Mercurial > emacs
view src/s/cxux.h @ 68000:830e95c83d49
* mh-customize.el (mh-folder-msg-number): Snow is actually off-white
on low color displays which turns to white when bold. This is
unreadable on white backgrounds. Use snow with min-colors requirement.
Use cyan on low-color displays.
* mh-init.el (mh-defface-compat): On low-color displays, delete the
high-color display rather than simply strip the min-colors requirement
since the existing algorithm shadowed the desired display on low-color
displays.
author | Bill Wohler <wohler@newt.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 03 Jan 2006 18:25:26 +0000 |
parents | 6358e3c6075c |
children | 3bd95f4f2941 2d92f5c9d6ae |
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/* Header file for Harris CXUX. Copyright (C) 1994, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 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., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */ /* * Define symbols to identify the version of Unix this is. * Define all the symbols that apply correctly. */ /* #define UNIPLUS */ #define USG5 #define USG /* #define HPUX */ /* #define UMAX */ /* #define BSD4_1 */ /* #define BSD4_2 */ /* #define BSD4_3 */ /* #define BSD_SYSTEM */ /* #define VMS */ #ifndef _CX_UX #define _CX_UX 1 #endif /* Define this symbol if you are running CX/UX 7.0 or later (7.0 introduced * support for ELF files, and while we still build emacs in COFF format, the * way it is linked is different for 7.0). */ /* #define USING_CX_UX_7 */ #ifdef USING_CX_UX_7 #define LINKER /usr/sde/coff/usr/bin/ld #define LD_SWITCH_SYSTEM -L/usr/sde/coff/usr/lib -zzero_word #define START_FILES pre-crt0.o /usr/sde/coff/usr/lib/crt0.o /usr/sde/coff/usr/lib/m88100.o #else /* !USING_CX_UX_7 */ #ifdef _M88K #define START_FILES pre-crt0.o /lib/crt0.o #else #define START_FILES cxux-crt0.o /lib/crt0.o #endif #endif /* USING_CX_UX_7 */ /* SYSTEM_TYPE should indicate the kind of system you are using. It sets the Lisp variable system-type. */ #define SYSTEM_TYPE "usg-unix-v" #define C_SWITCH_SYSTEM -Xa #define POSIX_SIGNALS /* With POSIX signals, also need to use sigaction rather than signal to * setup signal handlers */ #define signal sys_signal /* NOMULTIPLEJOBS should be defined if your system's shell does not have "job control" (the ability to stop a program, run some other program, then continue the first one). */ /* #define NOMULTIPLEJOBS */ /* Emacs can read input using SIGIO and buffering characters itself, or using CBREAK mode and making C-g cause SIGINT. The choice is controlled by the variable interrupt_input. Define INTERRUPT_INPUT to make interrupt_input = 1 the default (use SIGIO) Emacs uses the presence or absence of the SIGIO macro to indicate whether or not signal-driven I/O is possible. It uses INTERRUPT_INPUT to decide whether to use it by default. SIGIO can be used only on systems that implement it (4.2 and 4.3). CBREAK mode has two disadvantages 1) At least in 4.2, it is impossible to handle the Meta key properly. I hear that in system V this problem does not exist. 2) Control-G causes output to be discarded. I do not know whether this can be fixed in system V. Another method of doing input is planned but not implemented. It would have Emacs fork off a separate process to read the input and send it to the true Emacs process through a pipe. */ #define INTERRUPT_INPUT /* #define BROKEN_FIONREAD */ /* Letter to use in finding device name of first pty, if system supports pty's. 'a' means it is /dev/ptya0 */ #define FIRST_PTY_LETTER 'A' #define PTY_ITERATION for (c = 'A'; c <= 'P'; c++) for (i = 0; i < 16; i++) /* * Define HAVE_TERMIOS if the system provides POSIX-style * functions and macros for terminal control. * * Define HAVE_TERMIO if the system provides sysV-style ioctls * for terminal control. * * Do not define both. HAVE_TERMIOS is preferred, if it is * supported on your system. */ #define HAVE_TERMIOS /* #define HAVE_TERMIO */ #define NO_TERMIO /* * Define HAVE_PTYS if the system supports pty devices. */ #define HAVE_PTYS /* * Define NONSYSTEM_DIR_LIBRARY to make Emacs emulate * The 4.2 opendir, etc., library functions. */ /* #define NONSYSTEM_DIR_LIBRARY */ #define SYSV_SYSTEM_DIR /* Define this symbol if your system has the functions bcopy, etc. */ #define BSTRING /* subprocesses should be defined if you want to have code for asynchronous subprocesses (as used in M-x compile and M-x shell). This is generally OS dependent, and not supported under most USG systems. */ #define subprocesses /* If your system uses COFF (Common Object File Format) then define the preprocessor symbol "COFF". */ #define COFF /* define MAIL_USE_FLOCK if the mailer uses flock to interlock access to /usr/spool/mail/$USER. The alternative is that a lock file named /usr/spool/mail/$USER.lock. */ #define MAIL_USE_FLOCK /* Define CLASH_DETECTION if you want lock files to be written so that Emacs can tell instantly when you try to modify a file that someone else has modified in his Emacs. */ #define CLASH_DETECTION /* Define this if your operating system declares signal handlers to have a type other than the usual. `The usual' is `void' for ANSI C systems (i.e. when the __STDC__ macro is defined), and `int' for pre-ANSI systems. If you're using GCC on an older system, __STDC__ will be defined, but the system's include files will still say that signal returns int or whatever; in situations like that, define this to be what the system's include files want. */ /* #define SIGTYPE int */ #define SIGTYPE void /* If the character used to separate elements of the executable path is not ':', #define this to be the appropriate character constant. */ /* #define SEPCHAR ':' */ /* Here, on a separate page, add any special hacks needed to make Emacs work on this system. For example, you might define certain system call names that don't exist on your system, or that do different things on your system and must be used only through an encapsulation (Which you should place, by convention, in sysdep.c). */ /* Yes! The Night Hawk has sockets! */ #define HAVE_SOCKETS /* The symbol in the kernel where the load average is found is named _avenrun. */ #define LDAV_SYMBOL "_avenrun" #define KERNEL_FILE "/unix" /* There are too many kludges required to redefine malloc - use the system one */ #define SYSTEM_MALLOC #define _setjmp setjmp #define _longjmp longjmp /* const really does work, but I can't get configure to run the C compiler * with the right options so it figures that out. */ #undef const #ifdef sigmask #undef sigmask #endif /* * <pwd.h> already declares getpwuid, and with a uid_t argument in ANSI C * mode. Define this so xrdb.c will compile */ #ifdef __STDC__ #define DECLARE_GETPWUID_WITH_UID_T #endif /* Some compilers tend to put everything declared static into the initialized data area, which becomes pure after dumping Emacs. On these systems, you must #define static as nothing to foil this. Note that emacs carefully avoids static vars inside functions. */ /* #define static */ /* arch-tag: 5febe5fe-f0b0-49cb-9280-9d5a9fa43710 (do not change this comment) */