view doc/the_penguin.txt @ 9417:9f6a28af7164

[gaim-migrate @ 10232] " IDLETRACK.DLL uses Windows hooks to record the last time the user pressed a key or moved the mouse. Windows hooks are a bit unfriendly in that they force the hook DLL into every process - so IDLETRACK.DLL gets added to every process after Gaim runs. This can mean that IDLETRACK.DLL doesn't get unloaded when Gaim stops, which causes a warning about being unable to write to IDLETRACK.DLL if you then upgrade Gaim. Further, hooking is a common tactic employed by key loggers. If the user has a program installed that checks for global hooks then it will warn the user that Gaim may contain a key logger. From Windows 2000 onwards Microsoft introduced an API function called GetLastInputInfo that returns the timer tick at the point that the user last pressed a key or moved the mouse. I have changed idletrack.c so that it will try to use this if it can, which avoids all the ugliness of having to use hooks, but it will fall back to using hooks if the function isn't present. This patch changes all three exported functions in idletrack.c. In wgaim_set_idlehooks it checks to see if GetLastInputInfo is present. If it is then the address of the function is recorded and no hooks are set. If it isn't then we're running on an old verison of Windows and the hooks are set as per current behaviour. In wgaim_remove_idlehooks the module handle taken for USER32.DLL by wgaim_set_idlehooks is released. In wgaim_get_lastactive the GetLastInputInfo function is called, if present. If it isn't present then the hooks will have run and the shared memory they write to will be read as per current behaviour. Both methods end up getting the timer tick of the last user activity, which is returned as per current behaviour." --Andrew Whewell committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
author Luke Schierer <lschiere@pidgin.im>
date Sun, 27 Jun 2004 22:29:53 +0000
parents eb63f9960d07
children
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The Penguin

by Rob Flynn <rob@marko.net>
   and
   Jeramey Crawford <jacrawf@marko.net>


Once upon a term'nal dreary, while I hack'ed, weak and weary,
Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten code--
While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a beeping,
As of some one gently feeping, feeping using damn talk mode.
"'Tis some hacker," I muttered, "beeping using damn talk mode--
                          Only this. I hate talk mode."

Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak semester,
And college life wrought its terror as the school year became a bore.
Eagerly I wished for privledges;--higher access I sought to borrow
For my term'nal, unceasing sorrow--sorrow for a file called core--
For the rare and radiant files of .c  the coders call the core--
                           Access Denied.  Chown me more.

"Open Source," did all mutter, when, with very little flirt and flutter,
In there stepped a stately Penguin of the saintly days of yore.
Quite a bit obese was he; having eaten lots of fish had he,
But, by deign of Finnish programmer, he sat in the middle of my floor--
Looking upon my dusty term'nal in the middle of my floor--
                           Came, and sat, and nothing more.

Then the tubby bird beguiling my sad code into shining,
By the free and open decorum of the message that it bore,
"Though thy term'nal be dusty and slow," he said, "Linux be not craven!"
And thus I installed a new OS far from the proprietary shore--
The kernel code open but documentation lacking on this shore.
                           Quoth the Penguin, "pipe grep more!"

Much I marvelled this rotund fowl to hear discourse so plainly,
Though its answer little meaning--little relevancy bore;
For we cannot help believing that no living human being
Ever yet was blessed with seeing bird in the middle of his floor--
Bird or beast sitting in the middle of his cluttered floor,
                           With such instructions as "pipe grep more."

But the Penguin, sitting lonely in that cluttered floor, spoke only
Those words, as if its soul in that instruction he did outpour.
Nothing more did he need utter; understood did I among that clutter--
Understood his command as I could scarcely do a few moments before--
I typed as furious as was willed me, understanding just a minute before.
                           Again the bird said "pipe grep more!"

"Amazing!" said I, "Penguin we will conquor the world if you will!
By the Network that interconnects us--by that Finn we both adore--
We'll take this very world by storm!" For now grasped I what he'd meant,
The thing I do while searching /usr/doc/* for that wond'rous lore--
Those compendiums of plaintext documentation and descriptive lore.
                           Quoth the Penguin, "pipe grep more!"

And the Penguin, never waddling, still is sitting, still is sitting
In the middle of my room and still very cluttered floor;
And his eyes have all the seeming of the free beer I am drinking
And the term'nal-light o'er him glowing throws his shadows on the floor;
And this OS from out the shadows that is pow'ring my term'nal on the floor
                            Shall be dominating--"Pipe grep more!"