view lisp/tty-init.el @ 5294:bbff29a01820

Add compiler macros and compilation sanity-checks for functions with keywords. 2010-10-25 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> Add compiler macros and compilation sanity-checking for various functions that take keywords. * byte-optimize.el (side-effect-free-fns): #'symbol-value is side-effect free and not error free. * bytecomp.el (byte-compile-normal-call): Check keyword argument lists for sanity; store information about the positions where keyword arguments start using the new byte-compile-keyword-start property. * cl-macs.el (cl-const-expr-val): Take a new optional argument, cl-not-constant, defaulting to nil, in this function; return it if the expression is not constant. (cl-non-fixnum-number-p): Make this into a separate function, we want to pass it to #'every. (eql): Use it. (define-star-compiler-macros): Use the same code to generate the member*, assoc* and rassoc* compiler macros; special-case some code in #'add-to-list in subr.el. (remove, remq): Add compiler macros for these two functions, in preparation for #'remove being in C. (define-foo-if-compiler-macros): Transform (remove-if-not ...) calls to (remove ... :if-not) at compile time, which will be a real win once the latter is in C. (define-substitute-if-compiler-macros) (define-subst-if-compiler-macros): Similarly for these functions. (delete-duplicates): Change this compiler macro to use #'plists-equal; if we don't have information about the type of SEQUENCE at compile time, don't bother attempting to inline the call, the function will be in C soon enough. (equalp): Remove an old commented-out compiler macro for this, if we want to see it it's in version control. (subst-char-in-string): Transform this to a call to nsubstitute or nsubstitute, if that is appropriate. * cl.el (ldiff): Don't call setf here, this makes for a load-time dependency problem in cl-macs.el
author Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
date Mon, 25 Oct 2010 13:04:04 +0100
parents c786c3fd0740
children 308d34e9f07d
line wrap: on
line source

;;; tty-init.el --- initialization code for tty's

;; Copyright (C) 1994, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Copyright (C) 1996 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>.

;; Maintainer: XEmacs Development Team
;; Keywords: terminals, dumped

;; 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 synched.

;;; Commentary:

;; This file is dumped with XEmacs (when TTY support is compiled in).

;;; Code:

(defvar make-device-early-tty-entry-point-called-p nil
  "Whether `make-device-early-tty-entry-point' has been called, at least once.")

(defun make-device-early-tty-entry-point ()
  "Entry point to set up the Lisp environment for TTY device creation."
  (with-fboundp 'register-tty-color
    (unless make-device-early-tty-entry-point-called-p
      (register-tty-color "black"   "\e[30m" "\e[40m")
      (register-tty-color "red"     "\e[31m" "\e[41m")
      (register-tty-color "green"   "\e[32m" "\e[42m")
      (register-tty-color "yellow"  "\e[33m" "\e[43m")
      (register-tty-color "blue"    "\e[34m" "\e[44m")
      (register-tty-color "magenta" "\e[35m" "\e[45m")
      (register-tty-color "cyan"    "\e[36m" "\e[46m")
      (register-tty-color "white"   "\e[37m" "\e[47m")

      ;; Define `highlighted' tty colors
      (register-tty-color "darkgrey"      "\e[1;30m" "\e[1;40m")
      (register-tty-color "brightred"     "\e[1;31m" "\e[1;41m")
      (register-tty-color "brightgreen"   "\e[1;32m" "\e[1;42m")
      (register-tty-color "brightyellow"  "\e[1;33m" "\e[1;43m")
      (register-tty-color "brightblue"    "\e[1;34m" "\e[1;44m")
      (register-tty-color "brightmagenta" "\e[1;35m" "\e[1;45m")
      (register-tty-color "brightcyan"    "\e[1;36m" "\e[1;46m")
      (register-tty-color "brightwhite"   "\e[1;37m" "\e[1;47m")

      (setq make-device-early-tty-entry-point-called-p t))))

;; We have to do this for every created TTY console, after the first frame
;; has been created.
(defun make-frame-after-init-entry-point (console)
  "Entry point for Lisp called after first frame creation on a TTY device."
  ;; load the appropriate term-type-specific Lisp file.
  ;; we don't do this at startup here so that the user can
  ;; override term-file-prefix. (startup.el does it after
  ;; loading the init file.)
  (when (and (find-coding-system 'euc-jp)
             (string-match "^kterm" (getenv "TERM")))
    (set-console-tty-coding-system console 'euc-jp))
  (when init-file-loaded
    ;; temporarily select the console so that the changes
    ;; to function-key-map are made for the right console.
    (let ((foobar (selected-console)))
      (unwind-protect
	  (progn
	    (select-console console)
	    (load-terminal-library))
	(select-console foobar)))))

(defun make-frame-on-tty (tty &optional props)
  "Create a frame on the TTY connection named TTY.
TTY should be a TTY device name such as \"/dev/ttyp3\" (as returned by
the `tty' command in that TTY), or nil for the standard input/output
of the running XEmacs process.

PROPS should be a plist of properties, as in the call to `make-frame'.

This function opens a connection to the TTY or reuses an existing
connection.

This function is a trivial wrapper around `make-frame-on-device'."
  (interactive "sMake frame on TTY: ")
  (if (equal tty "") (setq tty nil))
  (make-frame-on-device 'tty tty props))

;;; tty-init.el ends here