view src/specifier.h @ 665:fdefd0186b75

[xemacs-hg @ 2001-09-20 06:28:42 by ben] The great integral types renaming. The purpose of this is to rationalize the names used for various integral types, so that they match their intended uses and follow consist conventions, and eliminate types that were not semantically different from each other. The conventions are: -- All integral types that measure quantities of anything are signed. Some people disagree vociferously with this, but their arguments are mostly theoretical, and are vastly outweighed by the practical headaches of mixing signed and unsigned values, and more importantly by the far increased likelihood of inadvertent bugs: Because of the broken "viral" nature of unsigned quantities in C (operations involving mixed signed/unsigned are done unsigned, when exactly the opposite is nearly always wanted), even a single error in declaring a quantity unsigned that should be signed, or even the even more subtle error of comparing signed and unsigned values and forgetting the necessary cast, can be catastrophic, as comparisons will yield wrong results. -Wsign-compare is turned on specifically to catch this, but this tends to result in a great number of warnings when mixing signed and unsigned, and the casts are annoying. More has been written on this elsewhere. -- All such quantity types just mentioned boil down to EMACS_INT, which is 32 bits on 32-bit machines and 64 bits on 64-bit machines. This is guaranteed to be the same size as Lisp objects of type `int', and (as far as I can tell) of size_t (unsigned!) and ssize_t. The only type below that is not an EMACS_INT is Hashcode, which is an unsigned value of the same size as EMACS_INT. -- Type names should be relatively short (no more than 10 characters or so), with the first letter capitalized and no underscores if they can at all be avoided. -- "count" == a zero-based measurement of some quantity. Includes sizes, offsets, and indexes. -- "bpos" == a one-based measurement of a position in a buffer. "Charbpos" and "Bytebpos" count text in the buffer, rather than bytes in memory; thus Bytebpos does not directly correspond to the memory representation. Use "Membpos" for this. -- "Char" refers to internal-format characters, not to the C type "char", which is really a byte. -- For the actual name changes, see the script below. I ran the following script to do the conversion. (NOTE: This script is idempotent. You can safely run it multiple times and it will not screw up previous results -- in fact, it will do nothing if nothing has changed. Thus, it can be run repeatedly as necessary to handle patches coming in from old workspaces, or old branches.) There are two tags, just before and just after the change: `pre-integral-type-rename' and `post-integral-type-rename'. When merging code from the main trunk into a branch, the best thing to do is first merge up to `pre-integral-type-rename', then apply the script and associated changes, then merge from `post-integral-type-change' to the present. (Alternatively, just do the merging in one operation; but you may then have a lot of conflicts needing to be resolved by hand.) Script `fixtypes.sh' follows: ----------------------------------- cut ------------------------------------ files="*.[ch] s/*.h m/*.h config.h.in ../configure.in Makefile.in.in ../lib-src/*.[ch] ../lwlib/*.[ch]" gr Memory_Count Bytecount $files gr Lstream_Data_Count Bytecount $files gr Element_Count Elemcount $files gr Hash_Code Hashcode $files gr extcount bytecount $files gr bufpos charbpos $files gr bytind bytebpos $files gr memind membpos $files gr bufbyte intbyte $files gr Extcount Bytecount $files gr Bufpos Charbpos $files gr Bytind Bytebpos $files gr Memind Membpos $files gr Bufbyte Intbyte $files gr EXTCOUNT BYTECOUNT $files gr BUFPOS CHARBPOS $files gr BYTIND BYTEBPOS $files gr MEMIND MEMBPOS $files gr BUFBYTE INTBYTE $files gr MEMORY_COUNT BYTECOUNT $files gr LSTREAM_DATA_COUNT BYTECOUNT $files gr ELEMENT_COUNT ELEMCOUNT $files gr HASH_CODE HASHCODE $files ----------------------------------- cut ------------------------------------ `fixtypes.sh' is a Bourne-shell script; it uses 'gr': ----------------------------------- cut ------------------------------------ #!/bin/sh # Usage is like this: # gr FROM TO FILES ... # globally replace FROM with TO in FILES. FROM and TO are regular expressions. # backup files are stored in the `backup' directory. from="$1" to="$2" shift 2 echo ${1+"$@"} | xargs global-replace "s/$from/$to/g" ----------------------------------- cut ------------------------------------ `gr' in turn uses a Perl script to do its real work, `global-replace', which follows: ----------------------------------- cut ------------------------------------ : #-*- Perl -*- ### global-modify --- modify the contents of a file by a Perl expression ## Copyright (C) 1999 Martin Buchholz. ## Copyright (C) 2001 Ben Wing. ## Authors: Martin Buchholz <martin@xemacs.org>, Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> ## Maintainer: Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> ## Current Version: 1.0, May 5, 2001 # This program 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. # # This program 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. eval 'exec perl -w -S $0 ${1+"$@"}' if 0; use strict; use FileHandle; use Carp; use Getopt::Long; use File::Basename; (my $myName = $0) =~ s@.*/@@; my $usage=" Usage: $myName [--help] [--backup-dir=DIR] [--line-mode] [--hunk-mode] PERLEXPR FILE ... Globally modify a file, either line by line or in one big hunk. Typical usage is like this: [with GNU print, GNU xargs: guaranteed to handle spaces, quotes, etc. in file names] find . -name '*.[ch]' -print0 | xargs -0 $0 's/\bCONST\b/const/g'\n [with non-GNU print, xargs] find . -name '*.[ch]' -print | xargs $0 's/\bCONST\b/const/g'\n The file is read in, either line by line (with --line-mode specified) or in one big hunk (with --hunk-mode specified; it's the default), and the Perl expression is then evalled with \$_ set to the line or hunk of text, including the terminating newline if there is one. It should destructively modify the value there, storing the changed result in \$_. Files in which any modifications are made are backed up to the directory specified using --backup-dir, or to `backup' by default. To disable this, use --backup-dir= with no argument. Hunk mode is the default because it is MUCH MUCH faster than line-by-line. Use line-by-line only when it matters, e.g. you want to do a replacement only once per line (the default without the `g' argument). Conversely, when using hunk mode, *ALWAYS* use `g'; otherwise, you will only make one replacement in the entire file! "; my %options = (); $Getopt::Long::ignorecase = 0; &GetOptions ( \%options, 'help', 'backup-dir=s', 'line-mode', 'hunk-mode', ); die $usage if $options{"help"} or @ARGV <= 1; my $code = shift; die $usage if grep (-d || ! -w, @ARGV); sub SafeOpen { open ((my $fh = new FileHandle), $_[0]); confess "Can't open $_[0]: $!" if ! defined $fh; return $fh; } sub SafeClose { close $_[0] or confess "Can't close $_[0]: $!"; } sub FileContents { my $fh = SafeOpen ("< $_[0]"); my $olddollarslash = $/; local $/ = undef; my $contents = <$fh>; $/ = $olddollarslash; return $contents; } sub WriteStringToFile { my $fh = SafeOpen ("> $_[0]"); binmode $fh; print $fh $_[1] or confess "$_[0]: $!\n"; SafeClose $fh; } foreach my $file (@ARGV) { my $changed_p = 0; my $new_contents = ""; if ($options{"line-mode"}) { my $fh = SafeOpen $file; while (<$fh>) { my $save_line = $_; eval $code; $changed_p = 1 if $save_line ne $_; $new_contents .= $_; } } else { my $orig_contents = $_ = FileContents $file; eval $code; if ($_ ne $orig_contents) { $changed_p = 1; $new_contents = $_; } } if ($changed_p) { my $backdir = $options{"backup-dir"}; $backdir = "backup" if !defined ($backdir); if ($backdir) { my ($name, $path, $suffix) = fileparse ($file, ""); my $backfulldir = $path . $backdir; my $backfile = "$backfulldir/$name"; mkdir $backfulldir, 0755 unless -d $backfulldir; print "modifying $file (original saved in $backfile)\n"; rename $file, $backfile; } WriteStringToFile ($file, $new_contents); } } ----------------------------------- cut ------------------------------------ In addition to those programs, I needed to fix up a few other things, particularly relating to the duplicate definitions of types, now that some types merged with others. Specifically: 1. in lisp.h, removed duplicate declarations of Bytecount. The changed code should now look like this: (In each code snippet below, the first and last lines are the same as the original, as are all lines outside of those lines. That allows you to locate the section to be replaced, and replace the stuff in that section, verifying that there isn't anything new added that would need to be kept.) --------------------------------- snip ------------------------------------- /* Counts of bytes or chars */ typedef EMACS_INT Bytecount; typedef EMACS_INT Charcount; /* Counts of elements */ typedef EMACS_INT Elemcount; /* Hash codes */ typedef unsigned long Hashcode; /* ------------------------ dynamic arrays ------------------- */ --------------------------------- snip ------------------------------------- 2. in lstream.h, removed duplicate declaration of Bytecount. Rewrote the comment about this type. The changed code should now look like this: --------------------------------- snip ------------------------------------- #endif /* The have been some arguments over the what the type should be that specifies a count of bytes in a data block to be written out or read in, using Lstream_read(), Lstream_write(), and related functions. Originally it was long, which worked fine; Martin "corrected" these to size_t and ssize_t on the grounds that this is theoretically cleaner and is in keeping with the C standards. Unfortunately, this practice is horribly error-prone due to design flaws in the way that mixed signed/unsigned arithmetic happens. In fact, by doing this change, Martin introduced a subtle but fatal error that caused the operation of sending large mail messages to the SMTP server under Windows to fail. By putting all values back to be signed, avoiding any signed/unsigned mixing, the bug immediately went away. The type then in use was Lstream_Data_Count, so that it be reverted cleanly if a vote came to that. Now it is Bytecount. Some earlier comments about why the type must be signed: This MUST BE SIGNED, since it also is used in functions that return the number of bytes actually read to or written from in an operation, and these functions can return -1 to signal error. Note that the standard Unix read() and write() functions define the count going in as a size_t, which is UNSIGNED, and the count going out as an ssize_t, which is SIGNED. This is a horrible design flaw. Not only is it highly likely to lead to logic errors when a -1 gets interpreted as a large positive number, but operations are bound to fail in all sorts of horrible ways when a number in the upper-half of the size_t range is passed in -- this number is unrepresentable as an ssize_t, so code that checks to see how many bytes are actually written (which is mandatory if you are dealing with certain types of devices) will get completely screwed up. --ben */ typedef enum lstream_buffering --------------------------------- snip ------------------------------------- 3. in dumper.c, there are four places, all inside of switch() statements, where XD_BYTECOUNT appears twice as a case tag. In each case, the two case blocks contain identical code, and you should *REMOVE THE SECOND* and leave the first.
author ben
date Thu, 20 Sep 2001 06:31:11 +0000
parents af57a77cbc92
children 943eaba38521
line wrap: on
line source

/* Generic specifier list implementation
   Copyright (C) 1994, 1995 Board of Trustees, University of Illinois.
   Copyright (C) 1995 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 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. */

#ifndef INCLUDED_specifier_h_
#define INCLUDED_specifier_h_

/*
  MAGIC SPECIFIERS
  ================

  Magic specifiers are used to provide fallback values for window
  system provided specifications, reflecting user preferences on the
  window system, such as default fonts, colors, scrollbar thickness
  etc.

  A magic specifier consists of two specifier objects. The first one
  behaves like a normal specifier in all senses. The second one, a
  ghost specifier, is a fallback value for the first one, and contains
  values provided by window system, resources etc. which reflect
  default settings for values being specified.

  A magic specifier has an "ultimate" fallback value, as any usual
  specifier does. This value, an inst-list, is stored in the fallback
  slot of the ghost specifier object.

  Ghost specifiers have the following properties:
  - Have back pointers to their parent specifiers.
  - Do not have instance data. Instead, they share parent's instance
    data.
  - Have the same methods structure pointer.
  - Share parent's caching scheme.
  - Store fallback value instead of their parents.

  Ghost specifiers normally are not modifiable at the lisp level, and
  only used to supply fallback instance values. They are accessible
  via (specifier-fallback), but are read-only.  Although, under
  certain rare conditions, modification of ghost objects is allowed.
  This behavior is controlled by the global variable
  Vunlock_ghost_specifiers. It is not exposed to lisp, and is set
  during calls to lisp functions which initialize global, device and
  frame defaults, such as
  init-{global,frame,device}-{faces,toolbars,etc}.

  Thus, values supplied by resources or other means of a window system
  stored in externally unmodifiable ghost objects. Regular lisp code
  may thus freely modify the normal part of a magic specifier, and
  removing a specification for a particular domain causes the
  specification to consider ghost-provided fallback values, or its own
  fallback value.

  Rules of conduct for magic specifiers
  -------------------------------------
  1. recompute_*() functions always operate on the whole specifier
     when passed only a ghost object, by substituting it with their
     parent bodily object.
  2. All specifier methods, except for instantiate method, are passed
     the bodily object of the magic specifier. Instantiate method is
     passed the specifier being instantiated.
  3. Only bodily objects are passed to set_specifier_caching function,
     and only these may be cached.
  4. All specifiers are added to Vall_specifiers list, both bodily and
     ghost. The pair of objects is always removed from the list at the
     same time.
*/

extern const struct struct_description specifier_methods_description;

struct specifier_methods
{
  const char *name;
  Lisp_Object predicate_symbol;

  /* Implementation specific methods: */

  /* Create method: Initialize specifier data. Optional. */
  void (*create_method) (Lisp_Object specifier);

  /* Mark method: Mark any lisp object within specifier data
     structure. Not required if no specifier data are Lisp_Objects. */
  void (*mark_method) (Lisp_Object specifier);

  /* Equal method: Compare two specifiers. This is called after
     ensuring that the two specifiers are of the same type, and have
     the same specs.  Quit is inhibited during the call so it is safe
     to call internal_equal().

     If this function is not present, specifiers considered equal when
     the above conditions are met, i.e. as if the method returned
     non-zero. */
  int (*equal_method) (Lisp_Object sp1, Lisp_Object sp2, int depth);

  /* Hash method: Hash specifier instance data. This has to hash only
    data structure of the specifier, as specs are hashed by the core
    code.

     If this function is not present, hashing behaves as if it
     returned zero. */
  unsigned long (*hash_method) (Lisp_Object specifier, int depth);

  /* Validate method: Given an instantiator, verify that it's
     valid for this specifier type.  If not, signal an error.

     If this function is not present, all instantiators are considered
     valid. */
  void (*validate_method) (Lisp_Object instantiator);


  /* Copy method: Given an instantiator, copy the bits that we need to
     for this specifier type.

     If this function is not present, then Fcopy_tree is used. */
  Lisp_Object (*copy_instantiator_method) (Lisp_Object instantiator);

  /* Validate-matchspec method: Given a matchspec, verify that it's
     valid for this specifier type.  If not, signal an error.

     If this function is not present, *no* matchspecs are considered
     valid.  Note that this differs from validate_method(). */
  void (*validate_matchspec_method) (Lisp_Object matchspec);

  /* Instantiate method: Return SPECIFIER instance in DOMAIN,
     specified by INSTANTIATOR.  MATCHSPEC specifies an additional
     constraints on the instance value (see the docstring for
     Fspecifier_matching_instance function). MATCHSPEC is passed
     Qunbound when no matching constraints are imposed. The method is
     called via call_with_suspended_errors(), so allowed to eval
     safely.

     DEPTH is a lisp integer denoting current depth of instantiation
     calls. This parameter should be passed as the initial depth value
     to functions which also instantiate specifiers (of which I can
     name specifier_instance) to avoid creating "external"
     specification loops.

     This method must presume that both INSTANTIATOR and MATCHSPEC are
     already validated by the corresponding validate_* methods, and
     may abort if they are invalid.

     Return value is an instance, which is returned immediately to the
     caller, or Qunbound to continue instantiation lookup chain.

     If this function is not present, INSTANTIATOR is used as the
     specifier instance.  This is the usual case for "simple"
     specifiers, like integer and boolean. */
  Lisp_Object (*instantiate_method) (Lisp_Object specifier,
				     Lisp_Object matchspec,
				     Lisp_Object domain,
				     Lisp_Object instantiator,
				     Lisp_Object depth);

  /* Going-to-add method: Called when an instantiator is about
     to be added to a specifier.  This function can specify
     that different instantiators should be used instead by
     returning an inst-list (possibly containing zero elements).
     If the instantiator is fine as-is, return Qt.  The
     instantiator has been copied with copy-tree, so feel
     free to reuse parts of it to create a new instantiator.
     The tag-set, however, is not copied and is not canonicalized
     (that will be done on the result of this function). */
  Lisp_Object (*going_to_add_method) (Lisp_Object specifier,
				      Lisp_Object locale,
				      Lisp_Object tag_set,
				      Lisp_Object instantiator);

  /* After-change method: Called when the SPECIFIER has just been
     changed in LOCALE.  The method is called upon:
     * Removing and adding specs to/from the specifier;
     * Changing the specifier fallback.

     #### The method may have called more than once per each specifier
     change.

     #### Do not still know if this can safely eval. */
  void (*after_change_method) (Lisp_Object specifier,
			       Lisp_Object locale);

  const struct lrecord_description *extra_description;
  int extra_data_size;
};

struct Lisp_Specifier
{
  struct lcrecord_header header;
  struct specifier_methods *methods;

  /* we keep a chained list of all current specifiers, for GC cleanup
     purposes.  Do NOT mark through this, or specifiers will never
     be GC'd. */
  Lisp_Object next_specifier;

  /* This is a straight list of instantiators. */
  Lisp_Object global_specs;

  /* These are all assoc lists where the key is the type of object the
     list represents (buffer, window, etc.) and the associated list is
     the actual list of instantiators. */
  Lisp_Object device_specs;
  Lisp_Object frame_specs;
  /* window_specs is actually a key-assoc weak list.  See specifier.c
     for an explanation of why (it boils down to the fact that
     dead windows can become live again through window configurations).
     */
  Lisp_Object window_specs;
  Lisp_Object buffer_specs;

  struct specifier_caching *caching;

  /* This can be either nil, for a plain, non-magic specifier object,
     t for the normal part of the magic specifier, or #<specifier> for
     the ghost part of the magic specifier, a pointer to its parent
     object */
  Lisp_Object magic_parent;

  /* Fallback value. For magic specifiers, it is a pointer to the ghost. */
  Lisp_Object fallback;

  /* type-specific extra data attached to a specifier */
  max_align_t data[1];
};
typedef struct Lisp_Specifier Lisp_Specifier;

DECLARE_LRECORD (specifier, Lisp_Specifier);
#define XSPECIFIER(x) XRECORD (x, specifier, Lisp_Specifier)
#define XSETSPECIFIER(x, p) XSETRECORD (x, p, specifier)
#define wrap_specifier(p) wrap_record (p, specifier)
#define SPECIFIERP(x) RECORDP (x, specifier)
#define CHECK_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_RECORD (x, specifier)
#define CONCHECK_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_RECORD (x, specifier)

/***** Calling a specifier method *****/

#define RAW_SPECMETH(sp, m) ((sp)->methods->m##_method)
#define HAS_SPECMETH_P(sp, m) (!!RAW_SPECMETH (sp, m))
#define SPECMETH(sp, m, args) (((sp)->methods->m##_method) args)

/* Call a void-returning specifier method, if it exists.  */
#define MAYBE_SPECMETH(sp, m, args) do {	\
  Lisp_Specifier *maybe_specmeth_sp = (sp);	\
  if (HAS_SPECMETH_P (maybe_specmeth_sp, m))	\
    SPECMETH (maybe_specmeth_sp, m, args);	\
} while (0)

/***** Defining new specifier types *****/

#define specifier_data_offset offsetof (Lisp_Specifier, data)
extern const struct lrecord_description specifier_empty_extra_description[];

#ifdef ERROR_CHECK_TYPECHECK
#define DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE(type)					\
extern struct specifier_methods * type##_specifier_methods;		\
INLINE_HEADER struct type##_specifier *					\
error_check_##type##_specifier_data (Lisp_Specifier *sp);		\
INLINE_HEADER struct type##_specifier *					\
error_check_##type##_specifier_data (Lisp_Specifier *sp)		\
{									\
  if (SPECIFIERP (sp->magic_parent))					\
    {									\
      assert (SPECIFIER_TYPE_P (sp, type));				\
      sp = XSPECIFIER (sp->magic_parent);				\
    }									\
  else									\
    assert (NILP (sp->magic_parent) || EQ (sp->magic_parent, Qt));	\
  assert (SPECIFIER_TYPE_P (sp, type));					\
  return (struct type##_specifier *) sp->data;				\
}									\
INLINE_HEADER Lisp_Specifier *						\
error_check_##type##_specifier_type (Lisp_Object obj);			\
INLINE_HEADER Lisp_Specifier *						\
error_check_##type##_specifier_type (Lisp_Object obj)			\
{									\
  Lisp_Specifier *sp = XSPECIFIER (obj);				\
  assert (SPECIFIER_TYPE_P (sp, type));					\
  return sp;								\
}									\
DECLARE_NOTHING
#else
#define DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE(type)					\
extern struct specifier_methods * type##_specifier_methods
#endif /* ERROR_CHECK_TYPECHECK */

#define DEFINE_SPECIFIER_TYPE(type)					\
struct specifier_methods * type##_specifier_methods

#define INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE(type, obj_name, pred_sym) do {		\
  type##_specifier_methods = xnew_and_zero (struct specifier_methods);		\
  type##_specifier_methods->name = obj_name;					\
  type##_specifier_methods->extra_description =					\
    specifier_empty_extra_description;						\
  defsymbol_nodump (&type##_specifier_methods->predicate_symbol, pred_sym);	\
  add_entry_to_specifier_type_list (Q##type, type##_specifier_methods);		\
  dump_add_root_struct_ptr (&type##_specifier_methods,				\
			    &specifier_methods_description);			\
} while (0)

#define REINITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE(type) do {				\
  staticpro_nodump (&type##_specifier_methods->predicate_symbol);	\
} while (0)

#define INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE_WITH_DATA(type, obj_name, pred_sym)	\
do {									\
  INITIALIZE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (type, obj_name, pred_sym);			\
  type##_specifier_methods->extra_data_size =				\
    sizeof (struct type##_specifier);					\
  type##_specifier_methods->extra_description = 			\
    type##_specifier_description;					\
} while (0)

/* Declare that specifier-type TYPE has method METH; used in
   initialization routines */
#define SPECIFIER_HAS_METHOD(type, meth) \
  (type##_specifier_methods->meth##_method = type##_##meth)

/***** Macros for accessing specifier types *****/

#define SPECIFIER_TYPE_P(sp, type) \
  ((sp)->methods == type##_specifier_methods)

/* Any of the two of the magic spec */
#define MAGIC_SPECIFIER_P(sp) (!NILP((sp)->magic_parent))
/* Normal part of the magic specifier */
#define BODILY_SPECIFIER_P(sp) EQ ((sp)->magic_parent, Qt)
/* Ghost part of the magic specifier */
#define GHOST_SPECIFIER_P(sp) SPECIFIERP((sp)->magic_parent)

#define GHOST_SPECIFIER(sp) XSPECIFIER ((sp)->fallback)

#ifdef ERROR_CHECK_TYPECHECK
# define SPECIFIER_TYPE_DATA(sp, type) \
   error_check_##type##_specifier_data (sp)
#else
# define SPECIFIER_TYPE_DATA(sp, type)		\
  ((struct type##_specifier *)			\
    (GHOST_SPECIFIER_P(sp)			\
     ? XSPECIFIER((sp)->magic_parent)->data	\
     : (sp)->data))
#endif

#ifdef ERROR_CHECK_TYPECHECK
# define XSPECIFIER_TYPE(x, type)	\
   error_check_##type##_specifier_type (x)
# define XSETSPECIFIER_TYPE(x, p, type)	do		\
{							\
  XSETSPECIFIER (x, p);					\
  assert (SPECIFIER_TYPEP (XSPECIFIER(x), type));	\
} while (0)
#else
# define XSPECIFIER_TYPE(x, type) XSPECIFIER (x)
# define XSETSPECIFIER_TYPE(x, p, type) XSETSPECIFIER (x, p)
#endif /* ERROR_CHECK_TYPE_CHECK */

#define SPECIFIER_TYPEP(x, type)			\
  (SPECIFIERP (x) && SPECIFIER_TYPE_P (XSPECIFIER (x), type))
#define CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE(x, type) do {		\
  CHECK_SPECIFIER (x);					\
  if (!SPECIFIER_TYPE_P (XSPECIFIER (x), type))		\
    dead_wrong_type_argument				\
      (type##_specifier_methods->predicate_symbol, x);	\
} while (0)
#define CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE(x, type) do {		\
  CONCHECK_SPECIFIER (x);				\
  if (!(SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, type)))			\
    x = wrong_type_argument				\
      (type##_specifier_methods->predicate_symbol, x);	\
} while (0)

/***** Miscellaneous structures *****/

enum spec_locale_type
{
  LOCALE_GLOBAL,
  LOCALE_DEVICE,
  LOCALE_FRAME,
  LOCALE_WINDOW,
  LOCALE_BUFFER
};

enum spec_add_meth
{
  SPEC_PREPEND,
  SPEC_APPEND,
  SPEC_REMOVE_TAG_SET_PREPEND,
  SPEC_REMOVE_TAG_SET_APPEND,
  SPEC_REMOVE_LOCALE,
  SPEC_REMOVE_LOCALE_TYPE,
  SPEC_REMOVE_ALL
};

struct specifier_caching
{
  int offset_into_struct_window;
  void (*value_changed_in_window) (Lisp_Object specifier, struct window *w,
				   Lisp_Object oldval);
  int offset_into_struct_frame;
  void (*value_changed_in_frame) (Lisp_Object specifier, struct frame *f,
				  Lisp_Object oldval);
  int always_recompute;
};

/* #### get image instances out of domains! */

/* #### I think the following should abort() rather than return nil
   when an invalid domain is given; much more likely we'll catch design
   errors early. --ben */

/* This turns out to be used heavily so we make it a macro to make it
   inline.  Also, the majority of the time the object will turn out to
   be a window so we move it from being checked last to being checked
   first. */
#define DOMAIN_DEVICE(obj)					\
   (WINDOWP (obj) ? WINDOW_DEVICE (XWINDOW (obj))		\
  : (FRAMEP  (obj) ? FRAME_DEVICE (XFRAME (obj))		\
  : (DEVICEP (obj) ? obj					\
  : (IMAGE_INSTANCEP (obj) ? image_instance_device (obj)	\
  : Qnil))))

#define DOMAIN_FRAME(obj)				\
   (WINDOWP (obj) ? WINDOW_FRAME (XWINDOW (obj))	\
  : (FRAMEP  (obj) ? obj				\
  : (IMAGE_INSTANCEP (obj) ? image_instance_frame (obj)	\
  : Qnil)))

#define DOMAIN_WINDOW(obj)					\
   (WINDOWP (obj) ? obj						\
  : (IMAGE_INSTANCEP (obj) ? image_instance_window (obj)	\
  : Qnil))

#define DOMAIN_LIVE_P(obj)					\
   (WINDOWP (obj) ? WINDOW_LIVE_P (XWINDOW (obj))		\
  : (FRAMEP  (obj) ? FRAME_LIVE_P (XFRAME (obj))		\
  : (DEVICEP (obj) ? DEVICE_LIVE_P (XDEVICE (obj))		\
  : (IMAGE_INSTANCEP (obj) ? image_instance_live_p (obj)	\
  : 0))))

#define DOMAIN_XDEVICE(obj)			\
  (XDEVICE (DOMAIN_DEVICE (obj)))
#define DOMAIN_XFRAME(obj)			\
  (XFRAME (DOMAIN_FRAME (obj)))
#define DOMAIN_XWINDOW(obj)			\
  (XWINDOW (DOMAIN_WINDOW (obj)))

EXFUN (Fcopy_specifier, 6);
EXFUN (Fmake_specifier, 1);
EXFUN (Fset_specifier_dirty_flag, 1);
EXFUN (Fspecifier_instance, 4);
EXFUN (Fvalid_specifier_locale_p, 1);

extern Lisp_Object Qfallback, Qnatnum;

Lisp_Object make_magic_specifier (Lisp_Object type);
Lisp_Object decode_locale_list (Lisp_Object locale);
extern enum spec_add_meth
decode_how_to_add_specification (Lisp_Object how_to_add);
Lisp_Object decode_specifier_tag_set (Lisp_Object tag_set);
Lisp_Object decode_domain (Lisp_Object domain);

void add_entry_to_specifier_type_list (Lisp_Object symbol,
				       struct specifier_methods *meths);
void set_specifier_caching (Lisp_Object specifier,
			    int struct_window_offset,
			    void (*value_changed_in_window)
			    (Lisp_Object specifier, struct window *w,
			     Lisp_Object oldval),
			    int struct_frame_offset,
			    void (*value_changed_in_frame)
			    (Lisp_Object specifier, struct frame *f,
			     Lisp_Object oldval),
			    int always_recompute);
void set_specifier_fallback (Lisp_Object specifier,
			     Lisp_Object fallback);
void recompute_all_cached_specifiers_in_window (struct window *w);
void recompute_all_cached_specifiers_in_frame (struct frame *f);

/* Counterparts of Fadd_spec_to_specifier and Fremove_specifier, which
   operate directly on ghost objects given a magic specifier. */
void add_spec_to_ghost_specifier (Lisp_Object specifier, Lisp_Object instantiator,
				  Lisp_Object locale, Lisp_Object tag_set,
				  Lisp_Object how_to_add);
void remove_ghost_specifier (Lisp_Object specifier, Lisp_Object locale,
			     Lisp_Object tag_set, Lisp_Object exact_p);

int unlock_ghost_specifiers_protected (void);

void cleanup_specifiers (void);
void prune_specifiers (void);
void setup_device_initial_specifier_tags (struct device *d);
void kill_specifier_buffer_locals (Lisp_Object buffer);

DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (generic);
#define XGENERIC_SPECIFIER(x) XSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, generic)
#define XSETGENERIC_SPECIFIER(x, p) XSETSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, p, generic)
#define GENERIC_SPECIFIERP(x) SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, generic)
#define CHECK_GENERIC_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, generic)
#define CONCHECK_GENERIC_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, generic)

DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (integer);
#define XINTEGER_SPECIFIER(x) XSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, integer)
#define XSETINTEGER_SPECIFIER(x, p) XSETSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, p, integer)
#define INTEGER_SPECIFIERP(x) SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, integer)
#define CHECK_INTEGER_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, integer)
#define CONCHECK_INTEGER_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, integer)

DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (natnum);
#define XNATNUM_SPECIFIER(x) XSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, natnum)
#define XSETNATNUM_SPECIFIER(x, p) XSETSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, p, natnum)
#define NATNUM_SPECIFIERP(x) SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, natnum)
#define CHECK_NATNUM_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, natnum)
#define CONCHECK_NATNUM_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, natnum)

DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (boolean);
#define XBOOLEAN_SPECIFIER(x) XSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, boolean)
#define XSETBOOLEAN_SPECIFIER(x, p) XSETSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, p, boolean)
#define BOOLEAN_SPECIFIERP(x) SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, boolean)
#define CHECK_BOOLEAN_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, boolean)
#define CONCHECK_BOOLEAN_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, boolean)

DECLARE_SPECIFIER_TYPE (display_table);
#define XDISPLAYTABLE_SPECIFIER(x) XSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, display_table)
#define XSETDISPLAYTABLE_SPECIFIER(x, p) XSETSPECIFIER_TYPE (x, p, display_table)
#define DISPLAYTABLE_SPECIFIERP(x) SPECIFIER_TYPEP (x, display_table)
#define CHECK_DISPLAYTABLE_SPECIFIER(x) CHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, display_table)
#define CONCHECK_DISPLAYTABLE_SPECIFIER(x) CONCHECK_SPECIFIER_TYPE (x, display_table)

#endif /* INCLUDED_specifier_h_ */