Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view src/filemode.c @ 5872:f9e59cd39a9a
Clean up #'read-quoted-char, support help-event-list there.
lisp/changeLog addition:
2015-03-14 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
* simple.el (quoted-insert):
Update the docstring here, syncing GNU's, especially mentioning
read-quoted-char-radix.
* cmdloop.el:
* cmdloop.el (read-quoted-char-radix): Move this up here, outside
the functions.
* cmdloop.el (read-function-key-map): New label, reading and
replacing characters from function-key-map if appropriate.
* cmdloop.el (read-quoted-char): Multiple changes:
-- Take advantage of help-event-list, but be careful not to have
any keystrokes with character equivalents in it, so the user can
type C-q C-h and have the expected result.
-- Use function-key-map, as does #'read-char and
#'read-exclusive-char, helpful for character composition under
X11.
-- Pop up the help window ourselves if, e.g. F1 arrives on a TTY
via function-key-map, event-stream won't have done it.
-- Error if no keystroke that can be converted into a character is
specified, don't just insert ?\x00 as we used to and as does GNU
-- Use #'digit-char-p instead of reimplementing it.
-- Fix a bug of mine where I wasn't consistent about treating
character codes as Unicode.
author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 17 Mar 2015 12:22:50 +0000 |
parents | 308d34e9f07d |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
/* filemode.c -- make a string describing file modes Copyright (C) 1985, 1990, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 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: FSF 19.30. */ #include <config.h> #include "lisp.h" #include "sysfile.h" static void mode_string (unsigned short mode, char *str); static char ftypelet (mode_t bits); static void rwx (unsigned short bits, char *chars); static void setst (unsigned short bits, char *chars); /* declared in "sysfile.h" filemodestring - fill in string STR with an ls-style ASCII representation of the st_mode field of file stats block STATP. 10 characters are stored in STR; no terminating null is added. The characters stored in STR are: 0 File type. 'd' for directory, 'c' for character special, 'b' for block special, 'm' for multiplex, 'l' for symbolic link, 's' for socket, 'p' for fifo, '-' for regular, '?' for any other file type 1 'r' if the owner may read, '-' otherwise. 2 'w' if the owner may write, '-' otherwise. 3 'x' if the owner may execute, 's' if the file is set-user-id, '-' otherwise. 'S' if the file is set-user-id, but the execute bit isn't set. 4 'r' if group members may read, '-' otherwise. 5 'w' if group members may write, '-' otherwise. 6 'x' if group members may execute, 's' if the file is set-group-id, '-' otherwise. 'S' if it is set-group-id but not executable. 7 'r' if any user may read, '-' otherwise. 8 'w' if any user may write, '-' otherwise. 9 'x' if any user may execute, 't' if the file is "sticky" (will be retained in swap space after execution), '-' otherwise. 'T' if the file is sticky but not executable. */ void filemodestring (struct stat *statp, char *str) { mode_string (statp->st_mode, str); } /* Like filemodestring, but only the relevant part of the `struct stat' is given as an argument. */ static void mode_string (unsigned short mode, char *str) { str[0] = ftypelet (mode); rwx ((unsigned short) ((mode & 0700) << 0), &str[1]); rwx ((unsigned short) ((mode & 0070) << 3), &str[4]); rwx ((unsigned short) ((mode & 0007) << 6), &str[7]); setst (mode, str); } /* Return a character indicating the type of file described by file mode BITS: 'd' for directories 'b' for block special files 'c' for character special files 'm' for multiplexor files 'l' for symbolic links 's' for sockets 'p' for fifos '-' for regular files '?' for any other file type. */ static char ftypelet (mode_t bits) { #ifdef S_ISBLK if (S_ISBLK (bits)) return 'b'; #endif if (S_ISCHR (bits)) return 'c'; if (S_ISDIR (bits)) return 'd'; if (S_ISREG (bits)) return '-'; #ifdef S_ISFIFO if (S_ISFIFO (bits)) return 'p'; #endif #ifdef S_ISLNK if (S_ISLNK (bits)) return 'l'; #endif #ifdef S_ISSOCK if (S_ISSOCK (bits)) return 's'; #endif #ifdef S_ISMPC if (S_ISMPC (bits)) return 'm'; #endif #ifdef S_ISNWK if (S_ISNWK (bits)) return 'n'; #endif return '?'; } /* Look at read, write, and execute bits in BITS and set flags in CHARS accordingly. */ static void rwx (unsigned short bits, char *chars) { chars[0] = (bits & S_IRUSR) ? 'r' : '-'; chars[1] = (bits & S_IWUSR) ? 'w' : '-'; chars[2] = (bits & S_IXUSR) ? 'x' : '-'; } /* Set the 's' and 't' flags in file attributes string CHARS, according to the file mode BITS. */ static void setst ( #if defined(S_ISUID) || defined(S_ISGID) || defined(S_ISVTX) unsigned short bits, char *chars #else unsigned short UNUSED (bits), char *UNUSED (chars) #endif ) { #ifdef S_ISUID if (bits & S_ISUID) { if (chars[3] != 'x') /* Set-uid, but not executable by owner. */ chars[3] = 'S'; else chars[3] = 's'; } #endif #ifdef S_ISGID if (bits & S_ISGID) { if (chars[6] != 'x') /* Set-gid, but not executable by group. */ chars[6] = 'S'; else chars[6] = 's'; } #endif #ifdef S_ISVTX if (bits & S_ISVTX) { if (chars[9] != 'x') /* Sticky, but not executable by others. */ chars[9] = 'T'; else chars[9] = 't'; } #endif }