Mercurial > emacs
view src/termcap.c @ 110725:36370937dd5f
Remove obsolete use of binary-overwrite-mode in bytecomp (Bug#7001).
* emacs-lisp/bytecomp.el (byte-compile-from-buffer): Remove
obsolete use of binary-overwrite-mode (Bug#7001).
author | Chong Yidong <cyd@stupidchicken.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 03 Oct 2010 00:31:59 -0400 |
parents | 76e072dbe342 |
children | 72f46bad930c |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Work-alike for termcap, plus extra features. Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1993, 1994, 1995, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 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 this program; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */ /* Emacs config.h may rename various library functions such as malloc. */ #include <config.h> #include <setjmp.h> #include <lisp.h> /* xmalloc is here */ /* Get the O_* definitions for open et al. */ #include <sys/file.h> #ifdef HAVE_FCNTL_H #include <fcntl.h> #endif #ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H #include <unistd.h> #endif #ifndef NULL #define NULL (char *) 0 #endif #ifndef O_RDONLY #define O_RDONLY 0 #endif /* BUFSIZE is the initial size allocated for the buffer for reading the termcap file. It is not a limit. Make it large normally for speed. Make it variable when debugging, so can exercise increasing the space dynamically. */ #ifndef BUFSIZE #ifdef DEBUG #define BUFSIZE bufsize int bufsize = 128; #else #define BUFSIZE 2048 #endif #endif #ifndef TERMCAP_FILE #define TERMCAP_FILE "/etc/termcap" #endif /* Looking up capabilities in the entry already found. */ /* The pointer to the data made by tgetent is left here for tgetnum, tgetflag and tgetstr to find. */ static char *term_entry; static char *tgetst1 (char *ptr, char **area); /* Search entry BP for capability CAP. Return a pointer to the capability (in BP) if found, 0 if not found. */ static char * find_capability (register char *bp, register char *cap) { for (; *bp; bp++) if (bp[0] == ':' && bp[1] == cap[0] && bp[2] == cap[1]) return &bp[4]; return NULL; } int tgetnum (char *cap) { register char *ptr = find_capability (term_entry, cap); if (!ptr || ptr[-1] != '#') return -1; return atoi (ptr); } int tgetflag (char *cap) { register char *ptr = find_capability (term_entry, cap); return ptr && ptr[-1] == ':'; } /* Look up a string-valued capability CAP. If AREA is non-null, it points to a pointer to a block in which to store the string. That pointer is advanced over the space used. If AREA is null, space is allocated with `malloc'. */ char * tgetstr (char *cap, char **area) { register char *ptr = find_capability (term_entry, cap); if (!ptr || (ptr[-1] != '=' && ptr[-1] != '~')) return NULL; return tgetst1 (ptr, area); } #ifdef IS_EBCDIC_HOST /* Table, indexed by a character in range 0200 to 0300 with 0200 subtracted, gives meaning of character following \, or a space if no special meaning. Sixteen characters per line within the string. */ static const char esctab[] = " \057\026 \047\014 \ \025 \015 \ \005 \013 \ "; #else /* Table, indexed by a character in range 0100 to 0140 with 0100 subtracted, gives meaning of character following \, or a space if no special meaning. Eight characters per line within the string. */ static const char esctab[] = " \007\010 \033\014 \ \012 \ \015 \011 \013 \ "; #endif /* PTR points to a string value inside a termcap entry. Copy that value, processing \ and ^ abbreviations, into the block that *AREA points to, or to newly allocated storage if AREA is NULL. Return the address to which we copied the value, or NULL if PTR is NULL. */ static char * tgetst1 (char *ptr, char **area) { register char *p, *r; register int c; register int size; char *ret; register int c1; if (!ptr) return NULL; /* `ret' gets address of where to store the string. */ if (!area) { /* Compute size of block needed (may overestimate). */ p = ptr; while ((c = *p++) && c != ':' && c != '\n') ; ret = (char *) xmalloc (p - ptr + 1); } else ret = *area; /* Copy the string value, stopping at null or colon. Also process ^ and \ abbreviations. */ p = ptr; r = ret; while ((c = *p++) && c != ':' && c != '\n') { if (c == '^') { c = *p++; if (c == '?') c = 0177; else c &= 037; } else if (c == '\\') { c = *p++; if (c >= '0' && c <= '7') { c -= '0'; size = 0; while (++size < 3 && (c1 = *p) >= '0' && c1 <= '7') { c *= 8; c += c1 - '0'; p++; } } #ifdef IS_EBCDIC_HOST else if (c >= 0200 && c < 0360) { c1 = esctab[(c & ~0100) - 0200]; if (c1 != ' ') c = c1; } #else else if (c >= 0100 && c < 0200) { c1 = esctab[(c & ~040) - 0100]; if (c1 != ' ') c = c1; } #endif } *r++ = c; } /* Sometimes entries have "%pN" which means use parameter N in the next %-substitution. If all such N are continuous in the range [1,9] we can remove each "%pN" because they are redundant, thus reducing bandwidth requirements. True, Emacs is well beyond the days of 150baud teletypes, but some of its users aren't much so. This pass could probably be integrated into the one above but abbreviation expansion makes that effort a little more hairy than its worth; this is cleaner. */ { register int last_p_param = 0; int remove_p_params = 1; struct { char *beg; int len; } cut[11]; for (cut[0].beg = p = ret; p < r - 3; p++) { if (!remove_p_params) break; if (*p == '%' && *(p + 1) == 'p') { if (*(p + 2) - '0' == 1 + last_p_param) { cut[last_p_param].len = p - cut[last_p_param].beg; last_p_param++; p += 3; cut[last_p_param].beg = p; } else /* not continuous: bail */ remove_p_params = 0; if (last_p_param > 10) /* too many: bail */ remove_p_params = 0; } } if (remove_p_params && last_p_param) { register int i; char *wp; cut[last_p_param].len = r - cut[last_p_param].beg; for (i = 0, wp = ret; i <= last_p_param; wp += cut[i++].len) memcpy (wp, cut[i].beg, cut[i].len); r = wp; } } *r = '\0'; /* Update *AREA. */ if (area) *area = r + 1; return ret; } /* Outputting a string with padding. */ #ifndef emacs short ospeed; /* If OSPEED is 0, we use this as the actual baud rate. */ int tputs_baud_rate; #endif char PC; #ifndef emacs /* Actual baud rate if positive; - baud rate / 100 if negative. */ static const int speeds[] = { 0, 50, 75, 110, 135, 150, -2, -3, -6, -12, -18, -24, -48, -96, -192, -288, -384, -576, -1152 }; #endif /* not emacs */ void tputs (register char *str, int nlines, register int (*outfun) (/* ??? */)) { register int padcount = 0; register int speed; #ifdef emacs extern EMACS_INT baud_rate; speed = baud_rate; /* For quite high speeds, convert to the smaller units to avoid overflow. */ if (speed > 10000) speed = - speed / 100; #else if (ospeed == 0) speed = tputs_baud_rate; else speed = speeds[ospeed]; #endif if (!str) return; while (*str >= '0' && *str <= '9') { padcount += *str++ - '0'; padcount *= 10; } if (*str == '.') { str++; padcount += *str++ - '0'; } if (*str == '*') { str++; padcount *= nlines; } while (*str) (*outfun) (*str++); /* PADCOUNT is now in units of tenths of msec. SPEED is measured in characters per 10 seconds or in characters per .1 seconds (if negative). We use the smaller units for larger speeds to avoid overflow. */ padcount *= speed; padcount += 500; padcount /= 1000; if (speed < 0) padcount = -padcount; else { padcount += 50; padcount /= 100; } while (padcount-- > 0) (*outfun) (PC); } /* Finding the termcap entry in the termcap data base. */ struct termcap_buffer { char *beg; int size; char *ptr; int ateof; int full; }; /* Forward declarations of static functions. */ static int scan_file (char *str, int fd, register struct termcap_buffer *bufp); static char *gobble_line (int fd, register struct termcap_buffer *bufp, char *append_end); static int compare_contin (register char *str1, register char *str2); static int name_match (char *line, char *name); #ifdef MSDOS /* MW, May 1993 */ static int valid_filename_p (fn) char *fn; { return *fn == '/' || fn[1] == ':'; } #else #define valid_filename_p(fn) (*(fn) == '/') #endif /* Find the termcap entry data for terminal type NAME and store it in the block that BP points to. Record its address for future use. If BP is null, space is dynamically allocated. Return -1 if there is some difficulty accessing the data base of terminal types, 0 if the data base is accessible but the type NAME is not defined in it, and some other value otherwise. */ int tgetent (char *bp, char *name) { register char *termcap_name; register int fd; struct termcap_buffer buf; register char *bp1; char *tc_search_point; char *term; int malloc_size = 0; register int c; char *tcenv = NULL; /* TERMCAP value, if it contains :tc=. */ char *indirect = NULL; /* Terminal type in :tc= in TERMCAP value. */ int filep; #ifdef INTERNAL_TERMINAL /* For the internal terminal we don't want to read any termcap file, so fake it. */ if (!strcmp (name, "internal")) { term = INTERNAL_TERMINAL; if (!bp) { malloc_size = 1 + strlen (term); bp = (char *) xmalloc (malloc_size); } strcpy (bp, term); goto ret; } #endif /* INTERNAL_TERMINAL */ /* For compatibility with programs like `less' that want to put data in the termcap buffer themselves as a fallback. */ if (bp) term_entry = bp; termcap_name = getenv ("TERMCAP"); if (termcap_name && *termcap_name == '\0') termcap_name = NULL; #if defined (MSDOS) && !defined (TEST) if (termcap_name && (*termcap_name == '\\' || *termcap_name == '/' || termcap_name[1] == ':')) dostounix_filename(termcap_name); #endif filep = termcap_name && valid_filename_p (termcap_name); /* If termcap_name is non-null and starts with / (in the un*x case, that is), it is a file name to use instead of /etc/termcap. If it is non-null and does not start with /, it is the entry itself, but only if the name the caller requested matches the TERM variable. */ if (termcap_name && !filep && !strcmp (name, getenv ("TERM"))) { indirect = tgetst1 (find_capability (termcap_name, "tc"), (char **) 0); if (!indirect) { if (!bp) bp = termcap_name; else strcpy (bp, termcap_name); goto ret; } else { /* It has tc=. Need to read /etc/termcap. */ tcenv = termcap_name; termcap_name = NULL; } } if (!termcap_name || !filep) termcap_name = TERMCAP_FILE; /* Here we know we must search a file and termcap_name has its name. */ #ifdef MSDOS fd = open (termcap_name, O_RDONLY|O_TEXT, 0); #else fd = open (termcap_name, O_RDONLY, 0); #endif if (fd < 0) return -1; buf.size = BUFSIZE; /* Add 1 to size to ensure room for terminating null. */ buf.beg = (char *) xmalloc (buf.size + 1); term = indirect ? indirect : name; if (!bp) { malloc_size = indirect ? strlen (tcenv) + 1 : buf.size; bp = (char *) xmalloc (malloc_size); } tc_search_point = bp1 = bp; if (indirect) /* Copy the data from the environment variable. */ { strcpy (bp, tcenv); bp1 += strlen (tcenv); } while (term) { /* Scan the file, reading it via buf, till find start of main entry. */ if (scan_file (term, fd, &buf) == 0) { close (fd); free (buf.beg); if (malloc_size) free (bp); return 0; } /* Free old `term' if appropriate. */ if (term != name) free (term); /* If BP is malloc'd by us, make sure it is big enough. */ if (malloc_size) { int offset1 = bp1 - bp, offset2 = tc_search_point - bp; malloc_size = offset1 + buf.size; bp = termcap_name = (char *) xrealloc (bp, malloc_size); bp1 = termcap_name + offset1; tc_search_point = termcap_name + offset2; } /* Copy the line of the entry from buf into bp. */ termcap_name = buf.ptr; while ((*bp1++ = c = *termcap_name++) && c != '\n') /* Drop out any \ newline sequence. */ if (c == '\\' && *termcap_name == '\n') { bp1--; termcap_name++; } *bp1 = '\0'; /* Does this entry refer to another terminal type's entry? If something is found, copy it into heap and null-terminate it. */ tc_search_point = find_capability (tc_search_point, "tc"); term = tgetst1 (tc_search_point, (char **) 0); } close (fd); free (buf.beg); if (malloc_size) bp = (char *) xrealloc (bp, bp1 - bp + 1); ret: term_entry = bp; return 1; } /* Given file open on FD and buffer BUFP, scan the file from the beginning until a line is found that starts the entry for terminal type STR. Return 1 if successful, with that line in BUFP, or 0 if no entry is found in the file. */ static int scan_file (char *str, int fd, register struct termcap_buffer *bufp) { register char *end; bufp->ptr = bufp->beg; bufp->full = 0; bufp->ateof = 0; *bufp->ptr = '\0'; lseek (fd, 0L, 0); while (!bufp->ateof) { /* Read a line into the buffer. */ end = NULL; do { /* if it is continued, append another line to it, until a non-continued line ends. */ end = gobble_line (fd, bufp, end); } while (!bufp->ateof && end[-2] == '\\'); if (*bufp->ptr != '#' && name_match (bufp->ptr, str)) return 1; /* Discard the line just processed. */ bufp->ptr = end; } return 0; } /* Return nonzero if NAME is one of the names specified by termcap entry LINE. */ static int name_match (char *line, char *name) { register char *tem; if (!compare_contin (line, name)) return 1; /* This line starts an entry. Is it the right one? */ for (tem = line; *tem && *tem != '\n' && *tem != ':'; tem++) if (*tem == '|' && !compare_contin (tem + 1, name)) return 1; return 0; } static int compare_contin (register char *str1, register char *str2) { register int c1, c2; while (1) { c1 = *str1++; c2 = *str2++; while (c1 == '\\' && *str1 == '\n') { str1++; while ((c1 = *str1++) == ' ' || c1 == '\t'); } if (c2 == '\0') { /* End of type being looked up. */ if (c1 == '|' || c1 == ':') /* If end of name in data base, we win. */ return 0; else return 1; } else if (c1 != c2) return 1; } } /* Make sure that the buffer <- BUFP contains a full line of the file open on FD, starting at the place BUFP->ptr points to. Can read more of the file, discard stuff before BUFP->ptr, or make the buffer bigger. Return the pointer to after the newline ending the line, or to the end of the file, if there is no newline to end it. Can also merge on continuation lines. If APPEND_END is non-null, it points past the newline of a line that is continued; we add another line onto it and regard the whole thing as one line. The caller decides when a line is continued. */ static char * gobble_line (int fd, register struct termcap_buffer *bufp, char *append_end) { register char *end; register int nread; register char *buf = bufp->beg; register char *tem; if (!append_end) append_end = bufp->ptr; while (1) { end = append_end; while (*end && *end != '\n') end++; if (*end) break; if (bufp->ateof) return buf + bufp->full; if (bufp->ptr == buf) { if (bufp->full == bufp->size) { bufp->size *= 2; /* Add 1 to size to ensure room for terminating null. */ tem = (char *) xrealloc (buf, bufp->size + 1); bufp->ptr = (bufp->ptr - buf) + tem; append_end = (append_end - buf) + tem; bufp->beg = buf = tem; } } else { append_end -= bufp->ptr - buf; memcpy (buf, bufp->ptr, bufp->full -= bufp->ptr - buf); bufp->ptr = buf; } if (!(nread = read (fd, buf + bufp->full, bufp->size - bufp->full))) bufp->ateof = 1; bufp->full += nread; buf[bufp->full] = '\0'; } return end + 1; } #ifdef TEST #ifdef NULL #undef NULL #endif #include <stdio.h> main (argc, argv) int argc; char **argv; { char *term; char *buf; term = argv[1]; printf ("TERM: %s\n", term); buf = (char *) tgetent (0, term); if ((int) buf <= 0) { printf ("No entry.\n"); return 0; } printf ("Entry: %s\n", buf); tprint ("cm"); tprint ("AL"); printf ("co: %d\n", tgetnum ("co")); printf ("am: %d\n", tgetflag ("am")); } tprint (cap) char *cap; { char *x = tgetstr (cap, 0); register char *y; printf ("%s: ", cap); if (x) { for (y = x; *y; y++) if (*y <= ' ' || *y == 0177) printf ("\\%0o", *y); else putchar (*y); free (x); } else printf ("none"); putchar ('\n'); } #endif /* TEST */ /* arch-tag: c2e8d427-2271-4fac-95fe-411857238b80 (do not change this comment) */