view lib-src/cvtmail.c @ 2439:b6c62e4abf59

Put interrupt input blocking in a separate file from xterm.h. This isn't specific to X, and it allows us to avoid #including xterm.h in files that don't really have anything to do with X. * blockinput.h: New file. * xterm.h (BLOCK_INPUT, UNBLOCK_INPUT, TOTALLY_UNBLOCK_INPUT, UNBLOCK_INPUT_RESIGNAL): These are now in blockinput.h. (x_input_blocked, x_pending_input): Deleted; there are analogs in blockinput.h called interrupt_input_blocked and interrupt_input_pending. * keyboard.c (interrupt_input_blocked, interrupt_input_pending): New variables, used by the macros in blockinput.h. * xterm.c: #include blockinput.h. (x_input_blocked, x_pending_input): Deleted. (XTread_socket): Test and set interrupt_input_blocked and interrupt_input_pending instead of the old variables. * alloc.c, xfaces.c, xfns.c, xmenu.c, xselect.c, keymap.c: #include blockinput.h. * eval.c: #include blockinput.h instead of xterm.h. * keyboard.c: #include blockinput.h. (input_poll_signal): Just test interrupt_input_blocked, instead of testing HAVE_X_WINDOWS and x_input_blocked. Block the processing of interrupt input while we're manipulating the malloc heap. * alloc.c: (xfree): New function, to make it easy to free things safely. (xmalloc, xrealloc): Block X input while doing the deed. (VALIDATE_LISP_STORAGE, gc_sweep, compact_strings): Use xfree instead of free. (uninterrupt_malloc): New function, to install input-blocking hooks into the GNU malloc routines. * emacs.c [not SYSTEM_MALLOC] (main): Call uninterrupt_malloc on startup. * alloc.c: (make_interval, make_float, Fcons, Fmake_vector, Fmake_symbol, Fmake_marker, make_uninit_string, Fgarbage_collect): Use xmalloc instead of malloc; don't bother to check if out of memory here. (Fgarbage_collect): Call xrealloc instead of realloc. * buffer.c: Use xmalloc and xfree instead of malloc and free; don't bother to check if out of memory here. (Fget_buffer_create): Put BLOCK_INPUT/UNBLOCK_INPUT pair around calls to ralloc routines. * insdel.c: Same. * lisp.h (xfree): New extern declaration. * xfaces.c (xfree): Don't #define this to be free; use the definition in alloc.c. * dispnew.c, doc.c, doprnt.c, fileio.c, lread.c, term.c, xfns.c, xmenu.c, xterm.c: Use xfree instead of free. * hftctl.c: Use xfree and xmalloc instead of free and malloc. * keymap.c (current_minor_maps): BLOCK_INPUT while calling realloc and malloc. * search.c: Since the regexp routines can malloc, BLOCK_INPUT while runing them. #include blockinput.h. * sysdep.c: #include blockinput.h. Call xfree and xmalloc instead of free and malloc. BLOCK_INPUT around routines which we know will call malloc. ymakefile (keyboard.o, keymap.o, search.o, sysdep.o, xfaces.o, xfns.o, xmenu.o, xterm.o, xselect.o, alloc.o, eval.o): Note that these depend on blockinput.h.
author Jim Blandy <jimb@redhat.com>
date Wed, 31 Mar 1993 10:55:33 +0000
parents e48c0f5e6696
children 8cc2a5d2e728
line wrap: on
line source

/* Copyright (C) 1985 Free Software Foundation
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 1, 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, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.  */

/* cvtmail:
 * Program to convert oldstyle goslings emacs mail directories into
 * gnu-rmail format.  Program expects a directory called Messages to
 * exist in your home directory, containing individual mail messages in
 * separate files in the standard gosling emacs mail reader format.
 *
 * Program takes one argument: an output file.  THis file will contain
 * all the messages in Messages directory, in berkeley mail format.
 * If no output file is mentioned, messages are put in ~/OMAIL.
 *
 * In order to get rmail to read the messages, the resulting file must
 * be mv'ed to ~/mbox, and then have rmail invoked on them.
 * 
 * Author: Larry Kolodney, 1985

 * RMS, 2 Sept 85: Removed fix maximums on file name sizes.
 */


#include <stdio.h>


main (argc, argv)
     int argc;
     char *argv[];
{
  char *hd;
  char *md;
  char *mdd;
  char *mfile;
  char *cf;
  int cflen;
  FILE *mddf;
  FILE *mfilef;
  FILE *cff;
  char pre[10], post[100];
  char name[14];
  int c;

  hd = (char *) getenv ("HOME");

  md = (char *) xmalloc (strlen (hd) + 10);
  strcpy (md, hd);
  strcat (md, "/Messages");

  mdd = (char *) xmalloc (strlen (md) + 11);
  strcpy (mdd, md);
  strcat (mdd, "/Directory");

  cflen = 100;
  cf = (char *) xmalloc (cflen);

  mddf = fopen (mdd, "r");
  if (argc > 1)
    mfilef = fopen (argv[1], "w");
  else
    {
      mfile = (char *) xmalloc (strlen (hd) + 7);
      strcpy (mfile, hd);
      strcat (mfile, "/OMAIL");
      mfilef = fopen (mfile, "w");
    }
  skip_to_lf (mddf);
  while (fscanf (mddf, "%4c%14[0123456789]", pre, name) != EOF)
    {
      if (cflen < strlen (md) + strlen (name) + 2)
	{
	  cflen = strlen (md) + strlen (name) + 2;
	  cf = (char *) xrealloc (cf, cflen);
	}
      strcpy (cf, md);
      strcat (cf,"/");
      strcat (cf, name);
      cff = fopen (cf, "r");
      while ((c = getc(cff)) != EOF)
	putc (c, mfilef);
      putc ('\n', mfilef);
      skip_to_lf (mddf);
     fclose (cff);
    }
  fclose (mddf);
  fclose (mfilef);    
  return 0;
}

skip_to_lf (stream)
     FILE *stream;
{
  register int c;
  while ((c = getc(stream)) != '\n')
    ;
}

int
xmalloc (size)
     int size;
{
  int result = malloc (size);
  if (!result)
    fatal ("virtual memory exhausted", 0);
  return result;
}

int
xrealloc (ptr, size)
     char *ptr;
     int size;
{
  int result = realloc (ptr, size);
  if (!result)
    fatal ("virtual memory exhausted");
  return result;
}

/* Print error message and exit.  */

fatal (s1, s2)
     char *s1, *s2;
{
  error (s1, s2);
  exit (1);
}

error (s1, s2)
     char *s1, *s2;
{
  printf ("cvtmail: ");
  printf (s1, s2);
  printf ("\n");
}