Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view CHANGES-ben-mule @ 1950:b5691d548489
[xemacs-hg @ 2004-03-14 22:50:33 by viteno]
Update xemacs_extra_name.
author | viteno |
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date | Sun, 14 Mar 2004 22:50:33 +0000 |
parents | 943eaba38521 |
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List of changes in new Mule workspace: -------------------------------------- Deleted files: src/iso-wide.h src/mule-charset.h src/mule.c src/ntheap.h src/syscommctrl.h lisp/files-nomule.el lisp/help-nomule.el lisp/mule/mule-help.el lisp/mule/mule-init.el lisp/mule/mule-misc.el nt/config.h Other deleted files, all zero-width and accidentally present: src/events-mod.h tests/Dnd/README.OffiX tests/Dnd/dragtest.el netinstall/README.xemacs lib-src/srcdir-symlink.stamp New files: CHANGES-ben-mule README.ben-mule-21-5 README.ben-separate-stderr TODO.ben-mule-21-5 etc/TUTORIAL.{cs,es,nl,sk,sl} etc/unicode/* lib-src/make-mswin-unicode.pl lisp/code-init.el lisp/resize-minibuffer.el lisp/unicode.el lisp/mule/china-util.el lisp/mule/cyril-util.el lisp/mule/devan-util.el lisp/mule/devanagari.el lisp/mule/ethio-util.el lisp/mule/indian.el lisp/mule/japan-util.el lisp/mule/korea-util.el lisp/mule/lao-util.el lisp/mule/lao.el lisp/mule/mule-locale.txt lisp/mule/mule-msw-init.el lisp/mule/thai-util.el lisp/mule/thai.el lisp/mule/tibet-util.el lisp/mule/tibetan.el lisp/mule/viet-util.el src/charset.h src/intl-auto-encap-win32.c src/intl-auto-encap-win32.h src/intl-encap-win32.c src/intl-win32.c src/intl-x.c src/mule-coding.c src/text.c src/text.h src/unicode.c src/s/win32-common.h src/s/win32-native.h gzip support: -- new coding system `gzip' (bytes -> bytes); unfortunately, not quite working yet because it handles only the raw zlib format and not the higher-level gzip format (the zlib library is brain-damaged in that it provides low-level, stream-oriented API's only for raw zlib, and for gzip you have only high-level API's, which aren't useful for xemacs). -- configure support (with-zlib). configure changes: - file-coding always compiled in. eol detection is off by default on unix, non-mule, but can be enabled with configure option --with-default-eol-detection or command-line flag -eol. - code that selects which files are compiled is mostly moved to Makefile.in.in. see comment in Makefile.in.in. - vestigial i18n3 code deleted. - new cygwin mswin libs imm32 (input methods), mpr (user name enumeration). - check for link, symlink. - vfork-related code deleted. - fix configure.usage. (delete --with-file-coding, --no-doc-file, add --with-default-eol-detection, --quick-build). - nt/config.h has been eliminated and everything in it merged into config.h.in and s/windowsnt.h. see config.h.in for more info. - massive rewrite of s/windowsnt.h, m/windowsnt.h, s/cygwin32.h, s/mingw32.h. common code moved into s/win32-common.h, s/win32-native.h. - in nt/xemacs.mak,config.inc.samp, variable is called MULE, not HAVE_MULE, for consistency with sources. - define TABDLY, TAB3 in freebsd.h (#### from where?) Tutorial: - massive rewrite; sync to FSF 21.0.106, switch focus to window systems, new sections on terminology and multiple frames, lots of fixes for current xemacs idioms. - german version from Adrian mostly matching my changes. - copy new tutorials from FSF (Spanish, Dutch, Slovak, Slovenian, Czech); not updated yet though. - eliminate help-nomule.el and mule-help.el; merge into one single tutorial function, fix lots of problems, put back in help.el where it belongs. (there was some random junk in help-nomule -- string-width and make-char. string-width is now in subr.el with a single definition, and make-char in text.c.) Sample init file: - remove forward/backward buffer code, since it's now standard. - when disabling C-x C-c, make it display a message saying how to exit, not just beep and complain "undefined". Key bindings: (keymap.c, keydefs.el, help.el, etc.) - M-home, M-end now move forward and backward in buffers; with Shift, stay within current group (e.g. all C files; same grouping as the gutter tabs). (bindings switch-to-{next/previous}-buffer[-in-group] in files.el) - needed to move code from gutter-items.el to buff-menu.el that's used by these bindings, since gutter-items.el is loaded only when the gutter is active and these bindings (and hence the code) is not (any more) gutter specific. - new global vars global-tty-map and global-window-system-map specify key bindings for use only on TTY's or window systems, respectively. this is used to make ESC ESC be keyboard-quit on window systems, but ESC ESC ESC on TTY's, where Meta + arrow keys may appear as ESC ESC O A or whatever. C-z on window systems is now zap-up-to-char, and iconify-frame is moved to C-Z. ESC ESC is isearch-quit. (isearch-mode.el) - document global-{tty,window-system}-map in various places; display them when you do C-h b. - fix up function documentation in general for keyboard primitives. e.g. key-bindings now contains a detailed section on the steps prior to looking up in keymaps, i.e. function-key-map, keyboard-translate-table. etc. define-key and other obvious starting points indicate where to look for more info. - eliminate use and mention of grody advertised-undo and deprecated-help. (simple.el, startup.el, picture.el, menubar-items.el) gnuclient, gnuserv: - clean up headers a bit. - use proper ms win idiom for checking for temp directory (TEMP or TMP, not TMPDIR). throughout XEmacs sources: - all #ifdef FILE_CODING statements removed from code. I/O: - use PATH_MAX consistently instead of MAXPATHLEN, MAX_PATH, etc. - all code that does preprocessor games with C lib I/O functions (open, read) has been removed. The code has been changed to call the correct function directly. Functions that accept Intbyte * arguments for filenames and such and do automatic conversion to or from external format will be prefixed qxe...(). Functions that are retrying in case of EINTR are prefixed retry_...(). DONT_ENCAPSULATE is long-gone. - never call getcwd() any more. use our shadowed value always. Strings: - new qxe() string functions that accept Intbyte * as arguments. These work exactly like the standard strcmp(), strcpy(), sprintf(), etc. except for the argument declaration differences. We use these whenever we have Intbyte * strings, which is quite often. - new fun build_intstring() takes an Intbyte *. also new funs build_msg_intstring (like build_intstring()) and build_msg_string (like build_string()) to do a GETTEXT() before building the string. (elimination of old build_translated_string(), replaced by build_msg_string()). - the doprnt.c external entry points have been completely rewritten to be more useful and have more sensible names. We now have, for example, versions that work exactly like sprintf() but return a malloc()ed string. - function intern_int() for Intbyte * arguments, like intern(). - numerous places throughout code where char * replaced with something else, e.g. Char_ASCII *, Intbyte *, Char_Binary *, etc. same with unsigned char *, going to UChar_Binary *, etc. - code in print.c that handles stdout, stderr rewritten. - places that print to stderr directly replaced with stderr_out(). - new convenience functions write_fmt_string(), write_fmt_string_lisp(), stderr_out_lisp(), write_string(). Allocation, Objects, Lisp Interpreter: - automatically use "managed lcrecord" code when allocating. any lcrecord can be put on a free list with free_lcrecord(). - record_unwind_protect() returns the old spec depth. - unbind_to() now takes only one arg. use unbind_to_1() if you want the 2-arg version, with GC protection of second arg. - new funs to easily inhibit GC. ({begin,end}_gc_forbidden()) use them in places where gc is currently being inhibited in a more ugly fashion. also, we disable GC in certain strategic places where string data is often passed in, e.g. dfc functions, print functions. - major improvements to eistring code, fleshing out of missing funs. - make_buffer() -> wrap_buffer() for consistency with other objects; same for make_frame() -> wrap_frame() and make_console() -> wrap_console(). - better documentation in condition-case. - new convenience funs record_unwind_protect_freeing() and record_unwind_protect_freeing_dynarr() for conveniently setting up an unwind-protect to xfree() or Dynarr_free() a pointer. Init code: - lots of init code rewritten to be mule-correct. Processes: - always call egetenv(), never getenv(), for mule correctness. s/m files: - removal of unused DATA_END, TEXT_END, SYSTEM_PURESIZE_EXTRA, HAVE_ALLOCA (automatically determined) - removal of vfork references (we no longer use vfork) make-docfile: - clean up headers a bit. - allow .obj to mean equivalent .c, just like for .o. - allow specification of a "response file" (a command-line argument beginning with @, specifying a file containing further command-line arguments) -- a standard mswin idiom to avoid potential command-line limits and to simplify makefiles. use this in xemacs.mak. debug support: - (cmdloop.el) new var breakpoint-on-error, which breaks into the C debugger when an unhandled error occurs noninteractively. useful when debugging errors coming out of complicated make scripts, e.g. package compilation, since you can set this through an env var. - (startup.el) new env var XEMACSDEBUG, specifying a Lisp form executed early in the startup process; meant to be used for turning on debug flags such as breakpoint-on-error or stack-trace-on-error, to track down noninteractive errors. - (cmdloop.el) removed non-working code in command-error to display a backtrace on debug-on-error. use stack-trace-on-error instead to get this. - (process.c) new var debug-process-io displays data sent to and received from a process. - (alloc.c) staticpros have name stored with them for easier debugging. - (emacs.c) code that handles fatal errors consolidated and rewritten. much more robust and correctly handles all fatal exits on mswin (e.g. aborts, not previously handled right). command line (startup.el, emacs.c): - new option -eol to enable auto EOL detection under non-mule unix. - new option -nuni (--no-unicode-lib-calls) to force use of non-Unicode API's under Windows NT, mostly for debugging purposes. - help message fixed up (divided into sections), existing problem causing incomplete output fixed, undocumented options documented. startup.el: - move init routines from before-init-hook or after-init-hook; just call them directly (init-menubar-at-startup, init-mule-at-startup). frame.el: - delete old commented-out code. Mule changes: Major: - the code that handles the details of processing multilingual text has been consolidated to make it easier to extend it. it has been yanked out of various files (buffer.h, mule-charset.h, lisp.h, insdel.c, fns.c, file-coding.c, etc.) and put into text.c and text.h. mule-charset.h has also been renamed charset.h. all long comments concerning the representations and their processing have been consolidated into text.c. - major rewriting of file-coding. it's mostly abstracted into coding systems that are defined by methods (similar to devices and specifiers), with the ultimate aim being to allow non-i18n coding systems such as gzip. there is a "chain" coding system that allows multiple coding systems to be chained together. (it doesn't yet have the concept that either end of a coding system can be bytes or chars; this needs to be added.) - large amounts of code throughout the code base have been Mule-ized, not just Windows code. - total rewriting of OS locale code. it notices your locale at startup and sets the language environment accordingly, and calls setlocale() and sets LANG when you change the language environment. new language environment properties locale, mswindows-locale, cygwin-locale, native-coding-system, to determine langenv from locale and vice-versa; fix all language environments (lots of language files). langenv startup code rewritten. many new functions to convert between locales, language environments, etc. - major overhaul of the way default values for the various coding system variables are handled. all default values are collected into one location, a new file code-init.el, which provides a unified mechanism for setting and querying what i call "basic coding system variables" (which may be aliases, parts of conses, etc.) and a mechanism of different configurations (Windows w/Mule, Windows w/o Mule, Unix w/Mule, Unix w/o Mule, unix w/o Mule but w/auto EOL), each of which specifies a set of default values. we determine the configuration at startup and set all the values in one place. (code-init.el, code-files.el, coding.el, ...) - i copied the remaining language-specific files from fsf. i made some minor changes in certain cases but for the most part the stuff was just copied and may not work. - ms windows mule support, with full unicode support. required font, redisplay, event, other changes. ime support from ikeyama. User-Visible Changes: Lisp-Visible Changes: - ensure that `escape-quoted' works correctly even without Mule support and use it for all auto-saves. (auto-save.el, fileio.c, coding.el, files.el) - new var buffer-file-coding-system-when-loaded specifies the actual coding system used when the file was loaded (buffer-file-coding-system is usually the same, but may be changed because it controls how the file is written out). use it in revert-buffer (files.el, code-files.el) and in new submenu File->Revert Buffer with Specified Encoding (menubar-items.el). - improve docs on how the coding system is determined when a file is read in; improved docs are in both find-file and insert-file-contents and a reference to where to find them is in buffer-file-coding-system-for-read. (files.el, code-files.el) - new (brain-damaged) FSF way of calling post-read-conversion (only one arg, not two) is supported, along with our two-argument way, as best we can. (code-files.el) - add inexplicably missing var default-process-coding-system. use it. get rid of former hacked-up way of setting these defaults using comint-exec-hook. also fun set-buffer-process-coding-system. (code-process.el, code-cmds.el, process.c) - remove function set-default-coding-systems; replace with set-default-output-coding-systems, which affects only the output defaults (buffer-file-coding-system, output half of default-process-coding-system). the input defaults should not be set by this because they should always remain `undecided' in normal circumstances. fix prefer-coding-system to use the new function and correct its docs. - fix bug in coding-system-change-eol-conversion (code-cmds.el) - recognize all eol types in prefer-coding-system (code-cmds.el) - rewrite coding-system-category to be correct (coding.el) Internal Changes: - Separate encoding and decoding lstreams have been combined into a single coding lstream. Functions make_encoding_*_stream and make_decoding_*_stream have been combined into make_coding_*_stream, which takes an argument specifying whether encode or decode is wanted. - remove last vestiges of I18N3, I18N4 code. - ascii optimization for strings: we keep track of the number of ascii chars at the beginning and use this to optimize byte<->char conversion on strings. - mule-misc.el, mule-init.el deleted; code in there either deleted, rewritten, or moved to another file. - mule.c deleted. - move non-Mule-specific code out of mule-cmds.el into code-cmds.el. (coding-system-change-text-conversion; remove duplicate coding-system-change-eol-conversion) - remove duplicate set-buffer-process-coding-system (code-cmds.el) - add some commented-out code from FSF mule-cmds.el (find-coding-systems-region-subset-p, find-coding-systems-region, find-coding-systems-string, find-coding-systems-for-charsets, find-multibyte-characters, last-coding-system-specified, select-safe-coding-system, select-message-coding-system) (code-cmds.el) - remove obsolete alias pathname-coding-system, function set-pathname-coding-system (coding.el) - remove coding-system property doc-string; split into `description' (short, for menu items) and `documentation' (long); correct coding system defns (coding.el, file-coding.c, lots of language files) - move coding-system-base into C and make use of internal info (coding.el, file-coding.c) - move undecided defn into C (coding.el, file-coding.c) - use define-coding-system-alias, not copy-coding-system (coding.el) - new coding system iso-8859-6 for arabic - delete windows-1251 support from cyrillic.el; we do it automatically - remove setup-*-environment as per FSF 21 - rewrite european.el with lang envs for each language, so we can specify the locale - fix corruption in greek.el - sync japanese.el with FSF 20.6 - fix warnings in mule-ccl.el - move FSF compat Mule fns from obsolete.el to mule-charset.el - eliminate unused truncate-string{-to-width} - make-coding-system accepts (but ignores) the additional properties present in the fsf version, for compatibility. - i fixed the iso2022 handling so it will correctly read in files containing unknown charsets, creating a "temporary" charset which can later be overwritten by the real charset when it's defined. this allows iso2022 elisp files with literals in strange languages to compile correctly under mule. i also added a hack that will correctly read in and write out the emacs-specific "composition" escape sequences, i.e. ESC 0 through ESC 4. this means that my workspace correctly compiles the new file devanagari.el that i added. - elimination of string-to-char-list (use string-to-list) - elimination of junky define-charset Search: - make regex routines reentrant, since they're sometimes called reentrantly. (see regex.c for a description of how.) all global variables used by the regex routines get pushed onto a stack by the callers before being set, and are restored when finished. redo the preprocessor flags controlling REL_ALLOC in conjunction with this. Selection: - fix msw selection code for Mule. proper encoding for RegisterClipboardFormat. store selection as CF_UNICODETEXT, which will get converted to the other formats. don't respond to destroy messages from EmptyClipboard(). Menubar: - move menu-splitting code (menu-split-long-menu, etc.) from font-menu.el to menubar-items.el and redo its algorithm; use in various items with long generated menus; rename to remove `font-' from beginning of functions but keep old names as aliases - new fn menu-sort-menu - new items Open With Specified Encoding, Revert Buffer with Specified Encoding - split Mule menu into Encoding (non-Mule-specific; includes new item to control EOL auto-detection) and International submenus on Options, International on Help - redo items Grep All Files in Current Directory {and Below} using stuff from sample init.el - Debug on Error and friends now affect current session only; not saved - maybe-add-init-button -> init-menubar-at-startup and call explicitly from startup.el - don't use charset-registry in msw-font-menu.el; it's only for X Process: - Move setenv from packages; synch setenv/getenv with 21.0.105 Unicode support: - translation tables added in etc/unicode - new files unicode.c, unicode.el containing unicode coding systems and support; old code ripped out of file-coding.c - translation tables read in at startup (NEEDS WORK TO MAKE IT MORE EFFICIENT) - support CF_TEXT, CF_UNICODETEXT in select.el - encapsulation code added so that we can support both Windows 9x and NT in a single executable, determining at runtime whether to call the Unicode or non-Unicode API. encapsulated routines in intl-encap-win32.c (non-auto-generated) and intl-auto-encap-win32.[ch] (auto-generated). code generator in lib-src/make-mswin-unicode.pl. changes throughout the code to use the wide structures (W suffix) and call the encapsulated Win32 API routines (qxe prefix). calling code needs to do proper conversion of text using new coding systems Qmswindows_tstr, Qmswindows_unicode, or Qmswindows_multibyte. (the first points to one of the other two.) File-coding rewrite: The coding system code has been majorly rewritten. It's abstracted into coding systems that are defined by methods (similar to devices and specifiers). The types of conversions have also been generalized. Formerly, decoding always converted bytes to characters and encoding the reverse (these are now called "text file converters"), but conversion can now happen either to or from bytes or characters. This allows coding systems such as `gzip' and `base64' to be written. When specifying such a coding system to an operation that expects a text file converter (such as reading in or writing out a file), the appropriate coding systems to convert between bytes and characters are automatically inserted into the conversion chain as necessary. To facilitate creating such chains, a special coding system called "chain" has been created, which chains together two or more coding systems. Encoding detection has also been abstracted. Detectors are logically separate from coding systems, and each detector defines one or more categories. (For example, the detector for Unicode defines categories such as UTF-8, UTF-16, UCS-4, and UTF-7.) When a particular detector is given a piece of text to detect, it determines likeliness values (seven of them, from 3 [most likely] to -3 [least likely]; specific criteria are defined for each possible value). All detectors are run in parallel on a particular piece of text, and the results tabulated together to determine the actual encoding of the text. Encoding and decoding are now completely parallel operations, and the former "encoding" and "decoding" lstreams have been combined into a single "coding" lstream. Coding system methods that were formerly split in such a fashion have also been combined.