Mercurial > emacs
view src/s/sol2-3.h @ 12886:4029ded28f9d
(skeleton-newline-indent-rigidly): New variable.
(skeleton-internal-1): Use it for indenting after \n because previous
behaviour was only useful for `sh-script.el' and old `ada.el'. Other
modes now get their own indentation.
(skeleton, skeleton-modified, skeleton-point, skeleton-regions): `New'
variables for passing between the mutually recursive functions of
the skeleton engine. Introduced to remove compiler warnings.
(skeleton-proxy): New argument `str' to make this settable when calling
a skeleton as a function.
(skeleton-insert): New argument `str' to pass down. Element `\n'
now usually indents according to mode. Subskeletons may also have
a list of strings as iterator. Earlier modification also removed
meaning of `quit' -- I did not put it back in since it's useless.
When quitting out of a subskeleton while still wrapping around text
don't duplicate first line of that text.
(skeleton-end-hook): New hook useful say for modes that leave a `;' on
an empty line to indent right and then want to clean it up when doing
a skeleton there.
author | Karl Heuer <kwzh@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 19 Aug 1995 00:30:38 +0000 |
parents | 03de0dfc6657 |
children | a3b8903f3de0 |
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#include "sol2.h" /* Solaris 2.3 has a bug in XListFontsWithInfo. */ #define BROKEN_XLISTFONTSWITHINFO /* Override LD_SWITCH_SYSTEM: add -L /usr/ccs/lib to the sol2.h value. */ #undef LD_SWITCH_SYSTEM #ifndef __GNUC__ #define LD_SWITCH_SYSTEM -L /usr/ccs/lib LD_SWITCH_X_SITE_AUX #else /* GCC */ /* We use ./prefix-args because we don't know whether LD_SWITCH_X_SITE_AUX has anything in it. It can be empty. This works ok in src. Luckily lib-src does not use LD_SWITCH_SYSTEM. */ #define LD_SWITCH_SYSTEM -L /usr/ccs/lib \ `./prefix-args -Xlinker LD_SWITCH_X_SITE_AUX` #endif /* GCC */ /* Info from fnf@cygnus.com suggests this is appropriate. */ #define POSIX_SIGNALS /* We don't need the definition from usg5-3.h with POSIX_SIGNALS. */ #undef sigsetmask /* This is the same definition as in usg5-4.h, but with sigblock/sigunblock rather than sighold/sigrelse, which appear to be BSD4.1 specific and won't work if POSIX_SIGNALS is defined. It may also be appropriate for SVR4.x (x<2) but I'm not sure. fnf@cygnus.com */ /* This sets the name of the slave side of the PTY. On SysVr4, grantpt(3) forks a subprocess, so keep sigchld_handler() from intercepting that death. If any child but grantpt's should die within, it should be caught after sigrelse(2). */ #undef PTY_TTY_NAME_SPRINTF #define PTY_TTY_NAME_SPRINTF \ { \ char *ptsname(), *ptyname; \ \ sigblock(sigmask(SIGCLD)); \ if (grantpt(fd) == -1) \ fatal("could not grant slave pty"); \ sigunblock(sigmask(SIGCLD)); \ if (unlockpt(fd) == -1) \ fatal("could not unlock slave pty"); \ if (!(ptyname = ptsname(fd))) \ fatal ("could not enable slave pty"); \ strncpy(pty_name, ptyname, sizeof(pty_name)); \ pty_name[sizeof(pty_name) - 1] = 0; \ } /* David Miller <davem@caip.rutgers.edu> says vfork fails on 2.4. Brendan Kehoe <brendan@zen.org> says it also fails on 2.3. So we'll use the alternate definition in sysdep.c. But a header file has a declaration that would conflict with the definition of vfork in sysdep.c. So we'll choose the return type to match the system header. */ #undef HAVE_VFORK #define VFORK_RETURN_TYPE pid_t