view src/opaque.c @ 5882:bbe4146603db

Reduce regexp usage, now CL-oriented non-regexp code available, core Lisp lisp/ChangeLog addition: 2015-04-01 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> When calling #'string-match with a REGEXP without regular expression special characters, call #'search, #'mismatch, #'find, etc. instead, making our code less likely to side-effect other functions' match data and a little faster. * apropos.el (apropos-command): * apropos.el (apropos): Call (position ?\n ...) rather than (string-match "\n" ...) here. * buff-menu.el: * buff-menu.el (buffers-menu-omit-invisible-buffers): Don't fire up the regexp engine just to check if a string starts with a space. * buff-menu.el (select-buffers-tab-buffers-by-mode): Don't fire up the regexp engine just to compare mode basenames. * buff-menu.el (format-buffers-tab-line): * buff-menu.el (build-buffers-tab-internal): Moved to being a label within the following. * buff-menu.el (buffers-tab-items): Use the label. * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-log-1): Don't fire up the regexp engine just to look for a newline. * cus-edit.el (get): Ditto. * cus-edit.el (custom-variable-value-create): Ditto, but for a colon. * descr-text.el (describe-text-sexp): Ditto. * descr-text.el (describe-char-unicode-data): Use #'split-string-by-char given that we're just looking for a semicolon. * descr-text.el (describe-char): Don't fire up the regexp engine just to look for a newline. * disass.el (disassemble-internal): Ditto. * files.el (file-name-sans-extension): Implement this using #'position. * files.el (file-name-extension): Correct this function's docstring, implement it in terms of #'position. * files.el (insert-directory): Don't fire up the regexp engine to split a string by space; don't reverse the list of switches, this is actually a longstand bug as far as I can see. * gnuserv.el (gnuserv-process-filter): Use #'position here, instead of consing inside #'split-string needlessly. * gtk-file-dialog.el (gtk-file-dialog-update-dropdown): Use #'split-string-by-char here, don't fire up #'split-string for directory-sep-char. * gtk-font-menu.el (hack-font-truename): Implement this more cheaply in terms of #'find, #'split-string-by-char, #'equal, rather than #'string-match, #'split-string, #'string-equal. * hyper-apropos.el (hyper-apropos-grok-functions): * hyper-apropos.el (hyper-apropos-grok-variables): Look for a newline using #'position rather than #'string-match in these functions. * info.el (Info-insert-dir): * info.el (Info-insert-file-contents): * info.el (Info-follow-reference): * info.el (Info-extract-menu-node-name): * info.el (Info-menu): Look for fixed strings using #'position or #'search as appropriate in this file. * ldap.el (ldap-decode-string): * ldap.el (ldap-encode-string): #'encode-coding-string, #'decode-coding-string are always available, don't check if they're fboundp. * ldap.el (ldap-decode-address): * ldap.el (ldap-encode-address): Use #'split-string-by-char in these functions. * lisp-mnt.el (lm-creation-date): * lisp-mnt.el (lm-last-modified-date): Don't fire up the regexp engine just to look for spaces in this file. * menubar-items.el (default-menubar): Use (not (mismatch ...)) rather than #'string-match here, for simple regexp. Use (search "beta" ...) rather than (string-match "beta" ...) * menubar-items.el (sort-buffers-menu-alphabetically): * menubar-items.el (sort-buffers-menu-by-mode-then-alphabetically): * menubar-items.el (group-buffers-menu-by-mode-then-alphabetically): Don't fire up the regexp engine to check if a string starts with a space or an asterisk. Use the more fine-grained results of #'compare-strings; compare case-insensitively for the buffer menu. * menubar-items.el (list-all-buffers): * menubar-items.el (tutorials-menu-filter): Use #'equal rather than #'string-equal, which, in this context, has the drawback of not having a bytecode, and no redeeming features. * minibuf.el: * minibuf.el (un-substitute-in-file-name): Use #'count, rather than counting the occurences of $ using the regexp engine. * minibuf.el (read-file-name-internal-1): Don't fire up the regexp engine to search for ?=. * mouse.el (mouse-eval-sexp): Check for newline with #'find. * msw-font-menu.el (mswindows-reset-device-font-menus): Split a string by newline with #'split-string-by-char. * mule/japanese.el: * mule/japanese.el ("Japanese"): Use #'search rather than #'string-match; canoncase before comparing; fix a bug I had introduced where I had been making case insensitive comparisons where the case mattered. * mule/korea-util.el (default-korean-keyboard): Look for ?3 using #'find, not #'string-march. * mule/korea-util.el (quail-hangul-switch-hanja): Search for a fixed string using #'search. * mule/mule-cmds.el (set-locale-for-language-environment): #'position, #'substitute rather than #'string-match, #'replace-in-string. * newcomment.el (comment-make-extra-lines): Use #'search rather than #'string-match for a simple string. * package-get.el (package-get-remote-filename): Use #'position when looking for ?@ * process.el (setenv): * process.el (read-envvar-name): Use #'position when looking for ?=. * replace.el (map-query-replace-regexp): Use #'split-string-by-char instead of using an inline implementation of it. * select.el (select-convert-from-cf-text): * select.el (select-convert-from-cf-unicodetext): Use #'position rather than #'string-match in these functions. * setup-paths.el (paths-emacs-data-root-p): Use #'search when looking for simple string. * sound.el (load-sound-file): Use #'split-string-by-char rather than an inline reimplementation of same. * startup.el (splash-screen-window-body): * startup.el (splash-screen-tty-body): Search for simple strings using #'search. * version.el (emacs-version): Ditto. * x-font-menu.el (hack-font-truename): Implement this more cheaply in terms of #'find, #'split-string-by-char, #'equal, rather than #'string-match, #'split-string, #'string-equal. * x-font-menu.el (x-reset-device-font-menus-core): Use #'split-string-by-char here. * x-init.el (x-initialize-keyboard): Search for a simple string using #'search.
author Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
date Wed, 01 Apr 2015 14:28:20 +0100
parents 308d34e9f07d
children e2fae7783046
line wrap: on
line source

/* Opaque Lisp objects.
   Copyright (C) 1993, 1994, 1995 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
   Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 2002, 2010 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 3 of the License, 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.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */

/* Synched up with: Not in FSF. */

/* Written by Ben Wing, October 1993. */

/* "Opaque" is used internally to hold keep track of allocated memory
   so it gets GC'd properly, and to store arbitrary data in places
   where a Lisp_Object is required and which may get GC'd. (e.g.  as
   the argument to record_unwind_protect()).  Once created in C,
   opaque objects cannot be resized.

   OPAQUE OBJECTS SHOULD NEVER ESCAPE TO THE LISP LEVEL.  Some code
   depends on this.  As such, opaque objects are a generalization
   of the Qunbound marker.
 */

#include <config.h>
#include "lisp.h"
#include "opaque.h"

#ifndef NEW_GC
Lisp_Object Vopaque_ptr_free_list;
#endif /* not NEW_GC */

/* Should never, ever be called. (except by an external debugger) */
static void
print_opaque (Lisp_Object obj, Lisp_Object printcharfun,
	      int UNUSED (escapeflag))
{
  const Lisp_Opaque *p = XOPAQUE (obj);

  write_fmt_string
    (printcharfun,
     "#<INTERNAL OBJECT (XEmacs bug?) (opaque, size=%lu) 0x%x>",
     (long)(p->size), LISP_OBJECT_UID (obj));
}

inline static Bytecount
aligned_sizeof_opaque (Bytecount opaque_size)
{
  return MAX_ALIGN_SIZE (offsetof (Lisp_Opaque, data) + opaque_size);
}

static Bytecount
sizeof_opaque (Lisp_Object obj)
{
  return aligned_sizeof_opaque (XOPAQUE (obj)->size);
}

/* Return an opaque object of size SIZE.
   If DATA is OPAQUE_CLEAR, the object's data is memset to '\0' bytes.
   If DATA is OPAQUE_UNINIT, the object's data is uninitialized.
   Else the object's data is initialized by copying from DATA. */
Lisp_Object
make_opaque (const void *data, Bytecount size)
{
  Lisp_Object obj =
    ALLOC_SIZED_LISP_OBJECT (aligned_sizeof_opaque (size), opaque);
  Lisp_Opaque *p = XOPAQUE (obj);
  p->size = size;

  if (data == OPAQUE_CLEAR)
    memset (p->data, '\0', size);
  else if (data == OPAQUE_UNINIT)
    DO_NOTHING;
  else
    memcpy (p->data, data, size);

  return obj;
}

/* This will not work correctly for opaques with subobjects! */

static int
equal_opaque (Lisp_Object obj1, Lisp_Object obj2, int UNUSED (depth),
	      int UNUSED (foldcase))
{
  Bytecount size;
  return ((size = XOPAQUE_SIZE (obj1)) == XOPAQUE_SIZE (obj2) &&
	  !memcmp (XOPAQUE_DATA (obj1), XOPAQUE_DATA (obj2), size));
}

/* This will not work correctly for opaques with subobjects! */

static Hashcode
hash_opaque (Lisp_Object obj, int UNUSED (depth), int UNUSED (equalp))
{
  if (XOPAQUE_SIZE (obj) == sizeof (unsigned long))
    return *((Hashcode *) XOPAQUE_DATA (obj));
  else
    return memory_hash (XOPAQUE_DATA (obj), XOPAQUE_SIZE (obj));
}

static const struct memory_description opaque_description[] = {
  { XD_END }
};

DEFINE_DUMPABLE_SIZABLE_LISP_OBJECT ("opaque", opaque,
				     0, print_opaque, 0,
				     equal_opaque, hash_opaque,
				     opaque_description,
				     sizeof_opaque, Lisp_Opaque);

/* stuff to handle opaque pointers */

/* Should never, ever be called. (except by an external debugger) */
static void
print_opaque_ptr (Lisp_Object obj, Lisp_Object printcharfun,
		  int UNUSED (escapeflag))
{
  const Lisp_Opaque_Ptr *p = XOPAQUE_PTR (obj);

  write_fmt_string
    (printcharfun,
     "#<INTERNAL OBJECT (XEmacs bug?) (opaque-ptr, adr=0x%lx) 0x%x>",
     (long)(p->ptr), LISP_OBJECT_UID (obj));
}

static int
equal_opaque_ptr (Lisp_Object obj1, Lisp_Object obj2, int UNUSED (depth),
		  int UNUSED (foldcase))
{
  return (XOPAQUE_PTR (obj1)->ptr == XOPAQUE_PTR (obj2)->ptr);
}

static Hashcode
hash_opaque_ptr (Lisp_Object obj, int UNUSED (depth), int UNUSED (equalp))
{
  return (Hashcode) XOPAQUE_PTR (obj)->ptr;
}

static const struct memory_description opaque_ptr_description[] = {
  { XD_END }
};

DEFINE_NODUMP_LISP_OBJECT ("opaque-ptr", opaque_ptr,
			   0, print_opaque_ptr, 0,
			   equal_opaque_ptr, hash_opaque_ptr,
			   opaque_ptr_description, Lisp_Opaque_Ptr);

Lisp_Object
make_opaque_ptr (void *val)
{
#ifdef NEW_GC
  Lisp_Object res = ALLOC_NORMAL_LISP_OBJECT (opaque_ptr);
#else /* not NEW_GC */
  Lisp_Object res = alloc_managed_lcrecord (Vopaque_ptr_free_list);
#endif /* not NEW_GC */
  set_opaque_ptr (res, val);
  return res;
}

/* Be very very careful with this.  Same admonitions as with
   free_cons() apply. */

void
free_opaque_ptr (Lisp_Object ptr)
{
#ifdef NEW_GC
  free_normal_lisp_object (ptr);
#else /* not NEW_GC */
  free_managed_lcrecord (Vopaque_ptr_free_list, ptr);
#endif /* not NEW_GC */
}

#ifndef NEW_GC
void
reinit_opaque_early (void)
{
  Vopaque_ptr_free_list = make_lcrecord_list (sizeof (Lisp_Opaque_Ptr),
					      &lrecord_opaque_ptr);
  staticpro_nodump (&Vopaque_ptr_free_list);
}
#endif /* not NEW_GC */

void
init_opaque_once_early (void)
{
  INIT_LISP_OBJECT (opaque);
  INIT_LISP_OBJECT (opaque_ptr);

#ifndef NEW_GC
  reinit_opaque_early ();
#endif /* not NEW_GC */
}