritable, substitute PH with it, and close the
 * original one
 */
static void
make_inheritable (HANDLE* ph)
{
  HANDLE htmp;
  DuplicateHandle (GetCurrentProcess(), *ph, GetCurrentProcess(), &htmp,
		   0, TRUE, DUPLICATE_CLOSE_SOURCE | DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS);
  *ph = htmp;
}

/*
 * Worker thread proc. Reads source, pumps into drain,
 * till either clogs.
 */
static DWORD CALLBACK
pump (LPVOID pv_i)
{
  I_connector* pi = (I_connector*) pv_i;
  BYTE buffer [256];
  DWORD really_read, unused;

  while (ReadFile (pi->source, buffer, sizeof (buffer), &really_read, NULL) &&
	 WriteFile (pi->drain, buffer, really_read, &unused, NULL))
    ;

  return 0;
}

/*
 * Launch a pump for the given I-connector
 */
static void
start_pump (I_connector* pi)
{
  DWORD unused;
  HANDLE h_thread = CreateThread (NULL, 0, pump, (void*)pi, 0, &unused);
  CloseHandle (h_thread);
}

static HANDLE external_event;

static BOOL
ctrl_c_handler (unsigned long type)
{
  SetEvent (external_event);
  return FALSE;
}

/* Skip over the executable name in the given command line.  Correctly
   handles quotes in the name.  Return NULL upon error.  If
   REQUIRE_FOLLOWING is non-zero, it's an error if no argument follows the
   executable name. */

static LPTSTR
skip_executable_name (LPTSTR cl, int require_following)
{
  int ix;

  while (1)
    {
      ix = _tcscspn (cl, _T(" \t\""));
      if (cl[ix] == '\"')
	{
	  cl = _tcschr (cl + ix + 1, '\"');
	  if (cl == NULL)
	    return NULL; /* Unmatched quote */
	  cl++;
	}
      else
	{
	  cl += ix;
	  cl += _tcsspn (cl, _T(" \t"));
	  if (!require_following)
	    return cl;
	  return *cl ? cl : NULL;
	}
    }
}

/*
 * Brew coffee and bring snickers
 */
void
usage (void)
{
  fprintf (stderr,
   "\n"
   "usage: i command\n"
   "i executes the command and reroutes its standard handles to the calling\n"
   "console.  Good for seeing output of GUI programs that use standard output."
   "\n");
}

int
main (void)
{
  STARTUPINFO si;
  PROCESS_INFORMATION pi;
  I_connector I_in, I_out, I_err;
  DWORD exit_code;
  LPTSTR command = skip_executable_name (GetCommandLine (), 1);
     
  if (command == NULL)
    {
      usage ();
      return 1;
    }

  ZeroMemory (&si, sizeof (si));
  si.dwFlags = STARTF_USESTDHANDLES;

  I_in.source = GetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE);
  CreatePipe (&si.hStdInput, &I_in.drain, NULL, 0);
  make_inheritable (&si.hStdInput);

  I_out.drain = GetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE);
  CreatePipe (&I_out.source, &si.hStdOutput, NULL, 0);
  make_inheritable (&si.hStdOutput);

  I_err.drain = GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE);
  CreatePipe (&I_err.source, &si.hStdError, NULL, 0);
  make_inheritable (&si.hStdError);

  {
    SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES sa;
    LPTSTR new_command =
      (LPTSTR) malloc (666 + sizeof (TCHAR) * _tcslen (command));
    LPTSTR past_exe;

    if (!new_command)
      {
	_ftprintf (stderr, _T ("Out of memory when launching `%s'\n"),
		   command);
	return 2;
      }

    past_exe = skip_executable_name (command, 0);
    if (!past_exe)
      {
	usage ();
	return 1;
      }

    /* Since XEmacs isn't a console application, it can't easily be
       terminated using ^C.  Therefore, we set up a communication path with
       it so that when a ^C is sent to us (using GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent),
       we in turn signals it to commit suicide. (This is cleaner than using
       TerminateProcess()).  This makes (e.g.) the "Stop Build" command
       from VC++ correctly terminate XEmacs.

       #### This will cause problems if i.exe is used for commands other
       than XEmacs.  We need to make behavior this a command-line
       option. */

    /* Create the event as inheritable so that we can use it to communicate
       with the child process */
    sa.nLength = sizeof (sa);
    sa.bInheritHandle = TRUE;
    sa.lpSecurityDescriptor = NULL;
    external_event = CreateEvent (&sa, FALSE, FALSE, NULL);
    if (!external_event)
      {
	_ftprintf (stderr, _T ("Error %d creating signal event for `%s'\n"),
		   GetLastError (), command);
	return 2;
      }

    SetConsoleCtrlHandler ((PHANDLER_ROUTINE) ctrl_c_handler, TRUE);
    _tcsncpy (new_command, command, past_exe - command);
    _stprintf (new_command + (past_exe - command),
	       /* start with space in case no args past command name */
	       " -mswindows-termination-handle %d ", (long) external_event);
    _tcscat (new_command, past_exe);
    
    if (CreateProcess (NULL, new_command, NULL, NULL, TRUE, 0,
		       NULL, NULL, &si, &pi) == 0)
      {
	_ftprintf (stderr, _T("Error %d launching `%s'\n"),
		   GetLastError (), command);
	return 2;
      }
    
    CloseHandle (pi.hThread);
  }


  /* Start pump in each I-connector */
  start_pump (&I_in);
  start_pump (&I_out);
  start_pump (&I_err);

  /* Wait for the process to complete */
  WaitForSingleObject (pi.hProcess, INFINITE);
  GetExitCodeProcess (pi.hProcess, &exit_code);
  CloseHandle (pi.hProcess);

  /* Make pump threads eventually die out. Looks rude, I agree */
  CloseHandle (GetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE));
  CloseHandle (GetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE));
  CloseHandle (GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE));

  return exit_code;
}