1 ;; dos-w32.el --- Functions shared among MS-DOS and W32 (NT/95) platforms
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1996, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
4 ;; 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6 ;; Maintainer: Geoff Voelker <voelker@cs.washington.edu>
9 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
11 ;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
12 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
13 ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
14 ;; (at your option) any later version.
16 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
17 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
18 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
19 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
21 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
22 ;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
26 ;; Parts of this code are duplicated functions taken from dos-fns.el
31 ;; Use ";" instead of ":" as a path separator (from files.el).
32 (setq path-separator
";")
34 (setq minibuffer-history-case-insensitive-variables
35 (cons 'file-name-history minibuffer-history-case-insensitive-variables
))
37 ;; Set the null device (for compile.el).
38 (setq null-device
"NUL")
40 ;; For distinguishing file types based upon suffixes.
41 (defvar file-name-buffer-file-type-alist
43 ("[:/].*config.sys$" . nil
) ; config.sys text
44 ("\\.\\(obj\\|exe\\|com\\|lib\\|sys\\|bin\\|ico\\|pif\\|class\\)$" . t
)
46 ("\\.\\(dll\\|drv\\|386\\|vxd\\|fon\\|fnt\\|fot\\|ttf\\|grp\\)$" . t
)
48 ("\\.\\(bmp\\|wav\\|avi\\|mpg\\|jpg\\|tif\\|mov\\|au\\)$" . t
)
49 ; known binary data files
50 ("\\.\\(arc\\|zip\\|pak\\|lzh\\|zoo\\)$" . t
)
52 ("\\.\\(a\\|o\\|tar\\|z\\|gz\\|taz\\|jar\\)$" . t
)
54 ("\\.sx[dmicw]$" . t
) ; OpenOffice.org
55 ("\\.tp[ulpw]$" . t
) ; borland Pascal stuff
56 ("[:/]tags$" . nil
) ; emacs TAGS file
58 "*Alist for distinguishing text files from binary files.
59 Each element has the form (REGEXP . TYPE), where REGEXP is matched
60 against the file name, and TYPE is nil for text, t for binary.")
62 ;; Return the pair matching filename on file-name-buffer-file-type-alist,
64 (defun find-buffer-file-type-match (filename)
65 (let ((alist file-name-buffer-file-type-alist
)
67 (let ((case-fold-search t
))
68 (setq filename
(file-name-sans-versions filename
))
69 (while (and (not found
) alist
)
70 (if (string-match (car (car alist
)) filename
)
71 (setq found
(car alist
)))
72 (setq alist
(cdr alist
)))
75 ;; Silence compiler. Defined in src/buffer.c on DOS_NT.
76 (defvar default-buffer-file-type
)
78 ;; Don't check for untranslated file systems here.
79 (defun find-buffer-file-type (filename)
80 (let ((match (find-buffer-file-type-match filename
))
83 default-buffer-file-type
84 (setq code
(cdr match
))
85 (cond ((memq code
'(nil t
)) code
)
86 ((and (symbolp code
) (fboundp code
))
87 (funcall code filename
))))))
89 (setq-default buffer-file-coding-system
'undecided-dos
)
91 (defun find-buffer-file-type-coding-system (command)
92 "Choose a coding system for a file operation in COMMAND.
93 COMMAND is a list that specifies the operation, an I/O primitive, as its
94 CAR, and the arguments that might be given to that operation as its CDR.
95 If operation is `insert-file-contents', the coding system is chosen based
96 upon the filename (the CAR of the arguments beyond the operation), the contents
97 of `untranslated-filesystem-list' and `file-name-buffer-file-type-alist',
98 and whether the file exists:
100 If it matches in `untranslated-filesystem-list':
101 If the file exists: `undecided'
102 If the file does not exist: `undecided-unix'
103 If it matches in `file-name-buffer-file-type-alist':
104 If the match is t (for binary): `no-conversion'
105 If the match is nil (for dos-text): `undecided-dos'
107 If the file exists: `undecided'
108 If the file does not exist: default-buffer-file-coding-system
110 Note that the CAR of arguments to `insert-file-contents' operation could
111 be a cons cell of the form \(FILENAME . BUFFER\), where BUFFER is a buffer
112 into which the file's contents were already read, but not yet decoded.
114 If operation is `write-region', the coding system is chosen based upon
115 the value of `buffer-file-coding-system' and `buffer-file-type'. If
116 `buffer-file-coding-system' is non-nil, its value is used. If it is
117 nil and `buffer-file-type' is t, the coding system is `no-conversion'.
118 Otherwise, it is `undecided-dos'.
120 The two most common situations are when DOS and Unix files are read
121 and written, and their names do not match in
122 `untranslated-filesystem-list' and `file-name-buffer-file-type-alist'.
123 In these cases, the coding system initially will be `undecided'. As
124 the file is read in the DOS case, the coding system will be changed to
125 `undecided-dos' as CR/LFs are detected. As the file is read in the
126 Unix case, the coding system will be changed to `undecided-unix' as
127 LFs are detected. In both cases, `buffer-file-coding-system' will be
128 set to the appropriate coding system, and the value of
129 `buffer-file-coding-system' will be used when writing the file."
131 (let ((op (nth 0 command
))
133 (binary nil
) (text nil
)
134 (undecided nil
) (undecided-unix nil
))
135 (cond ((eq op
'insert-file-contents
)
136 (setq target
(nth 1 command
))
137 ;; If TARGET is a cons cell, it has the form (FILENAME . BUFFER),
138 ;; where BUFFER is a buffer into which the file was already read,
139 ;; but its contents were not yet decoded. (This form of the
140 ;; arguments is used, e.g., in arc-mode.el.) This function
141 ;; doesn't care about the contents, it only looks at the file's
142 ;; name, which is the CAR of the cons cell.
143 (if (consp target
) (setq target
(car target
)))
144 ;; First check for a file name that indicates
145 ;; it is truly binary.
146 (setq binary
(find-buffer-file-type target
))
148 ;; Next check for files that MUST use DOS eol conversion.
149 ((find-buffer-file-type-match target
)
151 ;; For any other existing file, decide based on contents.
152 ((file-exists-p target
)
154 ;; Next check for a non-DOS file system.
155 ((untranslated-file-p target
)
156 (setq undecided-unix t
)))
157 (cond (binary '(no-conversion . no-conversion
))
158 (text '(undecided-dos . undecided-dos
))
159 (undecided-unix '(undecided-unix . undecided-unix
))
160 (undecided '(undecided . undecided
))
161 (t (cons default-buffer-file-coding-system
162 default-buffer-file-coding-system
))))
163 ((eq op
'write-region
)
164 (if buffer-file-coding-system
165 (cons buffer-file-coding-system
166 buffer-file-coding-system
)
167 ;; Normally this is used only in a non-file-visiting
168 ;; buffer, because normally buffer-file-coding-system is non-nil
169 ;; in a file-visiting buffer.
171 '(no-conversion . no-conversion
)
172 '(undecided-dos . undecided-dos
)))))))
174 (modify-coding-system-alist 'file
"" 'find-buffer-file-type-coding-system
)
176 (defun find-file-binary (filename)
177 "Visit file FILENAME and treat it as binary."
178 (interactive "FFind file binary: ")
179 (let ((file-name-buffer-file-type-alist '(("" . t
))))
180 (find-file filename
)))
182 (defun find-file-text (filename)
183 "Visit file FILENAME and treat it as a text file."
184 (interactive "FFind file text: ")
185 (let ((file-name-buffer-file-type-alist '(("" . nil
))))
186 (find-file filename
)))
188 (defun find-file-not-found-set-buffer-file-coding-system ()
190 (set-buffer (current-buffer))
191 (let ((coding buffer-file-coding-system
))
192 ;; buffer-file-coding-system is already set by
193 ;; find-operation-coding-system, which was called from
194 ;; insert-file-contents. All that's left is to change
195 ;; the EOL conversion, if required by the user.
196 (when (and (null coding-system-for-read
)
197 (or inhibit-eol-conversion
198 (untranslated-file-p (buffer-file-name))))
199 (setq coding
(coding-system-change-eol-conversion coding
0))
200 (setq buffer-file-coding-system coding
))
201 (setq buffer-file-type
(eq buffer-file-coding-system
'no-conversion
)))))
203 ;;; To set the default coding system on new files.
204 (add-hook 'find-file-not-found-functions
205 'find-file-not-found-set-buffer-file-coding-system
)
207 ;;; To accomodate filesystems that do not require CR/LF translation.
208 (defvar untranslated-filesystem-list nil
209 "List of filesystems that require no CR/LF translation when reading
210 and writing files. Each filesystem in the list is a string naming
211 the directory prefix corresponding to the filesystem.")
213 (defun untranslated-canonical-name (filename)
214 "Return FILENAME in a canonicalized form for use with the functions
215 dealing with untranslated filesystems."
216 (if (memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin
))
217 ;; The canonical form for DOS/W32 is with A-Z downcased and all
218 ;; directory separators changed to directory-sep-char.
220 (setq name
(mapconcat
222 (if (and (<= ?A char
) (<= char ?Z
))
223 (char-to-string (+ (- char ?A
) ?a
))
224 (char-to-string char
)))
226 ;; Use expand-file-name to canonicalize directory separators, except
227 ;; with bare drive letters (which would have the cwd appended).
228 ;; Avoid expanding names that could trigger ange-ftp to prompt
229 ;; for passwords, though.
230 (if (or (string-match "^.:$" name
)
231 (string-match "^/[^/:]+:" name
))
233 (expand-file-name name
)))
236 (defun untranslated-file-p (filename)
237 "Return t if FILENAME is on a filesystem that does not require
238 CR/LF translation, and nil otherwise."
239 (let ((fs (untranslated-canonical-name filename
))
240 (ufs-list untranslated-filesystem-list
)
242 (while (and (not found
) ufs-list
)
243 (if (string-match (concat "^" (car ufs-list
)) fs
)
245 (setq ufs-list
(cdr ufs-list
))))
248 (defun add-untranslated-filesystem (filesystem)
249 "Add FILESYSTEM to the list of filesystems that do not require
250 CR/LF translation. FILESYSTEM is a string containing the directory
251 prefix corresponding to the filesystem. For example, for a Unix
252 filesystem mounted on drive Z:, FILESYSTEM could be \"Z:\"."
253 ;; We use "D", not "f", to avoid confusing the user: "f" prompts
254 ;; with a directory, but RET returns the current buffer's file, not
256 (interactive "DUntranslated file system: ")
257 (let ((fs (untranslated-canonical-name filesystem
)))
258 (if (member fs untranslated-filesystem-list
)
259 untranslated-filesystem-list
260 (setq untranslated-filesystem-list
261 (cons fs untranslated-filesystem-list
)))))
263 (defun remove-untranslated-filesystem (filesystem)
264 "Remove FILESYSTEM from the list of filesystems that do not require
265 CR/LF translation. FILESYSTEM is a string containing the directory
266 prefix corresponding to the filesystem. For example, for a Unix
267 filesystem mounted on drive Z:, FILESYSTEM could be \"Z:\"."
268 (interactive "fUntranslated file system: ")
269 (setq untranslated-filesystem-list
270 (delete (untranslated-canonical-name filesystem
)
271 untranslated-filesystem-list
)))
273 ;;; Support for printing under DOS/Windows, see lpr.el and ps-print.el.
275 (defvar direct-print-region-use-command-dot-com t
276 "*Control whether command.com is used to print on Windows 9x.")
278 ;; Function to actually send data to the printer port.
279 ;; Supports writing directly, and using various programs.
280 (defun direct-print-region-helper (printer
283 delete-text buf display
285 (let* (;; Ignore case when matching known external program names.
287 ;; Convert / to \ in printer name, for sake of external programs.
289 (if (stringp printer
)
290 (subst-char-in-string ?
/ ?
\\ printer
)
292 ;; Find a directory that is local, to work-around Windows bug.
294 (let ((safe-dirs (list "c:/" (getenv "windir") (getenv "TMPDIR"))))
295 (while (not (file-attributes (car safe-dirs
)))
296 (setq safe-dirs
(cdr safe-dirs
)))
299 (subst-char-in-string
302 (expand-file-name "EP" temporary-file-directory
))))
303 ;; capture output for diagnosis
304 (errbuf (list (get-buffer-create " *print-region-helper*") t
)))
305 ;; It seems that we must be careful about the directory name that
306 ;; gets added to the printer port name by write-region when using
307 ;; the standard "PRN" or "LPTx" ports, because the write can fail if
308 ;; the directory is on a network drive. The same is true when
309 ;; asking command.com to copy the file.
310 ;; No action is needed for UNC printer names, which is just as well
311 ;; because `expand-file-name' doesn't support UNC names on MS-DOS.
312 (if (and (stringp printer
) (not (string-match "^\\\\" printer
)))
314 (subst-char-in-string ?
/ ?
\\ (expand-file-name printer safe-dir
))))
315 ;; Handle known programs specially where necessary.
318 ;; nprint.exe is the standard print command on Netware
319 ((string-match "^nprint\\(\\.exe\\)?$" (file-name-nondirectory lpr-prog
))
320 (write-region start end tempfile nil
0)
321 (call-process lpr-prog nil errbuf nil
322 tempfile
(concat "P=" printer
)))
323 ;; print.exe is a standard command on NT
324 ((string-match "^print\\(\\.exe\\)?$" (file-name-nondirectory lpr-prog
))
325 ;; Be careful not to invoke print.exe on MS-DOS or Windows 9x
326 ;; though, because it is a TSR program there (hangs Emacs).
327 (or (and (eq system-type
'windows-nt
)
328 (null (getenv "winbootdir")))
329 (error "Printing via print.exe is not supported on MS-DOS or Windows 9x"))
330 ;; It seems that print.exe always appends a form-feed so we
331 ;; should make sure to omit the last FF in the data.
332 (if (and (> end start
)
333 (char-equal (char-before end
) ?\C-l
))
335 ;; cancel out annotate function for non-PS case
336 (let ((write-region-annotate-functions nil
))
337 (write-region start end tempfile nil
0))
338 (call-process lpr-prog nil errbuf nil
339 (concat "/D:" printer
) tempfile
))
340 ;; support lpr and similar programs for convenience, but
341 ;; supply an explicit filename because the NT version of lpr
342 ;; can't read from stdin.
343 ((> (length lpr-prog
) 0)
344 (write-region start end tempfile nil
0)
345 (setq rest
(append rest
(list tempfile
)))
346 (apply 'call-process lpr-prog nil errbuf nil rest
))
347 ;; Run command.com to access printer port on Windows 9x, unless
348 ;; we are supposed to append to an existing (non-empty) file,
349 ;; to work around a bug in Windows 9x that prevents Win32
350 ;; programs from accessing LPT ports reliably.
351 ((and (eq system-type
'windows-nt
)
352 (getenv "winbootdir")
353 ;; Allow cop-out so command.com isn't invoked
354 direct-print-region-use-command-dot-com
355 ;; file-attributes fails on LPT ports on Windows 9x but
356 ;; not on NT, so handle both cases for safety.
357 (eq (or (nth 7 (file-attributes printer
)) 0) 0))
358 (write-region start end tempfile nil
0)
359 (let ((w32-quote-process-args nil
))
360 (call-process "command.com" nil errbuf nil
"/c"
361 (format "copy /b %s %s" tempfile printer
))))
362 ;; write directly to the printer port
364 (write-region start end printer t
0)))
365 ;; ensure we remove the tempfile if created
366 (if (file-exists-p tempfile
)
367 (delete-file tempfile
)))))
369 (defvar printer-name
)
371 (declare-function default-printer-name
"w32fns.c")
373 (defun direct-print-region-function (start end
375 delete-text buf display
377 "DOS/Windows-specific function to print the region on a printer.
378 Writes the region to the device or file which is a value of
379 `printer-name' \(which see\), unless the value of `lpr-command'
380 indicates a specific program should be invoked."
382 ;; DOS printers need the lines to end with CR-LF pairs, so make
383 ;; sure it always happens that way, unless the buffer is binary.
384 (let* ((coding coding-system-for-write
)
386 (if (null coding
) 'undecided
(coding-system-base coding
)))
387 (eol-type (coding-system-eol-type coding-base
))
388 ;; Make each print-out eject the final page, but don't waste
389 ;; paper if the file ends with a form-feed already.
390 (write-region-annotate-functions
393 (if (not (char-equal (char-before end
) ?\C-l
))
395 write-region-annotate-functions
))
396 (printer (or (and (boundp 'dos-printer
)
397 (stringp (symbol-value 'dos-printer
))
398 (symbol-value 'dos-printer
))
400 (default-printer-name))))
401 (or (eq coding-system-for-write
'no-conversion
)
402 (setq coding-system-for-write
403 (aref eol-type
1))) ; force conversion to DOS EOLs
404 (direct-print-region-helper printer start end lpr-prog
405 delete-text buf display rest
)))
407 (defvar print-region-function
)
408 (defvar lpr-headers-switches
)
409 (setq print-region-function
'direct-print-region-function
)
411 ;; Set this to nil if you have a port of the `pr' program
412 ;; (e.g., from GNU Textutils), or if you have an `lpr'
413 ;; program (see above) that can print page headers.
414 ;; If `lpr-headers-switches' is non-nil (the default) and
415 ;; `print-region-function' is set to `dos-print-region-function',
416 ;; then requests to print page headers will be silently
417 ;; ignored, and `print-buffer' and `print-region' produce
418 ;; the same output as `lpr-buffer' and `lpr-region', accordingly.
419 (setq lpr-headers-switches
"(page headers are not supported)")
421 (defvar ps-printer-name
)
423 (defun direct-ps-print-region-function (start end
425 delete-text buf display
427 "DOS/Windows-specific function to print the region on a PostScript printer.
428 Writes the region to the device or file which is a value of
429 `ps-printer-name' \(which see\), unless the value of `ps-lpr-command'
430 indicates a specific program should be invoked."
432 (let ((printer (or (and (boundp 'dos-ps-printer
)
433 (stringp (symbol-value 'dos-ps-printer
))
434 (symbol-value 'dos-ps-printer
))
436 (default-printer-name))))
437 (direct-print-region-helper printer start end lpr-prog
438 delete-text buf display rest
)))
440 (defvar ps-print-region-function
)
441 (setq ps-print-region-function
'direct-ps-print-region-function
)
443 ;(setq ps-lpr-command "gs")
445 ;(setq ps-lpr-switches '("-q" "-dNOPAUSE" "-sDEVICE=epson" "-r240x60"
446 ; "-sOutputFile=LPT1"))
450 ;; arch-tag: dcfefdd2-362f-4fbc-9141-9634f5f4d6a7
451 ;;; dos-w32.el ends here