Mercurial > emacs
view src/unexhp9k800.c @ 13728:4b7903cfa7ee
(bibtex-auto-fill-function): Adapted for use with
changed autofill policy of emacs-19.30 (uses now fill-prefix
instead of indent-line-function).
(bibtex-indent-line-function): Removed (not used any more).
(bibtex-make-field): Was broken when called
non-interactively.
(bibtex-make-field): Point is now placed on closing
brace or quote (suggested by Karl Eichwalder <ke@ke.Central.DE>).
(bibtex-clean-entry): Comma after last field isn't
deleted anymore (new standard in BibTeX 0.99 and 1.xx).
(bibtex-enclosing-reference-maybe-empty-head): Works with entries
with comma after last field.
(bibtex-reference): Permits entries with comma after last field.
(bibtex-font-lock-keywords): Enhanced to support new field-name
characters (suggested by Martin Maechler
<maechler@stat.math.ethz.ch>).
(bibtex-field-name): Now numbers (not as the first sign), dashes,
and underscores are allowed (suggested by Martin Maechler
<maechler@stat.math.ethz.ch> and Oren Patashnik
<opbibtex@labrea.Stanford.EDU>).
(bibtex-make-field): Was broken on lines containing
non-parenthesized entries (reported by Karl Eichwalder
<ke@ke.Central.DE>).
(bibtex-validate-buffer): Changed so that preamble
references are ignored (same as string entries) (reported by
Martin Maechler <maechler@stat.math.ethz.ch>).
(bibtex-enclosing-reference-maybe-empty-head):
New function to be used in case reference head may be empty.
(bibtex-clean-entry, bibtex-pop-previous, bibtex-pop-next): Uses
now bibtex-enclosing-reference-maybe-empty-head.
(bibtex-mode): Added support for font-lock mode.
(bibtex-font-lock-keywords): New variable with font-lock keywords
for BibTeX mode.
(bibtex-make-optional-field): Not longer interactive
(suggested by Karl Eichwalder <karl@pertron.central.de>).
(bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries): Set to nil, since it
requires more user attention and more restricted files to have
this set to t.
(bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries,
bibtex-sort-ignore-string-entries): Made buffer local, since it
may depend on the buffer which preferences to use.
(bibtex-validate-buffer): Looking for correct sort order only when
bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries is non-nil.
Put a comment in the `KNOWN BUGS' section about the
quote-inside-quotes problem.
(whole file): Changed string `true' in some documentation strings
to `non-nil' (e.g. `if variable has a true/non-nil value').
(bibtex-mode-map): Changed `move/edit' to `bibtex-edit'.
(bibtex-sort-entries): Now works correctly with
`@String' entries inside BibTeX files (i.e. after the occurence of
other references).
(bibtex-validate-buffer): Inserted code which looks if entries are
balanced (a single non-escaped quote inside braces was not
detected till now, but bibtex-sort-entries stumbles about it).
(bibtex-entry): bibtex-move-outside-of-entry is only
called when bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries is nil (otherwise
bibtex-find-entry-location determines the correct location).
(bibtex-find-entry-location): Now uses binary search. As before,
it assumes that the buffer is sorted without duplicates (but as
before it is only called when bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries is
t). Ignores `@String' entries if told so via variable
bibtex-sort-ignore-string-entries.
(bibtex-clean-entry): Respect
bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries when inserting autokey.
(bibtex-validate-buffer): Searching whole buffer for duplicates
and correct order is now done directly instead of calling
bibtex-find-entry-location (since this is to be reprogrammed to
use a binary search instead a sequential one).
(bibtex-parse-keys): May now be called with an
optional parameter which (if t) tells bibtex-parse-keys that it
should abort if input is pending.
(bibtex-mode): The instance of bibtex-parse-keys called in
auto-save-mode-hook is now called with this new parameter set to
t, so an auto-save caused by exceeding auto-save-interval is now
aborted immediately if user is still typing.
(bibtex-print-help-message, bibtex-clean-entry): Use
now constant strings instead of custom ones.
(bibtex-clean-entry): Changed the call of
bibtex-enclosing-reference to a more specific call so entries
without a key (here allowed) can be handled.
(bibtex-reference-key): Cleared off parentheses (caused string
entries enclosed by parentheses instead of braces to be not added
to bibtex-completion-candidates).
(bibtex-complete-string): Made it use bibtex-string.
(bibtex-keys,
bibtex-buffer-last-parsed-for-keys-tick): New buffer-local
variables to make parsing of BibTeX buffer for reference keys
(needed by TAB completion in minibuffer when entering key) more
occasional.
(bibtex-parse-keys): New function to parse for keys (functionality
was partially included in bibtex-entry).
(bibtex-entry): Changed to use bibtex-parse-keys.
(bibtex-mode): Installs bibtex-parse-keys as an
auto-save-mode-hook, so whole buffer is parsed at most when it is
autosaved.
(bibtex-clean-entry): Calls bibtex-parse-keys on the new entry, so
bibtex-keys remains consistent for new entries that are finished
by calling this function (most should).
(bibtex-inside-field): Be independent on current
setting of bibtex-field-right-delimiter (allows more intermixing
between quotes and braces).
(bibtex-make-field): Last change didn't make it work correctly
when called non-interactively by bibtex-entry (fixed).
author | Karl Heuer <kwzh@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 13 Dec 1995 20:26:13 +0000 |
parents | 0ba4d34bcff4 |
children | 575a17a3c9fb |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Unexec for HP 9000 Series 800 machines. Bob Desinger <hpsemc!bd@hplabs.hp.com> Note that the GNU project considers support for HP operation a peripheral activity which should not be allowed to divert effort from development of the GNU system. Changes in this code will be installed when users send them in, but aside from that we don't plan to think about it, or about whether other Emacs maintenance might break it. Unexec creates a copy of the old a.out file, and replaces the old data area with the current data area. When the new file is executed, the process will see the same data structures and data values that the original process had when unexec was called. Unlike other versions of unexec, this one copies symbol table and debug information to the new a.out file. Thus, the new a.out file may be debugged with symbolic debuggers. If you fix any bugs in this, I'd like to incorporate your fixes. Send them to uunet!hpda!hpsemc!jmorris or jmorris%hpsemc@hplabs.HP.COM. CAVEATS: This routine saves the current value of all static and external variables. This means that any data structure that needs to be initialized must be explicitly reset. Variables will not have their expected default values. Unfortunately, the HP-UX signal handler has internal initialization flags which are not explicitly reset. Thus, for signals to work in conjunction with this routine, the following code must executed when the new process starts up. void _sigreturn (); ... sigsetreturn (_sigreturn); */ #include <stdio.h> #include <fcntl.h> #include <errno.h> #include <a.out.h> #ifdef emacs #include <config.h> #endif #ifdef HPUX_USE_SHLIBS #include <dl.h> #endif /* brk value to restore, stored as a global. This is really used only if we used shared libraries. */ static long brk_on_dump = 0; /* Called from main, if we use shared libraries. */ int run_time_remap (ignored) char *ignored; { brk (brk_on_dump); } #undef roundup #define roundup(x,n) (((x) + ((n) - 1)) & ~((n) - 1)) /* n is power of 2 */ #define min(x,y) (((x) < (y)) ? (x) : (y)) /* Create a new a.out file, same as old but with current data space */ unexec (new_name, old_name, new_end_of_text, dummy1, dummy2) char new_name[]; /* name of the new a.out file to be created */ char old_name[]; /* name of the old a.out file */ char *new_end_of_text; /* ptr to new edata/etext; NOT USED YET */ int dummy1, dummy2; /* not used by emacs */ { int old, new; int old_size, new_size; struct header hdr; struct som_exec_auxhdr auxhdr; long i; /* For the greatest flexibility, should create a temporary file in the same directory as the new file. When everything is complete, rename the temp file to the new name. This way, a program could update its own a.out file even while it is still executing. If problems occur, everything is still intact. NOT implemented. */ /* Open the input and output a.out files */ old = open (old_name, O_RDONLY); if (old < 0) { perror (old_name); exit (1); } new = open (new_name, O_CREAT|O_RDWR|O_TRUNC, 0777); if (new < 0) { perror (new_name); exit (1); } /* Read the old headers */ read_header (old, &hdr, &auxhdr); brk_on_dump = sbrk (0); /* Decide how large the new and old data areas are */ old_size = auxhdr.exec_dsize; /* I suspect these two statements are separate to avoid a compiler bug in hpux version 8. */ i = sbrk (0); new_size = i - auxhdr.exec_dmem; /* Copy the old file to the new, up to the data space */ lseek (old, 0, 0); copy_file (old, new, auxhdr.exec_dfile); /* Skip the old data segment and write a new one */ lseek (old, old_size, 1); save_data_space (new, &hdr, &auxhdr, new_size); /* Copy the rest of the file */ copy_rest (old, new); /* Update file pointers since we probably changed size of data area */ update_file_ptrs (new, &hdr, &auxhdr, auxhdr.exec_dfile, new_size-old_size); /* Save the modified header */ write_header (new, &hdr, &auxhdr); /* Close the binary file */ close (old); close (new); return 0; } /* Save current data space in the file, update header. */ save_data_space (file, hdr, auxhdr, size) int file; struct header *hdr; struct som_exec_auxhdr *auxhdr; int size; { /* Write the entire data space out to the file */ if (write (file, auxhdr->exec_dmem, size) != size) { perror ("Can't save new data space"); exit (1); } /* Update the header to reflect the new data size */ auxhdr->exec_dsize = size; auxhdr->exec_bsize = 0; } /* Update the values of file pointers when something is inserted. */ update_file_ptrs (file, hdr, auxhdr, location, offset) int file; struct header *hdr; struct som_exec_auxhdr *auxhdr; unsigned int location; int offset; { struct subspace_dictionary_record subspace; int i; /* Increase the overall size of the module */ hdr->som_length += offset; /* Update the various file pointers in the header */ #define update(ptr) if (ptr > location) ptr = ptr + offset update (hdr->aux_header_location); update (hdr->space_strings_location); update (hdr->init_array_location); update (hdr->compiler_location); update (hdr->symbol_location); update (hdr->fixup_request_location); update (hdr->symbol_strings_location); update (hdr->unloadable_sp_location); update (auxhdr->exec_tfile); update (auxhdr->exec_dfile); /* Do for each subspace dictionary entry */ lseek (file, hdr->subspace_location, 0); for (i = 0; i < hdr->subspace_total; i++) { if (read (file, &subspace, sizeof (subspace)) != sizeof (subspace)) { perror ("Can't read subspace record"); exit (1); } /* If subspace has a file location, update it */ if (subspace.initialization_length > 0 && subspace.file_loc_init_value > location) { subspace.file_loc_init_value += offset; lseek (file, -sizeof (subspace), 1); if (write (file, &subspace, sizeof (subspace)) != sizeof (subspace)) { perror ("Can't update subspace record"); exit (1); } } } /* Do for each initialization pointer record */ /* (I don't think it applies to executable files, only relocatables) */ #undef update } /* Read in the header records from an a.out file. */ read_header (file, hdr, auxhdr) int file; struct header *hdr; struct som_exec_auxhdr *auxhdr; { /* Read the header in */ lseek (file, 0, 0); if (read (file, hdr, sizeof (*hdr)) != sizeof (*hdr)) { perror ("Couldn't read header from a.out file"); exit (1); } if (hdr->a_magic != EXEC_MAGIC && hdr->a_magic != SHARE_MAGIC && hdr->a_magic != DEMAND_MAGIC) { fprintf (stderr, "a.out file doesn't have legal magic number\n"); exit (1); } lseek (file, hdr->aux_header_location, 0); if (read (file, auxhdr, sizeof (*auxhdr)) != sizeof (*auxhdr)) { perror ("Couldn't read auxiliary header from a.out file"); exit (1); } } /* Write out the header records into an a.out file. */ write_header (file, hdr, auxhdr) int file; struct header *hdr; struct som_exec_auxhdr *auxhdr; { /* Update the checksum */ hdr->checksum = calculate_checksum (hdr); /* Write the header back into the a.out file */ lseek (file, 0, 0); if (write (file, hdr, sizeof (*hdr)) != sizeof (*hdr)) { perror ("Couldn't write header to a.out file"); exit (1); } lseek (file, hdr->aux_header_location, 0); if (write (file, auxhdr, sizeof (*auxhdr)) != sizeof (*auxhdr)) { perror ("Couldn't write auxiliary header to a.out file"); exit (1); } } /* Calculate the checksum of a SOM header record. */ calculate_checksum (hdr) struct header *hdr; { int checksum, i, *ptr; checksum = 0; ptr = (int *) hdr; for (i = 0; i < sizeof (*hdr) / sizeof (int) - 1; i++) checksum ^= ptr[i]; return (checksum); } /* Copy size bytes from the old file to the new one. */ copy_file (old, new, size) int new, old; int size; { int len; int buffer[8192]; /* word aligned will be faster */ for (; size > 0; size -= len) { len = min (size, sizeof (buffer)); if (read (old, buffer, len) != len) { perror ("Read failure on a.out file"); exit (1); } if (write (new, buffer, len) != len) { perror ("Write failure in a.out file"); exit (1); } } } /* Copy the rest of the file, up to EOF. */ copy_rest (old, new) int new, old; { int buffer[4096]; int len; /* Copy bytes until end of file or error */ while ((len = read (old, buffer, sizeof (buffer))) > 0) if (write (new, buffer, len) != len) break; if (len != 0) { perror ("Unable to copy the rest of the file"); exit (1); } } #ifdef DEBUG display_header (hdr, auxhdr) struct header *hdr; struct som_exec_auxhdr *auxhdr; { /* Display the header information (debug) */ printf ("\n\nFILE HEADER\n"); printf ("magic number %d \n", hdr->a_magic); printf ("text loc %.8x size %d \n", auxhdr->exec_tmem, auxhdr->exec_tsize); printf ("data loc %.8x size %d \n", auxhdr->exec_dmem, auxhdr->exec_dsize); printf ("entry %x \n", auxhdr->exec_entry); printf ("Bss segment size %u\n", auxhdr->exec_bsize); printf ("\n"); printf ("data file loc %d size %d\n", auxhdr->exec_dfile, auxhdr->exec_dsize); printf ("som_length %d\n", hdr->som_length); printf ("unloadable sploc %d size %d\n", hdr->unloadable_sp_location, hdr->unloadable_sp_size); } #endif /* DEBUG */