Mercurial > pidgin
view src/protocols/zephyr/ZInit.c @ 5105:4cfc49e31c2e
[gaim-migrate @ 5468]
David Brigada (jsi) writes:
" This patch changes GTK_WRAP_WORD to GTK_WRAP_WORD_CHAR
throughout the sources. That fixes a bug where long
single-word input into GtkTextViews and similar would
cause the textview to expand, causing the window to
expand. This fix depends on a patch to GTK+ that is in
current CVS but not yet released. To address the
backwards-compatibility issue, GTK_WRAP_WORD_CHAR is
#defined to GTK_WRAP_WORD when not defined by GTK+'s
header files.
The only problem I can forsee is binary compatibility;
if Gaim is compiled under a GTK+ CVS (or a future
release) environment, and then run under a GTK+ 2.2.1
or earlier environment, behavior is undefined; the text
area will probably not wrap at all. However, source
compatibility is maintained."
basically, gaim will start wrapping text in any version of gtk2 that supports it,
and should work exactly the same in any version that still has the bug.
many thanks to David for his hard work.
committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
| author | Luke Schierer <lschiere@pidgin.im> |
|---|---|
| date | Fri, 11 Apr 2003 04:23:55 +0000 |
| parents | 7ba69b8e0de5 |
| children | 43d6c08d7e96 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* This file is part of the Project Athena Zephyr Notification System. * It contains source for the ZInitialize function. * * Created by: Robert French * * $Source$ * $Author: warmenhoven $ * * Copyright (c) 1987, 1991 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. * For copying and distribution information, see the file * "mit-copyright.h". */ /* $Header$ */ #ifndef lint static char rcsid_ZInitialize_c[] = "$Zephyr: /afs/athena.mit.edu/astaff/project/zephyr/src/lib/RCS/ZInitialize.c,v 1.17 89/05/30 18:11:25 jtkohl Exp $"; #endif #include <internal.h> #include <sys/socket.h> #ifdef ZEPHYR_USES_KERBEROS #include <krb_err.h> #endif #ifndef INADDR_NONE #define INADDR_NONE 0xffffffff #endif Code_t ZInitialize() { struct servent *hmserv; struct hostent *hostent; char addr[4], hostname[MAXHOSTNAMELEN]; struct in_addr servaddr; struct sockaddr_in sin; int s, sinsize = sizeof(sin); Code_t code; ZNotice_t notice; #ifdef ZEPHYR_USES_KERBEROS char *krealm = NULL; int krbval; char d1[ANAME_SZ], d2[INST_SZ]; initialize_krb_error_table(); #endif initialize_zeph_error_table(); (void) memset((char *)&__HM_addr, 0, sizeof(__HM_addr)); __HM_addr.sin_family = AF_INET; /* Set up local loopback address for HostManager */ addr[0] = 127; addr[1] = 0; addr[2] = 0; addr[3] = 1; hmserv = (struct servent *)getservbyname(HM_SVCNAME, "udp"); __HM_addr.sin_port = (hmserv) ? hmserv->s_port : HM_SVC_FALLBACK; (void) memcpy((char *)&__HM_addr.sin_addr, addr, 4); __HM_set = 0; /* Initialize the input queue */ __Q_Tail = NULL; __Q_Head = NULL; /* if the application is a server, there might not be a zhm. The code will fall back to something which might not be "right", but this is is ok, since none of the servers call krb_rd_req. */ servaddr.s_addr = INADDR_NONE; if (! __Zephyr_server) { if ((code = ZOpenPort(NULL)) != ZERR_NONE) return(code); if ((code = ZhmStat(NULL, ¬ice)) != ZERR_NONE) return(code); ZClosePort(); /* the first field, which is NUL-terminated, is the server name. If this code ever support a multiplexing zhm, this will have to be made smarter, and probably per-message */ #ifdef ZEPHYR_USES_KERBEROS krealm = krb_realmofhost(notice.z_message); #endif hostent = gethostbyname(notice.z_message); if (hostent && hostent->h_addrtype == AF_INET) memcpy(&servaddr, hostent->h_addr, sizeof(servaddr)); ZFreeNotice(¬ice); } #ifdef ZEPHYR_USES_KERBEROS if (krealm) { strcpy(__Zephyr_realm, krealm); } else if ((krb_get_tf_fullname(TKT_FILE, d1, d2, __Zephyr_realm) != KSUCCESS) && ((krbval = krb_get_lrealm(__Zephyr_realm, 1)) != KSUCCESS)) { return (krbval); } #else strcpy(__Zephyr_realm, "local-realm"); #endif __My_addr.s_addr = INADDR_NONE; if (servaddr.s_addr != INADDR_NONE) { /* Try to get the local interface address by connecting a UDP * socket to the server address and getting the local address. * Some broken operating systems (e.g. Solaris 2.0-2.5) yield * INADDR_ANY (zero), so we have to check for that. */ s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0); if (s != -1) { memset(&sin, 0, sizeof(sin)); sin.sin_family = AF_INET; memcpy(&sin.sin_addr, &servaddr, sizeof(servaddr)); sin.sin_port = HM_SRV_SVC_FALLBACK; if (connect(s, (struct sockaddr *) &sin, sizeof(sin)) == 0 && getsockname(s, (struct sockaddr *) &sin, &sinsize) == 0 && sin.sin_addr.s_addr != 0) memcpy(&__My_addr, &sin.sin_addr, sizeof(__My_addr)); close(s); } } if (__My_addr.s_addr == INADDR_NONE) { /* We couldn't figure out the local interface address by the * above method. Try by resolving the local hostname. (This * is a pretty broken thing to do, and unfortunately what we * always do on server machines.) */ if (gethostname(hostname, sizeof(hostname)) == 0) { hostent = gethostbyname(hostname); if (hostent && hostent->h_addrtype == AF_INET) memcpy(&__My_addr, hostent->h_addr, sizeof(__My_addr)); } } /* If the above methods failed, zero out __My_addr so things will * sort of kind of work. */ if (__My_addr.s_addr == INADDR_NONE) __My_addr.s_addr = 0; /* Get the sender so we can cache it */ (void) ZGetSender(); return (ZERR_NONE); }
