/* Definitions for asynchronous process control in GNU Emacs. Copyright (C) 1985 Free Software Foundation, Inc.This file is part of GNU Emacs.GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modifyit under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published bythe Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option)any later version.GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty ofMERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See theGNU General Public License for more details.You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public Licensealong with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write tothe Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. *//* * Structure records pertinent information about open channels. * There is one channel associated with each process. */struct Lisp_Process { int size; struct Lisp_Vector *v_next; /* Descriptor by which we read from this process */ Lisp_Object infd; /* Descriptor by which we write to this process */ Lisp_Object outfd; /* Descriptor for the tty which this process is using. nil if we didn't record it (on some systems, there's no need). */ Lisp_Object subtty; /* Name of this process */ Lisp_Object name; /* List of command arguments that this process was run with */ Lisp_Object command; /* (funcall FILTER PROC STRING) (if FILTER is non-nil) to dispose of a bunch of chars from the process all at once */ Lisp_Object filter; /* (funcall SENTINEL PROCESS) when process state changes */ Lisp_Object sentinel; /* Buffer that output is going to */ Lisp_Object buffer; /* Number of this process */ Lisp_Object pid; /* Non-nil if this is really a command channel */ Lisp_Object command_channel_p; /* Non-nil if this is really a child process */ Lisp_Object childp; /* Marker set to end of last buffer-inserted output from this process */ Lisp_Object mark; /* Non-nil means kill silently if Emacs is exited. */ Lisp_Object kill_without_query; /* Record the process status in the raw form in which it comes from `wait'. This is to avoid consing in a signal handler. */ Lisp_Object raw_status_low; Lisp_Object raw_status_high; /* Symbol indicating status of process. This may be a symbol: run, open, or closed. Or it may be a list, whose car is stop, exit or signal and whose cdr is a pair (EXIT_CODE . COREDUMP_FLAG) or (SIGNAL_NUMBER . COREDUMP_FLAG). */ Lisp_Object status; /* Non-nil if communicating through a pty. */ Lisp_Object pty_flag; /* Event-count of last event in which this process changed status. */ Lisp_Object tick; /* Event-count of last such event reported. */ Lisp_Object update_tick;};#define ChannelMask(n) (1<<(n))/* True iff we are about to fork off a synchronous process or if we are waiting for it. */extern int synch_process_alive;/* Communicate exit status of synch process to from sigchld_handler to Fcall_process. */extern int synch_process_retcode;extern char *synch_process_death;/* Nonzero => this is a string explaining death of synchronous subprocess. */extern char *synch_process_death;/* If synch_process_death is zero, this is exit code of synchronous subprocess. */extern int synch_process_retcode;/* The name of the file open to get a null file, or a data sink. VMS, MS-DOS, and OS/2 redefine this. */#ifndef NULL_DEVICE#define NULL_DEVICE "/dev/null"#endif/* A string listing the possible suffixes used for executable files, separated by colons. VMS, MS-DOS, and OS/2 redefine this. */#ifndef EXEC_SUFFIXES#define EXEC_SUFFIXES ""#endif