Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/filemode.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 | 2f8bb876ab1d |
children | 697ef44129c6 e5da225ea2ca |
line wrap: on
line source
/* filemode.c -- make a string describing file modes Copyright (C) 1985, 1990, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 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. */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" #include "sysfile.h" static void mode_string (unsigned short mode, char *str); static char ftypelet (mode_t bits); static void rwx (unsigned short bits, char *chars); static void setst (unsigned short bits, char *chars); /* filemodestring - fill in string STR with an ls-style ASCII representation of the st_mode field of file stats block STATP. 10 characters are stored in STR; no terminating null is added. The characters stored in STR are: 0 File type. 'd' for directory, 'c' for character special, 'b' for block special, 'm' for multiplex, 'l' for symbolic link, 's' for socket, 'p' for fifo, '-' for regular, '?' for any other file type 1 'r' if the owner may read, '-' otherwise. 2 'w' if the owner may write, '-' otherwise. 3 'x' if the owner may execute, 's' if the file is set-user-id, '-' otherwise. 'S' if the file is set-user-id, but the execute bit isn't set. 4 'r' if group members may read, '-' otherwise. 5 'w' if group members may write, '-' otherwise. 6 'x' if group members may execute, 's' if the file is set-group-id, '-' otherwise. 'S' if it is set-group-id but not executable. 7 'r' if any user may read, '-' otherwise. 8 'w' if any user may write, '-' otherwise. 9 'x' if any user may execute, 't' if the file is "sticky" (will be retained in swap space after execution), '-' otherwise. 'T' if the file is sticky but not executable. */ void filemodestring (struct stat *statp, char *str) { mode_string (statp->st_mode, str); } /* Like filemodestring, but only the relevant part of the `struct stat' is given as an argument. */ static void mode_string (unsigned short mode, char *str) { str[0] = ftypelet (mode); rwx ((unsigned short) ((mode & 0700) << 0), &str[1]); rwx ((unsigned short) ((mode & 0070) << 3), &str[4]); rwx ((unsigned short) ((mode & 0007) << 6), &str[7]); setst (mode, str); } /* Return a character indicating the type of file described by file mode BITS: 'd' for directories 'b' for block special files 'c' for character special files 'm' for multiplexor files 'l' for symbolic links 's' for sockets 'p' for fifos '-' for regular files '?' for any other file type. */ static char ftypelet (mode_t bits) { #ifdef S_ISBLK if (S_ISBLK (bits)) return 'b'; #endif if (S_ISCHR (bits)) return 'c'; if (S_ISDIR (bits)) return 'd'; if (S_ISREG (bits)) return '-'; #ifdef S_ISFIFO if (S_ISFIFO (bits)) return 'p'; #endif #ifdef S_ISLNK if (S_ISLNK (bits)) return 'l'; #endif #ifdef S_ISSOCK if (S_ISSOCK (bits)) return 's'; #endif #ifdef S_ISMPC if (S_ISMPC (bits)) return 'm'; #endif #ifdef S_ISNWK if (S_ISNWK (bits)) return 'n'; #endif return '?'; } /* Look at read, write, and execute bits in BITS and set flags in CHARS accordingly. */ static void rwx (unsigned short bits, char *chars) { chars[0] = (bits & S_IRUSR) ? 'r' : '-'; chars[1] = (bits & S_IWUSR) ? 'w' : '-'; chars[2] = (bits & S_IXUSR) ? 'x' : '-'; } /* Set the 's' and 't' flags in file attributes string CHARS, according to the file mode BITS. */ static void setst (unsigned short bits, char *chars) { #ifdef S_ISUID if (bits & S_ISUID) { if (chars[3] != 'x') /* Set-uid, but not executable by owner. */ chars[3] = 'S'; else chars[3] = 's'; } #endif #ifdef S_ISGID if (bits & S_ISGID) { if (chars[6] != 'x') /* Set-gid, but not executable by group. */ chars[6] = 'S'; else chars[6] = 's'; } #endif #ifdef S_ISVTX if (bits & S_ISVTX) { if (chars[9] != 'x') /* Sticky, but not executable by others. */ chars[9] = 'T'; else chars[9] = 't'; } #endif }