# HG changeset patch # User David Lawrence # Date 657799562 0 # Node ID 899728e6052a42de352ae221b4678821630ccd16 # Parent 9827cb0af717bc985a83962cd825aa5d52d0a274 Initial revision diff -r 9827cb0af717 -r 899728e6052a lisp/comint.el --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/lisp/comint.el Mon Nov 05 10:06:02 1990 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,866 @@ +;;; -*-Emacs-Lisp-*- General command interpreter in a window stuff +;;; Copyright (C) 1989 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +;;; Original author: Olin Shivers Aug 1988 + +;;; 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. + +;;; This file defines a general command-interpreter-in-a-buffer package +;;; (comint mode). The idea is that you can build specific process-in-a-buffer +;;; modes on top of comint mode -- e.g., lisp, shell, scheme, T, soar, .... +;;; This way, all these specific packages share a common base functionality, +;;; and a common set of bindings, which makes them easier to use (and +;;; saves code, implementation time, etc., etc.). + +;;; For documentation on the functionality provided by comint mode, and +;;; the hooks available for customising it, see the comments below. +;;; For further information on the standard derived modes (shell, +;;; inferior-lisp, inferior-scheme, ...), see the relevant source files. + +;;; For hints on converting existing process modes to use comint-mode +;;; instead of shell-mode, see the notes at the end of this file. + +(require 'history) +(provide 'comint) +(defconst comint-version "2.01") + + +;;; Not bound by default in comint-mode +;;; send-invisible Read a line w/o echo, and send to proc +;;; (These are bound in shell-mode) +;;; comint-dynamic-complete Complete filename at point. +;;; comint-dynamic-list-completions List completions in help buffer. +;;; comint-replace-by-expanded-filename Expand and complete filename at point; +;;; replace with expanded/completed name. +(defvar comint-mode-map nil) + +(if comint-mode-map + nil + (setq comint-mode-map (make-sparse-keymap)) + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-a" 'comint-bol) + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-d" 'comint-delchar-or-maybe-eof) + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-m" 'comint-send-input) + (define-key comint-mode-map "\M-p" 'comint-previous-input) + (define-key comint-mode-map "\M-n" 'comint-next-input) + (define-key comint-mode-map "\M-s" 'comint-previous-similar-input) + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-c\C-c" 'comint-interrupt-subjob) ; tty ^C + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-c\C-f" 'comint-continue-subjob) ; shell "fg" + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-c\C-l" 'comint-show-output) + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-c\C-o" 'comint-flush-output) ; tty ^O + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-c\C-r" 'comint-history-search-backward) + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-c\C-s" 'comint-history-search-forward) + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-c\C-u" 'comint-kill-input) ; tty ^U + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-c\C-w" 'backward-kill-word) ; tty ^W + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-c\C-z" 'comint-stop-subjob) ; tty ^Z + (define-key comint-mode-map "\C-c\C-\\" 'comint-quit-subjob)) ; tty ^\ + +;;; Buffer Local Variables: +;;;============================================================================ +;;; Comint mode buffer local variables: +;;; comint-prompt-regexp - string comint-bol uses to match prompt. +;;; comint-last-input-end - marker For comint-flush-output command +;;; input-ring-size - integer For the input history +;;; input-ring - ring mechanism +;;; input-ring-index - marker ... +;;; comint-last-input-match - string ... +;;; comint-get-old-input - function Hooks for specific +;;; comint-input-sentinel - function process-in-a-buffer +;;; comint-input-filter - function modes. +;;; comint-input-send - function +;;; comint-eol-on-send - boolean + +(make-variable-buffer-local + (defvar comint-prompt-regexp "^" + "*Regexp to recognise prompts in the inferior process. Defaults to \"^\". + +Good choices: + Canonical Lisp: \"^[^> \n]*>+:? *\" (Lucid, Franz, KCL, T, cscheme, oaklisp) + Lucid Common Lisp: \"^\\(>\\|\\(->\\)+\\) *\" + Franz: \"^\\(->\\|<[0-9]*>:\\) *\" + KCL and T: \"^>+ *\" + shell: \"^[^#$%>\n]*[#$%>] *\" + +This is a good thing to set in mode hooks.")) + +(make-variable-buffer-local + (defvar input-ring-size 30 "Size of input history ring.")) + +;;; Here are the per-interpreter hooks. +(make-variable-buffer-local + (defvar comint-get-old-input (function comint-get-old-input-default) + "Function that submits old text in comint mode. +This function is called when return is typed while the point is in old text. +It returns the text to be submitted as process input. The default is +comint-get-old-input-default, which grabs the current line, and strips off +leading text matching comint-prompt-regexp.")) + +(make-variable-buffer-local + (defvar comint-input-sentinel (function ignore) + "Called on each input submitted to comint mode process by comint-send-input. +Thus it can, for instance, track cd/pushd/popd commands issued to the csh.")) + +(make-variable-buffer-local + (defvar comint-input-filter + (function (lambda (str) (not (string-match "\\`\\s *\\'" str)))) + "Predicate for filtering additions to input history. +Only inputs answering true to this function are saved on the input +history list. Default is to save anything that isn't all whitespace")) + +(defvar comint-mode-hook '() + "Called upon entry into comint-mode") + +(defun comint-mode () + "Major mode for interacting with an inferior interpreter. +Interpreter name is same as buffer name, sans the asterisks. +Return at end of buffer sends line as input. +Return not at end copies rest of line to end and sends it. + +This mode is typically customised to create inferior-lisp-mode, +shell-mode, et cetera. This can be done by setting the hooks +comint-input-sentinel, comint-input-filter, and comint-get-old-input +to appropriate functions, and the variable comint-prompt-regexp +to the appropriate regular expression. + +An input history is maintained of size input-ring-size, and +can be accessed with the commands comint-next-input [\\[comint-next-input]] and +comint-previous-input [\\[comint-previous-input]]. Commands not keybound by +default are send-invisible, comint-dynamic-complete, and +comint-list-dynamic-completions. + +If you accidentally suspend your process, use \\[comint-continue-subjob] +to continue it. + +\\{comint-mode-map} + +Entry to this mode runs the hooks on comint-mode-hook." + (interactive) + (make-local-variable 'input-ring) + (put 'input-ring 'preserved t) + (kill-all-local-variables) + (setq major-mode 'comint-mode + mode-name "Comint" + mode-line-process '(": %s")) + (use-local-map comint-mode-map) + (set (make-local-variable 'comint-last-input-match) "") + (set (make-local-variable 'comint-last-similar--string) "") + (set (make-local-variable 'input-ring-index) 0) + (set (make-local-variable 'comint-last-input-end) (make-marker)) + (set-marker comint-last-input-end (point-max)) + (run-hooks 'comint-mode-hook)) + +(defun comint-check-proc (buffer-name) + "True if there is a running or stopped process associated with BUFFER." + (let ((proc (get-buffer-process buffer-name))) + (and proc (memq (process-status proc) '(run stop))))) + +(defun comint-mark () + ;; Returns the process-mark of the current-buffer + (process-mark (get-buffer-process (current-buffer)))) + +;;; Note that this guy, unlike shell.el's make-shell, barfs if you pass it () +;;; for the second argument (program). +(defun make-comint (name program &optional startfile &rest switches) + (let* ((buffer (get-buffer-create (concat "*" name "*"))) + (proc (get-buffer-process buffer))) + ;; If no process, or nuked process, crank up a new one and put buffer in + ;; comint mode. Otherwise, leave buffer and existing process alone. + (cond ((not (comint-check-proc)) + (save-excursion + (set-buffer buffer) + (comint-mode)) ; Install local vars, mode, keymap, ... + (comint-exec buffer name program startfile switches))) + buffer)) + +(defun comint-exec (buffer name command startfile switches) + "Fires up a process in buffer for comint modes. +Blasts any old process running in the buffer. Doesn't set the buffer mode. +You can use this to cheaply run a series of processes in the same buffer." + (or command (error "No program for comint process")) + (save-excursion + (set-buffer buffer) + (let ((proc (get-buffer-process buffer))) ; Blast any old process. + (if proc (delete-process proc))) + ;; Crank up a new process + (let ((proc (comint-exec-1 name buffer command switches))) + ;; Jump to the end, and set the process mark. + (set-marker (comint-mark) (goto-char (point-max))) + ;; Feed it the startfile. + (cond (startfile + ;;This is guaranteed to wait long enough + ;;but has bad results if the comint does not prompt at all + ;; (while (= size (buffer-size)) + ;; (sleep-for 1)) + ;;I hope 1 second is enough! + (sleep-for 1) + (goto-char (point-max)) + (insert-file-contents startfile) + (setq startfile (buffer-substring (point) (point-max))) + (delete-region (point) (point-max)) + (comint-send-string proc startfile))) + buffer)) + +;;; This auxiliary function cranks up the process for comint-exec in +;;; the appropriate environment. It is twice as long as it should be +;;; because emacs has two distinct mechanisms for manipulating the +;;; process environment, selected at compile time with the +;;; MAINTAIN-ENVIRONMENT #define. In one case, process-environment +;;; is bound; in the other it isn't. + +(defun comint-exec-1 (name buffer command switches) + (if (boundp 'process-environment) ; Not a completely reliable test. + (let ((process-environment + (comint-update-env process-environment + (list (format "TERMCAP=emacs:co#%d:tc=unknown" + (screen-width)) + "TERM=emacs" + "EMACS=t")))) + (apply 'start-process name buffer command switches)) + (let ((tcapv (getenv "TERMCAP")) + (termv (getenv "TERM")) + (emv (getenv "EMACS"))) + (unwind-protect + (progn (setenv "TERMCAP" (format "emacs:co#%d:tc=unknown" + (screen-width))) + (setenv "TERM" "emacs") + (setenv "EMACS" "t") + (apply 'start-process name buffer command switches)) + (setenv "TERMCAP" tcapv) + (setenv "TERM" termv) + (setenv "EMACS" emv))))) + +;; This is just (append new old-env) that compresses out shadowed entries. +;; It's also pretty ugly, mostly due to elisp's horrible iteration structures. +(defun comint-update-env (old-env new) + (let ((ans (reverse new)) + (vars (mapcar (function (lambda (vv) + (and (string-match "^[^=]*=" vv) + (substring vv 0 (match-end 0))))) + new))) + (while old-env + (let* ((vv (car old-env)) ; vv is var=value + (var (and (string-match "^[^=]*=" vv) + (substring vv 0 (match-end 0))))) + (setq old-env (cdr old-env)) + (cond ((not (and var (member var vars))) + (if var (setq var (cons var vars))) + (setq ans (cons vv ans)))))) + (nreverse ans))) + +;;; Input history retrieval commands +;;; M-p -- previous input M-n -- next input +;;; C-c r -- previous input matching +;;; =========================================================================== + +(defun comint-previous-input (arg) + "Cycle backwards through input history." + (interactive "*p") + (let ((len (ring-length input-ring))) + (if (<= len 0) (error "Empty input ring")) + (if (< (point) (comint-mark)) + (delete-region (comint-mark) (goto-char (point-max)))) + (cond ((eq last-command 'comint-previous-input) + (delete-region (mark) (point))) + ((eq last-command 'comint-previous-similar-input) + (delete-region (comint-mark) (point))) + (t + (setq input-ring-index + (if (> arg 0) -1 + (if (< arg 0) 1 0))) + (push-mark (point)))) + (setq input-ring-index (comint-mod (+ input-ring-index arg) len)) + (message "%d" (1+ input-ring-index)) + (insert (ring-ref input-ring input-ring-index)) + (setq this-command 'comint-previous-input))) + +(defun comint-next-input (arg) + "Cycle forwards through input history." + (interactive "*p") + (comint-previous-input (- arg))) + +(defun comint-previous-input-matching (str) + "Searches backwards through input history for substring match." + (interactive (let* ((last-command last-command) ; preserve around r-f-m + (s (read-from-minibuffer + (format "Command substring (default %s): " + comint-last-input-match)))) + (list (if (string= s "") comint-last-input-match s)))) +; (interactive "sCommand substring: ") + (setq comint-last-input-match str) ; update default + (if (not (eq last-command 'comint-previous-input)) + (setq input-ring-index -1)) + (let ((str (regexp-quote str)) + (len (ring-length input-ring)) + (n (+ input-ring-index 1))) + (while (and (< n len) (not (string-match str (ring-ref input-ring n)))) + (setq n (+ n 1))) + (cond ((< n len) + (comint-previous-input (- n input-ring-index))) + (t (if (eq last-command 'comint-previous-input) + (setq this-command 'comint-previous-input)) + (error "Not found"))))) + +;;; +;;; Similar input -- contributed by ccm and highly winning. +;;; +;;; Reenter input, removing back to the last insert point if it exists. +;;; +(defun comint-previous-similar-input (arg) + "Reenters the last input that matches the string typed so far. If repeated +successively older inputs are reentered. If arg is 1, it will go back +in the history, if -1 it will go forward." + (interactive "p") + (if (< (point) (comint-mark)) + (error "Not after process mark")) + (if (not (eq last-command 'comint-previous-similar-input)) + (setq input-ring-index -1 + comint-last-similar-string + (buffer-substring (comint-mark) (point)))) + (let* ((size (length comint-last-similar-string)) + (len (ring-length input-ring)) + (n (+ input-ring-index arg)) + entry) + (while (and (< n len) + (or (< (length (setq entry (ring-ref input-ring n))) size) + (not (equal comint-last-similar-string + (substring entry 0 size))))) + (setq n (+ n arg))) + (cond ((< n len) + (setq input-ring-index n) + (if (eq last-command 'comint-previous-similar-input) + (delete-region (comint-mark) (point))) + (insert (substring entry size))) + (t (error "Not found"))))) + +(defun comint-send-input (&optional terminator delete) + "Send input to process, followed by a linefeed or optional TERMINATOR. +After the process output mark, sends all text from the process mark to +end of buffer as input to the process. Before the process output mark, calls +value of variable comint-get-old-input to retrieve old input, replaces it in +the input region (from the end of process output to the end of the buffer) and +then sends it. In either case, the value of variable comint-input-sentinel is +called on the input before sending it. The input is entered into the input +history ring, if value of variable comint-input-filter returns non-nil when +called on the input. + +If optional second argument DELETE is non-nil, then the input is deleted from +the end of the buffer. This is useful if the process unconditionally echoes +input. Processes which use TERMINATOR or DELETE should have a command wrapper +which provides them bound to RET; see telnet.el for an example. + +comint-get-old-input, comint-input-sentinel, and comint-input-filter are chosen +according to the command interpreter running in the buffer. For example, + +If the interpreter is the csh, + comint-get-old-input defaults: takes the current line, discard any + initial string matching regexp comint-prompt-regexp. + comint-input-sentinel: monitors input for \"cd\", \"pushd\", and \"popd\" + commands. When it sees one, it changes the default directory of the buffer. + comint-input-filter defaults: returns t if the input isn't all whitespace. + +If the comint is Lucid Common Lisp, + comint-get-old-input: snarfs the sexp ending at point. + comint-input-sentinel: does nothing. + comint-input-filter: returns nil if the input matches input-filter-regexp, + which matches (1) all whitespace (2) :a, :c, etc. + +Similar functions are used for other process modes." + (interactive) + ;; Note that the input string does not include its terminal newline. + (if (not (get-buffer-process (current-buffer))) + (error "Current buffer has no process") + (let* ((pmark (comint-mark)) + (input (if (>= (point) pmark) + (buffer-substring pmark (goto-char (point-max))) + (let ((copy (funcall comint-get-old-input))) + (delete-region pmark (goto-char (point-max))) + (insert copy) + copy)))) + (set-marker comint-last-input-end (point)) + (setq input-ring-index 0) + (if (funcall comint-input-filter input) (ring-insert input-ring input)) + (funcall comint-input-sentinel input) + (comint-send-string nil (concat input (or terminator "\n"))) + (if delete (delete-region mark (point)) + (insert "\n")) + (set-marker (comint-mark) (point))))) + +(defun comint-get-old-input-default () + "Default for comint-get-old-input: use the current line sans prompt." + (save-excursion + (comint-bol) + (buffer-substring (point) (progn (end-of-line) (point))))) + +(defun comint-bol (arg) + "Goes to the beginning of line, then skips past the prompt, if any. +With a prefix argument, (\\[universal-argument]), then doesn't skip prompt. + +The prompt skip is done by passing over text matching the regular expression +comint-prompt-regexp, a buffer local variable." + (interactive "P") + (beginning-of-line) + (or arg (if (looking-at comint-prompt-regexp) (goto-char (match-end 0))))) + +;;; These two functions are for entering text you don't want echoed or +;;; saved -- typically passwords to ftp, telnet, or somesuch. +;;; Just enter M-x send-invisible and type in your line. +(defun comint-read-noecho (prompt) + "Prompting with PROMPT, read a single line of text without echoing. +The text can still be recovered (temporarily) with \\[view-lossage]. This +may be a security bug for some applications." + (let ((echo-keystrokes 0) + (answ "") + tem) + (if (and (stringp prompt) (not (string= (message prompt) ""))) + (message prompt)) + (while (not (or (= (setq tem (read-char)) ?\^m) + (= tem ?\n))) + (setq answ (concat answ (char-to-string tem)))) + (message "") + answ)) + +(defun send-invisible (str) + "Read a string without echoing, and send it to the current buffer's process. +A newline is also sent. String is not saved on comint input history list. +Security bug: your string can still be temporarily recovered with \\[view-lossage]." +; (interactive (list (comint-read-noecho "Enter non-echoed text"))) + (interactive "P") ; Defeat snooping via C-x esc + (let ((proc (get-buffer-process (current-buffer)))) + (if (not proc) (error "Current buffer has no process") + (comint-send-string proc + (if (stringp str) str + (comint-read-noecho "Enter non-echoed text"))) + (comint-send-string proc "\n")))) + + +;;; Low-level process communication + +(defvar comint-input-chunk-size 512 + "*Long inputs send to comint processes are broken up into chunks of this size. +If your process is choking on big inputs, try lowering the value.") + +(defun comint-send-string (proc str) + "Send PROCESS the contents of STRING as input. +This is equivalent to process-send-string, except that long input strings +are broken up into chunks of size comint-input-chunk-size. Processes +are given a chance to output between chunks. This can help prevent processes +from hanging when you send them long inputs on some OS's." + (let* ((len (length str)) + (i (min len comint-input-chunk-size))) + (process-send-string proc (substring str 0 i)) + (while (< i len) + (let ((next-i (+ i comint-input-chunk-size))) + (accept-process-output) + (process-send-string proc (substring str i (min len next-i))) + (setq i next-i))))) + +(defun comint-send-region (proc start end) + "Sends to PROC the region delimited by START and END. +This is a replacement for process-send-region that tries to keep +your process from hanging on long inputs. See comint-send-string." + (comint-send-string proc (buffer-substring start end))) + + +;;; Random input hackage + +(defun comint-flush-output () + "Kill all output from interpreter since last input." + (interactive) + (save-excursion + (goto-char (comint-mark)) + (beginning-of-line) + (delete-region (1+ comint-last-input-end) (point)) + (insert "*** output flushed ***\n"))) + +(defun comint-show-output () + "Start display of the current window at line preceding start of last output. +\"Last output\" is considered to start at the line following the last command +entered to the process." + (interactive) + (goto-char comint-last-input-end) + (beginning-of-line) + (set-window-start (selected-window) (point)) + (comint-bol)) + +(defun comint-interrupt-subjob () + "Sent an interrupt signal to the current subprocess. +If the process-connection-type is via ptys, the signal is sent to the current +process group of the pseudoterminal which Emacs is using to communicate with +the subprocess. If the process is a job-control shell, this means the +shell's current subjob. If the process connection is via pipes, the signal is +sent to the immediate subprocess." + (interactive) + (interrupt-process nil t)) + +(defun comint-kill-subjob () + "Send a kill signal to the current subprocess. +See comint-interrupt-subjob for a description of \"current subprocess\"." + (interactive) + (kill-process nil t)) + +(defun comint-quit-subjob () + "Send a quit signal to the current subprocess. +See comint-interrupt-subjob for a description of \"current subprocess\"." + (interactive) + (quit-process nil t)) + +(defun comint-stop-subjob () + "Stop the current subprocess. +See comint-interrupt-subjob for a description of \"current subprocess\". + +WARNING: if there is no current subjob, you can end up suspending +the top-level process running in the buffer. If you accidentally do +this, use \\[comint-continue-subjob] to resume the process. (This is not a +problem with most shells, since they ignore this signal.)" + (interactive) + (stop-process nil t)) + +(defun comint-continue-subjob () + "Send a continue signal to current subprocess. +See comint-interrupt-subjob for a description of \"current subprocess\". +Useful if you accidentally suspend the top-level process." + (interactive) + (continue-process nil t)) + +(defun comint-kill-input () + "Kill from current command through point." + (interactive) + (let ((pmark (comint-mark))) + (if (> (point) pmark) + (kill-region pmark (point)) + (error "Nothing to kill")))) + +(defun comint-delchar-or-maybe-eof (arg) + "Delete ARG characters forward, or send an EOF to process if at end of buffer." + (interactive "p") + (if (eobp) + (process-send-eof) + (delete-char arg))) + +;;; Support for source-file processing commands. +;;;============================================================================ +;;; Many command-interpreters (e.g., Lisp, Scheme, Soar) have +;;; commands that process files of source text (e.g. loading or compiling +;;; files). So the corresponding process-in-a-buffer modes have commands +;;; for doing this (e.g., lisp-load-file). The functions below are useful +;;; for defining these commands. +;;; +;;; Alas, these guys don't do exactly the right thing for Lisp, Scheme +;;; and Soar, in that they don't know anything about file extensions. +;;; So the compile/load interface gets the wrong default occasionally. +;;; The load-file/compile-file default mechanism could be smarter -- it +;;; doesn't know about the relationship between filename extensions and +;;; whether the file is source or executable. If you compile foo.lisp +;;; with compile-file, then the next load-file should use foo.bin for +;;; the default, not foo.lisp. This is tricky to do right, particularly +;;; because the extension for executable files varies so much (.o, .bin, +;;; .lbin, .mo, .vo, .ao, ...). + + +;;; COMINT-SOURCE-DEFAULT -- determines defaults for source-file processing +;;; commands. +;;; +;;; COMINT-CHECK-SOURCE -- if FNAME is in a modified buffer, asks you if you +;;; want to save the buffer before issuing any process requests to the command +;;; interpreter. +;;; +;;; COMINT-GET-SOURCE -- used by the source-file processing commands to prompt +;;; for the file to process. + +;;; (COMINT-SOURCE-DEFAULT previous-dir/file source-modes) +;;;============================================================================ +;;; This function computes the defaults for the load-file and compile-file +;;; commands for tea, soar, lisp, and scheme modes. +;;; +;;; - PREVIOUS-DIR/FILE is a pair (directory . filename) from the last +;;; source-file processing command. NIL if there hasn't been one yet. +;;; - SOURCE-MODES is a list used to determine what buffers contain source +;;; files: if the major mode of the buffer is in SOURCE-MODES, it's source. +;;; Typically, (lisp-mode) or (scheme-mode). +;;; +;;; If the command is given while the cursor is inside a string, *and* +;;; the string is an existing filename, *and* the filename is not a directory, +;;; then the string is taken as default. This allows you to just position +;;; your cursor over a string that's a filename and have it taken as default. +;;; +;;; If the command is given in a file buffer whose major mode is in +;;; SOURCE-MODES, then the the filename is the default file, and the +;;; file's directory is the default directory. +;;; +;;; If the buffer isn't a source file buffer (e.g., it's the process buffer), +;;; then the default directory & file are what was used in the last source-file +;;; processing command (i.e., PREVIOUS-DIR/FILE). If this is the first time +;;; the command has been run (PREVIOUS-DIR/FILE is nil), the default directory +;;; is the cwd, with no default file. (\"no default file\" = nil) +;;; +;;; SOURCE-REGEXP is typically going to be something like (tea-mode) +;;; for T programs, (lisp-mode) for Lisp programs, (soar-mode lisp-mode) +;;; for Soar programs, etc. +;;; +;;; The function returns a pair: (default-directory . default-file). + +(defun comint-source-default (previous-dir/file source-modes) + (cond ((and buffer-file-name (memq major-mode source-modes)) + (cons (file-name-directory buffer-file-name) + (file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name))) + (previous-dir/file) + (t + (cons default-directory nil)))) + +;;; (COMINT-CHECK-SOURCE fname) +;;;============================================================================ +;;; Prior to loading or compiling (or otherwise processing) a file (in the +;;; process-in-a-buffer modes), this function can be called on the filename. +;;; If the file is loaded into a buffer, and the buffer is modified, the user +;;; is queried to see if he wants to save the buffer before proceeding with +;;; the load or compile. + +(defun comint-check-source (fname) + (let ((buff (get-file-buffer fname))) + (if (and buff + (buffer-modified-p buff) + (y-or-n-p (format "Save buffer %s first? " + (buffer-name buff)))) + ;; save BUFF. + (let ((old-buffer (current-buffer))) + (set-buffer buff) + (save-buffer) + (set-buffer old-buffer))))) + +;;; (COMINT-GET-SOURCE prompt prev-dir/file source-modes mustmatch-p) +;;;============================================================================ +;;; COMINT-GET-SOURCE is used to prompt for filenames in command-interpreter +;;; commands that process source files (like loading or compiling a file). +;;; It prompts for the filename, provides a default, if there is one, +;;; and returns the result filename. +;;; +;;; See COMINT-SOURCE-DEFAULT for more on determining defaults. +;;; +;;; PROMPT is the prompt string. PREV-DIR/FILE is the (directory . file) pair +;;; from the last source processing command. SOURCE-MODES is a list of major +;;; modes used to determine what file buffers contain source files. (These +;;; two arguments are used for determining defaults). If MUSTMATCH-P is true, +;;; then the filename reader will only accept a file that exists. +;;; +;;; A typical use: +;;; (interactive (comint-get-source "Compile file: " prev-lisp-dir/file +;;; '(lisp-mode) t)) + +;;; This is pretty stupid about strings. It decides we're in a string +;;; if there's a quote on both sides of point on the current line. +(defun comint-extract-string () + "Returns string around point that starts the current line or nil." + (save-excursion + (let* ((point (point)) + (bol (progn (beginning-of-line) (point))) + (eol (progn (end-of-line) (point))) + (start (progn (goto-char point) + (and (search-backward "\"" bol t) + (1+ (point))))) + (end (progn (goto-char point) + (and (search-forward "\"" eol t) + (1- (point)))))) + (and start end + (buffer-substring start end))))) + +(defun comint-get-source (prompt prev-dir/file source-modes mustmatch-p) + (let* ((def (comint-source-default prev-dir/file source-modes)) + (stringfile (comint-extract-string)) + (sfile-p (and stringfile + (file-exists-p stringfile) + (not (file-directory-p stringfile)))) + (defdir (if sfile-p (file-name-directory stringfile) + (car def))) + (deffile (if sfile-p (file-name-nondirectory stringfile) + (cdr def))) + (ans (read-file-name (if deffile (format "%s(default %s) " + prompt deffile) + prompt) + defdir + (concat defdir deffile) + mustmatch-p))) + (list (expand-file-name (substitute-in-file-name ans))))) + + +;;; Simple process query facility. +;;; =========================================================================== +;;; This function is for commands that want to send a query to the process +;;; and show the response to the user. For example, a command to get the +;;; arglist for a Common Lisp function might send a "(arglist 'foo)" query +;;; to an inferior Common Lisp process. +;;; +;;; This simple facility just sends strings to the inferior process and pops +;;; up a window for the process buffer so you can see what the process +;;; responds with. We don't do anything fancy like try to intercept what the +;;; process responds with and put it in a pop-up window or on the message +;;; line. We just display the buffer. Low tech. Simple. Works good. + +;;; Send to the inferior process PROC the string STR. Pop-up but do not select +;;; a window for the inferior process so that its response can be seen. +(defun comint-proc-query (proc str) + (let* ((proc-buf (process-buffer proc)) + (proc-mark (process-mark proc))) + (display-buffer proc-buf) + (set-buffer proc-buf) ; but it's not the selected *window* + (let ((proc-win (get-buffer-window proc-buf)) + (proc-pt (marker-position proc-mark))) + (comint-send-string proc str) ; send the query + (accept-process-output proc) ; wait for some output + ;; Try to position the proc window so you can see the answer. + ;; This is bogus code. If you delete the (sit-for 0), it breaks. + ;; I don't know why. Wizards invited to improve it. + (if (not (pos-visible-in-window-p proc-pt proc-win)) + (let ((opoint (window-point proc-win))) + (set-window-point proc-win proc-mark) (sit-for 0) + (if (not (pos-visible-in-window-p opoint proc-win)) + (push-mark opoint) + (set-window-point proc-win opoint))))))) + + +;;; Filename completion in a buffer +;;; =========================================================================== +;;; Useful completion functions, courtesy of the Ergo group. +;;; M- will complete the filename at the cursor as much as possible +;;; M-? will display a list of completions in the help buffer. + +;;; Three commands: +;;; comint-dynamic-complete Complete filename at point. +;;; comint-dynamic-list-completions List completions in help buffer. +;;; comint-replace-by-expanded-filename Expand and complete filename at point; +;;; replace with expanded/completed name. + +;;; These are not installed in the comint-mode keymap. But they are +;;; available for people who want them. Shell-mode-map uses them, though. + +(defun comint-match-partial-pathname () + "Returns the string of an existing filename or causes an error." + (if (save-excursion (backward-char 1) (looking-at "\\s ")) "" + (save-excursion + (re-search-backward "[^~/A-Za-z0-9---_.$#,]+") + (re-search-forward "[~/A-Za-z0-9---_.$#,]+") + (substitute-in-file-name + (buffer-substring (match-beginning 0) (match-end 0)))))) + +(defun comint-replace-by-expanded-filename () + "Replace the filename at point with its expanded, canonicalised completion. +\"Expanded\" means environment variables (e.g., $HOME) and ~'s are +replaced with the corresponding directories. \"Canonicalised\" means .. +and . are removed, and the filename is made absolute instead of relative. +See functions expand-file-name and substitute-in-file-name. See also +comint-dynamic-complete." + (interactive) + (let* ((pathname (comint-match-partial-pathname)) + (pathdir (file-name-directory pathname)) + (pathnondir (file-name-nondirectory pathname)) + (completion (file-name-completion pathnondir + (or pathdir default-directory)))) + (cond ((null completion) + (error "No completions")) + ((eql completion t) + (message "Sole completion")) + (t ; this means a string was returned. + (delete-region (match-beginning 0) (match-end 0)) + (insert (expand-file-name (concat pathdir completion))))))) + +(defun comint-dynamic-complete () + "Complete the filename at point. +This function is similar to comint-replace-by-expanded-filename, except +that it won't change parts of the filename already entered in the buffer; +it just adds completion characters to the end of the filename." + (interactive) + (let* ((pathname (comint-match-partial-pathname)) + (pathdir (file-name-directory pathname)) + (pathnondir (file-name-nondirectory pathname)) + (completion (file-name-completion pathnondir + (or pathdir default-directory)))) + (cond ((null completion) + (error "No completions")) + ((eql completion t) + (error "Sole completion")) + (t ; this means a string was returned. + (goto-char (match-end 0)) + (insert (substring completion (length pathnondir))))))) + +(defun comint-dynamic-list-completions () + "List all possible completions of the filename at point." + (interactive) + (let* ((pathname (comint-match-partial-pathname)) + (pathdir (file-name-directory pathname)) + (pathnondir (file-name-nondirectory pathname)) + (completions + (file-name-all-completions pathnondir + (or pathdir default-directory)))) + (cond ((null completions) + (error "No completions")) + (t + (let ((conf (current-window-configuration))) + (with-output-to-temp-buffer " *Completions*" + (display-completion-list completions)) + (sit-for 0) + (message "Hit space to flush.") + (let ((ch (read-char))) + (if (= ch ?\ ) + (set-window-configuration conf) + (setq unread-command-char ch)))))))) + + +;;; Converting process modes to use comint mode +;;; =========================================================================== +;;; Renaming variables +;;; Most of the work is renaming variables and functions. +;;; These are the common ones. + +;;; Local variables -- +;;; last-input-end comint-last-input-end +;;; last-input-start +;;; shell-prompt-pattern comint-prompt-regexp +;;; shell-set-directory-error-hook +;;; Miscellaneous -- +;;; shell-set-directory +;;; shell-mode-map comint-mode-map +;;; Commands -- +;;; shell-send-input comint-send-input +;;; shell-send-eof comint-delchar-or-maybe-eof +;;; kill-shell-input comint-kill-input +;;; interrupt-shell-subjob comint-interrupt-subjob +;;; stop-shell-subjob comint-stop-subjob +;;; quit-shell-subjob comint-quit-subjob +;;; kill-shell-subjob comint-kill-subjob +;;; kill-output-from-shell comint-kill-output +;;; show-output-from-shell comint-show-output +;;; copy-last-shell-input Use comint-previous-input/comint-next-input +;;; +;;; LAST-INPUT-START is no longer necessary because inputs are stored on the +;;; input history ring. SHELL-SET-DIRECTORY is gone, its functionality taken +;;; over by SHELL-DIRECTORY-TRACKER, the shell mode's comint-input-sentinel. +;;; Comint mode does not provide functionality equivalent to +;;; shell-set-directory-error-hook; it is gone. +;;; +;;; If you are implementing some process-in-a-buffer mode, called foo-mode, do +;;; *not* create the comint-mode local variables in your foo-mode function. +;;; This is not modular. Instead, call comint-mode, and let *it* create the +;;; necessary comint-specific local variables. Then create the +;;; foo-mode-specific local variables in foo-mode. Set the buffer's keymap to +;;; be foo-mode-map, and its mode to be foo-mode. Set the comint-mode hooks +;;; (comint-prompt-regexp, comint-input-filter, comint-input-sentinel, +;;; comint-get-old-input) that need to be different from the defaults. Call +;;; foo-mode-hook, and you're done. Don't run the comint-mode hook yourself; +;;; comint-mode will take care of it. +;;; +;;; Note that make-comint is different from make-shell in that it +;;; doesn't have a default program argument. If you give make-shell +;;; a program name of NIL, it cleverly chooses one of explicit-shell-name, +;;; $ESHELL, $SHELL, or /bin/sh. If you give make-comint a program argument +;;; of NIL, it barfs. Adjust your code accordingly... diff -r 9827cb0af717 -r 899728e6052a lisp/shell.el --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/lisp/shell.el Mon Nov 05 10:06:02 1990 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,392 @@ +;; -*-Emacs-Lisp-*- run a shell in an Emacs window +;; Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1990 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 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. + +;;; Hacked from tea.el and shell.el by Olin Shivers (shivers@cs.cmu.edu). 8/88 + +;;; Since this mode is built on top of the general command-interpreter-in- +;;; a-buffer mode (comint mode), it shares a common base functionality, +;;; and a common set of bindings, with all modes derived from comint mode. + +;;; For documentation on the functionality provided by comint mode, and +;;; the hooks available for customising it, see the file comint.el. + +;;; Needs fixin: +;;; When sending text from a source file to a subprocess, the process-mark can +;;; move off the window, so you can lose sight of the process interactions. +;;; Maybe I should ensure the process mark is in the window when I send +;;; text to the process? Switch selectable? + +(require 'comint) +(provide 'shell) + +(defvar shell-popd-regexp "popd" + "*Regexp to match subshell commands equivalent to popd.") + +(defvar shell-pushd-regexp "pushd" + "*Regexp to match subshell commands equivalent to pushd.") + +(defvar shell-cd-regexp "cd" + "*Regexp to match subshell commands equivalent to cd.") + +(defvar explicit-shell-file-name nil + "*If non-nil, is file name to use for explicitly requested inferior shell.") + +(defvar explicit-csh-args + (if (eq system-type 'hpux) + ;; -T persuades HP's csh not to think it is smarter + ;; than us about what terminal modes to use. + '("-i" "-T") + '("-i")) + "*Args passed to inferior shell by M-x shell, if the shell is csh. +Value is a list of strings, which may be nil.") + +(defvar shell-dirstack nil + "List of directories saved by pushd in this buffer's shell.") + +(defvar shell-dirstack-query "dirs" + "Command used by shell-resync-dirlist to query shell.") + +(defvar shell-mode-map ()) +(cond ((not shell-mode-map) + (setq shell-mode-map (copy-keymap comint-mode-map)) + (define-key shell-mode-map "\t" 'comint-dynamic-complete) + (define-key shell-mode-map "\M-?" 'comint-dynamic-list-completions))) + +(defvar shell-mode-hook '() + "*Hook for customising shell mode") + + +;;; Basic Procedures +;;; =========================================================================== +;;; + +(defun shell-mode () + "Major mode for interacting with an inferior shell. +Return after the end of the process' output sends the text from the + end of process to the end of the current line. +Return before end of process output copies rest of line to end (skipping + the prompt) and sends it. +M-x send-invisible reads a line of text without echoing it, and sends it to + the shell. + +If you accidentally suspend your process, use \\[comint-continue-subjob] +to continue it. + +cd, pushd and popd commands given to the shell are watched by Emacs to keep +this buffer's default directory the same as the shell's working directory. +M-x dirs queries the shell and resyncs Emacs' idea of what the current + directory stack is. +M-x dirtrack-toggle turns directory tracking on and off. + +\\{shell-mode-map} +Customisation: Entry to this mode runs the hooks on comint-mode-hook and +shell-mode-hook (in that order). + +Variables shell-cd-regexp, shell-pushd-regexp and shell-popd-regexp are used +to match their respective commands." + (interactive) + (comint-mode) + (setq major-mode 'shell-mode + mode-name "Shell" + comint-prompt-regexp shell-prompt-pattern + comint-input-sentinel 'shell-directory-tracker) + (use-local-map shell-mode-map) + (make-local-variable 'shell-dirstack) + (set (make-local-variable 'shell-dirtrackp) t) + (run-hooks 'shell-mode-hook)) + + +(defun shell () + "Run an inferior shell, with I/O through buffer *shell*. +If buffer exists but shell process is not running, make new shell. +If buffer exists and shell process is running, just switch to buffer *shell*. + +The shell to use comes from the first non-nil variable found from these: +explicit-shell-file-name in Emacs, ESHELL in the environment or SHELL in the +environment. If none is found, /bin/sh is used. + +If a file ~/.emacs_SHELLNAME exists, it is given as initial input, simulating +a start-up file for the shell like .profile or .cshrc. Note that this may +lose due to a timing error if the shell discards input when it starts up. + +The buffer is put in shell-mode, giving commands for sending input +and controlling the subjobs of the shell. + +The shell file name, sans directories, is used to make a symbol name +such as `explicit-csh-arguments'. If that symbol is a variable, +its value is used as a list of arguments when invoking the shell. +Otherwise, one argument `-i' is passed to the shell. + +\(Type \\[describe-mode] in the shell buffer for a list of commands.)" + (interactive) + (cond ((not (comint-check-proc "*shell*")) + (let* ((prog (or explicit-shell-file-name + (getenv "ESHELL") + (getenv "SHELL") + "/bin/sh")) + (name (file-name-nondirectory prog)) + (startfile (concat "~/.emacs_" name)) + (xargs-name (intern-soft (concat "explicit-" name "-args")))) + (set-buffer (apply 'make-comint "shell" prog + (if (file-exists-p startfile) startfile) + (if (and xargs-name (boundp xargs-name)) + (symbol-value xargs-name) + '("-i")))) + (shell-mode)))) + (switch-to-buffer "*shell*")) + + +;;; Directory tracking +;;; =========================================================================== +;;; This code provides the shell mode input sentinel +;;; SHELL-DIRECTORY-TRACKER +;;; that tracks cd, pushd, and popd commands issued to the shell, and +;;; changes the current directory of the shell buffer accordingly. +;;; +;;; This is basically a fragile hack, although it's more accurate than +;;; the original version in shell.el. It has the following failings: +;;; 1. It doesn't know about the cdpath shell variable. +;;; 2. It only spots the first command in a command sequence. E.g., it will +;;; miss the cd in "ls; cd foo" +;;; 3. More generally, any complex command (like ";" sequencing) is going to +;;; throw it. Otherwise, you'd have to build an entire shell interpreter in +;;; emacs lisp. Failing that, there's no way to catch shell commands where +;;; cd's are buried inside conditional expressions, aliases, and so forth. +;;; +;;; The whole approach is a crock. Shell aliases mess it up. File sourcing +;;; messes it up. You run other processes under the shell; these each have +;;; separate working directories, and some have commands for manipulating +;;; their w.d.'s (e.g., the lcd command in ftp). Some of these programs have +;;; commands that do *not* effect the current w.d. at all, but look like they +;;; do (e.g., the cd command in ftp). In shells that allow you job +;;; control, you can switch between jobs, all having different w.d.'s. So +;;; simply saying %3 can shift your w.d.. +;;; +;;; The solution is to relax, not stress out about it, and settle for +;;; a hack that works pretty well in typical circumstances. Remember +;;; that a half-assed solution is more in keeping with the spirit of Unix, +;;; anyway. Blech. +;;; +;;; One good hack not implemented here for users of programmable shells +;;; is to program up the shell w.d. manipulation commands to output +;;; a coded command sequence to the tty. Something like +;;; ESC | | +;;; where is the new current working directory. Then trash the +;;; directory tracking machinery currently used in this package, and +;;; replace it with a process filter that watches for and strips out +;;; these messages. + +;;; REGEXP is a regular expression. STR is a string. START is a fixnum. +;;; Returns T if REGEXP matches STR where the match is anchored to start +;;; at position START in STR. Sort of like LOOKING-AT for strings. +(defun shell-front-match (regexp str start) + (eq start (string-match regexp str start))) + +(defun shell-directory-tracker (str) + "Tracks cd, pushd and popd commands issued to the shell. +This function is called on each input passed to the shell. +It watches for cd, pushd and popd commands and sets the buffer's +default directory to track these commands. + +You may toggle this tracking on and off with M-x dirtrack-toggle. +If emacs gets confused, you can resync with the shell with M-x dirs. + +See variables shell-cd-regexp, shell-pushd-regexp, and shell-popd-regexp. +Environment variables are expanded, see function substitute-in-file-name." + (condition-case err + (cond (shell-dirtrackp + (string-match "^\\s *" str) ; skip whitespace + (let ((bos (match-end 0)) + (x nil)) + (cond ((setq x (shell-match-cmd-w/optional-arg shell-popd-regexp + str bos)) + (shell-process-popd (substitute-in-file-name x))) + ((setq x (shell-match-cmd-w/optional-arg shell-pushd-regexp + str bos)) + (shell-process-pushd (substitute-in-file-name x))) + ((setq x (shell-match-cmd-w/optional-arg shell-cd-regexp + str bos)) + (shell-process-cd (substitute-in-file-name x))))))) + (error (message (car (cdr err)))))) + + +;;; Try to match regexp CMD to string, anchored at position START. +;;; CMD may be followed by a single argument. If a match, then return +;;; the argument, if there is one, or the empty string if not. If +;;; no match, return nil. + +(defun shell-match-cmd-w/optional-arg (cmd str start) + (and (shell-front-match cmd str start) + (let ((eoc (match-end 0))) ; end of command + (cond ((shell-front-match "\\s *\\(\;\\|$\\)" str eoc) + "") ; no arg + ((shell-front-match "\\s +\\([^ \t\;]+\\)\\s *\\(\;\\|$\\)" + str eoc) + (substring str (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1))) ; arg + (t nil))))) ; something else. +;;; The first regexp is [optional whitespace, (";" or the end of string)]. +;;; The second regexp is [whitespace, (an arg), optional whitespace, +;;; (";" or end of string)]. + + +;;; popd [+n] +(defun shell-process-popd (arg) + (let ((num (if (zerop (length arg)) 0 ; no arg means +0 + (shell-extract-num arg)))) + (if (and num (< num (length shell-dirstack))) + (if (= num 0) ; condition-case because the CD could lose. + (condition-case nil (progn (cd (car shell-dirstack)) + (setq shell-dirstack + (cdr shell-dirstack)) + (shell-dirstack-message)) + (error (message "Couldn't cd."))) + (let* ((ds (cons nil shell-dirstack)) + (cell (nthcdr (- num 1) ds))) + (rplacd cell (cdr (cdr cell))) + (setq shell-dirstack (cdr ds)) + (shell-dirstack-message))) + (message "Bad popd.")))) + + +;;; cd [dir] +(defun shell-process-cd (arg) + (condition-case nil (progn (cd (if (zerop (length arg)) (getenv "HOME") + arg)) + (shell-dirstack-message)) + (error (message "Couldn't cd.")))) + + +;;; pushd [+n | dir] +(defun shell-process-pushd (arg) + (if (zerop (length arg)) + ;; no arg -- swap pwd and car of shell stack + (condition-case nil (if shell-dirstack + (let ((old default-directory)) + (cd (car shell-dirstack)) + (setq shell-dirstack + (cons old (cdr shell-dirstack))) + (shell-dirstack-message)) + (message "Directory stack empty.")) + (message "Couldn't cd.")) + + (let ((num (shell-extract-num arg))) + (if num ; pushd +n + (if (> num (length shell-dirstack)) + (message "Directory stack not that deep.") + (let* ((ds (cons default-directory shell-dirstack)) + (dslen (length ds)) + (front (nthcdr num ds)) + (back (reverse (nthcdr (- dslen num) (reverse ds)))) + (new-ds (append front back))) + (condition-case nil + (progn (cd (car new-ds)) + (setq shell-dirstack (cdr new-ds)) + (shell-dirstack-message)) + (error (message "Couldn't cd."))))) + + ;; pushd + (let ((old-wd default-directory)) + (condition-case nil + (progn (cd arg) + (setq shell-dirstack + (cons old-wd shell-dirstack)) + (shell-dirstack-message)) + (error (message "Couldn't cd.")))))))) + +;; If STR is of the form +n, for n>0, return n. Otherwise, nil. +(defun shell-extract-num (str) + (and (string-match "^\\+[1-9][0-9]*$" str) + (string-to-int str))) + + +(defun shell-dirtrack-toggle () + "Turn directory tracking on and off in a shell buffer." + (interactive) + (setq shell-dirtrackp (not shell-dirtrackp)) + (message "directory tracking %s." + (if shell-dirtrackp "ON" "OFF"))) + +;;; For your typing convenience: +(fset 'dirtrack-toggle 'shell-dirtrack-toggle) + + +(defun shell-resync-dirs () + "Resync the buffer's idea of the current directory stack. +This command queries the shell with the command bound to +shell-dirstack-query (default \"dirs\"), reads the next +line output and parses it to form the new directory stack. +DON'T issue this command unless the buffer is at a shell prompt. +Also, note that if some other subprocess decides to do output +immediately after the query, its output will be taken as the +new directory stack -- you lose. If this happens, just do the +command again." + (interactive) + (let* ((proc (get-buffer-process (current-buffer))) + (pmark (process-mark proc))) + (goto-char pmark) + (insert shell-dirstack-query) (insert "\n") + (sit-for 0) ; force redisplay + (comint-send-string proc shell-dirstack-query) + (comint-send-string proc "\n") + (set-marker pmark (point)) + (let ((pt (point))) ; wait for 1 line + ;; This extra newline prevents the user's pending input from spoofing us. + (insert "\n") (backward-char 1) + (while (not (looking-at ".+\n")) + (accept-process-output proc) + (goto-char pt))) + (goto-char pmark) (delete-char 1) ; remove the extra newline + ;; That's the dirlist. grab it & parse it. + (let* ((dl (buffer-substring (match-beginning 0) (- (match-end 0) 1))) + (dl-len (length dl)) + (ds '()) ; new dir stack + (i 0)) + (while (< i dl-len) + ;; regexp = optional whitespace, (non-whitespace), optional whitespace + (string-match "\\s *\\(\\S +\\)\\s *" dl i) ; pick off next dir + (setq ds (cons (substring dl (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)) + ds)) + (setq i (match-end 0))) + (let ((ds (reverse ds))) + (condition-case nil + (progn (cd (car ds)) + (setq shell-dirstack (cdr ds)) + (shell-dirstack-message)) + (error (message "Couldn't cd."))))))) + +;;; For your typing convenience: +(fset 'dirs 'shell-resync-dirs) + + +;;; Show the current dirstack on the message line. +;;; Pretty up dirs a bit by changing "/usr/jqr/foo" to "~/foo". +;;; (This isn't necessary if the dirlisting is generated with a simple "dirs".) +;;; All the commands that mung the buffer's dirstack finish by calling +;;; this guy. +(defun shell-dirstack-message () + (let ((msg "") + (ds (cons default-directory shell-dirstack))) + (while ds + (let ((dir (car ds))) + (if (string-match (format "^%s\\(/\\|$\\)" (getenv "HOME")) dir) + (setq dir (concat "~/" (substring dir (match-end 0))))) + (if (string-equal dir "~/") (setq dir "~")) + (setq msg (concat msg dir " ")) + (setq ds (cdr ds)))) + (message msg))) diff -r 9827cb0af717 -r 899728e6052a lisp/subr.el --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/lisp/subr.el Mon Nov 05 10:06:02 1990 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,316 @@ +;; Basic lisp subroutines for Emacs +;; Copyright (C) 1985, 1986 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 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. + + +(defun one-window-p (&optional arg) + "Returns non-nil if there is only one window. +Optional arg NOMINI non-nil means don't count the minibuffer +even if it is active." + (eq (selected-window) + (next-window (selected-window) (if arg 'arg)))) + +(defun walk-windows (proc &optional minibuf all-screens) + "Cycle through all visible windows, calling PROC for each one. +PROC is called with a window as argument. +Optional second arg MINIBUF t means count the minibuffer window +even if not active. If MINIBUF is neither t nor nil it means +not to count the minibuffer even if it is active. +Optional third arg ALL-SCREENS t means include all windows in all screens; +otherwise cycle within the selected screen." + (let* ((walk-windows-start (selected-window)) + (walk-windows-current walk-windows-start)) + (while (progn + (setq walk-windows-current + (next-window walk-windows-current minibuf all-screens)) + (funcall proc walk-windows-current) + (not (eq walk-windows-current walk-windows-start)))))) + +(defun read-quoted-char (&optional prompt) + "Like `read-char', except that if the first character read is an octal +digit, we read up to two more octal digits and return the character +represented by the octal number consisting of those digits. +Optional argument PROMPT specifies a string to use to prompt the user." + (let ((count 0) (code 0) char) + (while (< count 3) + (let ((inhibit-quit (zerop count)) + (help-form nil)) + (and prompt (message "%s-" prompt)) + (setq char (read-char)) + (if inhibit-quit (setq quit-flag nil))) + (cond ((null char)) + ((and (<= ?0 char) (<= char ?7)) + (setq code (+ (* code 8) (- char ?0)) + count (1+ count)) + (and prompt (message (setq prompt + (format "%s %c" prompt char))))) + ((> count 0) + (setq unread-command-char char count 259)) + (t (setq code char count 259)))) + (logand 255 code))) + +(defun error (&rest args) + "Signal an error, making error message by passing all args to `format'." + (while t + (signal 'error (list (apply 'format args))))) + +(defun undefined () + (interactive) + (ding)) + +;Prevent the \{...} documentation construct +;from mentioning keys that run this command. +(put 'undefined 'suppress-keymap t) + +(defun suppress-keymap (map &optional nodigits) + "Make MAP override all normally self-inserting keys to be undefined. +Normally, as an exception, digits and minus-sign are set to make prefix args, +but optional second arg NODIGITS non-nil treats them like other chars." + (let ((i 0)) + (while (<= i 127) + (if (eql (lookup-key global-map (char-to-string i)) 'self-insert-command) + (define-key map (char-to-string i) 'undefined)) + (setq i (1+ i)))) + (or nodigits + (let (loop) + (define-key map "-" 'negative-argument) + ;; Make plain numbers do numeric args. + (setq loop ?0) + (while (<= loop ?9) + (define-key map (char-to-string loop) 'digit-argument) + (setq loop (1+ loop)))))) + +;; now in fns.c +;(defun nth (n list) +; "Returns the Nth element of LIST. +;N counts from zero. If LIST is not that long, nil is returned." +; (car (nthcdr n list))) +; +;(defun copy-alist (alist) +; "Return a copy of ALIST. +;This is a new alist which represents the same mapping +;from objects to objects, but does not share the alist structure with ALIST. +;The objects mapped (cars and cdrs of elements of the alist) +;are shared, however." +; (setq alist (copy-sequence alist)) +; (let ((tail alist)) +; (while tail +; (if (consp (car tail)) +; (setcar tail (cons (car (car tail)) (cdr (car tail))))) +; (setq tail (cdr tail)))) +; alist) + +;Moved to keymap.c +;(defun copy-keymap (keymap) +; "Return a copy of KEYMAP" +; (while (not (keymapp keymap)) +; (setq keymap (signal 'wrong-type-argument (list 'keymapp keymap)))) +; (if (vectorp keymap) +; (copy-sequence keymap) +; (copy-alist keymap))) + +(defun substitute-key-definition (olddef newdef keymap) + "Replace OLDDEF with NEWDEF for any keys in KEYMAP now defined as OLDDEF. +In other words, OLDDEF is replaced with NEWDEF where ever it appears. +Prefix keymaps reached from KEYMAP are not checked recursively; +perhaps they ought to be." + (if (arrayp keymap) + (let ((len (length keymap)) + (i 0)) + (while (< i len) + (if (eq (aref keymap i) olddef) + (aset keymap i newdef)) + (setq i (1+ i)))) + (while keymap + (if (eq (cdr-safe (car-safe keymap)) olddef) + (setcdr (car keymap) newdef)) + (setq keymap (cdr keymap))))) + +;; Avoids useless byte-compilation. +;; In the future, would be better to fix byte compiler +;; not to really compile in cases like this, +;; and use defun here. +(fset 'ignore '(lambda (&rest ignore) nil)) + + +; old names +(fset 'make-syntax-table 'copy-syntax-table) +(fset 'dot 'point) +(fset 'dot-marker 'point-marker) +(fset 'dot-min 'point-min) +(fset 'dot-max 'point-max) +(fset 'window-dot 'window-point) +(fset 'set-window-dot 'set-window-point) +(fset 'read-input 'read-string) +(fset 'send-string 'process-send-string) +(fset 'send-region 'process-send-region) +(fset 'show-buffer 'set-window-buffer) +(fset 'buffer-flush-undo 'buffer-disable-undo) + +; alternate names +(fset 'string= 'string-equal) +(fset 'string< 'string-lessp) +(fset 'move-marker 'set-marker) +(fset 'eql 'eq) +(fset 'not 'null) +(fset 'numberp 'integerp) +(fset 'rplaca 'setcar) +(fset 'rplacd 'setcdr) +(fset 'beep 'ding) ;preserve lingual purtity +(fset 'indent-to-column 'indent-to) +(fset 'backward-delete-char 'delete-backward-char) + +(defvar global-map nil + "Default global keymap mapping Emacs keyboard input into commands. +The value is a keymap which is usually (but not necessarily) Emacs's +global map.") + +(defvar ctl-x-map nil + "Default keymap for C-x commands. +The normal global definition of the character C-x indirects to this keymap.") + +(defvar esc-map nil + "Default keymap for ESC (meta) commands. +The normal global definition of the character ESC indirects to this keymap.") + +(defvar mouse-map nil + "Keymap for mouse commands from the X window system.") + +(defun run-hooks (&rest hooklist) + "Takes hook names and runs each one in turn. Major mode functions use this. +Each argument should be a symbol, a hook variable. +These symbols are processed in the order specified. +If a hook symbol has a non-nil value, that value may be a function +or a list of functions to be called to run the hook. +If the value is a function, it is called with no arguments. +If it is a list, the elements are called, in order, with no arguments." + (while hooklist + (let ((sym (car hooklist))) + (and (boundp sym) + (symbol-value sym) + (let ((value (symbol-value sym))) + (if (and (listp value) (not (eq (car value) 'lambda))) + (mapcar 'funcall value) + (funcall value))))) + (setq hooklist (cdr hooklist)))) + +;; Tell C code how to call this function. +(defconst run-hooks 'run-hooks + "Variable by which C primitives find the function `run-hooks'. +Don't change it.") + +(defun add-hook (hook function) + "Add to the value of HOOK the function FUNCTION unless already present. +HOOK should be a symbol, and FUNCTION may be any valid function. +HOOK's value should be a list of functions, not a single function. +If HOOK is void, it is first set to nil." + (or (boundp hook) (set hook nil)) + (or (if (consp function) + ;; Clever way to tell whether a given lambda-expression + ;; is equal to anything in the hook. + (let ((tail (assoc (cdr function) (symbol-value hook)))) + (equal function tail)) + (memq function (symbol-value hook))) + (set hook (cons function hook)))) + +(defun momentary-string-display (string pos &optional exit-char message) + "Momentarily display STRING in the buffer at POS. +Display remains until next character is typed. +If the char is EXIT-CHAR (optional third arg, default is SPC) it is swallowed; +otherwise it is then available as input (as a command if nothing else). +Display MESSAGE (optional fourth arg) in the echo area. +If MESSAGE is nil, instructions to type EXIT-CHAR are displayed there." + (or exit-char (setq exit-char ?\ )) + (let ((buffer-read-only nil) + (modified (buffer-modified-p)) + (name buffer-file-name) + insert-end) + (unwind-protect + (progn + (save-excursion + (goto-char pos) + ;; defeat file locking... don't try this at home, kids! + (setq buffer-file-name nil) + (insert-before-markers string) + (setq insert-end (point))) + (message (or message "Type %s to continue editing.") + (single-key-description exit-char)) + (let ((char (read-char))) + (or (eq char exit-char) + (setq unread-command-char char)))) + (if insert-end + (save-excursion + (delete-region pos insert-end))) + (setq buffer-file-name name) + (set-buffer-modified-p modified)))) + +(defun start-process-shell-command (name buffer &rest args) + "Start a program in a subprocess. Return the process object for it. +Args are NAME BUFFER COMMAND &rest COMMAND-ARGS. +NAME is name for process. It is modified if necessary to make it unique. +BUFFER is the buffer or (buffer-name) to associate with the process. + Process output goes at end of that buffer, unless you specify + an output stream or filter function to handle the output. + BUFFER may be also nil, meaning that this process is not associated + with any buffer +Third arg is command name, the name of a shell command. +Remaining arguments are the arguments for the command. +Wildcards and redirection are handle as usual in the shell." + (if (eq system-type 'vax-vms) + (apply 'start-process name buffer args) + (start-process name buffer shell-file-name "-c" + (concat "exec " (mapconcat 'identity args " "))))) + +(defun eval-after-load (file form) + "Arrange that, if FILE is ever loaded, FORM will be run at that time. +This makes or adds to an entry on `after-load-alist'. +FILE should be the name of a library, with no directory name." + (or (assoc file after-load-alist) + (setq after-load-alist (cons (list file) after-load-alist))) + (nconc (assoc file after-load-alist) (list form)) + form) + +(defun eval-next-after-load (file) + "Read the following input sexp, and run it whenever FILE is loaded. +This makes or adds to an entry on `after-load-alist'. +FILE should be the name of a library, with no directory name." + (eval-after-load file (read))) + +(defun user-original-login-name () + "Return user's login name from original login. +This tries to remain unaffected by `su', by looking in environment variables." + (or (getenv "LOGNAME") (getenv "USER") (user-login-name))) + +(defun force-mode-line-update (&optional all) + "Force the mode-line of the current buffer to be redisplayed. +With optional non-nil ALL then force then force redisplay of all mode-lines." + (if all (save-excursion (set-buffer (other-buffer)))) + (set-buffer-modified-p (buffer-modified-p))) + +(defun keyboard-translate (from to) + "Translate character FROM to TO at a low level. +This function creates a `keyboard-translate-table' if necessary +and then modifies one entry in it." + (or (boundp 'keyboard-translate-table) + (let ((table (make-string 256)) + (i 0)) + (while (< i 256) + (aset table i i) + (setq i (1+ i))) + (setq keyboard-translate-table table))) + (aset keyboard-translate-table from to))