Mercurial > emacs
view lib-src/emacsserver.c @ 20553:a49deda9f5e6
(DECODE_POSITION): New macro.
(CHAR_TO_BYTE, BYTE_TO_CHAR): New macros.
(BEG_BYTE, BEGV_BYTE, PT_BYTE, GPT_BYTE)
(ZV_BYTE, Z_BYTE): New macros.
(BUF_BEG_BYTE, BUF_BEGV_BYTE, BUF_PT_BYTE, BUF_GPT_BYTE)
(BUF_ZV_BYTE, BUF_Z_BYTE): New macros.
(BUF_GAP_END_ADDR): New macro.
(BEGV_ADDR, PT_ADDR, GPT_ADDR, GAP_END_ADDR, ZV_ADDR, Z_ADDR):
Use the new ..._byte buffer data.
(BUFFER_CEILING_OF, BUFFER_FLOOR_OF): Likewise.
(BUF_GPT_ADDR, BUF_Z_ADDR): Likewise.
(SET_PT_BOTH, TEMP_SET_PT_BOTH): New macros.
(SET_PT, TEMP_SET_PT, BUF_SET_PT, BUF_TEMP_SET_PT):
Call functions with new arg order.
(SET_BUF_BEGV, SET_BUF_BEGV_BOTH): New macros.
(SET_BUF_PT): Macro deleted.
(SET_BUF_ZV): Set charpos and bytepos.
(SET_BUF_ZV_BOTH, SET_BUF_PT_BOTH): New macros.
(BYTE_POS_ADDR): Renamed from POS_ADDR.
(CHAR_POS_ADDR): New macro.
(FETCH_BYTE): Use BYTE_POS_ADDR.
(FETCH_MULTIBYTE_CHAR): Use ..._BYTE macros.
(BUF_CHAR_ADDRESS): Convert charpos to bytepos.
(BUF_BYTE_ADDRESS): New macro, like the old BUF_CHAR_ADDRESS.
(PTR_BYTE_POS): Renamed from PTR_CHAR_POS.
(BUF_PTR_BYTE_POS): New macro.
(BUF_FETCH_CHAR, BUF_FETCH_BYTE, BUF_FETCH_MULTIBYTE_CHAR): New macros.
(struct buffer_text): New fields gpt_byte, z_byte.
(struct buffer): New fields pt_byte, begv_byte, zv_byte.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 01 Jan 1998 06:49:17 +0000 |
parents | 1151154e9ba4 |
children | 1a8c44e38d9c |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Communication subprocess for GNU Emacs acting as server. Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1992, 1994 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., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ /* The GNU Emacs edit server process is run as a subprocess of Emacs under control of the file lisp/server.el. This program accepts communication from client (program emacsclient.c) and passes their commands (consisting of keyboard characters) up to the Emacs which then executes them. */ #define NO_SHORTNAMES #include <signal.h> #include <../src/config.h> #undef read #undef write #undef open #undef close #undef signal #if !defined (HAVE_SOCKETS) && !defined (HAVE_SYSVIPC) #include <stdio.h> main () { fprintf (stderr, "Sorry, the Emacs server is supported only on systems\n"); fprintf (stderr, "with Berkeley sockets or System V IPC.\n"); exit (1); } #else /* HAVE_SOCKETS or HAVE_SYSVIPC */ #if defined (HAVE_SOCKETS) && ! defined (NO_SOCKETS_IN_FILE_SYSTEM) /* BSD code is very different from SYSV IPC code */ #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/file.h> #include <sys/socket.h> #include <sys/un.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <errno.h> #include <sys/stat.h> extern int errno; /* Copied from src/process.c */ #ifdef FD_SET /* We could get this from param.h, but better not to depend on finding that. And better not to risk that it might define other symbols used in this file. */ #ifdef FD_SETSIZE #define MAXDESC FD_SETSIZE #else #define MAXDESC 64 #endif #define SELECT_TYPE fd_set #else /* no FD_SET */ #define MAXDESC 32 #define SELECT_TYPE int /* Define the macros to access a single-int bitmap of descriptors. */ #define FD_SET(n, p) (*(p) |= (1 << (n))) #define FD_CLR(n, p) (*(p) &= ~(1 << (n))) #define FD_ISSET(n, p) (*(p) & (1 << (n))) #define FD_ZERO(p) (*(p) = 0) #endif /* no FD_SET */ /* This is the file name of the socket that we made. */ char *socket_name; /* Name of this program. */ char *progname; /* Handle fatal signals. */ /* This is the handler. */ SIGTYPE delete_socket (sig) int sig; { signal (sig, SIG_DFL); unlink (socket_name); kill (getpid (), sig); } /* Set up to handle all the signals. */ handle_signals () { signal (SIGHUP, delete_socket); signal (SIGINT, delete_socket); signal (SIGQUIT, delete_socket); signal (SIGILL, delete_socket); signal (SIGTRAP, delete_socket); #ifdef SIGABRT signal (SIGABRT, delete_socket); #endif #ifdef SIGHWE signal (SIGHWE, delete_socket); #endif #ifdef SIGPRE signal (SIGPRE, delete_socket); #endif #ifdef SIGORE signal (SIGORE, delete_socket); #endif #ifdef SIGUME signal (SIGUME, delete_socket); #endif #ifdef SIGDLK signal (SIGDLK, delete_socket); #endif #ifdef SIGCPULIM signal (SIGCPULIM, delete_socket); #endif #ifdef SIGIOT /* This is missing on some systems - OS/2, for example. */ signal (SIGIOT, delete_socket); #endif #ifdef SIGEMT signal (SIGEMT, delete_socket); #endif signal (SIGFPE, delete_socket); #ifdef SIGBUS signal (SIGBUS, delete_socket); #endif signal (SIGSEGV, delete_socket); #ifdef SIGSYS signal (SIGSYS, delete_socket); #endif signal (SIGTERM, delete_socket); #ifdef SIGXCPU signal (SIGXCPU, delete_socket); #endif #ifdef SIGXFSZ signal (SIGXFSZ, delete_socket); #endif /* SIGXFSZ */ #ifdef AIX /* 20 is SIGCHLD, 21 is SIGTTIN, 22 is SIGTTOU. */ signal (SIGXCPU, delete_socket); #ifndef _I386 signal (SIGIOINT, delete_socket); #endif signal (SIGGRANT, delete_socket); signal (SIGRETRACT, delete_socket); signal (SIGSOUND, delete_socket); signal (SIGMSG, delete_socket); #endif /* AIX */ } /* Print error message. `s1' is printf control string, `s2' is arg for it. */ void error (s1, s2) char *s1, *s2; { fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", progname); fprintf (stderr, s1, s2); fprintf (stderr, "\n"); } /* Print error message and exit. */ void fatal (s1, s2) char *s1, *s2; { error (s1, s2); exit (1); } /* Like malloc but get fatal error if memory is exhausted. */ long * xmalloc (size) unsigned int size; { long *result = (long *) malloc (size); if (result == NULL) fatal ("virtual memory exhausted", 0); return result; } int main (argc, argv) int argc; char **argv; { char system_name[32]; int s, infd; #ifdef SOCKLEN_TYPE SOCKLEN_TYPE fromlen; #else size_t fromlen; #endif struct sockaddr_un server, fromunix; char *homedir; char *str, string[BUFSIZ], code[BUFSIZ]; FILE *infile; FILE **openfiles; int openfiles_size; struct stat statbuf; #ifndef convex char *getenv (); #endif progname = argv[0]; openfiles_size = 20; openfiles = (FILE **) malloc (openfiles_size * sizeof (FILE *)); if (openfiles == 0) abort (); /* * Open up an AF_UNIX socket in this person's home directory */ if ((s = socket (AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0)) < 0) { perror_1 ("socket"); exit (1); } server.sun_family = AF_UNIX; #ifndef SERVER_HOME_DIR gethostname (system_name, sizeof (system_name)); sprintf (server.sun_path, "/tmp/esrv%d-%s", geteuid (), system_name); if (unlink (server.sun_path) == -1 && errno != ENOENT) { perror_1 ("unlink"); exit (1); } #else if ((homedir = getenv ("HOME")) == NULL) fatal_error ("No home directory\n"); strcpy (server.sun_path, homedir); strcat (server.sun_path, "/.emacs-server-"); gethostname (system_name, sizeof (system_name)); strcat (server.sun_path, system_name); /* Delete anyone else's old server. */ unlink (server.sun_path); #endif /* Save the socket name so we can delete it. */ socket_name = (char *) xmalloc (strlen (server.sun_path) + 1); strcpy (socket_name, server.sun_path); handle_signals (); if (bind (s, (struct sockaddr *) &server, strlen (server.sun_path) + 2) < 0) { perror_1 ("bind"); exit (1); } /* Only this user can send commands to this Emacs. */ if (stat (server.sun_path, &statbuf) < 0) { perror_1 ("bind"); exit (1); } chmod (server.sun_path, statbuf.st_mode & 0600); /* * Now, just wait for everything to come in.. */ if (listen (s, 5) < 0) { perror_1 ("listen"); exit (1); } /* Disable sigpipes in case luser kills client... */ signal (SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN); for (;;) { SELECT_TYPE rmask; FD_ZERO (&rmask); FD_SET (0, &rmask); FD_SET (s, &rmask); if (select (s + 1, &rmask, 0, 0, 0) < 0) perror_1 ("select"); if (FD_ISSET (s, &rmask)) /* client sends list of filenames */ { fromlen = sizeof (fromunix); fromunix.sun_family = AF_UNIX; infd = accept (s, (struct sockaddr *) &fromunix, &fromlen); if (infd < 0) { if (errno == EMFILE || errno == ENFILE) fprintf (stderr, "Error: too many clients.\n"); else perror_1 ("accept"); continue; } if (infd >= openfiles_size) { openfiles_size *= 2; openfiles = (FILE **) realloc (openfiles, openfiles_size * sizeof (FILE *)); if (openfiles == 0) abort (); } infile = fdopen (infd, "r+"); /* open stream */ if (infile == NULL) { fprintf (stderr, "Error: too many clients.\n"); write (infd, "Too many clients.\n", 18); close (infd); /* Prevent descriptor leak.. */ continue; } str = fgets (string, BUFSIZ, infile); if (str == NULL) { perror_1 ("fgets"); close (infd); /* Prevent descriptor leak.. */ continue; } openfiles[infd] = infile; printf ("Client: %d %s", infd, string); /* If what we read did not end in a newline, it means there is more. Keep reading from the socket and outputting to Emacs, until we get the newline. */ while (string[strlen (string) - 1] != '\n') { if (fgets (string, BUFSIZ, infile) == 0) break; printf ("%s", string); } fflush (stdout); fflush (infile); continue; } else if (FD_ISSET (0, &rmask)) /* emacs sends codeword, fd, and string message */ { /* Read command codeword and fd */ clearerr (stdin); scanf ("%s %d%*c", code, &infd); if (ferror (stdin) || feof (stdin)) fatal_error ("server: error reading from standard input\n"); /* Transfer text from Emacs to the client, up to a newline. */ infile = openfiles[infd]; rewind (infile); while (1) { if (fgets (string, BUFSIZ, stdin) == 0) break; fprintf (infile, "%s", string); if (string[strlen (string) - 1] == '\n') break; } fflush (infile); /* If command is close, close connection to client. */ if (strncmp (code, "Close:", 6) == 0) if (infd > 2) { fclose (infile); close (infd); } continue; } } } #else /* This is the SYSV IPC section */ #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/ipc.h> #include <sys/msg.h> #include <setjmp.h> #include <errno.h> #include <sys/utsname.h> struct utsname system_name; #ifndef errno extern int errno; #endif jmp_buf msgenv; SIGTYPE msgcatch () { longjmp (msgenv, 1); } /* "THIS has to be fixed. Remember, stderr may not exist...-rlk." Incorrect. This program runs as an inferior of Emacs. Its stderr always exists--rms. */ #include <stdio.h> main () { int s, infd, fromlen, ioproc; key_t key; struct msgbuf * msgp = (struct msgbuf *) malloc (sizeof *msgp + BUFSIZ); struct msqid_ds msg_st; int p; char *homedir, *getenv (); char string[BUFSIZ]; FILE *infile; /* * Create a message queue using ~/.emacs-server as the path for ftok */ if ((homedir = getenv ("HOME")) == NULL) fatal_error ("No home directory\n"); strcpy (string, homedir); #ifndef HAVE_LONG_FILE_NAMES /* If file names are short, we can't fit the host name. */ strcat (string, "/.emacs-server"); #else strcat (string, "/.emacs-server-"); uname (&system_name); strcat (string, system_name.nodename); #endif creat (string, 0600); key = ftok (string, 1); /* unlikely to be anyone else using it */ s = msgget (key, 0600 | IPC_CREAT); if (s == -1) { perror_1 ("msgget"); exit (1); } /* Fork so we can close connection even if parent dies */ p = fork (); if (setjmp (msgenv)) { msgctl (s, IPC_RMID, 0); if (p > 0) kill (p, SIGKILL); exit (0); } signal (SIGTERM, msgcatch); signal (SIGINT, msgcatch); signal (SIGHUP, msgcatch); if (p > 0) { /* This is executed in the original process that did the fork above. */ /* Get pid of Emacs itself. */ p = getppid (); setpgrp (); /* Gnu kills process group on exit */ while (1) { /* Is Emacs still alive? */ if (kill (p, 0) < 0) { msgctl (s, IPC_RMID, 0); exit (0); } sleep (10); } } /* This is executed in the child made by forking above. Call it c1. Make another process, ioproc. */ ioproc = fork (); if (ioproc == 0) { /* In process ioproc, wait for text from Emacs, and send it to the process c1. This way, c1 only has to wait for one source of input. */ while (fgets (msgp->mtext, BUFSIZ, stdin)) { msgp->mtype = 1; msgsnd (s, msgp, strlen (msgp->mtext) + 1, 0); } exit (1); } /* In the process c1, listen for messages from clients and pass them to Emacs. */ while (1) { if ((fromlen = msgrcv (s, msgp, BUFSIZ - 1, 1, 0)) < 0) { #ifdef EINTR if (errno == EINTR) continue; #endif perror_1 ("msgrcv"); exit (1); } else { msgctl (s, IPC_STAT, &msg_st); /* Distinguish whether the message came from a client, or from ioproc. */ if (msg_st.msg_lspid == ioproc) { char code[BUFSIZ]; int inproc; /* Message from ioproc: tell a client we are done. */ msgp->mtext[strlen (msgp->mtext)-1] = 0; sscanf (msgp->mtext, "%s %d", code, &inproc); msgp->mtype = inproc; msgsnd (s, msgp, strlen (msgp->mtext) + 1, 0); continue; } /* This is a request from a client: copy to stdout so that Emacs will get it. Include msg_lspid so server.el can tell us where to send the reply. */ strncpy (string, msgp->mtext, fromlen); string[fromlen] = 0; /* make sure */ /* Newline is part of string.. */ printf ("Client: %d %s", msg_st.msg_lspid, string); fflush (stdout); } } } #endif /* HAVE_SYSVIPC */ #endif /* HAVE_SOCKETS or HAVE_SYSVIPC */ /* This is like perror but puts `Error: ' at the beginning. */ perror_1 (string) char *string; { char *copy = (char *) malloc (strlen (string) + 8); if (copy == 0) fatal_error ("Virtual memory exhausted"); strcpy (copy, "Error: "); strcat (copy, string); perror (copy); } fatal_error (string) char *string; { fprintf (stderr, "%s", "Error: "); fprintf (stderr, string); exit (1); }