Mercurial > emacs
view lisp/byte-run.el @ 44604:4702b23921b4
Avoid doubly tagging parse.y when both parse.c and parse.y are given on
the command line, in either order.
* etags.c (find_entries): Delete tags previously obtained from
file xxx.c's #line directives when parsing file xxx.y. This is
generally done for automatically generated files containing
#line directives. This handles the case when xxx.y is tagged
before xxx.c, and the entries of xxx.c pointing to xxx.y should
be discarded.
(language): Added the metasource member. Initializers changed.
(invalidate_nodes): New function.
(readline): Discard lines after having found a #line
directive pointing to an already tagged file. This handles the
case when xxx.y is tagged before xxx.c, and the entries of
xxx.c pointing to xxx.y should be discarded.
(fdesc): New structure for keeping track of input files.
(fdesc): Remove `file' member (a string) and use instead a pointer
to a file description structure.
(curfile, curfiledir, curtagfname, curlang, nocharno,
forced_lang): Global variables removed in favor of fdhead and
curfdp, pointers to file description strucures.
(longopts, main, print_help): Use the CTAGS conditional to include
or exclude options that work on etags or ctags only.
(process_file, find_entries, pfnote, add_node, put_entries,
readline): Use fdhead and curfdp.
(process_file, find_entries): Do not take an arg string, all
callers changed.
* etags.c (longopts, print_help, main): Test CTAGS to disallow
options that are not right for either etags or ctags.
* etags.c (number_len, total_size_of_entries): Define them also
in CTAGS mode, because gcc does not compile all refs away.
author | Francesco Potortì <pot@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 15 Apr 2002 14:18:47 +0000 |
parents | fa490904bee0 |
children | 37645a051842 |
line wrap: on
line source
;;; byte-run.el --- byte-compiler support for inlining ;; Copyright (C) 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Author: Jamie Zawinski <jwz@lucid.com> ;; Hallvard Furuseth <hbf@ulrik.uio.no> ;; Maintainer: FSF ;; Keywords: internal ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. ;; GNU Emacs 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. ;; GNU Emacs 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 GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the ;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, ;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. ;;; Commentary: ;; interface to selectively inlining functions. ;; This only happens when source-code optimization is turned on. ;;; Code: ;; Redefined in byte-optimize.el. ;; This is not documented--it's not clear that we should promote it. (fset 'inline 'progn) (put 'inline 'lisp-indent-hook 0) ;;; Interface to inline functions. ;; (defmacro proclaim-inline (&rest fns) ;; "Cause the named functions to be open-coded when called from compiled code. ;; They will only be compiled open-coded when byte-compile-optimize is true." ;; (cons 'eval-and-compile ;; (mapcar '(lambda (x) ;; (or (memq (get x 'byte-optimizer) ;; '(nil byte-compile-inline-expand)) ;; (error ;; "%s already has a byte-optimizer, can't make it inline" ;; x)) ;; (list 'put (list 'quote x) ;; ''byte-optimizer ''byte-compile-inline-expand)) ;; fns))) ;; (defmacro proclaim-notinline (&rest fns) ;; "Cause the named functions to no longer be open-coded." ;; (cons 'eval-and-compile ;; (mapcar '(lambda (x) ;; (if (eq (get x 'byte-optimizer) 'byte-compile-inline-expand) ;; (put x 'byte-optimizer nil)) ;; (list 'if (list 'eq (list 'get (list 'quote x) ''byte-optimizer) ;; ''byte-compile-inline-expand) ;; (list 'put x ''byte-optimizer nil))) ;; fns))) ;; This has a special byte-hunk-handler in bytecomp.el. (defmacro defsubst (name arglist &rest body) "Define an inline function. The syntax is just like that of `defun'." (or (memq (get name 'byte-optimizer) '(nil byte-compile-inline-expand)) (error "`%s' is a primitive" name)) (list 'prog1 (cons 'defun (cons name (cons arglist body))) (list 'eval-and-compile (list 'put (list 'quote name) ''byte-optimizer ''byte-compile-inline-expand)))) (defun make-obsolete (fn new &optional when) "Make the byte-compiler warn that FUNCTION is obsolete. The warning will say that NEW should be used instead. If NEW is a string, that is the `use instead' message. If provided, WHEN should be a string indicating when the function was first made obsolete, for example a date or a release number." (interactive "aMake function obsolete: \nxObsoletion replacement: ") (let ((handler (get fn 'byte-compile))) (if (eq 'byte-compile-obsolete handler) (setq handler (nth 1 (get fn 'byte-obsolete-info))) (put fn 'byte-compile 'byte-compile-obsolete)) (put fn 'byte-obsolete-info (list new handler when))) fn) (defun make-obsolete-variable (var new &optional when) "Make the byte-compiler warn that VARIABLE is obsolete, and NEW should be used instead. If NEW is a string, then that is the `use instead' message. If provided, WHEN should be a string indicating when the variable was first made obsolete, for example a date or a release number." (interactive (list (let ((str (completing-read "Make variable obsolete: " obarray 'boundp t))) (if (equal str "") (error "")) (intern str)) (car (read-from-string (read-string "Obsoletion replacement: "))))) (put var 'byte-obsolete-variable (cons new when)) var) (put 'dont-compile 'lisp-indent-hook 0) (defmacro dont-compile (&rest body) "Like `progn', but the body always runs interpreted (not compiled). If you think you need this, you're probably making a mistake somewhere." (list 'eval (list 'quote (if (cdr body) (cons 'progn body) (car body))))) ;;; interface to evaluating things at compile time and/or load time ;;; these macro must come after any uses of them in this file, as their ;;; definition in the file overrides the magic definitions on the ;;; byte-compile-macro-environment. (put 'eval-when-compile 'lisp-indent-hook 0) (defmacro eval-when-compile (&rest body) "Like `progn', but evaluates the body at compile time. The result of the body appears to the compiler as a quoted constant." ;; Not necessary because we have it in b-c-initial-macro-environment ;; (list 'quote (eval (cons 'progn body))) (cons 'progn body)) (put 'eval-and-compile 'lisp-indent-hook 0) (defmacro eval-and-compile (&rest body) "Like `progn', but evaluates the body at compile time and at load time." ;; Remember, it's magic. (cons 'progn body)) ;;; I nuked this because it's not a good idea for users to think of using it. ;;; These options are a matter of installation preference, and have nothing to ;;; with particular source files; it's a mistake to suggest to users ;;; they should associate these with particular source files. ;;; There is hardly any reason to change these parameters, anyway. ;;; --rms. ;; (put 'byte-compiler-options 'lisp-indent-hook 0) ;; (defmacro byte-compiler-options (&rest args) ;; "Set some compilation-parameters for this file. This will affect only the ;; file in which it appears; this does nothing when evaluated, and when loaded ;; from a .el file. ;; ;; Each argument to this macro must be a list of a key and a value. ;; ;; Keys: Values: Corresponding variable: ;; ;; verbose t, nil byte-compile-verbose ;; optimize t, nil, source, byte byte-compile-optimize ;; warnings list of warnings byte-compile-warnings ;; Legal elements: (callargs redefine free-vars unresolved) ;; file-format emacs18, emacs19 byte-compile-compatibility ;; ;; For example, this might appear at the top of a source file: ;; ;; (byte-compiler-options ;; (optimize t) ;; (warnings (- free-vars)) ; Don't warn about free variables ;; (file-format emacs19))" ;; nil) ;;; byte-run.el ends here