1 /* Process support for GNU Emacs on the Microsoft Windows API.
3 Copyright (C) 1992, 1995, 1999-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
7 GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
12 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
21 Drew Bliss Oct 14, 1993
22 Adapted from alarm.c by Tim Fleehart
25 #include <mingw_time.h>
37 /* must include CRT headers *before* config.h */
47 #if defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__MINGW64__)
48 /* This definition is missing from mingw.org headers, but not MinGW64
50 extern BOOL WINAPI
IsValidLocale (LCID
, DWORD
);
53 #ifdef HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET
60 #include "w32common.h"
65 #include "syssignal.h"
67 #include "dispextern.h" /* for xstrcasecmp */
70 #define RVA_TO_PTR(var,section,filedata) \
71 ((void *)((section)->PointerToRawData \
72 + ((DWORD_PTR)(var) - (section)->VirtualAddress) \
73 + (filedata).file_base))
75 /* Signal handlers...SIG_DFL == 0 so this is initialized correctly. */
76 static signal_handler sig_handlers
[NSIG
];
78 static sigset_t sig_mask
;
80 static CRITICAL_SECTION crit_sig
;
82 /* Improve on the CRT 'signal' implementation so that we could record
83 the SIGCHLD handler and fake interval timers. */
85 sys_signal (int sig
, signal_handler handler
)
89 /* SIGCHLD is needed for supporting subprocesses, see sys_kill
90 below. SIGALRM and SIGPROF are used by setitimer. All the
91 others are the only ones supported by the MS runtime. */
92 if (!(sig
== SIGCHLD
|| sig
== SIGSEGV
|| sig
== SIGILL
93 || sig
== SIGFPE
|| sig
== SIGABRT
|| sig
== SIGTERM
94 || sig
== SIGALRM
|| sig
== SIGPROF
))
99 old
= sig_handlers
[sig
];
100 /* SIGABRT is treated specially because w32.c installs term_ntproc
101 as its handler, so we don't want to override that afterwards.
102 Aborting Emacs works specially anyway: either by calling
103 emacs_abort directly or through terminate_due_to_signal, which
104 calls emacs_abort through emacs_raise. */
105 if (!(sig
== SIGABRT
&& old
== term_ntproc
))
107 sig_handlers
[sig
] = handler
;
108 if (!(sig
== SIGCHLD
|| sig
== SIGALRM
|| sig
== SIGPROF
))
109 signal (sig
, handler
);
114 /* Emulate sigaction. */
116 sigaction (int sig
, const struct sigaction
*act
, struct sigaction
*oact
)
118 signal_handler old
= SIG_DFL
;
122 old
= sys_signal (sig
, act
->sa_handler
);
124 old
= sig_handlers
[sig
];
133 oact
->sa_handler
= old
;
135 oact
->sa_mask
= empty_mask
;
140 /* Emulate signal sets and blocking of signals used by timers. */
143 sigemptyset (sigset_t
*set
)
150 sigaddset (sigset_t
*set
, int signo
)
157 if (signo
< 0 || signo
>= NSIG
)
163 *set
|= (1U << signo
);
169 sigfillset (sigset_t
*set
)
182 sigprocmask (int how
, const sigset_t
*set
, sigset_t
*oset
)
184 if (!(how
== SIG_BLOCK
|| how
== SIG_UNBLOCK
|| how
== SIG_SETMASK
))
205 /* FIXME: Catch signals that are blocked and reissue them when
206 they are unblocked. Important for SIGALRM and SIGPROF only. */
215 pthread_sigmask (int how
, const sigset_t
*set
, sigset_t
*oset
)
217 if (sigprocmask (how
, set
, oset
) == -1)
223 sigismember (const sigset_t
*set
, int signo
)
225 if (signo
< 0 || signo
>= NSIG
)
230 if (signo
> sizeof (*set
) * BITS_PER_CHAR
)
233 return (*set
& (1U << signo
)) != 0;
249 setpgid (pid_t pid
, pid_t pgid
)
260 /* Emulations of interval timers.
262 Limitations: only ITIMER_REAL and ITIMER_PROF are supported.
264 Implementation: a separate thread is started for each timer type,
265 the thread calls the appropriate signal handler when the timer
266 expires, after stopping the thread which installed the timer. */
269 volatile ULONGLONG expire
;
270 volatile ULONGLONG reload
;
271 volatile int terminate
;
273 HANDLE caller_thread
;
277 static ULONGLONG ticks_now
;
278 static struct itimer_data real_itimer
, prof_itimer
;
279 static ULONGLONG clocks_min
;
280 /* If non-zero, itimers are disabled. Used during shutdown, when we
281 delete the critical sections used by the timer threads. */
282 static int disable_itimers
;
284 static CRITICAL_SECTION crit_real
, crit_prof
;
286 /* GetThreadTimes is not available on Windows 9X and possibly also on 2K. */
287 typedef BOOL (WINAPI
*GetThreadTimes_Proc
) (
289 LPFILETIME lpCreationTime
,
290 LPFILETIME lpExitTime
,
291 LPFILETIME lpKernelTime
,
292 LPFILETIME lpUserTime
);
294 static GetThreadTimes_Proc s_pfn_Get_Thread_Times
;
296 #define MAX_SINGLE_SLEEP 30
297 #define TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC 1000
299 /* Return a suitable time value, in 1-ms units, for THREAD, a handle
300 to a thread. If THREAD is NULL or an invalid handle, return the
301 current wall-clock time since January 1, 1601 (UTC). Otherwise,
302 return the sum of kernel and user times used by THREAD since it was
303 created, plus its creation time. */
305 w32_get_timer_time (HANDLE thread
)
308 int use_system_time
= 1;
309 /* The functions below return times in 100-ns units. */
310 const int tscale
= 10 * TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
;
312 if (thread
&& thread
!= INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE
313 && s_pfn_Get_Thread_Times
!= NULL
)
315 FILETIME creation_ftime
, exit_ftime
, kernel_ftime
, user_ftime
;
316 ULARGE_INTEGER temp_creation
, temp_kernel
, temp_user
;
318 if (s_pfn_Get_Thread_Times (thread
, &creation_ftime
, &exit_ftime
,
319 &kernel_ftime
, &user_ftime
))
322 temp_creation
.LowPart
= creation_ftime
.dwLowDateTime
;
323 temp_creation
.HighPart
= creation_ftime
.dwHighDateTime
;
324 temp_kernel
.LowPart
= kernel_ftime
.dwLowDateTime
;
325 temp_kernel
.HighPart
= kernel_ftime
.dwHighDateTime
;
326 temp_user
.LowPart
= user_ftime
.dwLowDateTime
;
327 temp_user
.HighPart
= user_ftime
.dwHighDateTime
;
329 temp_creation
.QuadPart
/ tscale
+ temp_kernel
.QuadPart
/ tscale
330 + temp_user
.QuadPart
/ tscale
;
333 DebPrint (("GetThreadTimes failed with error code %lu\n",
339 FILETIME current_ftime
;
342 GetSystemTimeAsFileTime (¤t_ftime
);
344 temp
.LowPart
= current_ftime
.dwLowDateTime
;
345 temp
.HighPart
= current_ftime
.dwHighDateTime
;
347 retval
= temp
.QuadPart
/ tscale
;
353 /* Thread function for a timer thread. */
355 timer_loop (LPVOID arg
)
357 struct itimer_data
*itimer
= (struct itimer_data
*)arg
;
358 int which
= itimer
->type
;
359 int sig
= (which
== ITIMER_REAL
) ? SIGALRM
: SIGPROF
;
360 CRITICAL_SECTION
*crit
= (which
== ITIMER_REAL
) ? &crit_real
: &crit_prof
;
361 const DWORD max_sleep
= MAX_SINGLE_SLEEP
* 1000 / TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
;
362 HANDLE hth
= (which
== ITIMER_REAL
) ? NULL
: itimer
->caller_thread
;
367 signal_handler handler
;
368 ULONGLONG now
, expire
, reload
;
370 /* Load new values if requested by setitimer. */
371 EnterCriticalSection (crit
);
372 expire
= itimer
->expire
;
373 reload
= itimer
->reload
;
374 LeaveCriticalSection (crit
);
375 if (itimer
->terminate
)
385 if (expire
> (now
= w32_get_timer_time (hth
)))
386 sleep_time
= expire
- now
;
389 /* Don't sleep too long at a time, to be able to see the
390 termination flag without too long a delay. */
391 while (sleep_time
> max_sleep
)
393 if (itimer
->terminate
)
396 EnterCriticalSection (crit
);
397 expire
= itimer
->expire
;
398 LeaveCriticalSection (crit
);
400 (expire
> (now
= w32_get_timer_time (hth
))) ? expire
- now
: 0;
402 if (itimer
->terminate
)
406 Sleep (sleep_time
* 1000 / TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
);
407 /* Always sleep past the expiration time, to make sure we
408 never call the handler _before_ the expiration time,
409 always slightly after it. Sleep(5) makes sure we don't
410 hog the CPU by calling 'w32_get_timer_time' with high
411 frequency, and also let other threads work. */
412 while (w32_get_timer_time (hth
) < expire
)
416 EnterCriticalSection (crit
);
417 expire
= itimer
->expire
;
418 LeaveCriticalSection (crit
);
423 handler
= sig_handlers
[sig
];
424 if (!(handler
== SIG_DFL
|| handler
== SIG_IGN
|| handler
== SIG_ERR
)
425 /* FIXME: Don't ignore masked signals. Instead, record that
426 they happened and reissue them when the signal is
428 && !sigismember (&sig_mask
, sig
)
429 /* Simulate masking of SIGALRM and SIGPROF when processing
431 && !fatal_error_in_progress
432 && itimer
->caller_thread
)
434 /* Simulate a signal delivered to the thread which installed
435 the timer, by suspending that thread while the handler
437 HANDLE th
= itimer
->caller_thread
;
438 DWORD result
= SuspendThread (th
);
440 if (result
== (DWORD
)-1)
447 /* Update expiration time and loop. */
448 EnterCriticalSection (crit
);
449 expire
= itimer
->expire
;
452 LeaveCriticalSection (crit
);
455 reload
= itimer
->reload
;
458 now
= w32_get_timer_time (hth
);
461 ULONGLONG lag
= now
- expire
;
463 /* If we missed some opportunities (presumably while
464 sleeping or while the signal handler ran), skip
467 expire
= now
- (lag
% reload
);
473 expire
= 0; /* become idle */
474 itimer
->expire
= expire
;
475 LeaveCriticalSection (crit
);
481 stop_timer_thread (int which
)
483 struct itimer_data
*itimer
=
484 (which
== ITIMER_REAL
) ? &real_itimer
: &prof_itimer
;
486 DWORD err
, exit_code
= 255;
489 /* Signal the thread that it should terminate. */
490 itimer
->terminate
= 1;
492 if (itimer
->timer_thread
== NULL
)
495 /* Wait for the timer thread to terminate voluntarily, then kill it
496 if it doesn't. This loop waits twice more than the maximum
497 amount of time a timer thread sleeps, see above. */
498 for (i
= 0; i
< MAX_SINGLE_SLEEP
/ 5; i
++)
500 if (!((status
= GetExitCodeThread (itimer
->timer_thread
, &exit_code
))
501 && exit_code
== STILL_ACTIVE
))
505 if ((status
== FALSE
&& (err
= GetLastError ()) == ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE
)
506 || exit_code
== STILL_ACTIVE
)
508 if (!(status
== FALSE
&& err
== ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE
))
509 TerminateThread (itimer
->timer_thread
, 0);
513 CloseHandle (itimer
->timer_thread
);
514 itimer
->timer_thread
= NULL
;
515 if (itimer
->caller_thread
)
517 CloseHandle (itimer
->caller_thread
);
518 itimer
->caller_thread
= NULL
;
522 /* This is called at shutdown time from term_ntproc. */
526 if (real_itimer
.timer_thread
)
527 stop_timer_thread (ITIMER_REAL
);
528 if (prof_itimer
.timer_thread
)
529 stop_timer_thread (ITIMER_PROF
);
531 /* We are going to delete the critical sections, so timers cannot
535 DeleteCriticalSection (&crit_real
);
536 DeleteCriticalSection (&crit_prof
);
537 DeleteCriticalSection (&crit_sig
);
540 /* This is called at initialization time from init_ntproc. */
544 /* GetThreadTimes is not available on all versions of Windows, so
545 need to probe for its availability dynamically, and call it
546 through a pointer. */
547 s_pfn_Get_Thread_Times
= NULL
; /* in case dumped Emacs comes with a value */
548 if (os_subtype
!= OS_9X
)
549 s_pfn_Get_Thread_Times
=
550 (GetThreadTimes_Proc
)GetProcAddress (GetModuleHandle ("kernel32.dll"),
553 /* Make sure we start with zeroed out itimer structures, since
554 dumping may have left there traces of threads long dead. */
555 memset (&real_itimer
, 0, sizeof real_itimer
);
556 memset (&prof_itimer
, 0, sizeof prof_itimer
);
558 InitializeCriticalSection (&crit_real
);
559 InitializeCriticalSection (&crit_prof
);
560 InitializeCriticalSection (&crit_sig
);
566 start_timer_thread (int which
)
568 DWORD exit_code
, tid
;
570 struct itimer_data
*itimer
=
571 (which
== ITIMER_REAL
) ? &real_itimer
: &prof_itimer
;
573 if (itimer
->timer_thread
574 && GetExitCodeThread (itimer
->timer_thread
, &exit_code
)
575 && exit_code
== STILL_ACTIVE
)
578 /* Clean up after possibly exited thread. */
579 if (itimer
->timer_thread
)
581 CloseHandle (itimer
->timer_thread
);
582 itimer
->timer_thread
= NULL
;
584 if (itimer
->caller_thread
)
586 CloseHandle (itimer
->caller_thread
);
587 itimer
->caller_thread
= NULL
;
590 /* Start a new thread. */
591 if (!DuplicateHandle (GetCurrentProcess (), GetCurrentThread (),
592 GetCurrentProcess (), &th
, 0, FALSE
,
593 DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS
))
598 itimer
->terminate
= 0;
599 itimer
->type
= which
;
600 itimer
->caller_thread
= th
;
601 /* Request that no more than 64KB of stack be reserved for this
602 thread, to avoid reserving too much memory, which would get in
603 the way of threads we start to wait for subprocesses. See also
605 itimer
->timer_thread
= CreateThread (NULL
, 64 * 1024, timer_loop
,
606 (void *)itimer
, 0x00010000, &tid
);
608 if (!itimer
->timer_thread
)
610 CloseHandle (itimer
->caller_thread
);
611 itimer
->caller_thread
= NULL
;
616 /* This is needed to make sure that the timer thread running for
617 profiling gets CPU as soon as the Sleep call terminates. */
618 if (which
== ITIMER_PROF
)
619 SetThreadPriority (itimer
->timer_thread
, THREAD_PRIORITY_TIME_CRITICAL
);
624 /* Most of the code of getitimer and setitimer (but not of their
625 subroutines) was shamelessly stolen from itimer.c in the DJGPP
626 library, see www.delorie.com/djgpp. */
628 getitimer (int which
, struct itimerval
*value
)
630 volatile ULONGLONG
*t_expire
;
631 volatile ULONGLONG
*t_reload
;
632 ULONGLONG expire
, reload
;
634 CRITICAL_SECTION
*crit
;
635 struct itimer_data
*itimer
;
646 if (which
!= ITIMER_REAL
&& which
!= ITIMER_PROF
)
652 itimer
= (which
== ITIMER_REAL
) ? &real_itimer
: &prof_itimer
;
654 ticks_now
= w32_get_timer_time ((which
== ITIMER_REAL
)
656 : GetCurrentThread ());
658 t_expire
= &itimer
->expire
;
659 t_reload
= &itimer
->reload
;
660 crit
= (which
== ITIMER_REAL
) ? &crit_real
: &crit_prof
;
662 EnterCriticalSection (crit
);
665 LeaveCriticalSection (crit
);
670 value
->it_value
.tv_sec
= expire
/ TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
;
672 (expire
% TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
) * (__int64
)1000000 / TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
;
673 value
->it_value
.tv_usec
= usecs
;
674 value
->it_interval
.tv_sec
= reload
/ TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
;
676 (reload
% TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
) * (__int64
)1000000 / TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
;
677 value
->it_interval
.tv_usec
= usecs
;
683 setitimer(int which
, struct itimerval
*value
, struct itimerval
*ovalue
)
685 volatile ULONGLONG
*t_expire
, *t_reload
;
686 ULONGLONG expire
, reload
, expire_old
, reload_old
;
688 CRITICAL_SECTION
*crit
;
689 struct itimerval tem
, *ptem
;
694 /* Posix systems expect timer values smaller than the resolution of
695 the system clock be rounded up to the clock resolution. First
696 time we are called, measure the clock tick resolution. */
701 for (t1
= w32_get_timer_time (NULL
);
702 (t2
= w32_get_timer_time (NULL
)) == t1
; )
704 clocks_min
= t2
- t1
;
712 if (getitimer (which
, ptem
)) /* also sets ticks_now */
713 return -1; /* errno already set */
716 (which
== ITIMER_REAL
) ? &real_itimer
.expire
: &prof_itimer
.expire
;
718 (which
== ITIMER_REAL
) ? &real_itimer
.reload
: &prof_itimer
.reload
;
720 crit
= (which
== ITIMER_REAL
) ? &crit_real
: &crit_prof
;
723 || (value
->it_value
.tv_sec
== 0 && value
->it_value
.tv_usec
== 0))
725 EnterCriticalSection (crit
);
726 /* Disable the timer. */
729 LeaveCriticalSection (crit
);
733 reload
= value
->it_interval
.tv_sec
* TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
;
735 usecs
= value
->it_interval
.tv_usec
;
736 if (value
->it_interval
.tv_sec
== 0
737 && usecs
&& usecs
* TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
< clocks_min
* 1000000)
741 usecs
*= TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
;
742 reload
+= usecs
/ 1000000;
745 expire
= value
->it_value
.tv_sec
* TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
;
746 usecs
= value
->it_value
.tv_usec
;
747 if (value
->it_value
.tv_sec
== 0
748 && usecs
* TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
< clocks_min
* 1000000)
752 usecs
*= TIMER_TICKS_PER_SEC
;
753 expire
+= usecs
/ 1000000;
758 EnterCriticalSection (crit
);
759 expire_old
= *t_expire
;
760 reload_old
= *t_reload
;
761 if (!(expire
== expire_old
&& reload
== reload_old
))
766 LeaveCriticalSection (crit
);
768 return start_timer_thread (which
);
774 #ifdef HAVE_SETITIMER
775 struct itimerval new_values
, old_values
;
777 new_values
.it_value
.tv_sec
= seconds
;
778 new_values
.it_value
.tv_usec
= 0;
779 new_values
.it_interval
.tv_sec
= new_values
.it_interval
.tv_usec
= 0;
781 if (setitimer (ITIMER_REAL
, &new_values
, &old_values
) < 0)
783 return old_values
.it_value
.tv_sec
;
791 /* Here's an overview of how support for subprocesses and
792 network/serial streams is implemented on MS-Windows.
794 The management of both subprocesses and network/serial streams
795 circles around the child_procs[] array, which can record up to the
796 grand total of MAX_CHILDREN (= 32) of these. (The reasons for the
797 32 limitation will become clear below.) Each member of
798 child_procs[] is a child_process structure, defined on w32.h.
800 A related data structure is the fd_info[] array, which holds twice
801 as many members, 64, and records the information about file
802 descriptors used for communicating with subprocesses and
803 network/serial devices. Each member of the array is the filedesc
804 structure, which records the Windows handle for communications,
805 such as the read end of the pipe to a subprocess, a socket handle,
808 Both these arrays reference each other: there's a member of
809 child_process structure that records the corresponding file
810 descriptor, and there's a member of filedesc structure that holds a
811 pointer to the corresponding child_process.
813 Whenever Emacs starts a subprocess or opens a network/serial
814 stream, the function new_child is called to prepare a new
815 child_process structure. new_child looks for the first vacant slot
816 in the child_procs[] array, initializes it, and starts a "reader
817 thread" that will watch the output of the subprocess/stream and its
818 status. (If no vacant slot can be found, new_child returns a
819 failure indication to its caller, and the higher-level Emacs
820 primitive that called it will then fail with EMFILE or EAGAIN.)
822 The reader thread started by new_child communicates with the main
823 (a.k.a. "Lisp") thread via two event objects and a status, all of
824 them recorded by the members of the child_process structure in
825 child_procs[]. The event objects serve as semaphores between the
826 reader thread and the 'pselect' emulation in sys_select, as follows:
828 . Initially, the reader thread is waiting for the char_consumed
829 event to become signaled by sys_select, which is an indication
830 for the reader thread to go ahead and try reading more stuff
831 from the subprocess/stream.
833 . The reader thread then attempts to read by calling a
834 blocking-read function. When the read call returns, either
835 successfully or with some failure indication, the reader thread
836 updates the status of the read accordingly, and signals the 2nd
837 event object, char_avail, on whose handle sys_select is
838 waiting. This tells sys_select that the file descriptor
839 allocated for the subprocess or the the stream is ready to be
842 When the subprocess exits or the network/serial stream is closed,
843 the reader thread sets the status accordingly and exits. It also
844 exits when the main thread sets the status to STATUS_READ_ERROR
845 and/or the char_avail and char_consumed event handles become NULL;
846 this is how delete_child, called by Emacs when a subprocess or a
847 stream is terminated, terminates the reader thread as part of
848 deleting the child_process object.
850 The sys_select function emulates the Posix 'pselect' function; it
851 is needed because the Windows 'select' function supports only
852 network sockets, while Emacs expects 'pselect' to work for any file
853 descriptor, including pipes and serial streams.
855 When sys_select is called, it uses the information in fd_info[]
856 array to convert the file descriptors which it was asked to watch
857 into Windows handles. In general, the handle to watch is the
858 handle of the char_avail event of the child_process structure that
859 corresponds to the file descriptor. In addition, for subprocesses,
860 sys_select watches one more handle: the handle for the subprocess,
861 so that it could emulate the SIGCHLD signal when the subprocess
864 If file descriptor zero (stdin) doesn't have its bit set in the
865 'rfds' argument to sys_select, the function always watches for
866 keyboard interrupts, to be able to interrupt the wait and return
867 when the user presses C-g.
869 Having collected the handles to watch, sys_select calls
870 WaitForMultipleObjects to wait for any one of them to become
871 signaled. Since WaitForMultipleObjects can only watch up to 64
872 handles, Emacs on Windows is limited to maximum 32 child_process
873 objects (since a subprocess consumes 2 handles to be watched, see
876 When any of the handles become signaled, sys_select does whatever
877 is appropriate for the corresponding child_process object:
879 . If it's a handle to the char_avail event, sys_select marks the
880 corresponding bit in 'rfds', and Emacs will then read from that
883 . If it's a handle to the process, sys_select calls the SIGCHLD
884 handler, to inform Emacs of the fact that the subprocess
887 The waitpid emulation works very similar to sys_select, except that
888 it only watches handles of subprocesses, and doesn't synchronize
889 with the reader thread.
891 Because socket descriptors on Windows are handles, while Emacs
892 expects them to be file descriptors, all low-level I/O functions,
893 such as 'read' and 'write', and all socket operations, like
894 'connect', 'recvfrom', 'accept', etc., are redirected to the
895 corresponding 'sys_*' functions, which must convert a file
896 descriptor to a handle using the fd_info[] array, and then invoke
897 the corresponding Windows API on the handle. Most of these
898 redirected 'sys_*' functions are implemented on w32.c.
900 When the file descriptor was produced by functions such as 'open',
901 the corresponding handle is obtained by calling _get_osfhandle. To
902 produce a file descriptor for a socket handle, which has no file
903 descriptor as far as Windows is concerned, the function
904 socket_to_fd opens the null device; the resulting file descriptor
905 will never be used directly in any I/O API, but serves as an index
906 into the fd_info[] array, where the socket handle is stored. The
907 SOCK_HANDLE macro retrieves the handle when given the file
910 The function sys_kill emulates the Posix 'kill' functionality to
911 terminate other processes. It does that by attaching to the
912 foreground window of the process and sending a Ctrl-C or Ctrl-BREAK
913 signal to the process; if that doesn't work, then it calls
914 TerminateProcess to forcibly terminate the process. Note that this
915 only terminates the immediate process whose PID was passed to
916 sys_kill; it doesn't terminate the child processes of that process.
917 This means, for example, that an Emacs subprocess run through a
918 shell might not be killed, because sys_kill will only terminate the
919 shell. (In practice, however, such problems are very rare.) */
921 /* Defined in <process.h> which conflicts with the local copy */
924 /* Child process management list. */
925 int child_proc_count
= 0;
926 child_process child_procs
[ MAX_CHILDREN
];
928 static DWORD WINAPI
reader_thread (void *arg
);
930 /* Find an unused process slot. */
937 for (cp
= child_procs
+ (child_proc_count
-1); cp
>= child_procs
; cp
--)
938 if (!CHILD_ACTIVE (cp
) && cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
== NULL
)
940 if (child_proc_count
== MAX_CHILDREN
)
943 child_process
*dead_cp
= NULL
;
945 DebPrint (("new_child: No vacant slots, looking for dead processes\n"));
946 for (cp
= child_procs
+ (child_proc_count
-1); cp
>= child_procs
; cp
--)
947 if (!CHILD_ACTIVE (cp
) && cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
)
951 if (!GetExitCodeProcess (cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
, &status
))
953 DebPrint (("new_child.GetExitCodeProcess: error %lu for PID %lu\n",
954 GetLastError (), cp
->procinfo
.dwProcessId
));
955 status
= STILL_ACTIVE
;
957 if (status
!= STILL_ACTIVE
958 || WaitForSingleObject (cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
, 0) == WAIT_OBJECT_0
)
960 DebPrint (("new_child: Freeing slot of dead process %d, fd %d\n",
961 cp
->procinfo
.dwProcessId
, cp
->fd
));
962 CloseHandle (cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
);
963 cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
= NULL
;
964 CloseHandle (cp
->procinfo
.hThread
);
965 cp
->procinfo
.hThread
= NULL
;
966 /* Free up to 2 dead slots at a time, so that if we
967 have a lot of them, they will eventually all be
968 freed when the tornado ends. */
982 if (child_proc_count
== MAX_CHILDREN
)
984 cp
= &child_procs
[child_proc_count
++];
987 /* Last opportunity to avoid leaking handles before we forget them
989 if (cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
)
990 CloseHandle (cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
);
991 if (cp
->procinfo
.hThread
)
992 CloseHandle (cp
->procinfo
.hThread
);
993 memset (cp
, 0, sizeof (*cp
));
996 cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
= NULL
;
997 cp
->status
= STATUS_READ_ERROR
;
999 /* use manual reset event so that select() will function properly */
1000 cp
->char_avail
= CreateEvent (NULL
, TRUE
, FALSE
, NULL
);
1003 cp
->char_consumed
= CreateEvent (NULL
, FALSE
, FALSE
, NULL
);
1004 if (cp
->char_consumed
)
1006 /* The 0x00010000 flag is STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVATION.
1007 It means that the 64K stack we are requesting in the 2nd
1008 argument is how much memory should be reserved for the
1009 stack. If we don't use this flag, the memory requested
1010 by the 2nd argument is the amount actually _committed_,
1011 but Windows reserves 8MB of memory for each thread's
1012 stack. (The 8MB figure comes from the -stack
1013 command-line argument we pass to the linker when building
1014 Emacs, but that's because we need a large stack for
1015 Emacs's main thread.) Since we request 2GB of reserved
1016 memory at startup (see w32heap.c), which is close to the
1017 maximum memory available for a 32-bit process on Windows,
1018 the 8MB reservation for each thread causes failures in
1019 starting subprocesses, because we create a thread running
1020 reader_thread for each subprocess. As 8MB of stack is
1021 way too much for reader_thread, forcing Windows to
1022 reserve less wins the day. */
1023 cp
->thrd
= CreateThread (NULL
, 64 * 1024, reader_thread
, cp
,
1034 delete_child (child_process
*cp
)
1038 /* Should not be deleting a child that is still needed. */
1039 for (i
= 0; i
< MAXDESC
; i
++)
1040 if (fd_info
[i
].cp
== cp
)
1043 if (!CHILD_ACTIVE (cp
) && cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
== NULL
)
1046 /* reap thread if necessary */
1051 if (GetExitCodeThread (cp
->thrd
, &rc
) && rc
== STILL_ACTIVE
)
1053 /* let the thread exit cleanly if possible */
1054 cp
->status
= STATUS_READ_ERROR
;
1055 SetEvent (cp
->char_consumed
);
1057 /* We used to forcibly terminate the thread here, but it
1058 is normally unnecessary, and in abnormal cases, the worst that
1059 will happen is we have an extra idle thread hanging around
1060 waiting for the zombie process. */
1061 if (WaitForSingleObject (cp
->thrd
, 1000) != WAIT_OBJECT_0
)
1063 DebPrint (("delete_child.WaitForSingleObject (thread) failed "
1064 "with %lu for fd %ld\n", GetLastError (), cp
->fd
));
1065 TerminateThread (cp
->thrd
, 0);
1069 CloseHandle (cp
->thrd
);
1074 CloseHandle (cp
->char_avail
);
1075 cp
->char_avail
= NULL
;
1077 if (cp
->char_consumed
)
1079 CloseHandle (cp
->char_consumed
);
1080 cp
->char_consumed
= NULL
;
1083 /* update child_proc_count (highest numbered slot in use plus one) */
1084 if (cp
== child_procs
+ child_proc_count
- 1)
1086 for (i
= child_proc_count
-1; i
>= 0; i
--)
1087 if (CHILD_ACTIVE (&child_procs
[i
])
1088 || child_procs
[i
].procinfo
.hProcess
!= NULL
)
1090 child_proc_count
= i
+ 1;
1095 child_proc_count
= 0;
1098 /* Find a child by pid. */
1099 static child_process
*
1100 find_child_pid (DWORD pid
)
1104 for (cp
= child_procs
+ (child_proc_count
-1); cp
>= child_procs
; cp
--)
1105 if ((CHILD_ACTIVE (cp
) || cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
!= NULL
)
1112 release_listen_threads (void)
1116 for (i
= child_proc_count
- 1; i
>= 0; i
--)
1118 if (CHILD_ACTIVE (&child_procs
[i
])
1119 && (fd_info
[child_procs
[i
].fd
].flags
& FILE_LISTEN
))
1120 child_procs
[i
].status
= STATUS_READ_ERROR
;
1124 /* Thread proc for child process and socket reader threads. Each thread
1125 is normally blocked until woken by select() to check for input by
1126 reading one char. When the read completes, char_avail is signaled
1127 to wake up the select emulator and the thread blocks itself again. */
1129 reader_thread (void *arg
)
1134 cp
= (child_process
*)arg
;
1136 /* We have to wait for the go-ahead before we can start */
1138 || WaitForSingleObject (cp
->char_consumed
, INFINITE
) != WAIT_OBJECT_0
1146 if (cp
->fd
>= 0 && (fd_info
[cp
->fd
].flags
& FILE_CONNECT
) != 0)
1147 rc
= _sys_wait_connect (cp
->fd
);
1148 else if (cp
->fd
>= 0 && (fd_info
[cp
->fd
].flags
& FILE_LISTEN
) != 0)
1149 rc
= _sys_wait_accept (cp
->fd
);
1151 rc
= _sys_read_ahead (cp
->fd
);
1153 /* Don't bother waiting for the event if we already have been
1154 told to exit by delete_child. */
1155 if (cp
->status
== STATUS_READ_ERROR
|| !cp
->char_avail
)
1158 /* The name char_avail is a misnomer - it really just means the
1159 read-ahead has completed, whether successfully or not. */
1160 if (!SetEvent (cp
->char_avail
))
1162 DebPrint (("reader_thread.SetEvent(0x%x) failed with %lu for fd %ld (PID %d)\n",
1163 (DWORD_PTR
)cp
->char_avail
, GetLastError (),
1168 if (rc
== STATUS_READ_ERROR
|| rc
== STATUS_CONNECT_FAILED
)
1171 /* If the read died, the child has died so let the thread die */
1172 if (rc
== STATUS_READ_FAILED
)
1175 /* Don't bother waiting for the acknowledge if we already have
1176 been told to exit by delete_child. */
1177 if (cp
->status
== STATUS_READ_ERROR
|| !cp
->char_consumed
)
1180 /* Wait until our input is acknowledged before reading again */
1181 if (WaitForSingleObject (cp
->char_consumed
, INFINITE
) != WAIT_OBJECT_0
)
1183 DebPrint (("reader_thread.WaitForSingleObject failed with "
1184 "%lu for fd %ld\n", GetLastError (), cp
->fd
));
1187 /* delete_child sets status to STATUS_READ_ERROR when it wants
1189 if (cp
->status
== STATUS_READ_ERROR
)
1195 /* To avoid Emacs changing directory, we just record here the
1196 directory the new process should start in. This is set just before
1197 calling sys_spawnve, and is not generally valid at any other time.
1198 Note that this directory's name is UTF-8 encoded. */
1199 static char * process_dir
;
1202 create_child (char *exe
, char *cmdline
, char *env
, int is_gui_app
,
1203 pid_t
* pPid
, child_process
*cp
)
1206 SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES sec_attrs
;
1208 SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR sec_desc
;
1211 char dir
[ MAX_PATH
];
1215 if (cp
== NULL
) emacs_abort ();
1217 memset (&start
, 0, sizeof (start
));
1218 start
.cb
= sizeof (start
);
1221 if (NILP (Vw32_start_process_show_window
) && !is_gui_app
)
1222 start
.dwFlags
= STARTF_USESTDHANDLES
| STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW
;
1224 start
.dwFlags
= STARTF_USESTDHANDLES
;
1225 start
.wShowWindow
= SW_HIDE
;
1227 start
.hStdInput
= GetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE
);
1228 start
.hStdOutput
= GetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE
);
1229 start
.hStdError
= GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE
);
1230 #endif /* HAVE_NTGUI */
1233 /* Explicitly specify no security */
1234 if (!InitializeSecurityDescriptor (&sec_desc
, SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_REVISION
))
1236 if (!SetSecurityDescriptorDacl (&sec_desc
, TRUE
, NULL
, FALSE
))
1239 sec_attrs
.nLength
= sizeof (sec_attrs
);
1240 sec_attrs
.lpSecurityDescriptor
= NULL
/* &sec_desc */;
1241 sec_attrs
.bInheritHandle
= FALSE
;
1243 filename_to_ansi (process_dir
, dir
);
1244 /* Can't use unixtodos_filename here, since that needs its file name
1245 argument encoded in UTF-8. OTOH, process_dir, which _is_ in
1246 UTF-8, points, to the directory computed by our caller, and we
1247 don't want to modify that, either. */
1248 for (p
= dir
; *p
; p
= CharNextA (p
))
1252 /* CreateProcess handles batch files as exe specially. This special
1253 handling fails when both the batch file and arguments are quoted.
1254 We pass NULL as exe to avoid the special handling. */
1255 if (exe
&& cmdline
[0] == '"' &&
1256 (ext
= strrchr (exe
, '.')) &&
1257 (xstrcasecmp (ext
, ".bat") == 0
1258 || xstrcasecmp (ext
, ".cmd") == 0))
1261 flags
= (!NILP (Vw32_start_process_share_console
)
1262 ? CREATE_NEW_PROCESS_GROUP
1263 : CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE
);
1264 if (NILP (Vw32_start_process_inherit_error_mode
))
1265 flags
|= CREATE_DEFAULT_ERROR_MODE
;
1266 if (!CreateProcessA (exe
, cmdline
, &sec_attrs
, NULL
, TRUE
,
1267 flags
, env
, dir
, &start
, &cp
->procinfo
))
1270 cp
->pid
= (int) cp
->procinfo
.dwProcessId
;
1272 /* Hack for Windows 95, which assigns large (ie negative) pids */
1281 DebPrint (("create_child.CreateProcess failed: %ld\n", GetLastError ()););
1285 /* create_child doesn't know what emacs's file handle will be for waiting
1286 on output from the child, so we need to make this additional call
1287 to register the handle with the process
1288 This way the select emulator knows how to match file handles with
1289 entries in child_procs. */
1291 register_child (pid_t pid
, int fd
)
1295 cp
= find_child_pid ((DWORD
)pid
);
1298 DebPrint (("register_child unable to find pid %lu\n", pid
));
1303 DebPrint (("register_child registered fd %d with pid %lu\n", fd
, pid
));
1308 /* thread is initially blocked until select is called; set status so
1309 that select will release thread */
1310 cp
->status
= STATUS_READ_ACKNOWLEDGED
;
1312 /* attach child_process to fd_info */
1313 if (fd_info
[fd
].cp
!= NULL
)
1315 DebPrint (("register_child: fd_info[%d] apparently in use!\n", fd
));
1319 fd_info
[fd
].cp
= cp
;
1322 /* Called from waitpid when a process exits. */
1324 reap_subprocess (child_process
*cp
)
1326 if (cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
)
1328 /* Reap the process */
1330 /* Process should have already died before we are called. */
1331 if (WaitForSingleObject (cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
, 0) != WAIT_OBJECT_0
)
1332 DebPrint (("reap_subprocess: child for fd %d has not died yet!", cp
->fd
));
1334 CloseHandle (cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
);
1335 cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
= NULL
;
1336 CloseHandle (cp
->procinfo
.hThread
);
1337 cp
->procinfo
.hThread
= NULL
;
1340 /* If cp->fd was not closed yet, we might be still reading the
1341 process output, so don't free its resources just yet. The call
1342 to delete_child on behalf of this subprocess will be made by
1343 sys_read when the subprocess output is fully read. */
1348 /* Wait for a child process specified by PID, or for any of our
1349 existing child processes (if PID is nonpositive) to die. When it
1350 does, close its handle. Return the pid of the process that died
1351 and fill in STATUS if non-NULL. */
1354 waitpid (pid_t pid
, int *status
, int options
)
1356 DWORD active
, retval
;
1358 child_process
*cp
, *cps
[MAX_CHILDREN
];
1359 HANDLE wait_hnd
[MAX_CHILDREN
];
1361 int dont_wait
= (options
& WNOHANG
) != 0;
1364 /* According to Posix:
1366 PID = -1 means status is requested for any child process.
1368 PID > 0 means status is requested for a single child process
1371 PID = 0 means status is requested for any child process whose
1372 process group ID is equal to that of the calling process. But
1373 since Windows has only a limited support for process groups (only
1374 for console processes and only for the purposes of passing
1375 Ctrl-BREAK signal to them), and since we have no documented way
1376 of determining whether a given process belongs to our group, we
1379 PID < -1 means status is requested for any child process whose
1380 process group ID is equal to the absolute value of PID. Again,
1381 since we don't support process groups, we treat that as -1. */
1386 /* We are requested to wait for a specific child. */
1387 for (cp
= child_procs
+ (child_proc_count
-1); cp
>= child_procs
; cp
--)
1389 /* Some child_procs might be sockets; ignore them. Also
1390 ignore subprocesses whose output is not yet completely
1392 if (CHILD_ACTIVE (cp
)
1393 && cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
1402 if (cp
->fd
< 0 || (fd_info
[cp
->fd
].flags
& FILE_AT_EOF
) != 0)
1404 wait_hnd
[nh
] = cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
;
1410 /* PID specifies our subprocess, but its status is not
1417 /* No such child process, or nothing to wait for, so fail. */
1424 for (cp
= child_procs
+ (child_proc_count
-1); cp
>= child_procs
; cp
--)
1426 if (CHILD_ACTIVE (cp
)
1427 && cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
1428 && (cp
->fd
< 0 || (fd_info
[cp
->fd
].flags
& FILE_AT_EOF
) != 0))
1430 wait_hnd
[nh
] = cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
;
1437 /* Nothing to wait on, so fail. */
1446 timeout_ms
= 1000; /* check for quit about once a second. */
1451 active
= WaitForMultipleObjects (nh
, wait_hnd
, FALSE
, timeout_ms
);
1452 } while (active
== WAIT_TIMEOUT
&& !dont_wait
);
1454 if (active
== WAIT_FAILED
)
1459 else if (active
== WAIT_TIMEOUT
&& dont_wait
)
1461 /* PID specifies our subprocess, but it didn't exit yet, so its
1462 status is not yet available. */
1464 DebPrint (("Wait: PID %d not reap yet\n", cp
->pid
));
1468 else if (active
>= WAIT_OBJECT_0
1469 && active
< WAIT_OBJECT_0
+MAXIMUM_WAIT_OBJECTS
)
1471 active
-= WAIT_OBJECT_0
;
1473 else if (active
>= WAIT_ABANDONED_0
1474 && active
< WAIT_ABANDONED_0
+MAXIMUM_WAIT_OBJECTS
)
1476 active
-= WAIT_ABANDONED_0
;
1481 if (!GetExitCodeProcess (wait_hnd
[active
], &retval
))
1483 DebPrint (("Wait.GetExitCodeProcess failed with %lu\n",
1487 if (retval
== STILL_ACTIVE
)
1489 /* Should never happen. */
1490 DebPrint (("Wait.WaitForMultipleObjects returned an active process\n"));
1491 if (pid
> 0 && dont_wait
)
1497 /* Massage the exit code from the process to match the format expected
1498 by the WIFSTOPPED et al macros in syswait.h. Only WIFSIGNALED and
1499 WIFEXITED are supported; WIFSTOPPED doesn't make sense under NT. */
1501 if (retval
== STATUS_CONTROL_C_EXIT
)
1506 if (pid
> 0 && active
!= 0)
1511 DebPrint (("Wait signaled with process pid %d\n", cp
->pid
));
1516 reap_subprocess (cp
);
1521 /* Old versions of w32api headers don't have separate 32-bit and
1522 64-bit defines, but the one they have matches the 32-bit variety. */
1523 #ifndef IMAGE_NT_OPTIONAL_HDR32_MAGIC
1524 # define IMAGE_NT_OPTIONAL_HDR32_MAGIC IMAGE_NT_OPTIONAL_HDR_MAGIC
1525 # define IMAGE_OPTIONAL_HEADER32 IMAGE_OPTIONAL_HEADER
1528 /* Implementation note: This function works with file names encoded in
1529 the current ANSI codepage. */
1531 w32_executable_type (char * filename
,
1533 int * is_cygnus_app
,
1537 file_data executable
;
1541 /* Default values in case we can't tell for sure. */
1542 *is_dos_app
= FALSE
;
1543 *is_cygnus_app
= FALSE
;
1544 *is_msys_app
= FALSE
;
1545 *is_gui_app
= FALSE
;
1547 if (!open_input_file (&executable
, filename
))
1550 p
= strrchr (filename
, '.');
1552 /* We can only identify DOS .com programs from the extension. */
1553 if (p
&& xstrcasecmp (p
, ".com") == 0)
1555 else if (p
&& (xstrcasecmp (p
, ".bat") == 0
1556 || xstrcasecmp (p
, ".cmd") == 0))
1558 /* A DOS shell script - it appears that CreateProcess is happy to
1559 accept this (somewhat surprisingly); presumably it looks at
1560 COMSPEC to determine what executable to actually invoke.
1561 Therefore, we have to do the same here as well. */
1562 /* Actually, I think it uses the program association for that
1563 extension, which is defined in the registry. */
1564 p
= egetenv ("COMSPEC");
1566 retval
= w32_executable_type (p
, is_dos_app
, is_cygnus_app
, is_msys_app
,
1571 /* Look for DOS .exe signature - if found, we must also check that
1572 it isn't really a 16- or 32-bit Windows exe, since both formats
1573 start with a DOS program stub. Note that 16-bit Windows
1574 executables use the OS/2 1.x format. */
1576 IMAGE_DOS_HEADER
* dos_header
;
1577 IMAGE_NT_HEADERS
* nt_header
;
1579 dos_header
= (PIMAGE_DOS_HEADER
) executable
.file_base
;
1580 if (dos_header
->e_magic
!= IMAGE_DOS_SIGNATURE
)
1583 nt_header
= (PIMAGE_NT_HEADERS
) ((unsigned char *) dos_header
+ dos_header
->e_lfanew
);
1585 if ((char *) nt_header
> (char *) dos_header
+ executable
.size
)
1587 /* Some dos headers (pkunzip) have bogus e_lfanew fields. */
1590 else if (nt_header
->Signature
!= IMAGE_NT_SIGNATURE
1591 && LOWORD (nt_header
->Signature
) != IMAGE_OS2_SIGNATURE
)
1595 else if (nt_header
->Signature
== IMAGE_NT_SIGNATURE
)
1597 IMAGE_DATA_DIRECTORY
*data_dir
= NULL
;
1598 if (nt_header
->OptionalHeader
.Magic
== IMAGE_NT_OPTIONAL_HDR32_MAGIC
)
1600 /* Ensure we are using the 32 bit structure. */
1601 IMAGE_OPTIONAL_HEADER32
*opt
1602 = (IMAGE_OPTIONAL_HEADER32
*) &(nt_header
->OptionalHeader
);
1603 data_dir
= opt
->DataDirectory
;
1604 *is_gui_app
= (opt
->Subsystem
== IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_GUI
);
1606 /* MingW 3.12 has the required 64 bit structs, but in case older
1607 versions don't, only check 64 bit exes if we know how. */
1608 #ifdef IMAGE_NT_OPTIONAL_HDR64_MAGIC
1609 else if (nt_header
->OptionalHeader
.Magic
1610 == IMAGE_NT_OPTIONAL_HDR64_MAGIC
)
1612 IMAGE_OPTIONAL_HEADER64
*opt
1613 = (IMAGE_OPTIONAL_HEADER64
*) &(nt_header
->OptionalHeader
);
1614 data_dir
= opt
->DataDirectory
;
1615 *is_gui_app
= (opt
->Subsystem
== IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_GUI
);
1620 /* Look for Cygwin DLL in the DLL import list. */
1621 IMAGE_DATA_DIRECTORY import_dir
=
1622 data_dir
[IMAGE_DIRECTORY_ENTRY_IMPORT
];
1623 IMAGE_IMPORT_DESCRIPTOR
* imports
=
1624 RVA_TO_PTR (import_dir
.VirtualAddress
,
1625 rva_to_section (import_dir
.VirtualAddress
,
1629 for ( ; imports
->Name
; imports
++)
1631 IMAGE_SECTION_HEADER
* section
=
1632 rva_to_section (imports
->Name
, nt_header
);
1633 char * dllname
= RVA_TO_PTR (imports
->Name
, section
,
1636 /* The exact name of the Cygwin DLL has changed with
1637 various releases, but hopefully this will be
1638 reasonably future-proof. */
1639 if (strncmp (dllname
, "cygwin", 6) == 0)
1641 *is_cygnus_app
= TRUE
;
1644 else if (strncmp (dllname
, "msys-", 5) == 0)
1646 /* This catches both MSYS 1.x and MSYS2
1647 executables (the DLL name is msys-1.0.dll and
1648 msys-2.0.dll, respectively). There doesn't
1649 seem to be a reason to distinguish between
1650 the two, for now. */
1651 *is_msys_app
= TRUE
;
1660 close_file_data (&executable
);
1665 compare_env (const void *strp1
, const void *strp2
)
1667 const char *str1
= *(const char **)strp1
, *str2
= *(const char **)strp2
;
1669 while (*str1
&& *str2
&& *str1
!= '=' && *str2
!= '=')
1671 /* Sort order in command.com/cmd.exe is based on uppercasing
1672 names, so do the same here. */
1673 if (toupper (*str1
) > toupper (*str2
))
1675 else if (toupper (*str1
) < toupper (*str2
))
1680 if (*str1
== '=' && *str2
== '=')
1682 else if (*str1
== '=')
1689 merge_and_sort_env (char **envp1
, char **envp2
, char **new_envp
)
1691 char **optr
, **nptr
;
1703 num
+= optr
- envp2
;
1705 qsort (new_envp
, num
, sizeof (char *), compare_env
);
1710 /* When a new child process is created we need to register it in our list,
1711 so intercept spawn requests. */
1713 sys_spawnve (int mode
, char *cmdname
, char **argv
, char **envp
)
1715 Lisp_Object program
, full
;
1716 char *cmdline
, *env
, *parg
, **targ
;
1720 int is_dos_app
, is_cygnus_app
, is_msys_app
, is_gui_app
;
1722 /* We pass our process ID to our children by setting up an environment
1723 variable in their environment. */
1724 char ppid_env_var_buffer
[64];
1725 char *extra_env
[] = {ppid_env_var_buffer
, NULL
};
1726 /* These are the characters that cause an argument to need quoting.
1727 Arguments with whitespace characters need quoting to prevent the
1728 argument being split into two or more. Arguments with wildcards
1729 are also quoted, for consistency with posix platforms, where wildcards
1730 are not expanded if we run the program directly without a shell.
1731 Some extra whitespace characters need quoting in Cygwin/MSYS programs,
1732 so this list is conditionally modified below. */
1733 char *sepchars
= " \t*?";
1734 /* This is for native w32 apps; modified below for Cygwin/MSUS apps. */
1735 char escape_char
= '\\';
1736 char cmdname_a
[MAX_PATH
];
1738 /* We don't care about the other modes */
1739 if (mode
!= _P_NOWAIT
)
1745 /* Handle executable names without an executable suffix. The caller
1746 already searched exec-path and verified the file is executable,
1747 but start-process doesn't do that for file names that are already
1748 absolute. So we double-check this here, just in case. */
1749 if (faccessat (AT_FDCWD
, cmdname
, X_OK
, AT_EACCESS
) != 0)
1751 program
= build_string (cmdname
);
1753 openp (Vexec_path
, program
, Vexec_suffixes
, &full
, make_number (X_OK
), 0);
1759 program
= ENCODE_FILE (full
);
1760 cmdname
= SDATA (program
);
1764 char *p
= alloca (strlen (cmdname
) + 1);
1766 /* Don't change the command name we were passed by our caller
1767 (unixtodos_filename below will destructively mirror forward
1769 cmdname
= strcpy (p
, cmdname
);
1772 /* make sure argv[0] and cmdname are both in DOS format */
1773 unixtodos_filename (cmdname
);
1774 /* argv[0] was encoded by caller using ENCODE_FILE, so it is in
1775 UTF-8. All the other arguments are encoded by ENCODE_SYSTEM or
1776 some such, and are in some ANSI codepage. We need to have
1777 argv[0] encoded in ANSI codepage. */
1778 filename_to_ansi (cmdname
, cmdname_a
);
1779 /* We explicitly require that the command's file name be encodable
1780 in the current ANSI codepage, because we will be invoking it via
1782 if (_mbspbrk (cmdname_a
, "?"))
1787 /* From here on, CMDNAME is an ANSI-encoded string. */
1788 cmdname
= cmdname_a
;
1791 /* Determine whether program is a 16-bit DOS executable, or a 32-bit
1792 Windows executable that is implicitly linked to the Cygnus or
1793 MSYS dll (implying it was compiled with the Cygnus/MSYS GNU
1794 toolchain and hence relies on cygwin.dll or MSYS DLL to parse the
1795 command line - we use this to decide how to escape quote chars in
1796 command line args that must be quoted).
1798 Also determine whether it is a GUI app, so that we don't hide its
1799 initial window unless specifically requested. */
1800 w32_executable_type (cmdname
, &is_dos_app
, &is_cygnus_app
, &is_msys_app
,
1803 /* On Windows 95, if cmdname is a DOS app, we invoke a helper
1804 application to start it by specifying the helper app as cmdname,
1805 while leaving the real app name as argv[0]. */
1810 cmdname
= alloca (MAX_PATH
);
1811 if (egetenv ("CMDPROXY"))
1813 /* Implementation note: since process-environment, where
1814 'egetenv' looks, is encoded in the system codepage, we
1815 don't need to encode the cmdproxy file name if we get it
1816 from the environment. */
1817 strcpy (cmdname
, egetenv ("CMDPROXY"));
1821 char *q
= lispstpcpy (cmdname
,
1822 /* exec-directory needs to be encoded. */
1823 ansi_encode_filename (Vexec_directory
));
1824 /* If we are run from the source tree, use cmdproxy.exe from
1825 the same source tree. */
1826 for (p
= q
- 2; p
> cmdname
; p
= CharPrevA (cmdname
, p
))
1829 if (*p
== '/' && xstrcasecmp (p
, "/lib-src/") == 0)
1830 q
= stpcpy (p
, "/nt/");
1831 strcpy (q
, "cmdproxy.exe");
1834 /* Can't use unixtodos_filename here, since that needs its file
1835 name argument encoded in UTF-8. */
1836 for (p
= cmdname
; *p
; p
= CharNextA (p
))
1841 /* we have to do some conjuring here to put argv and envp into the
1842 form CreateProcess wants... argv needs to be a space separated/null
1843 terminated list of parameters, and envp is a null
1844 separated/double-null terminated list of parameters.
1846 Additionally, zero-length args and args containing whitespace or
1847 quote chars need to be wrapped in double quotes - for this to work,
1848 embedded quotes need to be escaped as well. The aim is to ensure
1849 the child process reconstructs the argv array we start with
1850 exactly, so we treat quotes at the beginning and end of arguments
1853 The w32 GNU-based library from Cygnus doubles quotes to escape
1854 them, while MSVC uses backslash for escaping. (Actually the MSVC
1855 startup code does attempt to recognize doubled quotes and accept
1856 them, but gets it wrong and ends up requiring three quotes to get a
1857 single embedded quote!) So by default we decide whether to use
1858 quote or backslash as the escape character based on whether the
1859 binary is apparently a Cygnus compiled app.
1861 Note that using backslash to escape embedded quotes requires
1862 additional special handling if an embedded quote is already
1863 preceded by backslash, or if an arg requiring quoting ends with
1864 backslash. In such cases, the run of escape characters needs to be
1865 doubled. For consistency, we apply this special handling as long
1866 as the escape character is not quote.
1868 Since we have no idea how large argv and envp are likely to be we
1869 figure out list lengths on the fly and allocate them. */
1871 if (!NILP (Vw32_quote_process_args
))
1874 /* Override escape char by binding w32-quote-process-args to
1875 desired character, or use t for auto-selection. */
1876 if (INTEGERP (Vw32_quote_process_args
))
1877 escape_char
= XINT (Vw32_quote_process_args
);
1879 escape_char
= (is_cygnus_app
|| is_msys_app
) ? '"' : '\\';
1882 /* Cygwin/MSYS apps need quoting a bit more often. */
1883 if (escape_char
== '"')
1884 sepchars
= "\r\n\t\f '";
1892 int need_quotes
= 0;
1893 int escape_char_run
= 0;
1899 if (escape_char
== '"' && *p
== '\\')
1900 /* If it's a Cygwin/MSYS app, \ needs to be escaped. */
1904 /* allow for embedded quotes to be escaped */
1907 /* handle the case where the embedded quote is already escaped */
1908 if (escape_char_run
> 0)
1910 /* To preserve the arg exactly, we need to double the
1911 preceding escape characters (plus adding one to
1912 escape the quote character itself). */
1913 arglen
+= escape_char_run
;
1916 else if (strchr (sepchars
, *p
) != NULL
)
1921 if (*p
== escape_char
&& escape_char
!= '"')
1924 escape_char_run
= 0;
1929 /* handle the case where the arg ends with an escape char - we
1930 must not let the enclosing quote be escaped. */
1931 if (escape_char_run
> 0)
1932 arglen
+= escape_char_run
;
1934 arglen
+= strlen (*targ
++) + 1;
1936 cmdline
= alloca (arglen
);
1942 int need_quotes
= 0;
1950 if ((strchr (sepchars
, *p
) != NULL
) || *p
== '"')
1955 int escape_char_run
= 0;
1961 /* last = p + strlen (p) - 1; */
1964 /* This version does not escape quotes if they occur at the
1965 beginning or end of the arg - this could lead to incorrect
1966 behavior when the arg itself represents a command line
1967 containing quoted args. I believe this was originally done
1968 as a hack to make some things work, before
1969 `w32-quote-process-args' was added. */
1972 if (*p
== '"' && p
> first
&& p
< last
)
1973 *parg
++ = escape_char
; /* escape embedded quotes */
1981 /* double preceding escape chars if any */
1982 while (escape_char_run
> 0)
1984 *parg
++ = escape_char
;
1987 /* escape all quote chars, even at beginning or end */
1988 *parg
++ = escape_char
;
1990 else if (escape_char
== '"' && *p
== '\\')
1994 if (*p
== escape_char
&& escape_char
!= '"')
1997 escape_char_run
= 0;
1999 /* double escape chars before enclosing quote */
2000 while (escape_char_run
> 0)
2002 *parg
++ = escape_char
;
2010 strcpy (parg
, *targ
);
2011 parg
+= strlen (*targ
);
2021 numenv
= 1; /* for end null */
2024 arglen
+= strlen (*targ
++) + 1;
2027 /* extra env vars... */
2028 sprintf (ppid_env_var_buffer
, "EM_PARENT_PROCESS_ID=%lu",
2029 GetCurrentProcessId ());
2030 arglen
+= strlen (ppid_env_var_buffer
) + 1;
2033 /* merge env passed in and extra env into one, and sort it. */
2034 targ
= (char **) alloca (numenv
* sizeof (char *));
2035 merge_and_sort_env (envp
, extra_env
, targ
);
2037 /* concatenate env entries. */
2038 env
= alloca (arglen
);
2042 strcpy (parg
, *targ
);
2043 parg
+= strlen (*targ
++);
2056 /* Now create the process. */
2057 if (!create_child (cmdname
, cmdline
, env
, is_gui_app
, &pid
, cp
))
2067 /* Emulate the select call
2068 Wait for available input on any of the given rfds, or timeout if
2069 a timeout is given and no input is detected
2070 wfds and efds are not supported and must be NULL.
2072 For simplicity, we detect the death of child processes here and
2073 synchronously call the SIGCHLD handler. Since it is possible for
2074 children to be created without a corresponding pipe handle from which
2075 to read output, we wait separately on the process handles as well as
2076 the char_avail events for each process pipe. We only call
2077 wait/reap_process when the process actually terminates.
2079 To reduce the number of places in which Emacs can be hung such that
2080 C-g is not able to interrupt it, we always wait on interrupt_handle
2081 (which is signaled by the input thread when C-g is detected). If we
2082 detect that we were woken up by C-g, we return -1 with errno set to
2083 EINTR as on Unix. */
2085 /* From w32console.c */
2086 extern HANDLE keyboard_handle
;
2088 /* From w32xfns.c */
2089 extern HANDLE interrupt_handle
;
2091 /* From process.c */
2092 extern int proc_buffered_char
[];
2095 sys_select (int nfds
, SELECT_TYPE
*rfds
, SELECT_TYPE
*wfds
, SELECT_TYPE
*efds
,
2096 struct timespec
*timeout
, void *ignored
)
2098 SELECT_TYPE orfds
, owfds
;
2099 DWORD timeout_ms
, start_time
;
2102 child_process
*cp
, *cps
[MAX_CHILDREN
];
2103 HANDLE wait_hnd
[MAXDESC
+ MAX_CHILDREN
];
2104 int fdindex
[MAXDESC
]; /* mapping from wait handles back to descriptors */
2107 timeout
? (timeout
->tv_sec
* 1000 + timeout
->tv_nsec
/ 1000000) : INFINITE
;
2109 /* If the descriptor sets are NULL but timeout isn't, then just Sleep. */
2110 if (rfds
== NULL
&& wfds
== NULL
&& efds
== NULL
&& timeout
!= NULL
)
2116 /* Otherwise, we only handle rfds and wfds, so fail otherwise. */
2117 if ((rfds
== NULL
&& wfds
== NULL
) || efds
!= NULL
)
2139 /* If interrupt_handle is available and valid, always wait on it, to
2140 detect C-g (quit). */
2142 if (interrupt_handle
&& interrupt_handle
!= INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE
)
2144 wait_hnd
[0] = interrupt_handle
;
2149 /* Build a list of pipe handles to wait on. */
2150 for (i
= 0; i
< nfds
; i
++)
2151 if (FD_ISSET (i
, &orfds
) || FD_ISSET (i
, &owfds
))
2155 if (keyboard_handle
)
2157 /* Handle stdin specially */
2158 wait_hnd
[nh
] = keyboard_handle
;
2163 /* Check for any emacs-generated input in the queue since
2164 it won't be detected in the wait */
2165 if (rfds
&& detect_input_pending ())
2170 else if (noninteractive
)
2172 if (handle_file_notifications (NULL
))
2178 /* Child process and socket/comm port input. */
2180 if (FD_ISSET (i
, &owfds
)
2182 && (fd_info
[i
].flags
&& FILE_CONNECT
) == 0)
2184 DebPrint (("sys_select: fd %d is in wfds, but FILE_CONNECT is reset!\n", i
));
2189 int current_status
= cp
->status
;
2191 if (current_status
== STATUS_READ_ACKNOWLEDGED
)
2193 /* Tell reader thread which file handle to use. */
2195 /* Zero out the error code. */
2197 /* Wake up the reader thread for this process */
2198 cp
->status
= STATUS_READ_READY
;
2199 if (!SetEvent (cp
->char_consumed
))
2200 DebPrint (("sys_select.SetEvent failed with "
2201 "%lu for fd %ld\n", GetLastError (), i
));
2204 #ifdef CHECK_INTERLOCK
2205 /* slightly crude cross-checking of interlock between threads */
2207 current_status
= cp
->status
;
2208 if (WaitForSingleObject (cp
->char_avail
, 0) == WAIT_OBJECT_0
)
2210 /* char_avail has been signaled, so status (which may
2211 have changed) should indicate read has completed
2212 but has not been acknowledged. */
2213 current_status
= cp
->status
;
2214 if (current_status
!= STATUS_READ_SUCCEEDED
2215 && current_status
!= STATUS_READ_FAILED
)
2216 DebPrint (("char_avail set, but read not completed: status %d\n",
2221 /* char_avail has not been signaled, so status should
2222 indicate that read is in progress; small possibility
2223 that read has completed but event wasn't yet signaled
2224 when we tested it (because a context switch occurred
2225 or if running on separate CPUs). */
2226 if (current_status
!= STATUS_READ_READY
2227 && current_status
!= STATUS_READ_IN_PROGRESS
2228 && current_status
!= STATUS_READ_SUCCEEDED
2229 && current_status
!= STATUS_READ_FAILED
)
2230 DebPrint (("char_avail reset, but read status is bad: %d\n",
2234 wait_hnd
[nh
] = cp
->char_avail
;
2236 if (!wait_hnd
[nh
]) emacs_abort ();
2239 DebPrint (("select waiting on child %d fd %d\n",
2240 cp
-child_procs
, i
));
2245 /* Unable to find something to wait on for this fd, skip */
2247 /* Note that this is not a fatal error, and can in fact
2248 happen in unusual circumstances. Specifically, if
2249 sys_spawnve fails, eg. because the program doesn't
2250 exist, and debug-on-error is t so Fsignal invokes a
2251 nested input loop, then the process output pipe is
2252 still included in input_wait_mask with no child_proc
2253 associated with it. (It is removed when the debugger
2254 exits the nested input loop and the error is thrown.) */
2256 DebPrint (("sys_select: fd %ld is invalid! ignoring\n", i
));
2262 /* Add handles of child processes. */
2264 for (cp
= child_procs
+ (child_proc_count
-1); cp
>= child_procs
; cp
--)
2265 /* Some child_procs might be sockets; ignore them. Also some
2266 children may have died already, but we haven't finished reading
2267 the process output; ignore them too. */
2268 if ((CHILD_ACTIVE (cp
) && cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
)
2270 || (fd_info
[cp
->fd
].flags
& FILE_SEND_SIGCHLD
) == 0
2271 || (fd_info
[cp
->fd
].flags
& FILE_AT_EOF
) != 0)
2274 wait_hnd
[nh
+ nc
] = cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
;
2279 /* Nothing to look for, so we didn't find anything */
2286 if (handle_file_notifications (NULL
))
2292 start_time
= GetTickCount ();
2294 /* Wait for input or child death to be signaled. If user input is
2295 allowed, then also accept window messages. */
2296 if (FD_ISSET (0, &orfds
))
2297 active
= MsgWaitForMultipleObjects (nh
+ nc
, wait_hnd
, FALSE
, timeout_ms
,
2300 active
= WaitForMultipleObjects (nh
+ nc
, wait_hnd
, FALSE
, timeout_ms
);
2302 if (active
== WAIT_FAILED
)
2304 DebPrint (("select.WaitForMultipleObjects (%d, %lu) failed with %lu\n",
2305 nh
+ nc
, timeout_ms
, GetLastError ()));
2306 /* don't return EBADF - this causes wait_reading_process_output to
2307 abort; WAIT_FAILED is returned when single-stepping under
2308 Windows 95 after switching thread focus in debugger, and
2309 possibly at other times. */
2313 else if (active
== WAIT_TIMEOUT
)
2317 if (handle_file_notifications (NULL
))
2322 else if (active
>= WAIT_OBJECT_0
2323 && active
< WAIT_OBJECT_0
+MAXIMUM_WAIT_OBJECTS
)
2325 active
-= WAIT_OBJECT_0
;
2327 else if (active
>= WAIT_ABANDONED_0
2328 && active
< WAIT_ABANDONED_0
+MAXIMUM_WAIT_OBJECTS
)
2330 active
-= WAIT_ABANDONED_0
;
2335 /* Loop over all handles after active (now officially documented as
2336 being the first signaled handle in the array). We do this to
2337 ensure fairness, so that all channels with data available will be
2338 processed - otherwise higher numbered channels could be starved. */
2341 if (active
== nh
+ nc
)
2343 /* There are messages in the lisp thread's queue; we must
2344 drain the queue now to ensure they are processed promptly,
2345 because if we don't do so, we will not be woken again until
2346 further messages arrive.
2348 NB. If ever we allow window message procedures to callback
2349 into lisp, we will need to ensure messages are dispatched
2350 at a safe time for lisp code to be run (*), and we may also
2351 want to provide some hooks in the dispatch loop to cater
2352 for modeless dialogs created by lisp (ie. to register
2353 window handles to pass to IsDialogMessage).
2355 (*) Note that MsgWaitForMultipleObjects above is an
2356 internal dispatch point for messages that are sent to
2357 windows created by this thread. */
2358 if (drain_message_queue ()
2359 /* If drain_message_queue returns non-zero, that means
2360 we received a WM_EMACS_FILENOTIFY message. If this
2361 is a TTY frame, we must signal the caller that keyboard
2362 input is available, so that w32_console_read_socket
2363 will be called to pick up the notifications. If we
2364 don't do that, file notifications will only work when
2365 the Emacs TTY frame has focus. */
2366 && FRAME_TERMCAP_P (SELECTED_FRAME ())
2367 /* they asked for stdin reads */
2368 && FD_ISSET (0, &orfds
)
2369 /* the stdin handle is valid */
2377 else if (active
>= nh
)
2379 cp
= cps
[active
- nh
];
2381 /* We cannot always signal SIGCHLD immediately; if we have not
2382 finished reading the process output, we must delay sending
2383 SIGCHLD until we do. */
2385 if (cp
->fd
>= 0 && (fd_info
[cp
->fd
].flags
& FILE_AT_EOF
) == 0)
2386 fd_info
[cp
->fd
].flags
|= FILE_SEND_SIGCHLD
;
2387 /* SIG_DFL for SIGCHLD is ignored */
2388 else if (sig_handlers
[SIGCHLD
] != SIG_DFL
&&
2389 sig_handlers
[SIGCHLD
] != SIG_IGN
)
2392 DebPrint (("select calling SIGCHLD handler for pid %d\n",
2395 sig_handlers
[SIGCHLD
] (SIGCHLD
);
2398 else if (fdindex
[active
] == -1)
2400 /* Quit (C-g) was detected. */
2404 else if (rfds
&& fdindex
[active
] == 0)
2406 /* Keyboard input available */
2412 /* Must be a socket or pipe - read ahead should have
2413 completed, either succeeding or failing. If this handle
2414 was waiting for an async 'connect', reset the connect
2415 flag, so it could read from now on. */
2416 if (wfds
&& (fd_info
[fdindex
[active
]].flags
& FILE_CONNECT
) != 0)
2418 cp
= fd_info
[fdindex
[active
]].cp
;
2421 /* Don't reset the FILE_CONNECT bit and don't
2422 acknowledge the read if the status is
2423 STATUS_CONNECT_FAILED or some other
2424 failure. That's because the thread exits in those
2425 cases, so it doesn't need the ACK, and we want to
2426 keep the FILE_CONNECT bit as evidence that the
2427 connect failed, to be checked in sys_read. */
2428 if (cp
->status
== STATUS_READ_SUCCEEDED
)
2430 fd_info
[cp
->fd
].flags
&= ~FILE_CONNECT
;
2431 cp
->status
= STATUS_READ_ACKNOWLEDGED
;
2433 ResetEvent (cp
->char_avail
);
2435 FD_SET (fdindex
[active
], wfds
);
2438 FD_SET (fdindex
[active
], rfds
);
2442 /* Even though wait_reading_process_output only reads from at most
2443 one channel, we must process all channels here so that we reap
2444 all children that have died. */
2445 while (++active
< nh
+ nc
)
2446 if (WaitForSingleObject (wait_hnd
[active
], 0) == WAIT_OBJECT_0
)
2448 } while (active
< nh
+ nc
);
2452 if (handle_file_notifications (NULL
))
2456 /* If no input has arrived and timeout hasn't expired, wait again. */
2459 DWORD elapsed
= GetTickCount () - start_time
;
2461 if (timeout_ms
> elapsed
) /* INFINITE is MAX_UINT */
2463 if (timeout_ms
!= INFINITE
)
2464 timeout_ms
-= elapsed
;
2465 goto count_children
;
2472 /* Substitute for certain kill () operations */
2474 static BOOL CALLBACK
2475 find_child_console (HWND hwnd
, LPARAM arg
)
2477 child_process
* cp
= (child_process
*) arg
;
2480 GetWindowThreadProcessId (hwnd
, &process_id
);
2481 if (process_id
== cp
->procinfo
.dwProcessId
)
2483 char window_class
[32];
2485 GetClassName (hwnd
, window_class
, sizeof (window_class
));
2486 if (strcmp (window_class
,
2487 (os_subtype
== OS_9X
)
2489 : "ConsoleWindowClass") == 0)
2499 /* Emulate 'kill', but only for other processes. */
2501 sys_kill (pid_t pid
, int sig
)
2505 int need_to_free
= 0;
2508 /* Each process is in its own process group. */
2512 /* Only handle signals that will result in the process dying */
2514 && sig
!= SIGINT
&& sig
!= SIGKILL
&& sig
!= SIGQUIT
&& sig
!= SIGHUP
)
2522 /* It will take _some_ time before PID 4 or less on Windows will
2529 proc_hand
= OpenProcess (PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION
, 0, pid
);
2530 if (proc_hand
== NULL
)
2532 DWORD err
= GetLastError ();
2536 case ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED
: /* existing process, but access denied */
2539 case ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER
: /* process PID does not exist */
2545 CloseHandle (proc_hand
);
2549 cp
= find_child_pid (pid
);
2552 /* We were passed a PID of something other than our subprocess.
2553 If that is our own PID, we will send to ourself a message to
2554 close the selected frame, which does not necessarily
2555 terminates Emacs. But then we are not supposed to call
2556 sys_kill with our own PID. */
2557 proc_hand
= OpenProcess (PROCESS_TERMINATE
, 0, pid
);
2558 if (proc_hand
== NULL
)
2567 proc_hand
= cp
->procinfo
.hProcess
;
2568 pid
= cp
->procinfo
.dwProcessId
;
2570 /* Try to locate console window for process. */
2571 EnumWindows (find_child_console
, (LPARAM
) cp
);
2574 if (sig
== SIGINT
|| sig
== SIGQUIT
)
2576 if (NILP (Vw32_start_process_share_console
) && cp
&& cp
->hwnd
)
2578 BYTE control_scan_code
= (BYTE
) MapVirtualKey (VK_CONTROL
, 0);
2579 /* Fake Ctrl-C for SIGINT, and Ctrl-Break for SIGQUIT. */
2580 BYTE vk_break_code
= (sig
== SIGINT
) ? 'C' : VK_CANCEL
;
2581 BYTE break_scan_code
= (BYTE
) MapVirtualKey (vk_break_code
, 0);
2582 HWND foreground_window
;
2584 if (break_scan_code
== 0)
2586 /* Fake Ctrl-C for SIGQUIT if we can't manage Ctrl-Break. */
2587 vk_break_code
= 'C';
2588 break_scan_code
= (BYTE
) MapVirtualKey (vk_break_code
, 0);
2591 foreground_window
= GetForegroundWindow ();
2592 if (foreground_window
)
2594 /* NT 5.0, and apparently also Windows 98, will not allow
2595 a Window to be set to foreground directly without the
2596 user's involvement. The workaround is to attach
2597 ourselves to the thread that owns the foreground
2598 window, since that is the only thread that can set the
2599 foreground window. */
2600 DWORD foreground_thread
, child_thread
;
2602 GetWindowThreadProcessId (foreground_window
, NULL
);
2603 if (foreground_thread
== GetCurrentThreadId ()
2604 || !AttachThreadInput (GetCurrentThreadId (),
2605 foreground_thread
, TRUE
))
2606 foreground_thread
= 0;
2608 child_thread
= GetWindowThreadProcessId (cp
->hwnd
, NULL
);
2609 if (child_thread
== GetCurrentThreadId ()
2610 || !AttachThreadInput (GetCurrentThreadId (),
2611 child_thread
, TRUE
))
2614 /* Set the foreground window to the child. */
2615 if (SetForegroundWindow (cp
->hwnd
))
2617 /* Generate keystrokes as if user had typed Ctrl-Break or
2619 keybd_event (VK_CONTROL
, control_scan_code
, 0, 0);
2620 keybd_event (vk_break_code
, break_scan_code
,
2621 (vk_break_code
== 'C' ? 0 : KEYEVENTF_EXTENDEDKEY
), 0);
2622 keybd_event (vk_break_code
, break_scan_code
,
2623 (vk_break_code
== 'C' ? 0 : KEYEVENTF_EXTENDEDKEY
)
2624 | KEYEVENTF_KEYUP
, 0);
2625 keybd_event (VK_CONTROL
, control_scan_code
,
2626 KEYEVENTF_KEYUP
, 0);
2628 /* Sleep for a bit to give time for Emacs frame to respond
2629 to focus change events (if Emacs was active app). */
2632 SetForegroundWindow (foreground_window
);
2634 /* Detach from the foreground and child threads now that
2635 the foreground switching is over. */
2636 if (foreground_thread
)
2637 AttachThreadInput (GetCurrentThreadId (),
2638 foreground_thread
, FALSE
);
2640 AttachThreadInput (GetCurrentThreadId (),
2641 child_thread
, FALSE
);
2644 /* Ctrl-Break is NT equivalent of SIGINT. */
2645 else if (!GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent (CTRL_BREAK_EVENT
, pid
))
2647 DebPrint (("sys_kill.GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent return %d "
2648 "for pid %lu\n", GetLastError (), pid
));
2655 if (NILP (Vw32_start_process_share_console
) && cp
&& cp
->hwnd
)
2658 if (os_subtype
== OS_9X
)
2661 Another possibility is to try terminating the VDM out-right by
2662 calling the Shell VxD (id 0x17) V86 interface, function #4
2663 "SHELL_Destroy_VM", ie.
2669 First need to determine the current VM handle, and then arrange for
2670 the shellapi call to be made from the system vm (by using
2671 Switch_VM_and_callback).
2673 Could try to invoke DestroyVM through CallVxD.
2677 /* On Windows 95, posting WM_QUIT causes the 16-bit subsystem
2678 to hang when cmdproxy is used in conjunction with
2679 command.com for an interactive shell. Posting
2680 WM_CLOSE pops up a dialog that, when Yes is selected,
2681 does the same thing. TerminateProcess is also less
2682 than ideal in that subprocesses tend to stick around
2683 until the machine is shutdown, but at least it
2684 doesn't freeze the 16-bit subsystem. */
2685 PostMessage (cp
->hwnd
, WM_QUIT
, 0xff, 0);
2687 if (!TerminateProcess (proc_hand
, 0xff))
2689 DebPrint (("sys_kill.TerminateProcess returned %d "
2690 "for pid %lu\n", GetLastError (), pid
));
2697 PostMessage (cp
->hwnd
, WM_CLOSE
, 0, 0);
2699 /* Kill the process. On W32 this doesn't kill child processes
2700 so it doesn't work very well for shells which is why it's not
2701 used in every case. */
2702 else if (!TerminateProcess (proc_hand
, 0xff))
2704 DebPrint (("sys_kill.TerminateProcess returned %d "
2705 "for pid %lu\n", GetLastError (), pid
));
2712 CloseHandle (proc_hand
);
2717 /* The following two routines are used to manipulate stdin, stdout, and
2718 stderr of our child processes.
2720 Assuming that in, out, and err are *not* inheritable, we make them
2721 stdin, stdout, and stderr of the child as follows:
2723 - Save the parent's current standard handles.
2724 - Set the std handles to inheritable duplicates of the ones being passed in.
2725 (Note that _get_osfhandle() is an io.h procedure that retrieves the
2726 NT file handle for a crt file descriptor.)
2727 - Spawn the child, which inherits in, out, and err as stdin,
2728 stdout, and stderr. (see Spawnve)
2729 - Close the std handles passed to the child.
2730 - Reset the parent's standard handles to the saved handles.
2731 (see reset_standard_handles)
2732 We assume that the caller closes in, out, and err after calling us. */
2735 prepare_standard_handles (int in
, int out
, int err
, HANDLE handles
[3])
2738 HANDLE newstdin
, newstdout
, newstderr
;
2740 parent
= GetCurrentProcess ();
2742 handles
[0] = GetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE
);
2743 handles
[1] = GetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE
);
2744 handles
[2] = GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE
);
2746 /* make inheritable copies of the new handles */
2747 if (!DuplicateHandle (parent
,
2748 (HANDLE
) _get_osfhandle (in
),
2753 DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS
))
2754 report_file_error ("Duplicating input handle for child", Qnil
);
2756 if (!DuplicateHandle (parent
,
2757 (HANDLE
) _get_osfhandle (out
),
2762 DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS
))
2763 report_file_error ("Duplicating output handle for child", Qnil
);
2765 if (!DuplicateHandle (parent
,
2766 (HANDLE
) _get_osfhandle (err
),
2771 DUPLICATE_SAME_ACCESS
))
2772 report_file_error ("Duplicating error handle for child", Qnil
);
2774 /* and store them as our std handles */
2775 if (!SetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE
, newstdin
))
2776 report_file_error ("Changing stdin handle", Qnil
);
2778 if (!SetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE
, newstdout
))
2779 report_file_error ("Changing stdout handle", Qnil
);
2781 if (!SetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE
, newstderr
))
2782 report_file_error ("Changing stderr handle", Qnil
);
2786 reset_standard_handles (int in
, int out
, int err
, HANDLE handles
[3])
2788 /* close the duplicated handles passed to the child */
2789 CloseHandle (GetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE
));
2790 CloseHandle (GetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE
));
2791 CloseHandle (GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE
));
2793 /* now restore parent's saved std handles */
2794 SetStdHandle (STD_INPUT_HANDLE
, handles
[0]);
2795 SetStdHandle (STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE
, handles
[1]);
2796 SetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE
, handles
[2]);
2800 set_process_dir (char * dir
)
2805 /* To avoid problems with winsock implementations that work over dial-up
2806 connections causing or requiring a connection to exist while Emacs is
2807 running, Emacs no longer automatically loads winsock on startup if it
2808 is present. Instead, it will be loaded when open-network-stream is
2811 To allow full control over when winsock is loaded, we provide these
2812 two functions to dynamically load and unload winsock. This allows
2813 dial-up users to only be connected when they actually need to use
2817 extern HANDLE winsock_lib
;
2818 extern BOOL
term_winsock (void);
2819 extern BOOL
init_winsock (int load_now
);
2821 DEFUN ("w32-has-winsock", Fw32_has_winsock
, Sw32_has_winsock
, 0, 1, 0,
2822 doc
: /* Test for presence of the Windows socket library `winsock'.
2823 Returns non-nil if winsock support is present, nil otherwise.
2825 If the optional argument LOAD-NOW is non-nil, the winsock library is
2826 also loaded immediately if not already loaded. If winsock is loaded,
2827 the winsock local hostname is returned (since this may be different from
2828 the value of `system-name' and should supplant it), otherwise t is
2829 returned to indicate winsock support is present. */)
2830 (Lisp_Object load_now
)
2834 have_winsock
= init_winsock (!NILP (load_now
));
2837 if (winsock_lib
!= NULL
)
2839 /* Return new value for system-name. The best way to do this
2840 is to call init_system_name, saving and restoring the
2841 original value to avoid side-effects. */
2842 Lisp_Object orig_hostname
= Vsystem_name
;
2843 Lisp_Object hostname
;
2845 init_system_name ();
2846 hostname
= Vsystem_name
;
2847 Vsystem_name
= orig_hostname
;
2855 DEFUN ("w32-unload-winsock", Fw32_unload_winsock
, Sw32_unload_winsock
,
2857 doc
: /* Unload the Windows socket library `winsock' if loaded.
2858 This is provided to allow dial-up socket connections to be disconnected
2859 when no longer needed. Returns nil without unloading winsock if any
2860 socket connections still exist. */)
2863 return term_winsock () ? Qt
: Qnil
;
2867 /* Some miscellaneous functions that are Windows specific, but not GUI
2868 specific (ie. are applicable in terminal or batch mode as well). */
2870 DEFUN ("w32-short-file-name", Fw32_short_file_name
, Sw32_short_file_name
, 1, 1, 0,
2871 doc
: /* Return the short file name version (8.3) of the full path of FILENAME.
2872 If FILENAME does not exist, return nil.
2873 All path elements in FILENAME are converted to their short names. */)
2874 (Lisp_Object filename
)
2876 char shortname
[MAX_PATH
];
2878 CHECK_STRING (filename
);
2880 /* first expand it. */
2881 filename
= Fexpand_file_name (filename
, Qnil
);
2883 /* luckily, this returns the short version of each element in the path. */
2884 if (w32_get_short_filename (SDATA (ENCODE_FILE (filename
)),
2885 shortname
, MAX_PATH
) == 0)
2888 dostounix_filename (shortname
);
2890 /* No need to DECODE_FILE, because 8.3 names are pure ASCII. */
2891 return build_string (shortname
);
2895 DEFUN ("w32-long-file-name", Fw32_long_file_name
, Sw32_long_file_name
,
2897 doc
: /* Return the long file name version of the full path of FILENAME.
2898 If FILENAME does not exist, return nil.
2899 All path elements in FILENAME are converted to their long names. */)
2900 (Lisp_Object filename
)
2902 char longname
[ MAX_UTF8_PATH
];
2905 CHECK_STRING (filename
);
2907 if (SBYTES (filename
) == 2
2908 && *(SDATA (filename
) + 1) == ':')
2911 /* first expand it. */
2912 filename
= Fexpand_file_name (filename
, Qnil
);
2914 if (!w32_get_long_filename (SDATA (ENCODE_FILE (filename
)), longname
,
2918 dostounix_filename (longname
);
2920 /* If we were passed only a drive, make sure that a slash is not appended
2921 for consistency with directories. Allow for drive mapping via SUBST
2922 in case expand-file-name is ever changed to expand those. */
2923 if (drive_only
&& longname
[1] == ':' && longname
[2] == '/' && !longname
[3])
2926 return DECODE_FILE (build_unibyte_string (longname
));
2929 DEFUN ("w32-set-process-priority", Fw32_set_process_priority
,
2930 Sw32_set_process_priority
, 2, 2, 0,
2931 doc
: /* Set the priority of PROCESS to PRIORITY.
2932 If PROCESS is nil, the priority of Emacs is changed, otherwise the
2933 priority of the process whose pid is PROCESS is changed.
2934 PRIORITY should be one of the symbols high, normal, or low;
2935 any other symbol will be interpreted as normal.
2937 If successful, the return value is t, otherwise nil. */)
2938 (Lisp_Object process
, Lisp_Object priority
)
2940 HANDLE proc_handle
= GetCurrentProcess ();
2941 DWORD priority_class
= NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS
;
2942 Lisp_Object result
= Qnil
;
2944 CHECK_SYMBOL (priority
);
2946 if (!NILP (process
))
2951 CHECK_NUMBER (process
);
2953 /* Allow pid to be an internally generated one, or one obtained
2954 externally. This is necessary because real pids on Windows 95 are
2957 pid
= XINT (process
);
2958 cp
= find_child_pid (pid
);
2960 pid
= cp
->procinfo
.dwProcessId
;
2962 proc_handle
= OpenProcess (PROCESS_SET_INFORMATION
, FALSE
, pid
);
2965 if (EQ (priority
, Qhigh
))
2966 priority_class
= HIGH_PRIORITY_CLASS
;
2967 else if (EQ (priority
, Qlow
))
2968 priority_class
= IDLE_PRIORITY_CLASS
;
2970 if (proc_handle
!= NULL
)
2972 if (SetPriorityClass (proc_handle
, priority_class
))
2974 if (!NILP (process
))
2975 CloseHandle (proc_handle
);
2981 DEFUN ("w32-application-type", Fw32_application_type
,
2982 Sw32_application_type
, 1, 1, 0,
2983 doc
: /* Return the type of an MS-Windows PROGRAM.
2985 Knowing the type of an executable could be useful for formatting
2986 file names passed to it or for quoting its command-line arguments.
2988 PROGRAM should specify an executable file, including the extension.
2990 The value is one of the following:
2992 `dos' -- a DOS .com program or some other non-PE executable
2993 `cygwin' -- a Cygwin program that depends on Cygwin DLL
2994 `msys' -- an MSYS 1.x or MSYS2 program
2995 `w32-native' -- a native Windows application
2996 `unknown' -- a file that doesn't exist, or cannot be open, or whose
2997 name is not encodable in the current ANSI codepage.
2999 Note that for .bat and .cmd batch files the function returns the type
3000 of their command interpreter, as specified by the \"COMSPEC\"
3001 environment variable.
3003 This function returns `unknown' for programs whose file names
3004 include characters not supported by the current ANSI codepage, as
3005 such programs cannot be invoked by Emacs anyway. */)
3006 (Lisp_Object program
)
3008 int is_dos_app
, is_cygwin_app
, is_msys_app
, dummy
;
3009 Lisp_Object encoded_progname
;
3010 char *progname
, progname_a
[MAX_PATH
];
3012 program
= Fexpand_file_name (program
, Qnil
);
3013 encoded_progname
= ENCODE_FILE (program
);
3014 progname
= SDATA (encoded_progname
);
3015 unixtodos_filename (progname
);
3016 filename_to_ansi (progname
, progname_a
);
3017 /* Reject file names that cannot be encoded in the current ANSI
3019 if (_mbspbrk (progname_a
, "?"))
3022 if (w32_executable_type (progname_a
, &is_dos_app
, &is_cygwin_app
,
3023 &is_msys_app
, &dummy
) != 0)
3034 #ifdef HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET
3035 /* Emulation of nl_langinfo. Used in fns.c:Flocale_info. */
3037 nl_langinfo (nl_item item
)
3039 /* Conversion of Posix item numbers to their Windows equivalents. */
3040 static const LCTYPE w32item
[] = {
3041 LOCALE_IDEFAULTANSICODEPAGE
,
3042 LOCALE_SDAYNAME1
, LOCALE_SDAYNAME2
, LOCALE_SDAYNAME3
,
3043 LOCALE_SDAYNAME4
, LOCALE_SDAYNAME5
, LOCALE_SDAYNAME6
, LOCALE_SDAYNAME7
,
3044 LOCALE_SMONTHNAME1
, LOCALE_SMONTHNAME2
, LOCALE_SMONTHNAME3
,
3045 LOCALE_SMONTHNAME4
, LOCALE_SMONTHNAME5
, LOCALE_SMONTHNAME6
,
3046 LOCALE_SMONTHNAME7
, LOCALE_SMONTHNAME8
, LOCALE_SMONTHNAME9
,
3047 LOCALE_SMONTHNAME10
, LOCALE_SMONTHNAME11
, LOCALE_SMONTHNAME12
3050 static char *nl_langinfo_buf
= NULL
;
3051 static int nl_langinfo_len
= 0;
3053 if (nl_langinfo_len
<= 0)
3054 nl_langinfo_buf
= xmalloc (nl_langinfo_len
= 1);
3056 if (item
< 0 || item
>= _NL_NUM
)
3057 nl_langinfo_buf
[0] = 0;
3060 LCID cloc
= GetThreadLocale ();
3061 int need_len
= GetLocaleInfo (cloc
, w32item
[item
] | LOCALE_USE_CP_ACP
,
3065 nl_langinfo_buf
[0] = 0;
3068 if (item
== CODESET
)
3070 need_len
+= 2; /* for the "cp" prefix */
3071 if (need_len
< 8) /* for the case we call GetACP */
3074 if (nl_langinfo_len
<= need_len
)
3075 nl_langinfo_buf
= xrealloc (nl_langinfo_buf
,
3076 nl_langinfo_len
= need_len
);
3077 if (!GetLocaleInfo (cloc
, w32item
[item
] | LOCALE_USE_CP_ACP
,
3078 nl_langinfo_buf
, nl_langinfo_len
))
3079 nl_langinfo_buf
[0] = 0;
3080 else if (item
== CODESET
)
3082 if (strcmp (nl_langinfo_buf
, "0") == 0 /* CP_ACP */
3083 || strcmp (nl_langinfo_buf
, "1") == 0) /* CP_OEMCP */
3084 sprintf (nl_langinfo_buf
, "cp%u", GetACP ());
3087 memmove (nl_langinfo_buf
+ 2, nl_langinfo_buf
,
3088 strlen (nl_langinfo_buf
) + 1);
3089 nl_langinfo_buf
[0] = 'c';
3090 nl_langinfo_buf
[1] = 'p';
3095 return nl_langinfo_buf
;
3097 #endif /* HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET */
3099 DEFUN ("w32-get-locale-info", Fw32_get_locale_info
,
3100 Sw32_get_locale_info
, 1, 2, 0,
3101 doc
: /* Return information about the Windows locale LCID.
3102 By default, return a three letter locale code which encodes the default
3103 language as the first two characters, and the country or regional variant
3104 as the third letter. For example, ENU refers to `English (United States)',
3105 while ENC means `English (Canadian)'.
3107 If the optional argument LONGFORM is t, the long form of the locale
3108 name is returned, e.g. `English (United States)' instead; if LONGFORM
3109 is a number, it is interpreted as an LCTYPE constant and the corresponding
3110 locale information is returned.
3112 If LCID (a 16-bit number) is not a valid locale, the result is nil. */)
3113 (Lisp_Object lcid
, Lisp_Object longform
)
3117 char abbrev_name
[32] = { 0 };
3118 char full_name
[256] = { 0 };
3120 CHECK_NUMBER (lcid
);
3122 if (!IsValidLocale (XINT (lcid
), LCID_SUPPORTED
))
3125 if (NILP (longform
))
3127 got_abbrev
= GetLocaleInfo (XINT (lcid
),
3128 LOCALE_SABBREVLANGNAME
| LOCALE_USE_CP_ACP
,
3129 abbrev_name
, sizeof (abbrev_name
));
3131 return build_string (abbrev_name
);
3133 else if (EQ (longform
, Qt
))
3135 got_full
= GetLocaleInfo (XINT (lcid
),
3136 LOCALE_SLANGUAGE
| LOCALE_USE_CP_ACP
,
3137 full_name
, sizeof (full_name
));
3139 return DECODE_SYSTEM (build_string (full_name
));
3141 else if (NUMBERP (longform
))
3143 got_full
= GetLocaleInfo (XINT (lcid
),
3145 full_name
, sizeof (full_name
));
3146 /* GetLocaleInfo's return value includes the terminating null
3147 character, when the returned information is a string, whereas
3148 make_unibyte_string needs the string length without the
3149 terminating null. */
3151 return make_unibyte_string (full_name
, got_full
- 1);
3158 DEFUN ("w32-get-current-locale-id", Fw32_get_current_locale_id
,
3159 Sw32_get_current_locale_id
, 0, 0, 0,
3160 doc
: /* Return Windows locale id for current locale setting.
3161 This is a numerical value; use `w32-get-locale-info' to convert to a
3162 human-readable form. */)
3165 return make_number (GetThreadLocale ());
3169 int_from_hex (char * s
)
3172 static char hex
[] = "0123456789abcdefABCDEF";
3175 while (*s
&& (p
= strchr (hex
, *s
)) != NULL
)
3177 unsigned digit
= p
- hex
;
3180 val
= val
* 16 + digit
;
3186 /* We need to build a global list, since the EnumSystemLocale callback
3187 function isn't given a context pointer. */
3188 Lisp_Object Vw32_valid_locale_ids
;
3190 static BOOL CALLBACK ALIGN_STACK
3191 enum_locale_fn (LPTSTR localeNum
)
3193 DWORD id
= int_from_hex (localeNum
);
3194 Vw32_valid_locale_ids
= Fcons (make_number (id
), Vw32_valid_locale_ids
);
3198 DEFUN ("w32-get-valid-locale-ids", Fw32_get_valid_locale_ids
,
3199 Sw32_get_valid_locale_ids
, 0, 0, 0,
3200 doc
: /* Return list of all valid Windows locale ids.
3201 Each id is a numerical value; use `w32-get-locale-info' to convert to a
3202 human-readable form. */)
3205 Vw32_valid_locale_ids
= Qnil
;
3207 EnumSystemLocales (enum_locale_fn
, LCID_SUPPORTED
);
3209 Vw32_valid_locale_ids
= Fnreverse (Vw32_valid_locale_ids
);
3210 return Vw32_valid_locale_ids
;
3214 DEFUN ("w32-get-default-locale-id", Fw32_get_default_locale_id
, Sw32_get_default_locale_id
, 0, 1, 0,
3215 doc
: /* Return Windows locale id for default locale setting.
3216 By default, the system default locale setting is returned; if the optional
3217 parameter USERP is non-nil, the user default locale setting is returned.
3218 This is a numerical value; use `w32-get-locale-info' to convert to a
3219 human-readable form. */)
3223 return make_number (GetSystemDefaultLCID ());
3224 return make_number (GetUserDefaultLCID ());
3228 DEFUN ("w32-set-current-locale", Fw32_set_current_locale
, Sw32_set_current_locale
, 1, 1, 0,
3229 doc
: /* Make Windows locale LCID be the current locale setting for Emacs.
3230 If successful, the new locale id is returned, otherwise nil. */)
3233 CHECK_NUMBER (lcid
);
3235 if (!IsValidLocale (XINT (lcid
), LCID_SUPPORTED
))
3238 if (!SetThreadLocale (XINT (lcid
)))
3241 /* Need to set input thread locale if present. */
3242 if (dwWindowsThreadId
)
3243 /* Reply is not needed. */
3244 PostThreadMessage (dwWindowsThreadId
, WM_EMACS_SETLOCALE
, XINT (lcid
), 0);
3246 return make_number (GetThreadLocale ());
3250 /* We need to build a global list, since the EnumCodePages callback
3251 function isn't given a context pointer. */
3252 Lisp_Object Vw32_valid_codepages
;
3254 static BOOL CALLBACK ALIGN_STACK
3255 enum_codepage_fn (LPTSTR codepageNum
)
3257 DWORD id
= atoi (codepageNum
);
3258 Vw32_valid_codepages
= Fcons (make_number (id
), Vw32_valid_codepages
);
3262 DEFUN ("w32-get-valid-codepages", Fw32_get_valid_codepages
,
3263 Sw32_get_valid_codepages
, 0, 0, 0,
3264 doc
: /* Return list of all valid Windows codepages. */)
3267 Vw32_valid_codepages
= Qnil
;
3269 EnumSystemCodePages (enum_codepage_fn
, CP_SUPPORTED
);
3271 Vw32_valid_codepages
= Fnreverse (Vw32_valid_codepages
);
3272 return Vw32_valid_codepages
;
3276 DEFUN ("w32-get-console-codepage", Fw32_get_console_codepage
,
3277 Sw32_get_console_codepage
, 0, 0, 0,
3278 doc
: /* Return current Windows codepage for console input. */)
3281 return make_number (GetConsoleCP ());
3285 DEFUN ("w32-set-console-codepage", Fw32_set_console_codepage
,
3286 Sw32_set_console_codepage
, 1, 1, 0,
3287 doc
: /* Make Windows codepage CP be the codepage for Emacs tty keyboard input.
3288 This codepage setting affects keyboard input in tty mode.
3289 If successful, the new CP is returned, otherwise nil. */)
3294 if (!IsValidCodePage (XINT (cp
)))
3297 if (!SetConsoleCP (XINT (cp
)))
3300 return make_number (GetConsoleCP ());
3304 DEFUN ("w32-get-console-output-codepage", Fw32_get_console_output_codepage
,
3305 Sw32_get_console_output_codepage
, 0, 0, 0,
3306 doc
: /* Return current Windows codepage for console output. */)
3309 return make_number (GetConsoleOutputCP ());
3313 DEFUN ("w32-set-console-output-codepage", Fw32_set_console_output_codepage
,
3314 Sw32_set_console_output_codepage
, 1, 1, 0,
3315 doc
: /* Make Windows codepage CP be the codepage for Emacs console output.
3316 This codepage setting affects display in tty mode.
3317 If successful, the new CP is returned, otherwise nil. */)
3322 if (!IsValidCodePage (XINT (cp
)))
3325 if (!SetConsoleOutputCP (XINT (cp
)))
3328 return make_number (GetConsoleOutputCP ());
3332 DEFUN ("w32-get-codepage-charset", Fw32_get_codepage_charset
,
3333 Sw32_get_codepage_charset
, 1, 1, 0,
3334 doc
: /* Return charset ID corresponding to codepage CP.
3335 Returns nil if the codepage is not valid or its charset ID could
3338 Note that this function is only guaranteed to work with ANSI
3339 codepages; most console codepages are not supported and will
3348 if (!IsValidCodePage (XINT (cp
)))
3351 /* Going through a temporary DWORD_PTR variable avoids compiler warning
3352 about cast to pointer from integer of different size, when
3353 building --with-wide-int or building for 64bit. */
3355 if (TranslateCharsetInfo ((DWORD
*) dwcp
, &info
, TCI_SRCCODEPAGE
))
3356 return make_number (info
.ciCharset
);
3362 DEFUN ("w32-get-valid-keyboard-layouts", Fw32_get_valid_keyboard_layouts
,
3363 Sw32_get_valid_keyboard_layouts
, 0, 0, 0,
3364 doc
: /* Return list of Windows keyboard languages and layouts.
3365 The return value is a list of pairs of language id and layout id. */)
3368 int num_layouts
= GetKeyboardLayoutList (0, NULL
);
3369 HKL
* layouts
= (HKL
*) alloca (num_layouts
* sizeof (HKL
));
3370 Lisp_Object obj
= Qnil
;
3372 if (GetKeyboardLayoutList (num_layouts
, layouts
) == num_layouts
)
3374 while (--num_layouts
>= 0)
3376 HKL kl
= layouts
[num_layouts
];
3378 obj
= Fcons (Fcons (make_number (LOWORD (kl
)),
3379 make_number (HIWORD (kl
))),
3388 DEFUN ("w32-get-keyboard-layout", Fw32_get_keyboard_layout
,
3389 Sw32_get_keyboard_layout
, 0, 0, 0,
3390 doc
: /* Return current Windows keyboard language and layout.
3391 The return value is the cons of the language id and the layout id. */)
3394 HKL kl
= GetKeyboardLayout (dwWindowsThreadId
);
3396 return Fcons (make_number (LOWORD (kl
)),
3397 make_number (HIWORD (kl
)));
3401 DEFUN ("w32-set-keyboard-layout", Fw32_set_keyboard_layout
,
3402 Sw32_set_keyboard_layout
, 1, 1, 0,
3403 doc
: /* Make LAYOUT be the current keyboard layout for Emacs.
3404 The keyboard layout setting affects interpretation of keyboard input.
3405 If successful, the new layout id is returned, otherwise nil. */)
3406 (Lisp_Object layout
)
3410 CHECK_CONS (layout
);
3411 CHECK_NUMBER_CAR (layout
);
3412 CHECK_NUMBER_CDR (layout
);
3414 kl
= (HKL
) (UINT_PTR
) ((XINT (XCAR (layout
)) & 0xffff)
3415 | (XINT (XCDR (layout
)) << 16));
3417 /* Synchronize layout with input thread. */
3418 if (dwWindowsThreadId
)
3420 if (PostThreadMessage (dwWindowsThreadId
, WM_EMACS_SETKEYBOARDLAYOUT
,
3424 GetMessage (&msg
, NULL
, WM_EMACS_DONE
, WM_EMACS_DONE
);
3426 if (msg
.wParam
== 0)
3430 else if (!ActivateKeyboardLayout (kl
, 0))
3433 return Fw32_get_keyboard_layout ();
3436 /* Two variables to interface between get_lcid and the EnumLocales
3437 callback function below. */
3438 #ifndef LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH
3439 # define LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH 85
3441 static LCID found_lcid
;
3442 static char lname
[3 * LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH
+ 1 + 1];
3444 /* Callback function for EnumLocales. */
3445 static BOOL CALLBACK
3446 get_lcid_callback (LPTSTR locale_num_str
)
3449 char locval
[2 * LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH
+ 1 + 1];
3450 LCID try_lcid
= strtoul (locale_num_str
, &endp
, 16);
3452 if (GetLocaleInfo (try_lcid
, LOCALE_SABBREVLANGNAME
,
3453 locval
, LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH
))
3457 /* This is for when they only specify the language, as in "ENU". */
3458 if (stricmp (locval
, lname
) == 0)
3460 found_lcid
= try_lcid
;
3463 locval_len
= strlen (locval
);
3464 strcpy (locval
+ locval_len
, "_");
3465 if (GetLocaleInfo (try_lcid
, LOCALE_SABBREVCTRYNAME
,
3466 locval
+ locval_len
+ 1, LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH
))
3468 locval_len
= strlen (locval
);
3469 if (strnicmp (locval
, lname
, locval_len
) == 0
3470 && (lname
[locval_len
] == '.'
3471 || lname
[locval_len
] == '\0'))
3473 found_lcid
= try_lcid
;
3481 /* Return the Locale ID (LCID) number given the locale's name, a
3482 string, in LOCALE_NAME. This works by enumerating all the locales
3483 supported by the system, until we find one whose name matches
3486 get_lcid (const char *locale_name
)
3488 /* A simple cache. */
3489 static LCID last_lcid
;
3490 static char last_locale
[1000];
3492 /* The code below is not thread-safe, as it uses static variables.
3493 But this function is called only from the Lisp thread. */
3494 if (last_lcid
> 0 && strcmp (locale_name
, last_locale
) == 0)
3497 strncpy (lname
, locale_name
, sizeof (lname
) - 1);
3498 lname
[sizeof (lname
) - 1] = '\0';
3500 EnumSystemLocales (get_lcid_callback
, LCID_SUPPORTED
);
3503 last_lcid
= found_lcid
;
3504 strcpy (last_locale
, locale_name
);
3509 #ifndef _NSLCMPERROR
3510 # define _NSLCMPERROR INT_MAX
3512 #ifndef LINGUISTIC_IGNORECASE
3513 # define LINGUISTIC_IGNORECASE 0x00000010
3516 typedef int (WINAPI
*CompareStringW_Proc
)
3517 (LCID
, DWORD
, LPCWSTR
, int, LPCWSTR
, int);
3520 w32_compare_strings (const char *s1
, const char *s2
, char *locname
,
3523 LCID lcid
= GetThreadLocale ();
3524 wchar_t *string1_w
, *string2_w
;
3526 extern BOOL g_b_init_compare_string_w
;
3527 static CompareStringW_Proc pCompareStringW
;
3532 /* The LCID machinery doesn't seem to support the "C" locale, so we
3533 need to do that by hand. */
3535 && ((locname
[0] == 'C' && (locname
[1] == '\0' || locname
[1] == '.'))
3536 || strcmp (locname
, "POSIX") == 0))
3537 return (ignore_case
? stricmp (s1
, s2
) : strcmp (s1
, s2
));
3539 if (!g_b_init_compare_string_w
)
3541 if (os_subtype
== OS_9X
)
3544 (CompareStringW_Proc
) GetProcAddress (LoadLibrary ("Unicows.dll"),
3546 if (!pCompareStringW
)
3549 /* This return value is compatible with wcscoll and
3550 other MS CRT functions. */
3551 return _NSLCMPERROR
;
3555 pCompareStringW
= CompareStringW
;
3557 g_b_init_compare_string_w
= 1;
3560 needed
= pMultiByteToWideChar (CP_UTF8
, MB_ERR_INVALID_CHARS
, s1
, -1, NULL
, 0);
3563 SAFE_NALLOCA (string1_w
, 1, needed
+ 1);
3564 pMultiByteToWideChar (CP_UTF8
, MB_ERR_INVALID_CHARS
, s1
, -1,
3570 return _NSLCMPERROR
;
3573 needed
= pMultiByteToWideChar (CP_UTF8
, MB_ERR_INVALID_CHARS
, s2
, -1, NULL
, 0);
3576 SAFE_NALLOCA (string2_w
, 1, needed
+ 1);
3577 pMultiByteToWideChar (CP_UTF8
, MB_ERR_INVALID_CHARS
, s2
, -1,
3584 return _NSLCMPERROR
;
3589 /* Convert locale name string to LCID. We don't want to use
3590 LocaleNameToLCID because (a) it is only available since
3591 Vista, and (b) it doesn't accept locale names returned by
3592 'setlocale' and 'GetLocaleInfo'. */
3593 LCID new_lcid
= get_lcid (locname
);
3598 error ("Invalid locale %s: Invalid argument", locname
);
3603 /* NORM_IGNORECASE ignores any tertiary distinction, not just
3604 case variants. LINGUISTIC_IGNORECASE is more selective, and
3605 is sensitive to the locale's language, but it is not
3606 available before Vista. */
3607 if (w32_major_version
>= 6)
3608 flags
|= LINGUISTIC_IGNORECASE
;
3610 flags
|= NORM_IGNORECASE
;
3612 /* This approximates what glibc collation functions do when the
3613 locale's codeset is UTF-8. */
3614 if (!NILP (Vw32_collate_ignore_punctuation
))
3615 flags
|= NORM_IGNORESYMBOLS
;
3616 val
= pCompareStringW (lcid
, flags
, string1_w
, -1, string2_w
, -1);
3621 return _NSLCMPERROR
;
3628 syms_of_ntproc (void)
3630 DEFSYM (Qhigh
, "high");
3631 DEFSYM (Qlow
, "low");
3632 DEFSYM (Qcygwin
, "cygwin");
3633 DEFSYM (Qmsys
, "msys");
3634 DEFSYM (Qw32_native
, "w32-native");
3636 defsubr (&Sw32_has_winsock
);
3637 defsubr (&Sw32_unload_winsock
);
3639 defsubr (&Sw32_short_file_name
);
3640 defsubr (&Sw32_long_file_name
);
3641 defsubr (&Sw32_set_process_priority
);
3642 defsubr (&Sw32_application_type
);
3643 defsubr (&Sw32_get_locale_info
);
3644 defsubr (&Sw32_get_current_locale_id
);
3645 defsubr (&Sw32_get_default_locale_id
);
3646 defsubr (&Sw32_get_valid_locale_ids
);
3647 defsubr (&Sw32_set_current_locale
);
3649 defsubr (&Sw32_get_console_codepage
);
3650 defsubr (&Sw32_set_console_codepage
);
3651 defsubr (&Sw32_get_console_output_codepage
);
3652 defsubr (&Sw32_set_console_output_codepage
);
3653 defsubr (&Sw32_get_valid_codepages
);
3654 defsubr (&Sw32_get_codepage_charset
);
3656 defsubr (&Sw32_get_valid_keyboard_layouts
);
3657 defsubr (&Sw32_get_keyboard_layout
);
3658 defsubr (&Sw32_set_keyboard_layout
);
3660 DEFVAR_LISP ("w32-quote-process-args", Vw32_quote_process_args
,
3661 doc
: /* Non-nil enables quoting of process arguments to ensure correct parsing.
3662 Because Windows does not directly pass argv arrays to child processes,
3663 programs have to reconstruct the argv array by parsing the command
3664 line string. For an argument to contain a space, it must be enclosed
3665 in double quotes or it will be parsed as multiple arguments.
3667 If the value is a character, that character will be used to escape any
3668 quote characters that appear, otherwise a suitable escape character
3669 will be chosen based on the type of the program. */);
3670 Vw32_quote_process_args
= Qt
;
3672 DEFVAR_LISP ("w32-start-process-show-window",
3673 Vw32_start_process_show_window
,
3674 doc
: /* When nil, new child processes hide their windows.
3675 When non-nil, they show their window in the method of their choice.
3676 This variable doesn't affect GUI applications, which will never be hidden. */);
3677 Vw32_start_process_show_window
= Qnil
;
3679 DEFVAR_LISP ("w32-start-process-share-console",
3680 Vw32_start_process_share_console
,
3681 doc
: /* When nil, new child processes are given a new console.
3682 When non-nil, they share the Emacs console; this has the limitation of
3683 allowing only one DOS subprocess to run at a time (whether started directly
3684 or indirectly by Emacs), and preventing Emacs from cleanly terminating the
3685 subprocess group, but may allow Emacs to interrupt a subprocess that doesn't
3686 otherwise respond to interrupts from Emacs. */);
3687 Vw32_start_process_share_console
= Qnil
;
3689 DEFVAR_LISP ("w32-start-process-inherit-error-mode",
3690 Vw32_start_process_inherit_error_mode
,
3691 doc
: /* When nil, new child processes revert to the default error mode.
3692 When non-nil, they inherit their error mode setting from Emacs, which stops
3693 them blocking when trying to access unmounted drives etc. */);
3694 Vw32_start_process_inherit_error_mode
= Qt
;
3696 DEFVAR_INT ("w32-pipe-read-delay", w32_pipe_read_delay
,
3697 doc
: /* Forced delay before reading subprocess output.
3698 This is done to improve the buffering of subprocess output, by
3699 avoiding the inefficiency of frequently reading small amounts of data.
3701 If positive, the value is the number of milliseconds to sleep before
3702 reading the subprocess output. If negative, the magnitude is the number
3703 of time slices to wait (effectively boosting the priority of the child
3704 process temporarily). A value of zero disables waiting entirely. */);
3705 w32_pipe_read_delay
= 50;
3707 DEFVAR_LISP ("w32-downcase-file-names", Vw32_downcase_file_names
,
3708 doc
: /* Non-nil means convert all-upper case file names to lower case.
3709 This applies when performing completions and file name expansion.
3710 Note that the value of this setting also affects remote file names,
3711 so you probably don't want to set to non-nil if you use case-sensitive
3712 filesystems via ange-ftp. */);
3713 Vw32_downcase_file_names
= Qnil
;
3716 DEFVAR_LISP ("w32-generate-fake-inodes", Vw32_generate_fake_inodes
,
3717 doc
: /* Non-nil means attempt to fake realistic inode values.
3718 This works by hashing the truename of files, and should detect
3719 aliasing between long and short (8.3 DOS) names, but can have
3720 false positives because of hash collisions. Note that determining
3721 the truename of a file can be slow. */);
3722 Vw32_generate_fake_inodes
= Qnil
;
3725 DEFVAR_LISP ("w32-get-true-file-attributes", Vw32_get_true_file_attributes
,
3726 doc
: /* Non-nil means determine accurate file attributes in `file-attributes'.
3727 This option controls whether to issue additional system calls to determine
3728 accurate link counts, file type, and ownership information. It is more
3729 useful for files on NTFS volumes, where hard links and file security are
3730 supported, than on volumes of the FAT family.
3732 Without these system calls, link count will always be reported as 1 and file
3733 ownership will be attributed to the current user.
3734 The default value `local' means only issue these system calls for files
3735 on local fixed drives. A value of nil means never issue them.
3736 Any other non-nil value means do this even on remote and removable drives
3737 where the performance impact may be noticeable even on modern hardware. */);
3738 Vw32_get_true_file_attributes
= Qlocal
;
3740 DEFVAR_LISP ("w32-collate-ignore-punctuation",
3741 Vw32_collate_ignore_punctuation
,
3742 doc
: /* Non-nil causes string collation functions ignore punctuation on MS-Windows.
3743 On Posix platforms, `string-collate-lessp' and `string-collate-equalp'
3744 ignore punctuation characters when they compare strings, if the
3745 locale's codeset is UTF-8, as in \"en_US.UTF-8\". Binding this option
3746 to a non-nil value will achieve a similar effect on MS-Windows, where
3747 locales with UTF-8 codeset are not supported.
3749 Note that setting this to non-nil will also ignore blanks and symbols
3750 in the strings. So do NOT use this option when comparing file names
3751 for equality, only when you need to sort them. */);
3752 Vw32_collate_ignore_punctuation
= Qnil
;
3754 staticpro (&Vw32_valid_locale_ids
);
3755 staticpro (&Vw32_valid_codepages
);
3757 /* end of w32proc.c */