1 ;;; ls-lisp.el --- emulate insert-directory completely in Emacs Lisp
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1992, 1994, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,
4 ;; 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6 ;; Author: Sebastian Kremer <sk@thp.uni-koeln.de>
7 ;; Modified by: Francis J. Wright <F.J.Wright@maths.qmw.ac.uk>
9 ;; Keywords: unix, dired
12 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
14 ;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
15 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
16 ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
17 ;; (at your option) any later version.
19 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
20 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
21 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
22 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
24 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
25 ;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
29 ;; OVERVIEW ==========================================================
31 ;; This file redefines the function `insert-directory' to implement it
32 ;; directly from Emacs lisp, without running ls in a subprocess. It
33 ;; is useful if you cannot afford to fork Emacs on a real memory UNIX,
34 ;; or other non-UNIX platforms if you don't have the ls
35 ;; program, or if you want a different format from what ls offers.
37 ;; This function can use regexps instead of shell wildcards. If you
38 ;; enter regexps remember to double each $ sign. For example, to
39 ;; include files *.el, enter `.*\.el$$', resulting in the regexp
42 ;; RESTRICTIONS ======================================================
44 ;; * A few obscure ls switches are still ignored: see the docstring of
45 ;; `insert-directory'.
47 ;; TO DO =============================================================
49 ;; Complete handling of F switch (if/when possible).
51 ;; FJW: May be able to sort much faster by consing the sort key onto
52 ;; the front of each list element, sorting and then stripping the key
57 ;; Written originally by Sebastian Kremer <sk@thp.uni-koeln.de>
58 ;; Revised by Andrew Innes and Geoff Volker (and maybe others).
60 ;; Modified by Francis J. Wright <F.J.Wright@maths.qmw.ac.uk>, mainly
61 ;; to support many more ls options, "platform emulation" and more
66 (eval-when-compile (require 'cl
))
69 "Emulate the ls program completely in Emacs Lisp."
73 (defcustom ls-lisp-emulation
74 (cond ;; ((eq system-type 'windows-nt) 'MS-Windows)
76 '(hpux usg-unix-v irix berkeley-unix
))
77 'UNIX
)) ; very similar to GNU
78 ;; Anything else defaults to nil, meaning GNU.
79 "Platform to emulate: GNU (default), MacOS, MS-Windows, UNIX.
80 Corresponding value is one of the atoms: nil, MacOS, MS-Windows, UNIX.
81 Sets default values for: `ls-lisp-ignore-case', `ls-lisp-dirs-first',
82 `ls-lisp-verbosity'. Need not match actual platform. Changing this
83 option will have no effect until you restart Emacs."
84 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"GNU" nil
)
90 (defcustom ls-lisp-ignore-case
91 ;; Name change for consistency with other option names.
92 (or (memq ls-lisp-emulation
'(MS-Windows MacOS
))
93 (and (boundp 'ls-lisp-dired-ignore-case
) ls-lisp-dired-ignore-case
))
94 "Non-nil causes ls-lisp alphabetic sorting to ignore case."
98 (defcustom ls-lisp-dirs-first
(eq ls-lisp-emulation
'MS-Windows
)
99 "Non-nil causes ls-lisp to sort directories first in any ordering.
100 \(Or last if it is reversed.) Follows Microsoft Windows Explorer."
101 ;; Functionality suggested by Chris McMahan <cmcmahan@one.net>
105 (defcustom ls-lisp-verbosity
106 (cond ((eq ls-lisp-emulation
'MacOS
) nil
)
107 ((eq ls-lisp-emulation
'MS-Windows
)
108 (if (and (fboundp 'w32-using-nt
) (w32-using-nt))
109 '(links))) ; distinguish NT/2K from 9x
110 ((eq ls-lisp-emulation
'UNIX
) '(links uid
)) ; UNIX ls
111 (t '(links uid gid
))) ; GNU ls
112 "A list of optional file attributes that ls-lisp should display.
113 It should contain none or more of the symbols: links, uid, gid.
114 A value of nil (or an empty list) means display none of them.
116 Concepts come from UNIX: `links' means count of names associated with
117 the file\; `uid' means user (owner) identifier\; `gid' means group
120 If emulation is MacOS then default is nil\;
121 if emulation is MS-Windows then default is `(links)' if platform is
122 Windows NT/2K, nil otherwise\;
123 if emulation is UNIX then default is `(links uid)'\;
124 if emulation is GNU then default is `(links uid gid)'."
125 ;; Functionality suggested by Howard Melman <howard@silverstream.com>
126 :type
'(set (const :tag
"Show Link Count" links
)
127 (const :tag
"Show User" uid
)
128 (const :tag
"Show Group" gid
))
131 (defcustom ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program
132 (not (memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt
)))
133 "Non-nil causes ls-lisp to revert back to using `insert-directory-program'.
134 This is useful on platforms where ls-lisp is dumped into Emacs, such as
135 Microsoft Windows, but you would still like to use a program to list
136 the contents of a directory."
140 ;;; Autoloaded because it is let-bound in `recover-session', `mail-recover-1'.
142 (defcustom ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards t
143 "Non-nil means ls-lisp treats file patterns as shell wildcards.
144 Otherwise they are treated as Emacs regexps (for backward compatibility)."
148 (defcustom ls-lisp-format-time-list
151 "List of `format-time-string' specs to display file time stamps.
152 These specs are used ONLY if a valid locale can not be determined.
154 If `ls-lisp-use-localized-time-format' is non-nil, these specs are used
155 regardless of whether the locale can be determined.
157 Syntax: (EARLY-TIME-FORMAT OLD-TIME-FORMAT)
159 The EARLY-TIME-FORMAT is used if file has been modified within the
160 current year. The OLD-TIME-FORMAT is used for older files. To use ISO
161 8601 dates, you could set:
163 \(setq ls-lisp-format-time-list
166 :type
'(list (string :tag
"Early time format")
167 (string :tag
"Old time format"))
170 (defcustom ls-lisp-use-localized-time-format nil
171 "Non-nil causes ls-lisp to use `ls-lisp-format-time-list' even if
172 a valid locale is specified.
174 WARNING: Using localized date/time format might cause Dired columns
175 to fail to lign up, e.g. if month names are not all of the same length."
179 (defvar original-insert-directory nil
180 "This holds the original function definition of `insert-directory'.")
182 (defvar ls-lisp-uid-d-fmt
"-%d"
183 "Format to display integer UIDs.")
184 (defvar ls-lisp-uid-s-fmt
"-%s"
185 "Format to display user names.")
186 (defvar ls-lisp-gid-d-fmt
"-%d"
187 "Format to display integer GIDs.")
188 (defvar ls-lisp-gid-s-fmt
"-%s"
189 "Format to display user group names.")
190 (defvar ls-lisp-filesize-d-fmt
"%d"
191 "Format to display integer file sizes.")
192 (defvar ls-lisp-filesize-f-fmt
"%.0f"
193 "Format to display float file sizes.")
195 ;; Remember the original insert-directory function
196 (or (featurep 'ls-lisp
) ; FJW: unless this file is being reloaded!
197 (setq original-insert-directory
(symbol-function 'insert-directory
)))
200 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
202 (defun insert-directory (file switches
&optional wildcard full-directory-p
)
203 "Insert directory listing for FILE, formatted according to SWITCHES.
204 Leaves point after the inserted text.
205 SWITCHES may be a string of options, or a list of strings.
206 Optional third arg WILDCARD means treat FILE as shell wildcard.
207 Optional fourth arg FULL-DIRECTORY-P means file is a directory and
208 switches do not contain `d', so that a full listing is expected.
210 This version of the function comes from `ls-lisp.el'.
211 If the value of `ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program' is non-nil then
212 it works exactly like the version from `files.el' and runs a directory
213 listing program whose name is in the variable
214 `insert-directory-program'; if also WILDCARD is non-nil then it runs
215 the shell specified by `shell-file-name'. If the value of
216 `ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program' is nil then it runs a Lisp
219 The Lisp emulation does not run any external programs or shells. It
220 supports ordinary shell wildcards if `ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards'
221 is non-nil; otherwise, it interprets wildcards as regular expressions
222 to match file names. It does not support all `ls' switches -- those
223 that work are: A a c i r S s t u U X g G B C R n and F partly."
224 (if ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program
225 (funcall original-insert-directory
226 file switches wildcard full-directory-p
)
227 ;; We need the directory in order to find the right handler.
228 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler (expand-file-name file
)
233 (funcall handler
'insert-directory file switches
234 wildcard full-directory-p
)
235 ;; Remove --dired switch
236 (if (string-match "--dired " switches
)
237 (setq switches
(replace-match "" nil nil switches
)))
238 ;; Convert SWITCHES to a list of characters.
239 (setq switches
(delete ?\
(delete ?-
(append switches nil
))))
240 ;; Sometimes we get ".../foo*/" as FILE. While the shell and
241 ;; `ls' don't mind, we certainly do, because it makes us think
242 ;; there is no wildcard, only a directory name.
243 (if (and ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards
244 (string-match "[[?*]" file
)
245 ;; Prefer an existing file to wildcards, like
246 ;; dired-noselect does.
247 (not (file-exists-p file
)))
249 (or (not (eq (aref file
(1- (length file
))) ?
/))
250 (setq file
(substring file
0 (1- (length file
)))))
253 (setq wildcard-regexp
254 (if ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards
255 (wildcard-to-regexp (file-name-nondirectory file
))
256 (file-name-nondirectory file
))
257 file
(file-name-directory file
))
258 (if (memq ?B switches
) (setq wildcard-regexp
"[^~]\\'")))
260 (ls-lisp-insert-directory
261 file switches
(ls-lisp-time-index switches
)
262 wildcard-regexp full-directory-p
)
264 ;; Maybe they wanted a literal file that just happens to
265 ;; use characters special to shell wildcards.
266 (if (equal (cadr err
) "Unmatched [ or [^")
268 (setq wildcard-regexp
(if (memq ?B switches
) "[^~]\\'")
269 file
(file-relative-name orig-file
))
270 (ls-lisp-insert-directory
271 file switches
(ls-lisp-time-index switches
)
272 nil full-directory-p
))
273 (signal (car err
) (cdr err
)))))
274 ;; Try to insert the amount of free space.
276 (goto-char (point-min))
277 ;; First find the line to put it on.
278 (when (re-search-forward "^total" nil t
)
279 (let ((available (get-free-disk-space ".")))
281 ;; Replace "total" with "total used", to avoid confusion.
282 (replace-match "total used in directory")
284 (insert " available " available
)))))))))
286 (defun ls-lisp-insert-directory
287 (file switches time-index wildcard-regexp full-directory-p
)
288 "Insert directory listing for FILE, formatted according to SWITCHES.
289 Leaves point after the inserted text. This is an internal function
290 optionally called by the `ls-lisp.el' version of `insert-directory'.
291 It is called recursively if the -R switch is used.
292 SWITCHES is a *list* of characters. TIME-INDEX is the time index into
293 file-attributes according to SWITCHES. WILDCARD-REGEXP is nil or an *Emacs
294 regexp*. FULL-DIRECTORY-P means file is a directory and SWITCHES does
295 not contain `d', so that a full listing is expected."
296 (if (or wildcard-regexp full-directory-p
)
297 (let* ((dir (file-name-as-directory file
))
298 (default-directory dir
) ; so that file-attributes works
300 (directory-files-and-attributes dir nil wildcard-regexp t
301 (if (memq ?n switches
)
309 ;; do all bindings here for speed
310 total-line files elt short file-size fil attr
311 fuid fgid uid-len gid-len
)
312 (cond ((memq ?A switches
)
314 (ls-lisp-delete-matching "^\\.\\.?$" file-alist
)))
315 ((not (memq ?a switches
))
316 ;; if neither -A nor -a, flush . files
318 (ls-lisp-delete-matching "^\\." file-alist
))))
320 (ls-lisp-handle-switches file-alist switches
))
321 (if (memq ?C switches
) ; column (-C) format
322 (ls-lisp-column-format file-alist
)
323 (setq total-line
(cons (point) (car-safe file-alist
)))
324 ;; Find the appropriate format for displaying uid, gid, and
325 ;; file size, by finding the longest strings among all the
326 ;; files we are about to display.
327 (dolist (elt file-alist
)
330 uid-len
(if (stringp fuid
) (string-width fuid
)
331 (length (format "%d" fuid
)))
333 gid-len
(if (stringp fgid
) (string-width fgid
)
334 (length (format "%d" fgid
)))
335 file-size
(nth 7 attr
))
336 (if (> uid-len max-uid-len
)
337 (setq max-uid-len uid-len
))
338 (if (> gid-len max-gid-len
)
339 (setq max-gid-len gid-len
))
340 (if (> file-size max-file-size
)
341 (setq max-file-size file-size
)))
342 (setq ls-lisp-uid-d-fmt
(format " %%-%dd" max-uid-len
))
343 (setq ls-lisp-uid-s-fmt
(format " %%-%ds" max-uid-len
))
344 (setq ls-lisp-gid-d-fmt
(format " %%-%dd" max-gid-len
))
345 (setq ls-lisp-gid-s-fmt
(format " %%-%ds" max-gid-len
))
346 (setq ls-lisp-filesize-d-fmt
348 (if (memq ?s switches
)
349 (length (format "%.0f"
350 (fceiling (/ max-file-size
1024.0))))
351 (length (format "%.0f" max-file-size
)))))
352 (setq ls-lisp-filesize-f-fmt
354 (if (memq ?s switches
)
355 (length (format "%.0f"
356 (fceiling (/ max-file-size
1024.0))))
357 (length (format "%.0f" max-file-size
)))))
358 (setq files file-alist
)
359 (while files
; long (-l) format
360 (setq elt
(car files
)
364 file-size
(nth 7 attr
))
366 (setq sum
(+ file-size
367 ;; Even if neither SUM nor file's size
368 ;; overflow, their sum could.
369 (if (or (< sum
(- 134217727 file-size
))
374 (insert (ls-lisp-format short attr file-size
375 switches time-index now
))))
376 ;; Insert total size of all files:
378 (goto-char (car total-line
))
380 ;; Shell says ``No match'' if no files match
381 ;; the wildcard; let's say something similar.
382 (insert "(No match)\n"))
383 (insert (format "total %.0f\n" (fceiling (/ sum
1024.0))))))
384 (if (memq ?R switches
)
385 ;; List the contents of all directories recursively.
386 ;; cadr of each element of `file-alist' is t for
387 ;; directory, string (name linked to) for symbolic
390 (setq elt
(car file-alist
)
391 file-alist
(cdr file-alist
))
392 (when (and (eq (cadr elt
) t
) ; directory
393 ;; Under -F, we have already decorated all
394 ;; directories, including "." and "..", with
395 ;; a /, so allow for that as well.
396 (not (string-match "\\`\\.\\.?/?\\'" (car elt
))))
397 (setq elt
(expand-file-name (car elt
) dir
))
398 (insert "\n" elt
":\n")
399 (ls-lisp-insert-directory
400 elt switches time-index wildcard-regexp full-directory-p
)))))
401 ;; If not full-directory-p, FILE *must not* end in /, as
402 ;; file-attributes will not recognize a symlink to a directory,
403 ;; so must make it a relative filename as ls does:
404 (if (file-name-absolute-p file
) (setq file
(expand-file-name file
)))
405 (if (eq (aref file
(1- (length file
))) ?
/)
406 (setq file
(substring file
0 -
1)))
407 (let ((fattr (file-attributes file
'string
)))
409 (insert (ls-lisp-format
410 (if (memq ?F switches
)
411 (ls-lisp-classify-file file fattr
)
414 switches time-index
(current-time)))
415 (message "%s: doesn't exist or is inaccessible" file
)
416 (ding) (sit-for 2))))) ; to show user the message!
418 (defun ls-lisp-column-format (file-alist)
419 "Insert the file names (only) in FILE-ALIST into the current buffer.
420 Format in columns, sorted vertically, following GNU ls -C.
421 Responds to the window width as ls should but may not!"
422 (let (files fmt ncols collen
(nfiles 0) (colwid 0))
423 ;; Count number of files as `nfiles', build list of filenames as
424 ;; `files', and find maximum filename length as `colwid':
427 (setq nfiles
(1+ nfiles
)
428 file
(caar file-alist
)
429 files
(cons file files
)
430 file-alist
(cdr file-alist
)
432 (if (> len colwid
) (setq colwid len
))))
433 (setq files
(nreverse files
)
434 colwid
(+ 2 colwid
) ; 2 character column gap
435 fmt
(format "%%-%ds" colwid
) ; print format
436 ncols
(/ (window-width) colwid
) ; no of columns
437 collen
(/ nfiles ncols
)) ; floor of column length
438 (if (> nfiles
(* collen ncols
)) (setq collen
(1+ collen
)))
439 ;; Output the file names in columns, sorted vertically:
444 (insert (format fmt
(nth j files
)))
445 (setq j
(+ j collen
)))
446 ;; FJW: This is completely unnecessary, but I don't like
447 ;; trailing white space...
448 (delete-region (point) (progn (skip-chars-backward " \t") (point)))
452 (defun ls-lisp-delete-matching (regexp list
)
453 "Delete all elements matching REGEXP from LIST, return new list."
454 ;; Should perhaps use setcdr for efficiency.
457 (or (string-match regexp
(caar list
))
458 (setq result
(cons (car list
) result
)))
459 (setq list
(cdr list
)))
462 (defsubst ls-lisp-string-lessp
(s1 s2
)
463 "Return t if string S1 is less than string S2 in lexicographic order.
464 Case is significant if `ls-lisp-ignore-case' is nil.
465 Unibyte strings are converted to multibyte for comparison."
466 (let ((u (compare-strings s1
0 nil s2
0 nil ls-lisp-ignore-case
)))
467 (and (numberp u
) (< u
0))))
469 (defun ls-lisp-handle-switches (file-alist switches
)
470 "Return new FILE-ALIST sorted according to SWITCHES.
471 SWITCHES is a list of characters. Default sorting is alphabetic."
472 ;; FILE-ALIST's elements are (FILE . FILE-ATTRIBUTES).
473 (or (memq ?U switches
) ; unsorted
474 ;; Catch and ignore unexpected sorting errors
478 ;; Copy file-alist in case of error
479 (sort (copy-sequence file-alist
) ; modifies its argument!
480 (cond ((memq ?S switches
)
481 (lambda (x y
) ; sorted on size
482 ;; 7th file attribute is file size
483 ;; Make largest file come first
486 ((setq index
(ls-lisp-time-index switches
))
487 (lambda (x y
) ; sorted on time
488 (ls-lisp-time-lessp (nth index
(cdr y
))
489 (nth index
(cdr x
)))))
491 (lambda (x y
) ; sorted on extension
492 (ls-lisp-string-lessp
493 (ls-lisp-extension (car x
))
494 (ls-lisp-extension (car y
)))))
496 (lambda (x y
) ; sorted alphabetically
497 (ls-lisp-string-lessp (car x
) (car y
))))))))
498 (error (message "Unsorted (ls-lisp sorting error) - %s"
499 (error-message-string err
))
500 (ding) (sit-for 2)))) ; to show user the message!
501 (if (memq ?F switches
) ; classify switch
502 (setq file-alist
(mapcar 'ls-lisp-classify file-alist
)))
503 (if ls-lisp-dirs-first
504 ;; Re-sort directories first, without otherwise changing the
505 ;; ordering, and reverse whole list. cadr of each element of
506 ;; `file-alist' is t for directory, string (name linked to) for
507 ;; symbolic link, or nil.
510 (if (or (eq (cadr (setq el
(car file-alist
))) t
) ; directory
511 (and (stringp (cadr el
))
512 (file-directory-p (cadr el
)))) ; symlink to a directory
513 (setq dirs
(cons el dirs
))
514 (setq files
(cons el files
)))
515 (setq file-alist
(cdr file-alist
)))
517 (if (memq ?U switches
) ; unsorted order is reversed
521 ;; Finally reverse file alist if necessary.
522 ;; (eq below MUST compare `(not (memq ...))' to force comparison of
523 ;; `t' or `nil', rather than list tails!)
524 (if (eq (eq (not (memq ?U switches
)) ; unsorted order is reversed
525 (not (memq ?r switches
))) ; reversed sort order requested
526 ls-lisp-dirs-first
) ; already reversed
527 (nreverse file-alist
)
530 (defun ls-lisp-classify-file (filename fattr
)
531 "Append a character to FILENAME indicating the file type.
533 FATTR is the file attributes returned by `file-attributes' for the file.
534 The file type indicators are `/' for directories, `@' for symbolic
535 links, `|' for FIFOs, `=' for sockets, `*' for regular files that
536 are executable, and nothing for other types of files."
537 (let* ((type (car fattr
))
538 (modestr (nth 8 fattr
))
539 (typestr (substring modestr
0 1)))
542 (concat filename
(if (eq type t
) "/" "@")))
543 ((string-match "x" modestr
)
544 (concat filename
"*"))
545 ((string= "p" typestr
)
546 (concat filename
"|"))
547 ((string= "s" typestr
)
548 (concat filename
"="))
551 (defun ls-lisp-classify (filedata)
552 "Append a character to file name in FILEDATA indicating the file type.
554 FILEDATA has the form (FILENAME . ATTRIBUTES), where ATTRIBUTES is the
555 structure returned by `file-attributes' for that file.
557 The file type indicators are `/' for directories, `@' for symbolic
558 links, `|' for FIFOs, `=' for sockets, `*' for regular files that
559 are executable, and nothing for other types of files."
560 (let ((file-name (car filedata
))
561 (fattr (cdr filedata
)))
562 (setq file-name
(propertize file-name
'dired-filename t
))
563 (cons (ls-lisp-classify-file file-name fattr
) fattr
)))
565 (defun ls-lisp-extension (filename)
566 "Return extension of FILENAME (ignoring any version extension)
567 FOLLOWED by null and full filename, SOLELY for full alpha sort."
568 ;; Force extension sort order: `no ext' then `null ext' then `ext'
569 ;; to agree with GNU ls.
571 (let* ((i (length filename
)) end
)
572 (if (= (aref filename
(1- i
)) ?.
) ; null extension
574 (while (and (>= (setq i
(1- i
)) 0)
575 (/= (aref filename i
) ?.
)))
576 (if (< i
0) "\0\0" ; no extension
577 (if (/= (aref filename
(1+ i
)) ?~
)
578 (substring filename
(1+ i
))
579 ;; version extension found -- ignore it
581 (while (and (>= (setq i
(1- i
)) 0)
582 (/= (aref filename i
) ?.
)))
583 (if (< i
0) "\0\0" ; no extension
584 (substring filename
(1+ i
) end
))))
587 ;; From Roland McGrath. Can use this to sort on time.
588 (defun ls-lisp-time-lessp (time0 time1
)
589 "Return t if time TIME0 is earlier than time TIME1."
590 (let ((hi0 (car time0
)) (hi1 (car time1
)))
593 (< (cadr time0
) (cadr time1
))))))
595 (defun ls-lisp-format (file-name file-attr file-size switches time-index now
)
596 "Format one line of long ls output for file FILE-NAME.
597 FILE-ATTR and FILE-SIZE give the file's attributes and size.
598 SWITCHES, TIME-INDEX and NOW give the full switch list and time data."
599 (let ((file-type (nth 0 file-attr
))
600 ;; t for directory, string (name linked to)
601 ;; for symbolic link, or nil.
602 (drwxrwxrwx (nth 8 file-attr
))) ; attribute string ("drwxrwxrwx")
603 (concat (if (memq ?i switches
) ; inode number
604 (let ((inode (nth 10 file-attr
)))
606 (if (consp (cdr inode
))
607 ;; 2^(24+16) = 1099511627776.0, but
608 ;; multiplying by it and then adding the
609 ;; other members of the cons cell in one go
610 ;; loses precision, since a double does not
611 ;; have enough significant digits to hold a
612 ;; full 64-bit value. So below we split
613 ;; 1099511627776 into high 13 and low 5
614 ;; digits and compute in two parts.
615 (let ((p1 (* (car inode
) 10995116.0))
616 (p2 (+ (* (car inode
) 27776.0)
617 (* (cadr inode
) 65536.0)
619 (format " %13.0f%05.0f "
620 ;; Use floor to emulate integer
622 (+ p1
(floor p2
100000.0))
625 (+ (* (car inode
) 65536.0)
627 (format " %18d " inode
))))
628 ;; nil is treated like "" in concat
629 (if (memq ?s switches
) ; size in K
630 (format ls-lisp-filesize-f-fmt
631 (fceiling (/ file-size
1024.0))))
632 drwxrwxrwx
; attribute string
633 (if (memq 'links ls-lisp-verbosity
)
634 (format "%3d" (nth 1 file-attr
))) ; link count
635 ;; Numeric uid/gid are more confusing than helpful;
636 ;; Emacs should be able to make strings of them.
637 ;; They tend to be bogus on non-UNIX platforms anyway so
638 ;; optionally hide them.
639 (if (memq 'uid ls-lisp-verbosity
)
640 ;; uid can be a string or an integer
641 (let ((uid (nth 2 file-attr
)))
642 (format (if (stringp uid
)
646 (if (not (memq ?G switches
)) ; GNU ls -- shows group by default
647 (if (or (memq ?g switches
) ; UNIX ls -- no group by default
648 (memq 'gid ls-lisp-verbosity
))
649 (let ((gid (nth 3 file-attr
)))
650 (format (if (stringp gid
)
654 (ls-lisp-format-file-size file-size
(memq ?h switches
))
656 (ls-lisp-format-time file-attr time-index now
)
658 (if (not (memq ?F switches
)) ; ls-lisp-classify already did that
659 (propertize file-name
'dired-filename t
)
661 (if (stringp file-type
) ; is a symbolic link
662 (concat " -> " file-type
))
666 (defun ls-lisp-time-index (switches)
667 "Return time index into file-attributes according to ls SWITCHES list.
668 Return nil if no time switch found."
669 ;; FJW: Default of nil is IMPORTANT and used in `ls-lisp-handle-switches'!
670 (cond ((memq ?c switches
) 6) ; last mode change
671 ((memq ?t switches
) 5) ; last modtime
672 ((memq ?u switches
) 4))) ; last access
674 (defun ls-lisp-time-to-seconds (time)
675 "Convert TIME to a floating point number."
676 (+ (* (car time
) 65536.0)
678 (/ (or (nth 2 time
) 0) 1000000.0)))
680 (defun ls-lisp-format-time (file-attr time-index now
)
681 "Format time for file with attributes FILE-ATTR according to TIME-INDEX.
682 Use the same method as ls to decide whether to show time-of-day or year,
683 depending on distance between file date and NOW.
684 All ls time options, namely c, t and u, are handled."
685 (let* ((time (nth (or time-index
5) file-attr
)) ; default is last modtime
686 (diff (- (ls-lisp-time-to-seconds time
)
687 (ls-lisp-time-to-seconds now
)))
688 ;; Consider a time to be recent if it is within the past six
689 ;; months. A Gregorian year has 365.2425 * 24 * 60 * 60 ==
690 ;; 31556952 seconds on the average, and half of that is 15778476.
691 ;; Write the constant explicitly to avoid roundoff error.
692 (past-cutoff -
15778476)) ; half a Gregorian year
694 ;; Use traditional time format in the C or POSIX locale,
695 ;; ISO-style time format otherwise, so columns line up.
696 (let ((locale system-time-locale
))
698 (let ((vars '("LC_ALL" "LC_TIME" "LANG")))
699 (while (and vars
(not (setq locale
(getenv (car vars
)))))
700 (setq vars
(cdr vars
)))))
701 (if (member locale
'("C" "POSIX"))
704 (if (and (<= past-cutoff diff
) (<= diff
0))
705 (if (and locale
(not ls-lisp-use-localized-time-format
))
707 (nth 0 ls-lisp-format-time-list
))
708 (if (and locale
(not ls-lisp-use-localized-time-format
))
710 (nth 1 ls-lisp-format-time-list
)))
712 (error "Unk 0 0000"))))
714 (defun ls-lisp-format-file-size (file-size human-readable
)
715 (if (not human-readable
)
716 (format (if (floatp file-size
)
717 ls-lisp-filesize-f-fmt
718 ls-lisp-filesize-d-fmt
)
720 (if (< file-size
1024)
721 (format " %4d" file-size
)
722 (do ((file-size (/ file-size
1024.0) (/ file-size
1024.0))
723 ;; kilo, mega, giga, tera, peta, exa
724 (post-fixes (list "k" "M" "G" "T" "P" "E") (cdr post-fixes
)))
726 (format " %3.0f%s" file-size
(car post-fixes
)))))))
730 ;; arch-tag: e55f399b-05ec-425c-a6d5-f5e349c35ab4
731 ;;; ls-lisp.el ends here