Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view nt/paths.h @ 5211:cdca98f2d36f
Move `default-file-system-ignore-case' to C; fix bug in directory hash tables
src/ChangeLog addition:
2010-05-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Move `default-file-system-ignore-case' to C; pay attention to it
in creating the directory hash tables for #'locate-file. Fix a bug
where #'eq was specified when creating directory hash tables in
dired.c.
* config.h.in (DEFAULT_FILE_SYSTEM_IGNORE_CASE): This is 1 on
Darwin.
* dired.c (make_directory_hash_table): If
#'file-system-ignore-case-p gives non-nil for a directory, created
the associated hash table with #'equalp as its test. Never use
#'eq as a directory hash table test.
* fileio.c (vars_of_fileio):
Move `default-file-system-ignore-case' here, so it can be a
constant boolean reflecting a compile-time #define.
* lisp.h: Update the declaration of make_directory_hash_table;
remove the declaration of wasteful_word_to_lisp, which was
#ifdef'd out.
* lread.c (Flocate_file): Take out a debugging statement from
this function.
(locate_file_refresh_hashing): Call make_directory_hash_table with
a Lisp string, not an Ibyte pointer.
(vars_of_lread): If DEFAULT_FILE_SYSTEM_IGNORE_CASE is defined,
use #'equalp as the hash table test for locate-file-hash-table,
not #'equal.
* s/win32-common.h (DEFAULT_FILE_SYSTEM_IGNORE_CASE):
Case should normally be ignored in file names on Win32.
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2010-05-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* files.el (default-file-system-ignore-case):
Move this to fileio.c, where it's a constant boolean variable
initialised at dump time.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 16 May 2010 12:33:21 +0100 |
parents | 4be1180a9e89 |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Hey Emacs, this is -*- C -*- code! */ /* Synched up with: Not synched with FSF. */ /* Think twice before editing this file. Generated automatically by configure. The file startup.el guesses at reasonable values for load-path, exec-path, and lock-directory. This means that if you move emacs and its associated sub-tree to a different place in the filesystem, or to a different machine, you won't have to do anything for it to work. If you define the paths in this file then they will take precedence over any value generated by the heuristic in startup.el. The hardcoded paths will be checked to see if they are valid, in which case they will be used. Otherwise the editor will attempt to make its normal guess. See the NEWS file for a description of the heuristic used to locate the lisp and exec directories at startup time. If you are looking at this file because you are having trouble, then you would be much better off arranging for those heuristics to succeed than defining the paths in this file. ** Let me say that again. If you're editing this file, you're making ** a mistake. Re-read the section on installation in ../etc/NEWS. If it defines anything, this file should define some subset of the following: PATH_PREFIX The default value of `prefix-directory'. This is the default root for everything. PATH_LOADSEARCH The default value of `load-path'. PATH_EXEC The default value of `exec-directory' and `exec-path'. (exec-path also contains the value of whatever is in the PATH environment variable.) PATH_DATA The default value of `data-directory'. This is where architecture-independent files are searched for. PATH_LOCK The name of the directory that contains lock files with which we record what files are being modified in Emacs. This directory should be writable by everyone. If this is specified, the string must end with a slash! PATH_SUPERLOCK The name of the file !!!SuperLock!!! in the lock directory. You probably should let this default... PATH_INFO The default value of `Info-directory-list'. This is where info files are searched for. */