Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view lisp/itimer-autosave.el @ 4604:e0a8715fdb1f
Support new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, #'query-coding-region.
lisp/ChangeLog addition:
2009-02-07 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* coding.el (query-coding-clear-highlights):
Rename the BUFFER argument to BUFFER-OR-STRING, describe it as
possibly being a string in its documentation.
(default-query-coding-region):
Add a new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, document that this
function does not support it.
Bind case-fold-search to nil, we don't want this to influence what the
function thinks is encodable or not.
(query-coding-region):
Add a new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, document what it
does; reflect this new argument in the associated compiler macro.
(query-coding-string):
Add a new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, document what it
does. Support the HIGHLIGHT argument correctly.
* unicode.el (unicode-query-coding-region):
Add a new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, document what it
does, implement this. Document a potential problem.
Use #'query-coding-clear-highlights instead of reimplementing it
ourselves.
Remove some debugging messages.
* mule/arabic.el (iso-8859-6):
* mule/cyrillic.el (iso-8859-5):
* mule/greek.el (iso-8859-7):
* mule/hebrew.el (iso-8859-8):
* mule/latin.el (iso-8859-2):
* mule/latin.el (iso-8859-3):
* mule/latin.el (iso-8859-4):
* mule/latin.el (iso-8859-14):
* mule/latin.el (iso-8859-15):
* mule/latin.el (iso-8859-16):
* mule/latin.el (iso-8859-9):
* mule/latin.el (windows-1252):
* mule/mule-coding.el (iso-8859-1):
Avoid the assumption that characters not given an explicit mapping
in these coding systems map to the ISO 8859-1 characters
corresponding to the octets on disk; this makes it much more
reasonable to implement the IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument to
query-coding-region.
* mule/mule-cmds.el (set-language-info):
Correct the docstring.
* mule/mule-cmds.el (finish-set-language-environment):
Treat invalid Unicode sequences produced from
invalid-sequence-coding-system and corresponding to control
characters the same as control characters in redisplay.
* mule/mule-cmds.el:
Document that encode-coding-char is available in coding.el
* mule/mule-coding.el (make-8-bit-generate-helper):
Change to return the both the encode-program generated and the
relevant non-ASCII charset; update the docstring to reflect this.
* mule/mule-coding.el
(make-8-bit-generate-encode-program-and-skip-chars-strings):
Rename this function; have it return skip-chars-strings as well as
the encode program. Have these skip-chars-strings use ranges for
charsets, where possible.
* mule/mule-coding.el (make-8-bit-create-decode-encode-tables):
Revise this to allow people to specify explicitly characters that
should be undefined (= corresponding to keys in
unicode-error-default-translation-table), and treating unspecified
octets above #x7f as undefined by default.
* mule/mule-coding.el (8-bit-fixed-query-coding-region):
Add a new IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument, implement support
for it using the 8-bit-fixed-invalid-sequences-skip-chars coding
system property; remove some debugging messages.
* mule/mule-coding.el (make-8-bit-coding-system):
This function is dumped, autoloading it makes no sense.
Document what happens when characters above #x7f are not
specified, implement this.
* mule/vietnamese.el:
Correct spelling.
tests/ChangeLog addition:
2009-02-07 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* automated/query-coding-tests.el:
Add FAILING-CASE arguments to the Assert calls, making #'q-c-debug
mostly unnecessary. Remove #'q-c-debug.
Add new tests that use the IGNORE-INVALID-SEQUENCESP argument to
#'query-coding-region; rework the existing ones to respect it.
| author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
|---|---|
| date | Sat, 07 Feb 2009 17:13:37 +0000 |
| parents | 41ff10fd062f |
| children | 308d34e9f07d |
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;;; itimer-autosave.el --- Autosave functions with itimers ;; Copyright status unknown ;; Maintainer: XEmacs Development Team ;; Keywords: internal, 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 in FSF. ;;; Commentary: ;; This file is dumped with XEmacs. ;; itimer-driven auto-saves ;;; Code: ;jwz: this is preloaded so don't ;;;###autoload (defvar auto-save-timeout 960 "*Number of seconds idle time before auto-save. Zero or nil means disable auto-saving due to idleness. The actual amount of idle time between auto-saves is logarithmically related to the size of the current buffer. This variable is the number of seconds after which an auto-save will happen when the current buffer is 50k or less; the timeout will be 2 1/4 times this in a 200k buffer, 3 3/4 times this in a 1000k buffer, and 4 1/2 times this in a 2000k buffer. See also the variable `auto-save-interval', which controls auto-saving based on the number of characters typed.") ;jwz: this is preloaded so don't ;;;###autoload (defvar auto-gc-threshold (/ gc-cons-threshold 3) "*GC when this many bytes have been consed since the last GC, and the user has been idle for `auto-save-timeout' seconds.") (defun auto-save-itimer () "For use as a itimer callback function. Auto-saves and garbage-collects based on the size of the current buffer and the value of `auto-save-timeout', `auto-gc-threshold', and the current keyboard idle-time." (if (or (null auto-save-timeout) (<= auto-save-timeout 0) (eq (minibuffer-window) (selected-window))) nil (let ((buf-size (1+ (ash (buffer-size) -8))) (delay-level 0) (now (current-time)) delay) (while (> buf-size 64) (setq delay-level (1+ delay-level) buf-size (- buf-size (ash buf-size -2)))) (if (< delay-level 4) (setq delay-level 4)) ;; delay_level is 4 for files under around 50k, 7 at 100k, 9 at 200k, ;; 11 at 300k, and 12 at 500k, 15 at 1 meg, and 17 at 2 meg. (setq delay (/ (* delay-level auto-save-timeout) 4)) (let ((idle-time (if (or (not (consp last-input-time)) (/= (car now) (car last-input-time))) (1+ delay) (- (car (cdr now)) (cdr last-input-time))))) (and (> idle-time delay) (do-auto-save)) (and (> idle-time auto-save-timeout) (> (consing-since-gc) auto-gc-threshold) (garbage-collect))))) ;; Look at the itimer that's currently running; if the user has changed ;; the value of auto-save-timeout, modify this itimer to have the correct ;; restart time. There will be some latency between when the user changes ;; this variable and when it takes effect, but it will happen eventually. (let ((self (get-itimer "auto-save"))) (or self (error "auto-save-itimer can't find itself")) (if (and auto-save-timeout (> auto-save-timeout 4)) (or (= (itimer-restart self) (/ auto-save-timeout 4)) (set-itimer-restart self (/ auto-save-timeout 4))))) nil) (defun itimer-init-auto-gc () (or noninteractive ; may be being run from after-init-hook in -batch mode. (get-itimer "auto-save") ;; the time here is just the first interval; if the user changes it ;; later, it will adjust. (let ((time (max 2 (/ (or auto-save-timeout 30) 4)))) (start-itimer "auto-save" 'auto-save-itimer time time)))) (cond (purify-flag ;; This file is being preloaded into an emacs about to be dumped. ;; So arrange for the auto-save itimer to be started once emacs ;; is launched. (add-hook 'after-init-hook 'itimer-init-auto-gc)) (t ;; Otherwise, this file is being loaded into a normal, interactive ;; emacs. Start the auto-save timer now. (itimer-init-auto-gc))) ;;; itimer-autosave.el ends here
