Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/intl.c @ 5146:88bd4f3ef8e4
make lrecord UID's have a separate UID space for each object, resurrect debug SOE code in extents.c
-------------------- ChangeLog entries follow: --------------------
src/ChangeLog addition:
2010-03-15 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
* alloc.c:
* alloc.c (c_readonly):
* alloc.c (deadbeef_memory):
* alloc.c (make_compiled_function):
* alloc.c (make_button_data):
* alloc.c (make_motion_data):
* alloc.c (make_process_data):
* alloc.c (make_timeout_data):
* alloc.c (make_magic_data):
* alloc.c (make_magic_eval_data):
* alloc.c (make_eval_data):
* alloc.c (make_misc_user_data):
* alloc.c (noseeum_make_marker):
* alloc.c (ADDITIONAL_FREE_string):
* alloc.c (common_init_alloc_early):
* alloc.c (init_alloc_once_early):
* bytecode.c (print_compiled_function):
* bytecode.c (mark_compiled_function):
* casetab.c:
* casetab.c (print_case_table):
* console.c:
* console.c (print_console):
* database.c (print_database):
* database.c (finalize_database):
* device-msw.c (sync_printer_with_devmode):
* device-msw.c (print_devmode):
* device-msw.c (finalize_devmode):
* device.c:
* device.c (print_device):
* elhash.c:
* elhash.c (print_hash_table):
* eval.c (print_multiple_value):
* eval.c (mark_multiple_value):
* events.c (deinitialize_event):
* events.c (print_event):
* events.c (event_equal):
* extents.c:
* extents.c (soe_dump):
* extents.c (soe_insert):
* extents.c (soe_delete):
* extents.c (soe_move):
* extents.c (extent_fragment_update):
* extents.c (print_extent_1):
* extents.c (print_extent):
* extents.c (vars_of_extents):
* frame.c:
* frame.c (print_frame):
* free-hook.c:
* free-hook.c (check_free):
* glyphs.c:
* glyphs.c (print_image_instance):
* glyphs.c (print_glyph):
* gui.c:
* gui.c (copy_gui_item):
* hash.c:
* hash.c (NULL_ENTRY):
* hash.c (KEYS_DIFFER_P):
* keymap.c (print_keymap):
* keymap.c (MARKED_SLOT):
* lisp.h:
* lrecord.h:
* lrecord.h (LISP_OBJECT_UID):
* lrecord.h (set_lheader_implementation):
* lrecord.h (struct old_lcrecord_header):
* lstream.c (print_lstream):
* lstream.c (finalize_lstream):
* marker.c (print_marker):
* marker.c (marker_equal):
* mc-alloc.c (visit_all_used_page_headers):
* mule-charset.c:
* mule-charset.c (print_charset):
* objects.c (print_color_instance):
* objects.c (print_font_instance):
* objects.c (finalize_font_instance):
* opaque.c (print_opaque):
* opaque.c (print_opaque_ptr):
* opaque.c (equal_opaque_ptr):
* print.c (internal_object_printer):
* print.c (enum printing_badness):
* rangetab.c (print_range_table):
* rangetab.c (range_table_equal):
* specifier.c (print_specifier):
* specifier.c (finalize_specifier):
* symbols.c:
* symbols.c (print_symbol_value_magic):
* tooltalk.c:
* tooltalk.c (print_tooltalk_message):
* tooltalk.c (print_tooltalk_pattern):
* window.c (print_window):
* window.c (debug_print_window):
(1) Make lrecord UID's have a separate UID space for each object.
Otherwise, with 20-bit UID's, we rapidly wrap around, especially
when common objects like conses and strings increment the UID value
for every object created. (Originally I tried making two UID spaces,
one for objects that always print readably and hence don't display
the UID, and one for other objects. But certain objects like markers
for which a UID is displayed are still generated rapidly enough that
UID overflow is a serious issue.) This also has the advantage of
making UID values smaller, hence easier to remember -- their main
purpose is to make it easier to keep track of different objects of
the same type when debugging code. Make sure we dump lrecord UID's
so that we don't have problems with pdumped and non-dumped objects
having the same UID.
(2) Display UID's consistently whenever an object (a) doesn't
consistently print readably (objects like cons and string, which
always print readably, can't display a UID), and (b) doesn't
otherwise have a unique property that makes objects of a
particular type distinguishable. (E.g. buffers didn't and still
don't print an ID, but the buffer name uniquely identifies the
buffer.) Some types, such as event, extent, compiled-function,
didn't always (or didn't ever) display an ID; others (such as
marker, extent, lstream, opaque, opaque-ptr, any object using
internal_object_printer()) used to display the actual machine
pointer instead.
(3) Rename NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT_UID to LISP_OBJECT_UID; make it work
over all Lisp objects and take a Lisp object, not a struct pointer.
(4) Some misc cleanups in alloc.c, elhash.c.
(5) Change code in events.c that "deinitializes" an event so that
it doesn't increment the event UID counter in the process. Also
use deadbeef_memory() to overwrite memory instead of doing the same
with custom code. In the process, make deadbeef_memory() in
alloc.c always available, and delete extraneous copy in mc-alloc.c.
Also capitalize all uses of 0xDEADBEEF. Similarly in elhash.c
call deadbeef_memory().
(6) Resurrect "debug SOE" code in extents.c. Make it conditional
on DEBUG_XEMACS and on a `debug-soe' variable, rather than on
SOE_DEBUG. Make it output to stderr, not stdout.
(7) Delete some custom print methods that were identical to
external_object_printer().
author | Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 15 Mar 2010 16:35:38 -0500 |
parents | 3c3c1d139863 |
children | 308d34e9f07d |
line wrap: on
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/* Various functions for internationalizing XEmacs. Copyright (C) 1993, 1994, 1995 Board of Trustees, University of Illinois. Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 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 in FSF. */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" #if defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS) && defined (HAVE_X11_XLOCALE_H) #include <X11/Xlocale.h> #else #ifdef HAVE_LOCALE_H #include <locale.h> #endif #endif #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS int init_x_locale (Lisp_Object locale); #endif DEFUN ("current-locale", Fcurrent_locale, 0, 0, 0, /* Return the current locale. This is of the form LANG_COUNTRY.ENCODING, or LANG_COUNTRY, or LANG, or .ENCODING. Unfortunately, the meanings of these three values are system-dependent, and there is no universal agreement. */ ()) { Extbyte *loc; loc = setlocale (LC_CTYPE, NULL); if (!loc) return Qnil; return build_extstring (loc, Qctext); } DEFUN ("set-current-locale", Fset_current_locale, 1, 1, 0, /* Set the user's current locale. Takes a string, the value passed to setlocale(). This is of the form LANG_COUNTRY.ENCODING, or LANG_COUNTRY, or LANG, or .ENCODING. Unfortunately, the meanings of these three values are system-dependent, and there is no universal agreement. This function is meant to be called only from `set-language-environment', which keeps tables to figure out the values to use for particular systems. If the empty string is passed in, the locale is initialized from environment variables. Returns nil if the call failed (typically, an invalid locale was given). Otherwise, returns the locale, or possibly a more-specified version. */ (locale)) { Extbyte *loc; Lisp_Object str; CHECK_STRING (locale); /* RedHat 6.2 contains a locale called "Francais" with the C-cedilla encoded in ISO2022! */ loc = LISP_STRING_TO_EXTERNAL (locale, Qctext); loc = setlocale (LC_ALL, loc); if (!loc) return Qnil; loc = xstrdup (loc); setlocale (LC_NUMERIC, "C"); #ifdef HAVE_X_WINDOWS if (!init_x_locale (locale)) { /* Locale not supported under X. Put it back. */ setlocale (LC_ALL, loc); setlocale (LC_NUMERIC, "C"); free (loc); return Qnil; } #endif str = build_extstring (loc, Qctext); xfree (loc); return str; } #if 0 /* #### some old code that I really want to nuke, but I'm not completely sure what it did, so I'll leave it until we get around to implementing message-translation and decide whether the functionality that this is trying to support makes any sense. --ben */ Lisp_Object Qdefer_gettext; DEFUN ("ignore-defer-gettext", Fignore_defer_gettext, 1, 1, 0, /* If OBJECT is of the form (defer-gettext "string"), return the string. The purpose of the defer-gettext symbol is to identify strings which are translated when they are referenced instead of when they are defined. */ (object)) { if (CONSP (object) && SYMBOLP (Fcar (object)) && EQ (Fcar (object), Qdefer_gettext)) return Fcar (Fcdr (object)); else return object; } #endif /* 0 */ DEFUN ("gettext", Fgettext, 1, 1, 0, /* Look up STRING in the default message domain and return its translation. This function does nothing if I18N3 was not enabled when Emacs was compiled. */ (string)) { #ifdef I18N3 /* #### What should happen here is: 1) If the string has no `string-translatable' property or its value is nil, no translation takes place. The `string-translatable' property only gets added when a constant string is read in from a .el or .elc file, to avoid excessive translation. (The user can also explicitly add this property to a string.) 2) If the string's `string-translatable' property is a string, that string should be returned. `format' add this property. This allows translation to take place at the proper time but avoids excessive translation if the string is not destined for a translating stream. (See print_internal().) 3) If gettext() returns the same string, then Fgettext() should return the same object, minus the 'string-translatable' property. */ #endif return string; } #ifdef I18N3 /* #### add the function `force-gettext', perhaps in Lisp. This ignores the `string-translatable' property and simply calls gettext() on the string. Add the functions `set-string-translatable' and `set-stream-translating'. */ #endif /************************************************************************/ /* initialization */ /************************************************************************/ void init_intl (void) { /* This function cannot GC, because it explicitly prevents it. */ if (initialized) { int count = begin_gc_forbidden (); Lisp_Object args[2]; specbind (Qinhibit_quit, Qt); args[0] = Qreally_early_error_handler; args[1] = intern ("init-locale-at-early-startup"); Fcall_with_condition_handler (2, args); /* Should be calling this here, but problems with `data-directory' and locating the files. See comment in mule-cmds.el:`init-mule-at-startup'. args[1] = intern ("init-unicode-at-early-startup"); Fcall_with_condition_handler (2, args); */ unbind_to (count); } } void syms_of_intl (void) { DEFSUBR (Fgettext); DEFSUBR (Fset_current_locale); DEFSUBR (Fcurrent_locale); } void vars_of_intl (void) { #ifdef I18N3 Fprovide (intern ("i18n3")); #endif #ifdef MULE Fprovide (intern ("mule")); #endif /* MULE */ }