1 ;;; files.el --- file input and output commands for Emacs -*- lexical-binding:t -*-
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1992-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 ;; Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org
8 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
10 ;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
11 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
12 ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
13 ;; (at your option) any later version.
15 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
18 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
20 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
21 ;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
25 ;; Defines most of Emacs's file- and directory-handling functions,
26 ;; including basic file visiting, backup generation, link handling,
27 ;; ITS-id version control, load- and write-hook handling, and the like.
31 (defvar font-lock-keywords
)
34 "Backups of edited data files."
37 (defgroup find-file nil
42 (defcustom delete-auto-save-files t
43 "Non-nil means delete auto-save file when a buffer is saved or killed.
45 Note that the auto-save file will not be deleted if the buffer is killed
46 when it has unsaved changes."
50 (defcustom directory-abbrev-alist
52 "Alist of abbreviations for file directories.
53 A list of elements of the form (FROM . TO), each meaning to replace
54 FROM with TO when it appears in a directory name. This replacement is
55 done when setting up the default directory of a newly visited file.
57 FROM is matched against directory names anchored at the first
58 character, so it should start with a \"\\\\\\=`\", or, if directory
59 names cannot have embedded newlines, with a \"^\".
61 FROM and TO should be equivalent names, which refer to the
62 same directory. Do not use `~' in the TO strings;
63 they should be ordinary absolute directory names.
65 Use this feature when you have directories which you normally refer to
66 via absolute symbolic links. Make TO the name of the link, and FROM
67 the name it is linked to."
68 :type
'(repeat (cons :format
"%v"
75 (defcustom make-backup-files t
76 "Non-nil means make a backup of a file the first time it is saved.
77 This can be done by renaming the file or by copying.
79 Renaming means that Emacs renames the existing file so that it is a
80 backup file, then writes the buffer into a new file. Any other names
81 that the old file had will now refer to the backup file. The new file
82 is owned by you and its group is defaulted.
84 Copying means that Emacs copies the existing file into the backup
85 file, then writes the buffer on top of the existing file. Any other
86 names that the old file had will now refer to the new (edited) file.
87 The file's owner and group are unchanged.
89 The choice of renaming or copying is controlled by the variables
90 `backup-by-copying', `backup-by-copying-when-linked',
91 `backup-by-copying-when-mismatch' and
92 `backup-by-copying-when-privileged-mismatch'. See also `backup-inhibited'."
96 ;; Do this so that local variables based on the file name
97 ;; are not overridden by the major mode.
98 (defvar backup-inhibited nil
99 "If non-nil, backups will be inhibited.
100 This variable is intended for use by making it local to a buffer,
101 but it is not an automatically buffer-local variable.")
102 (put 'backup-inhibited
'permanent-local t
)
104 (defcustom backup-by-copying nil
105 "Non-nil means always use copying to create backup files.
106 See documentation of variable `make-backup-files'."
110 (defcustom backup-by-copying-when-linked nil
111 "Non-nil means use copying to create backups for files with multiple names.
112 This causes the alternate names to refer to the latest version as edited.
113 This variable is relevant only if `backup-by-copying' is nil."
117 (defcustom backup-by-copying-when-mismatch t
118 "Non-nil means create backups by copying if this preserves owner or group.
119 Renaming may still be used (subject to control of other variables)
120 when it would not result in changing the owner or group of the file;
121 that is, for files which are owned by you and whose group matches
122 the default for a new file created there by you.
123 This variable is relevant only if `backup-by-copying' is nil."
127 (put 'backup-by-copying-when-mismatch
'permanent-local t
)
129 (defcustom backup-by-copying-when-privileged-mismatch
200
130 "Non-nil means create backups by copying to preserve a privileged owner.
131 Renaming may still be used (subject to control of other variables)
132 when it would not result in changing the owner of the file or if the owner
133 has a user id greater than the value of this variable. This is useful
134 when low-numbered uid's are used for special system users (such as root)
135 that must maintain ownership of certain files.
136 This variable is relevant only if `backup-by-copying' and
137 `backup-by-copying-when-mismatch' are nil."
138 :type
'(choice (const nil
) integer
)
141 (defvar backup-enable-predicate
'normal-backup-enable-predicate
142 "Predicate that looks at a file name and decides whether to make backups.
143 Called with an absolute file name as argument, it returns t to enable backup.")
145 (defcustom buffer-offer-save nil
146 "Non-nil in a buffer means always offer to save buffer on exit.
147 Do so even if the buffer is not visiting a file.
148 Automatically local in all buffers."
151 (make-variable-buffer-local 'buffer-offer-save
)
152 (put 'buffer-offer-save
'permanent-local t
)
154 (defcustom find-file-existing-other-name t
155 "Non-nil means find a file under alternative names, in existing buffers.
156 This means if any existing buffer is visiting the file you want
157 under another name, you get the existing buffer instead of a new buffer."
161 (defcustom find-file-visit-truename nil
162 "Non-nil means visiting a file uses its truename as the visited-file name.
163 That is, the buffer visiting the file has the truename as the
164 value of `buffer-file-name'. The truename of a file is found by
165 chasing all links both at the file level and at the levels of the
166 containing directories."
169 (put 'find-file-visit-truename
'safe-local-variable
'booleanp
)
171 (defcustom revert-without-query nil
172 "Specify which files should be reverted without query.
173 The value is a list of regular expressions.
174 If the file name matches one of these regular expressions,
175 then `revert-buffer' reverts the file without querying
176 if the file has changed on disk and you have not edited the buffer."
177 :type
'(repeat regexp
)
180 (defvar buffer-file-number nil
181 "The device number and file number of the file visited in the current buffer.
182 The value is a list of the form (FILENUM DEVNUM).
183 This pair of numbers uniquely identifies the file.
184 If the buffer is visiting a new file, the value is nil.")
185 (make-variable-buffer-local 'buffer-file-number
)
186 (put 'buffer-file-number
'permanent-local t
)
188 (defvar buffer-file-numbers-unique
(not (memq system-type
'(windows-nt)))
189 "Non-nil means that `buffer-file-number' uniquely identifies files.")
191 (defvar buffer-file-read-only nil
192 "Non-nil if visited file was read-only when visited.")
193 (make-variable-buffer-local 'buffer-file-read-only
)
195 (defcustom small-temporary-file-directory
196 (if (eq system-type
'ms-dos
) (getenv "TMPDIR"))
197 "The directory for writing small temporary files.
198 If non-nil, this directory is used instead of `temporary-file-directory'
199 by programs that create small temporary files. This is for systems that
200 have fast storage with limited space, such as a RAM disk."
202 :initialize
'custom-initialize-delay
203 :type
'(choice (const nil
) directory
))
205 ;; The system null device. (Should reference NULL_DEVICE from C.)
206 (defvar null-device
(purecopy "/dev/null") "The system null device.")
208 (declare-function msdos-long-file-names
"msdos.c")
209 (declare-function w32-long-file-name
"w32proc.c")
210 (declare-function dired-get-filename
"dired" (&optional localp no-error-if-not-filep
))
211 (declare-function dired-unmark
"dired" (arg &optional interactive
))
212 (declare-function dired-do-flagged-delete
"dired" (&optional nomessage
))
213 (declare-function dos-8
+3-filename
"dos-fns" (filename))
214 (declare-function dosified-file-name
"dos-fns" (file-name))
216 (defvar file-name-invalid-regexp
217 (cond ((and (eq system-type
'ms-dos
) (not (msdos-long-file-names)))
219 (concat "^\\([^A-Z[-`a-z]\\|..+\\)?:\\|" ; colon except after drive
220 "[+, ;=|<>\"?*]\\|\\[\\|\\]\\|" ; invalid characters
221 "[\000-\037]\\|" ; control characters
222 "\\(/\\.\\.?[^/]\\)\\|" ; leading dots
223 "\\(/[^/.]+\\.[^/.]*\\.\\)"))) ; more than a single dot
224 ((memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin
))
226 (concat "^\\([^A-Z[-`a-z]\\|..+\\)?:\\|" ; colon except after drive
227 "[|<>\"?*\000-\037]"))) ; invalid characters
228 (t (purecopy "[\000]")))
229 "Regexp recognizing file names which aren't allowed by the filesystem.")
231 (defcustom file-precious-flag nil
232 "Non-nil means protect against I/O errors while saving files.
233 Some modes set this non-nil in particular buffers.
235 This feature works by writing the new contents into a temporary file
236 and then renaming the temporary file to replace the original.
237 In this way, any I/O error in writing leaves the original untouched,
238 and there is never any instant where the file is nonexistent.
240 Note that this feature forces backups to be made by copying.
241 Yet, at the same time, saving a precious file
242 breaks any hard links between it and other files.
244 This feature is advisory: for example, if the directory in which the
245 file is being saved is not writable, Emacs may ignore a non-nil value
246 of `file-precious-flag' and write directly into the file.
248 See also: `break-hardlink-on-save'."
252 (defcustom break-hardlink-on-save nil
253 "Whether to allow breaking hardlinks when saving files.
254 If non-nil, then when saving a file that exists under several
255 names \(i.e., has multiple hardlinks), break the hardlink
256 associated with `buffer-file-name' and write to a new file, so
257 that the other instances of the file are not affected by the
260 If `buffer-file-name' refers to a symlink, do not break the symlink.
262 Unlike `file-precious-flag', `break-hardlink-on-save' is not advisory.
263 For example, if the directory in which a file is being saved is not
264 itself writable, then error instead of saving in some
265 hardlink-nonbreaking way.
267 See also `backup-by-copying' and `backup-by-copying-when-linked'."
272 (defcustom version-control nil
273 "Control use of version numbers for backup files.
274 When t, make numeric backup versions unconditionally.
275 When nil, make them for files that have some already.
276 The value `never' means do not make them."
277 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"Never" never
)
278 (const :tag
"If existing" nil
)
279 (other :tag
"Always" t
))
281 (put 'version-control
'safe-local-variable
282 (lambda (x) (or (booleanp x
) (equal x
'never
))))
284 (defcustom dired-kept-versions
2
285 "When cleaning directory, number of versions to keep."
290 (defcustom delete-old-versions nil
291 "If t, delete excess backup versions silently.
292 If nil, ask confirmation. Any other value prevents any trimming."
293 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"Delete" t
)
294 (const :tag
"Ask" nil
)
295 (other :tag
"Leave" other
))
298 (defcustom kept-old-versions
2
299 "Number of oldest versions to keep when a new numbered backup is made."
302 (put 'kept-old-versions
'safe-local-variable
'integerp
)
304 (defcustom kept-new-versions
2
305 "Number of newest versions to keep when a new numbered backup is made.
306 Includes the new backup. Must be > 0"
309 (put 'kept-new-versions
'safe-local-variable
'integerp
)
311 (defcustom require-final-newline nil
312 "Whether to add a newline automatically at the end of the file.
314 A value of t means do this only when the file is about to be saved.
315 A value of `visit' means do this right after the file is visited.
316 A value of `visit-save' means do it at both of those times.
317 Any other non-nil value means ask user whether to add a newline, when saving.
318 A value of nil means don't add newlines.
320 Certain major modes set this locally to the value obtained
321 from `mode-require-final-newline'."
323 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"When visiting" visit
)
324 (const :tag
"When saving" t
)
325 (const :tag
"When visiting or saving" visit-save
)
326 (const :tag
"Don't add newlines" nil
)
327 (other :tag
"Ask each time" ask
))
328 :group
'editing-basics
)
330 (defcustom mode-require-final-newline t
331 "Whether to add a newline at end of file, in certain major modes.
332 Those modes set `require-final-newline' to this value when you enable them.
333 They do so because they are often used for files that are supposed
334 to end in newlines, and the question is how to arrange that.
336 A value of t means do this only when the file is about to be saved.
337 A value of `visit' means do this right after the file is visited.
338 A value of `visit-save' means do it at both of those times.
339 Any other non-nil value means ask user whether to add a newline, when saving.
341 A value of nil means do not add newlines. That is a risky choice in this
342 variable since this value is used for modes for files that ought to have
343 final newlines. So if you set this to nil, you must explicitly check and
344 add a final newline, whenever you save a file that really needs one."
345 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"When visiting" visit
)
346 (const :tag
"When saving" t
)
347 (const :tag
"When visiting or saving" visit-save
)
348 (const :tag
"Don't add newlines" nil
)
349 (other :tag
"Ask each time" ask
))
350 :group
'editing-basics
353 (defcustom auto-save-default t
354 "Non-nil says by default do auto-saving of every file-visiting buffer."
358 (defcustom auto-save-file-name-transforms
359 `(("\\`/[^/]*:\\([^/]*/\\)*\\([^/]*\\)\\'"
360 ;; Don't put "\\2" inside expand-file-name, since it will be
361 ;; transformed to "/2" on DOS/Windows.
362 ,(concat temporary-file-directory
"\\2") t
))
363 "Transforms to apply to buffer file name before making auto-save file name.
364 Each transform is a list (REGEXP REPLACEMENT UNIQUIFY):
365 REGEXP is a regular expression to match against the file name.
366 If it matches, `replace-match' is used to replace the
367 matching part with REPLACEMENT.
368 If the optional element UNIQUIFY is non-nil, the auto-save file name is
369 constructed by taking the directory part of the replaced file-name,
370 concatenated with the buffer file name with all directory separators
371 changed to `!' to prevent clashes. This will not work
372 correctly if your filesystem truncates the resulting name.
374 All the transforms in the list are tried, in the order they are listed.
375 When one transform applies, its result is final;
376 no further transforms are tried.
378 The default value is set up to put the auto-save file into the
379 temporary directory (see the variable `temporary-file-directory') for
380 editing a remote file.
382 On MS-DOS filesystems without long names this variable is always
385 :type
'(repeat (list (string :tag
"Regexp") (string :tag
"Replacement")
386 (boolean :tag
"Uniquify")))
387 :initialize
'custom-initialize-delay
390 (defcustom save-abbrevs t
391 "Non-nil means save word abbrevs too when files are saved.
392 If `silently', don't ask the user before saving."
393 :type
'(choice (const t
) (const nil
) (const silently
))
396 (defcustom find-file-run-dired t
397 "Non-nil means allow `find-file' to visit directories.
398 To visit the directory, `find-file' runs `find-directory-functions'."
402 (defcustom find-directory-functions
'(cvs-dired-noselect dired-noselect
)
403 "List of functions to try in sequence to visit a directory.
404 Each function is called with the directory name as the sole argument
405 and should return either a buffer or nil."
406 :type
'(hook :options
(cvs-dired-noselect dired-noselect
))
409 ;; FIXME: also add a hook for `(thing-at-point 'filename)'
410 (defcustom file-name-at-point-functions
'(ffap-guess-file-name-at-point)
411 "List of functions to try in sequence to get a file name at point.
412 Each function should return either nil or a file name found at the
413 location of point in the current buffer."
414 :type
'(hook :options
(ffap-guess-file-name-at-point))
417 ;;;It is not useful to make this a local variable.
418 ;;;(put 'find-file-not-found-hooks 'permanent-local t)
419 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'find-file-not-found-hooks
420 'find-file-not-found-functions
"22.1")
421 (defvar find-file-not-found-functions nil
422 "List of functions to be called for `find-file' on nonexistent file.
423 These functions are called as soon as the error is detected.
424 Variable `buffer-file-name' is already set up.
425 The functions are called in the order given until one of them returns non-nil.")
427 ;;;It is not useful to make this a local variable.
428 ;;;(put 'find-file-hooks 'permanent-local t)
429 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'find-file-hooks
'find-file-hook
"22.1")
430 (defcustom find-file-hook nil
431 "List of functions to be called after a buffer is loaded from a file.
432 The buffer's local variables (if any) will have been processed before the
433 functions are called."
436 :options
'(auto-insert)
439 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'write-file-hooks
'write-file-functions
"22.1")
440 (defvar write-file-functions nil
441 "List of functions to be called before writing out a buffer to a file.
442 If one of them returns non-nil, the file is considered already written
443 and the rest are not called.
444 These hooks are considered to pertain to the visited file.
445 So any buffer-local binding of this variable is discarded if you change
446 the visited file name with \\[set-visited-file-name], but not when you
447 change the major mode.
449 This hook is not run if any of the functions in
450 `write-contents-functions' returns non-nil. Both hooks pertain
451 to how to save a buffer to file, for instance, choosing a suitable
452 coding system and setting mode bits. (See Info
453 node `(elisp)Saving Buffers'.) To perform various checks or
454 updates before the buffer is saved, use `before-save-hook'.")
455 (put 'write-file-functions
'permanent-local t
)
457 (defvar local-write-file-hooks nil
)
458 (make-variable-buffer-local 'local-write-file-hooks
)
459 (put 'local-write-file-hooks
'permanent-local t
)
460 (make-obsolete-variable 'local-write-file-hooks
'write-file-functions
"22.1")
462 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'write-contents-hooks
463 'write-contents-functions
"22.1")
464 (defvar write-contents-functions nil
465 "List of functions to be called before writing out a buffer to a file.
466 If one of them returns non-nil, the file is considered already written
467 and the rest are not called and neither are the functions in
468 `write-file-functions'.
470 This variable is meant to be used for hooks that pertain to the
471 buffer's contents, not to the particular visited file; thus,
472 `set-visited-file-name' does not clear this variable; but changing the
473 major mode does clear it.
475 For hooks that _do_ pertain to the particular visited file, use
476 `write-file-functions'. Both this variable and
477 `write-file-functions' relate to how a buffer is saved to file.
478 To perform various checks or updates before the buffer is saved,
479 use `before-save-hook'.")
480 (make-variable-buffer-local 'write-contents-functions
)
482 (defcustom enable-local-variables t
483 "Control use of local variables in files you visit.
484 The value can be t, nil, :safe, :all, or something else.
486 A value of t means file local variables specifications are obeyed
487 if all the specified variable values are safe; if any values are
488 not safe, Emacs queries you, once, whether to set them all.
489 \(When you say yes to certain values, they are remembered as safe.)
491 :safe means set the safe variables, and ignore the rest.
492 :all means set all variables, whether safe or not.
493 (Don't set it permanently to :all.)
494 A value of nil means always ignore the file local variables.
496 Any other value means always query you once whether to set them all.
497 \(When you say yes to certain values, they are remembered as safe, but
498 this has no effect when `enable-local-variables' is \"something else\".)
500 This variable also controls use of major modes specified in
503 The command \\[normal-mode], when used interactively,
504 always obeys file local variable specifications and the -*- line,
505 and ignores this variable."
507 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"Query Unsafe" t
)
508 (const :tag
"Safe Only" :safe
)
509 (const :tag
"Do all" :all
)
510 (const :tag
"Ignore" nil
)
511 (other :tag
"Query" other
))
514 (defvar enable-dir-local-variables t
515 "Non-nil means enable use of directory-local variables.
516 Some modes may wish to set this to nil to prevent directory-local
517 settings being applied, but still respect file-local ones.")
519 ;; This is an odd variable IMO.
520 ;; You might wonder why it is needed, when we could just do:
521 ;; (set (make-local-variable 'enable-local-variables) nil)
522 ;; These two are not precisely the same.
523 ;; Setting this variable does not cause -*- mode settings to be
524 ;; ignored, whereas setting enable-local-variables does.
525 ;; Only three places in Emacs use this variable: tar and arc modes,
526 ;; and rmail. The first two don't need it. They already use
527 ;; inhibit-local-variables-regexps, which is probably enough, and
528 ;; could also just set enable-local-variables locally to nil.
529 ;; Them setting it has the side-effect that dir-locals cannot apply to
530 ;; eg tar files (?). FIXME Is this appropriate?
531 ;; AFAICS, rmail is the only thing that needs this, and the only
532 ;; reason it uses it is for BABYL files (which are obsolete).
533 ;; These contain "-*- rmail -*-" in the first line, which rmail wants
534 ;; to respect, so that find-file on a BABYL file will switch to
535 ;; rmail-mode automatically (this is nice, but hardly essential,
536 ;; since most people are used to explicitly running a command to
537 ;; access their mail; M-x gnus etc). Rmail files may happen to
538 ;; contain Local Variables sections in messages, which Rmail wants to
539 ;; ignore. So AFAICS the only reason this variable exists is for a
540 ;; minor convenience feature for handling of an obsolete Rmail file format.
541 (defvar local-enable-local-variables t
542 "Like `enable-local-variables' but meant for buffer-local bindings.
543 The meaningful values are nil and non-nil. The default is non-nil.
544 If a major mode sets this to nil, buffer-locally, then any local
545 variables list in a file visited in that mode will be ignored.
547 This variable does not affect the use of major modes specified
550 (defcustom enable-local-eval
'maybe
551 "Control processing of the \"variable\" `eval' in a file's local variables.
552 The value can be t, nil or something else.
553 A value of t means obey `eval' variables.
554 A value of nil means ignore them; anything else means query."
556 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"Obey" t
)
557 (const :tag
"Ignore" nil
)
558 (other :tag
"Query" other
))
561 (defcustom view-read-only nil
562 "Non-nil means buffers visiting files read-only do so in view mode.
563 In fact, this means that all read-only buffers normally have
564 View mode enabled, including buffers that are read-only because
565 you visit a file you cannot alter, and buffers you make read-only
566 using \\[read-only-mode]."
570 (defvar file-name-history nil
571 "History list of file names entered in the minibuffer.
573 Maximum length of the history list is determined by the value
574 of `history-length', which see.")
576 (defvar save-silently nil
577 "If non-nil, avoid messages when saving files.
578 Error-related messages will still be printed, but all other
582 (put 'ange-ftp-completion-hook-function
'safe-magic t
)
583 (defun ange-ftp-completion-hook-function (op &rest args
)
584 "Provides support for ange-ftp host name completion.
585 Runs the usual ange-ftp hook, but only for completion operations."
586 ;; Having this here avoids the need to load ange-ftp when it's not
588 (if (memq op
'(file-name-completion file-name-all-completions
))
589 (apply 'ange-ftp-hook-function op args
)
590 (let ((inhibit-file-name-handlers
591 (cons 'ange-ftp-completion-hook-function
592 (and (eq inhibit-file-name-operation op
)
593 inhibit-file-name-handlers
)))
594 (inhibit-file-name-operation op
))
597 (declare-function dos-convert-standard-filename
"dos-fns.el" (filename))
598 (declare-function w32-convert-standard-filename
"w32-fns.el" (filename))
600 (defun convert-standard-filename (filename)
601 "Convert a standard file's name to something suitable for the OS.
602 This means to guarantee valid names and perhaps to canonicalize
605 FILENAME should be an absolute file name since the conversion rules
606 sometimes vary depending on the position in the file name. E.g. c:/foo
607 is a valid DOS file name, but c:/bar/c:/foo is not.
609 This function's standard definition is trivial; it just returns
610 the argument. However, on Windows and DOS, replace invalid
611 characters. On DOS, make sure to obey the 8.3 limitations.
612 In the native Windows build, turn Cygwin names into native names,
613 and also turn slashes into backslashes if the shell requires it (see
614 `w32-shell-dos-semantics').
616 See Info node `(elisp)Standard File Names' for more details."
618 ((eq system-type
'cygwin
)
619 (let ((name (copy-sequence filename
))
621 ;; Replace invalid filename characters with !
622 (while (string-match "[?*:<>|\"\000-\037]" name start
)
623 (aset name
(match-beginning 0) ?
!)
624 (setq start
(match-end 0)))
626 ((eq system-type
'windows-nt
)
627 (w32-convert-standard-filename filename
))
628 ((eq system-type
'ms-dos
)
629 (dos-convert-standard-filename filename
))
632 (defun read-directory-name (prompt &optional dir default-dirname mustmatch initial
)
633 "Read directory name, prompting with PROMPT and completing in directory DIR.
634 Value is not expanded---you must call `expand-file-name' yourself.
635 Default name to DEFAULT-DIRNAME if user exits with the same
636 non-empty string that was inserted by this function.
637 (If DEFAULT-DIRNAME is omitted, DIR combined with INITIAL is used,
638 or just DIR if INITIAL is nil.)
639 If the user exits with an empty minibuffer, this function returns
640 an empty string. (This can only happen if the user erased the
641 pre-inserted contents or if `insert-default-directory' is nil.)
642 Fourth arg MUSTMATCH non-nil means require existing directory's name.
643 Non-nil and non-t means also require confirmation after completion.
644 Fifth arg INITIAL specifies text to start with.
645 DIR should be an absolute directory name. It defaults to
646 the value of `default-directory'."
648 (setq dir default-directory
))
649 (read-file-name prompt dir
(or default-dirname
650 (if initial
(expand-file-name initial dir
)
656 (defun pwd (&optional insert
)
657 "Show the current default directory.
658 With prefix argument INSERT, insert the current default directory
662 (insert default-directory
)
663 (message "Directory %s" default-directory
)))
666 "Value of the CDPATH environment variable, as a list.
667 Not actually set up until the first time you use it.")
669 (defun parse-colon-path (search-path)
670 "Explode a search path into a list of directory names.
671 Directories are separated by `path-separator' (which is colon in
672 GNU and Unix systems). Substitute environment variables into the
673 resulting list of directory names. For an empty path element (i.e.,
674 a leading or trailing separator, or two adjacent separators), return
675 nil (meaning `default-directory') as the associated list element."
676 (when (stringp search-path
)
679 (substitute-in-file-name (file-name-as-directory f
))))
680 (split-string search-path path-separator
))))
682 (defun cd-absolute (dir)
683 "Change current directory to given absolute file name DIR."
684 ;; Put the name into directory syntax now,
685 ;; because otherwise expand-file-name may give some bad results.
686 (setq dir
(file-name-as-directory dir
))
687 ;; We used to additionally call abbreviate-file-name here, for an
688 ;; unknown reason. Problem is that most buffers are setup
689 ;; without going through cd-absolute and don't call
690 ;; abbreviate-file-name on their default-directory, so the few that
691 ;; do end up using a superficially different directory.
692 (setq dir
(expand-file-name dir
))
693 (if (not (file-directory-p dir
))
694 (if (file-exists-p dir
)
695 (error "%s is not a directory" dir
)
696 (error "%s: no such directory" dir
))
697 (unless (file-accessible-directory-p dir
)
698 (error "Cannot cd to %s: Permission denied" dir
))
699 (setq default-directory dir
)
700 (setq list-buffers-directory dir
)))
703 "Make DIR become the current buffer's default directory.
704 If your environment includes a `CDPATH' variable, try each one of
705 that list of directories (separated by occurrences of
706 `path-separator') when resolving a relative directory name.
707 The path separator is colon in GNU and GNU-like systems."
710 ;; FIXME: There's a subtle bug in the completion below. Seems linked
711 ;; to a fundamental difficulty of implementing `predicate' correctly.
712 ;; The manifestation is that TAB may list non-directories in the case where
713 ;; those files also correspond to valid directories (if your cd-path is (A/
714 ;; B/) and you have A/a a file and B/a a directory, then both `a' and `a/'
715 ;; will be listed as valid completions).
716 ;; This is because `a' (listed because of A/a) is indeed a valid choice
717 ;; (which will lead to the use of B/a).
718 (minibuffer-with-setup-hook
720 (setq minibuffer-completion-table
721 (apply-partially #'locate-file-completion-table
723 (setq minibuffer-completion-predicate
725 (locate-file dir cd-path nil
726 (lambda (f) (and (file-directory-p f
) 'dir-ok
))))))
728 (setq cd-path
(or (parse-colon-path (getenv "CDPATH"))
730 (read-directory-name "Change default directory: "
731 default-directory default-directory
734 (setq cd-path
(or (parse-colon-path (getenv "CDPATH"))
737 (or (locate-file dir cd-path nil
738 (lambda (f) (and (file-directory-p f
) 'dir-ok
)))
739 (error "No such directory found via CDPATH environment variable"))))
741 (defsubst directory-name-p
(name)
742 "Return non-nil if NAME ends with a directory separator character."
743 (let ((len (length name
))
746 (setq lastc
(aref name
(1- len
))))
748 (and (memq system-type
'(windows-nt ms-dos
))
751 (defun directory-files-recursively (dir regexp
&optional include-directories
)
752 "Return list of all files under DIR that have file names matching REGEXP.
753 This function works recursively. Files are returned in \"depth first\"
754 order, and files from each directory are sorted in alphabetical order.
755 Each file name appears in the returned list in its absolute form.
756 Optional argument INCLUDE-DIRECTORIES non-nil means also include in the
757 output directories whose names match REGEXP."
760 ;; When DIR is "/", remote file names like "/method:" could
761 ;; also be offered. We shall suppress them.
762 (tramp-mode (and tramp-mode
(file-remote-p (expand-file-name dir
)))))
763 (dolist (file (sort (file-name-all-completions "" dir
)
765 (unless (member file
'("./" "../"))
766 (if (directory-name-p file
)
767 (let* ((leaf (substring file
0 (1- (length file
))))
768 (full-file (expand-file-name leaf dir
)))
769 ;; Don't follow symlinks to other directories.
770 (unless (file-symlink-p full-file
)
772 (nconc result
(directory-files-recursively
773 full-file regexp include-directories
))))
774 (when (and include-directories
775 (string-match regexp leaf
))
776 (setq result
(nconc result
(list full-file
)))))
777 (when (string-match regexp file
)
778 (push (expand-file-name file dir
) files
)))))
779 (nconc result
(nreverse files
))))
781 (defvar module-file-suffix
)
783 (defun load-file (file)
784 "Load the Lisp file named FILE."
785 ;; This is a case where .elc and .so/.dll make a lot of sense.
786 (interactive (list (let ((completion-ignored-extensions
787 (remove module-file-suffix
789 completion-ignored-extensions
))))
790 (read-file-name "Load file: " nil nil
'lambda
))))
791 (load (expand-file-name file
) nil nil t
))
793 (defun locate-file (filename path
&optional suffixes predicate
)
794 "Search for FILENAME through PATH.
795 If found, return the absolute file name of FILENAME; otherwise
797 PATH should be a list of directories to look in, like the lists in
798 `exec-path' or `load-path'.
799 If SUFFIXES is non-nil, it should be a list of suffixes to append to
800 file name when searching. If SUFFIXES is nil, it is equivalent to (\"\").
801 Use (\"/\") to disable PATH search, but still try the suffixes in SUFFIXES.
802 If non-nil, PREDICATE is used instead of `file-readable-p'.
804 This function will normally skip directories, so if you want it to find
805 directories, make sure the PREDICATE function returns `dir-ok' for them.
807 PREDICATE can also be an integer to pass to the `access' system call,
808 in which case file-name handlers are ignored. This usage is deprecated.
809 For compatibility, PREDICATE can also be one of the symbols
810 `executable', `readable', `writable', or `exists', or a list of
811 one or more of those symbols."
812 (if (and predicate
(symbolp predicate
) (not (functionp predicate
)))
813 (setq predicate
(list predicate
)))
814 (when (and (consp predicate
) (not (functionp predicate
)))
816 (logior (if (memq 'executable predicate
) 1 0)
817 (if (memq 'writable predicate
) 2 0)
818 (if (memq 'readable predicate
) 4 0))))
819 (locate-file-internal filename path suffixes predicate
))
821 (defun locate-file-completion-table (dirs suffixes string pred action
)
822 "Do completion for file names passed to `locate-file'."
824 ((file-name-absolute-p string
)
825 ;; FIXME: maybe we should use completion-file-name-table instead,
826 ;; tho at least for `load', the arg is passed through
827 ;; substitute-in-file-name for historical reasons.
828 (read-file-name-internal string pred action
))
829 ((eq (car-safe action
) 'boundaries
)
830 (let ((suffix (cdr action
)))
832 ,(length (file-name-directory string
))
833 ,@(let ((x (file-name-directory suffix
)))
834 (if x
(1- (length x
)) (length suffix
))))))
837 ;; If we have files like "foo.el" and "foo.elc", we could load one of
838 ;; them with "foo.el", "foo.elc", or "foo", where just "foo" is the
839 ;; preferred way. So if we list all 3, that gives a lot of redundant
840 ;; entries for the poor soul looking just for "foo". OTOH, sometimes
841 ;; the user does want to pay attention to the extension. We try to
842 ;; diffuse this tension by stripping the suffix, except when the
843 ;; result is a single element (i.e. usually we only list "foo" unless
844 ;; it's the only remaining element in the list, in which case we do
845 ;; list "foo", "foo.elc" and "foo.el").
847 (suffix (concat (regexp-opt suffixes t
) "\\'"))
848 (string-dir (file-name-directory string
))
849 (string-file (file-name-nondirectory string
)))
852 (setq dir default-directory
))
853 (if string-dir
(setq dir
(expand-file-name string-dir dir
)))
854 (when (file-directory-p dir
)
855 (dolist (file (file-name-all-completions
857 (if (not (string-match suffix file
))
859 (push file fullnames
)
860 (push (substring file
0 (match-beginning 0)) names
)))))
861 ;; Switching from names to names+fullnames creates a non-monotonicity
862 ;; which can cause problems with things like partial-completion.
863 ;; To minimize the problem, filter out completion-regexp-list, so that
864 ;; M-x load-library RET t/x.e TAB finds some files. Also remove elements
865 ;; from `names' which only matched `string' when they still had
867 (setq names
(all-completions string names
))
868 ;; Remove duplicates of the first element, so that we can easily check
869 ;; if `names' really only contains a single element.
870 (when (cdr names
) (setcdr names
(delete (car names
) (cdr names
))))
872 ;; There's no more than one matching non-suffixed element, so expand
873 ;; the list by adding the suffixed elements as well.
874 (setq names
(nconc names fullnames
)))
875 (completion-table-with-context
876 string-dir names string-file pred action
)))))
878 (defun locate-file-completion (string path-and-suffixes action
)
879 "Do completion for file names passed to `locate-file'.
880 PATH-AND-SUFFIXES is a pair of lists, (DIRECTORIES . SUFFIXES)."
881 (declare (obsolete locate-file-completion-table
"23.1"))
882 (locate-file-completion-table (car path-and-suffixes
)
883 (cdr path-and-suffixes
)
886 (defvar locate-dominating-stop-dir-regexp
887 (purecopy "\\`\\(?:[\\/][\\/][^\\/]+[\\/]\\|/\\(?:net\\|afs\\|\\.\\.\\.\\)/\\)\\'")
888 "Regexp of directory names which stop the search in `locate-dominating-file'.
889 Any directory whose name matches this regexp will be treated like
890 a kind of root directory by `locate-dominating-file' which will stop its search
891 when it bumps into it.
892 The default regexp prevents fruitless and time-consuming attempts to find
893 special files in directories in which filenames are interpreted as hostnames,
894 or mount points potentially requiring authentication as a different user.")
896 ;; (defun locate-dominating-files (file regexp)
897 ;; "Look up the directory hierarchy from FILE for a file matching REGEXP.
898 ;; Stop at the first parent where a matching file is found and return the list
899 ;; of files that that match in this directory."
901 ;; ;; `user' is not initialized yet because `file' may not exist, so we may
902 ;; ;; have to walk up part of the hierarchy before we find the "initial UID".
904 ;; ;; Abbreviate, so as to stop when we cross ~/.
905 ;; (dir (abbreviate-file-name (file-name-as-directory file)))
908 ;; ;; As a heuristic, we stop looking up the hierarchy of
909 ;; ;; directories as soon as we find a directory belonging to
910 ;; ;; another user. This should save us from looking in
911 ;; ;; things like /net and /afs. This assumes that all the
912 ;; ;; files inside a project belong to the same user.
913 ;; (let ((prev-user user))
914 ;; (setq user (nth 2 (file-attributes dir)))
915 ;; (or (null prev-user) (equal user prev-user))))
916 ;; (if (setq files (condition-case nil
917 ;; (directory-files dir 'full regexp 'nosort)
919 ;; (throw 'found files)
921 ;; (setq dir (file-name-directory
922 ;; (directory-file-name dir))))
926 (defun locate-dominating-file (file name
)
927 "Look up the directory hierarchy from FILE for a directory containing NAME.
928 Stop at the first parent directory containing a file NAME,
929 and return the directory. Return nil if not found.
930 Instead of a string, NAME can also be a predicate taking one argument
931 \(a directory) and returning a non-nil value if that directory is the one for
932 which we're looking."
933 ;; We used to use the above locate-dominating-files code, but the
934 ;; directory-files call is very costly, so we're much better off doing
935 ;; multiple calls using the code in here.
937 ;; Represent /home/luser/foo as ~/foo so that we don't try to look for
938 ;; `name' in /home or in /.
939 (setq file
(abbreviate-file-name (expand-file-name file
)))
941 ;; `user' is not initialized outside the loop because
942 ;; `file' may not exist, so we may have to walk up part of the
943 ;; hierarchy before we find the "initial UID". Note: currently unused
948 ;; FIXME: Disabled this heuristic because it is sometimes
950 ;; As a heuristic, we stop looking up the hierarchy of
951 ;; directories as soon as we find a directory belonging
952 ;; to another user. This should save us from looking in
953 ;; things like /net and /afs. This assumes that all the
954 ;; files inside a project belong to the same user.
955 ;; (let ((prev-user user))
956 ;; (setq user (nth 2 (file-attributes file)))
957 ;; (and prev-user (not (equal user prev-user))))
958 (string-match locate-dominating-stop-dir-regexp file
)))
959 (setq try
(if (stringp name
)
960 (file-exists-p (expand-file-name name file
))
961 (funcall name file
)))
962 (cond (try (setq root file
))
963 ((equal file
(setq file
(file-name-directory
964 (directory-file-name file
))))
966 (if root
(file-name-as-directory root
))))
968 (defcustom user-emacs-directory-warning t
969 "Non-nil means warn if cannot access `user-emacs-directory'.
970 Set this to nil at your own risk..."
972 :group
'initialization
975 (defun locate-user-emacs-file (new-name &optional old-name
)
976 "Return an absolute per-user Emacs-specific file name.
977 If NEW-NAME exists in `user-emacs-directory', return it.
978 Else if OLD-NAME is non-nil and ~/OLD-NAME exists, return ~/OLD-NAME.
979 Else return NEW-NAME in `user-emacs-directory', creating the
980 directory if it does not exist."
981 (convert-standard-filename
982 (let* ((home (concat "~" (or init-file-user
"")))
983 (at-home (and old-name
(expand-file-name old-name home
)))
984 (bestname (abbreviate-file-name
985 (expand-file-name new-name user-emacs-directory
))))
986 (if (and at-home
(not (file-readable-p bestname
))
987 (file-readable-p at-home
))
989 ;; Make sure `user-emacs-directory' exists,
990 ;; unless we're in batch mode or dumping Emacs.
994 (if (file-directory-p user-emacs-directory
)
995 (or (file-accessible-directory-p user-emacs-directory
)
996 (setq errtype
"access"))
997 (with-file-modes ?
\700
999 (make-directory user-emacs-directory
)
1000 (error (setq errtype
"create")))))
1002 user-emacs-directory-warning
1003 (not (get 'user-emacs-directory-warning
'this-session
)))
1004 ;; Only warn once per Emacs session.
1005 (put 'user-emacs-directory-warning
'this-session t
)
1006 (display-warning 'initialization
1008 Unable to %s `user-emacs-directory' (%s).
1009 Any data that would normally be written there may be lost!
1010 If you never want to see this message again,
1011 customize the variable `user-emacs-directory-warning'."
1012 errtype user-emacs-directory
)))))
1016 (defun executable-find (command)
1017 "Search for COMMAND in `exec-path' and return the absolute file name.
1018 Return nil if COMMAND is not found anywhere in `exec-path'."
1019 ;; Use 1 rather than file-executable-p to better match the behavior of
1021 (locate-file command exec-path exec-suffixes
1))
1023 (defun load-library (library)
1024 "Load the Emacs Lisp library named LIBRARY.
1025 LIBRARY should be a string.
1026 This is an interface to the function `load'. LIBRARY is searched
1027 for in `load-path', both with and without `load-suffixes' (as
1028 well as `load-file-rep-suffixes').
1030 See Info node `(emacs)Lisp Libraries' for more details.
1031 See `load-file' for a different interface to `load'."
1033 (let (completion-ignored-extensions)
1034 (list (completing-read "Load library: "
1035 (apply-partially 'locate-file-completion-table
1037 (get-load-suffixes))))))
1040 (defun file-remote-p (file &optional identification connected
)
1041 "Test whether FILE specifies a location on a remote system.
1042 A file is considered remote if accessing it is likely to
1043 be slower or less reliable than accessing local files.
1045 `file-remote-p' never opens a new remote connection. It can
1046 only reuse a connection that is already open.
1048 Return nil or a string identifying the remote connection
1049 \(ideally a prefix of FILE). Return nil if FILE is a relative
1052 When IDENTIFICATION is nil, the returned string is a complete
1053 remote identifier: with components method, user, and host. The
1054 components are those present in FILE, with defaults filled in for
1055 any that are missing.
1057 IDENTIFICATION can specify which part of the identification to
1058 return. IDENTIFICATION can be the symbol `method', `user',
1059 `host', or `localname'. Any other value is handled like nil and
1060 means to return the complete identification. The string returned
1061 for IDENTIFICATION `localname' can differ depending on whether
1062 there is an existing connection.
1064 If CONNECTED is non-nil, return an identification only if FILE is
1065 located on a remote system and a connection is established to
1068 Tip: You can use this expansion of remote identifier components
1069 to derive a new remote file name from an existing one. For
1070 example, if FILE is \"/sudo::/path/to/file\" then
1072 (concat (file-remote-p FILE) \"/bin/sh\")
1074 returns a remote file name for file \"/bin/sh\" that has the
1075 same remote identifier as FILE but expanded; a name such as
1076 \"/sudo:root@myhost:/bin/sh\"."
1077 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler file
'file-remote-p
)))
1079 (funcall handler
'file-remote-p file identification connected
)
1082 ;; Probably this entire variable should be obsolete now, in favor of
1083 ;; something Tramp-related (?). It is not used in many places.
1084 ;; It's not clear what the best file for this to be in is, but given
1085 ;; it uses custom-initialize-delay, it is easier if it is preloaded
1086 ;; rather than autoloaded.
1087 (defcustom remote-shell-program
1088 ;; This used to try various hard-coded places for remsh, rsh, and
1089 ;; rcmd, trying to guess based on location whether "rsh" was
1090 ;; "restricted shell" or "remote shell", but I don't see the point
1091 ;; in this day and age. Almost everyone will use ssh, and have
1092 ;; whatever command they want to use in PATH.
1094 (let ((list '("ssh" "remsh" "rcmd" "rsh")))
1096 (not (executable-find (car list
)))
1097 (setq list
(cdr list
))))
1098 (or (car list
) "ssh")))
1099 "Program to use to execute commands on a remote host (e.g. ssh or rsh)."
1100 :version
"24.3" ; ssh rather than rsh, etc
1101 :initialize
'custom-initialize-delay
1105 (defcustom remote-file-name-inhibit-cache
10
1106 "Whether to use the remote file-name cache for read access.
1107 When nil, never expire cached values (caution)
1108 When t, never use the cache (safe, but may be slow)
1109 A number means use cached values for that amount of seconds since caching.
1111 The attributes of remote files are cached for better performance.
1112 If they are changed outside of Emacs's control, the cached values
1113 become invalid, and must be reread. If you are sure that nothing
1114 other than Emacs changes the files, you can set this variable to nil.
1116 If a remote file is checked regularly, it might be a good idea to
1117 let-bind this variable to a value less than the interval between
1118 consecutive checks. For example:
1120 (defun display-time-file-nonempty-p (file)
1121 (let ((remote-file-name-inhibit-cache (- display-time-interval 5)))
1122 (and (file-exists-p file)
1123 (< 0 (nth 7 (file-attributes (file-chase-links file)))))))"
1127 (const :tag
"Do not inhibit file name cache" nil
)
1128 (const :tag
"Do not use file name cache" t
)
1129 (integer :tag
"Do not use file name cache"
1130 :format
"Do not use file name cache older then %v seconds"
1133 (defun file-local-copy (file)
1134 "Copy the file FILE into a temporary file on this machine.
1135 Returns the name of the local copy, or nil, if FILE is directly
1137 ;; This formerly had an optional BUFFER argument that wasn't used by
1139 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler file
'file-local-copy
)))
1141 (funcall handler
'file-local-copy file
)
1144 (defun file-truename (filename &optional counter prev-dirs
)
1145 "Return the truename of FILENAME.
1146 If FILENAME is not absolute, first expands it against `default-directory'.
1147 The truename of a file name is found by chasing symbolic links
1148 both at the level of the file and at the level of the directories
1149 containing it, until no links are left at any level.
1151 \(fn FILENAME)" ;; Don't document the optional arguments.
1152 ;; COUNTER and PREV-DIRS are only used in recursive calls.
1153 ;; COUNTER can be a cons cell whose car is the count of how many
1154 ;; more links to chase before getting an error.
1155 ;; PREV-DIRS can be a cons cell whose car is an alist
1156 ;; of truenames we've just recently computed.
1157 (cond ((or (string= filename
"") (string= filename
"~"))
1158 (setq filename
(expand-file-name filename
))
1159 (if (string= filename
"")
1160 (setq filename
"/")))
1161 ((and (string= (substring filename
0 1) "~")
1162 (string-match "~[^/]*/?" filename
))
1164 (substring filename
0 (match-end 0)))
1165 (rest (substring filename
(match-end 0))))
1166 (setq filename
(concat (expand-file-name first-part
) rest
)))))
1168 (or counter
(setq counter
(list 100)))
1170 ;; For speed, remove the ange-ftp completion handler from the list.
1171 ;; We know it's not needed here.
1172 ;; For even more speed, do this only on the outermost call.
1173 (file-name-handler-alist
1174 (if prev-dirs file-name-handler-alist
1175 (let ((tem (copy-sequence file-name-handler-alist
)))
1176 (delq (rassq 'ange-ftp-completion-hook-function tem
) tem
)))))
1177 (or prev-dirs
(setq prev-dirs
(list nil
)))
1179 ;; andrewi@harlequin.co.uk - on Windows, there is an issue with
1180 ;; case differences being ignored by the OS, and short "8.3 DOS"
1181 ;; name aliases existing for all files. (The short names are not
1182 ;; reported by directory-files, but can be used to refer to files.)
1183 ;; It seems appropriate for file-truename to resolve these issues in
1184 ;; the most natural way, which on Windows is to call the function
1185 ;; `w32-long-file-name' - this returns the exact name of a file as
1186 ;; it is stored on disk (expanding short name aliases with the full
1187 ;; name in the process).
1188 (if (eq system-type
'windows-nt
)
1189 (unless (string-match "[[*?]" filename
)
1190 ;; If filename exists, use its long name. If it doesn't
1191 ;; exist, the recursion below on the directory of filename
1192 ;; will drill down until we find a directory that exists,
1193 ;; and use the long name of that, with the extra
1194 ;; non-existent path components concatenated.
1195 (let ((longname (w32-long-file-name filename
)))
1197 (setq filename longname
)))))
1199 ;; If this file directly leads to a link, process that iteratively
1200 ;; so that we don't use lots of stack.
1202 (setcar counter
(1- (car counter
)))
1203 (if (< (car counter
) 0)
1204 (error "Apparent cycle of symbolic links for %s" filename
))
1205 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler filename
'file-truename
)))
1206 ;; For file name that has a special handler, call handler.
1207 ;; This is so that ange-ftp can save time by doing a no-op.
1209 (setq filename
(funcall handler
'file-truename filename
)
1211 (let ((dir (or (file-name-directory filename
) default-directory
))
1213 ;; Get the truename of the directory.
1214 (setq dirfile
(directory-file-name dir
))
1215 ;; If these are equal, we have the (or a) root directory.
1216 (or (string= dir dirfile
)
1217 (and (memq system-type
'(windows-nt ms-dos cygwin nacl
))
1218 (eq (compare-strings dir
0 nil dirfile
0 nil t
) t
))
1219 ;; If this is the same dir we last got the truename for,
1220 ;; save time--don't recalculate.
1221 (if (assoc dir
(car prev-dirs
))
1222 (setq dir
(cdr (assoc dir
(car prev-dirs
))))
1224 (new (file-name-as-directory (file-truename dirfile counter prev-dirs
))))
1225 (setcar prev-dirs
(cons (cons old new
) (car prev-dirs
)))
1227 (if (equal ".." (file-name-nondirectory filename
))
1229 (directory-file-name (file-name-directory (directory-file-name dir
)))
1231 (if (equal "." (file-name-nondirectory filename
))
1232 (setq filename
(directory-file-name dir
)
1234 ;; Put it back on the file name.
1235 (setq filename
(concat dir
(file-name-nondirectory filename
)))
1236 ;; Is the file name the name of a link?
1237 (setq target
(file-symlink-p filename
))
1239 ;; Yes => chase that link, then start all over
1240 ;; since the link may point to a directory name that uses links.
1241 ;; We can't safely use expand-file-name here
1242 ;; since target might look like foo/../bar where foo
1243 ;; is itself a link. Instead, we handle . and .. above.
1245 (if (file-name-absolute-p target
)
1247 (concat dir target
))
1250 (setq done t
))))))))
1253 (defun file-chase-links (filename &optional limit
)
1254 "Chase links in FILENAME until a name that is not a link.
1255 Unlike `file-truename', this does not check whether a parent
1256 directory name is a symbolic link.
1257 If the optional argument LIMIT is a number,
1258 it means chase no more than that many links and then stop."
1259 (let (tem (newname filename
)
1261 (while (and (or (null limit
) (< count limit
))
1262 (setq tem
(file-symlink-p newname
)))
1264 (if (and (null limit
) (= count
100))
1265 (error "Apparent cycle of symbolic links for %s" filename
))
1266 ;; In the context of a link, `//' doesn't mean what Emacs thinks.
1267 (while (string-match "//+" tem
)
1268 (setq tem
(replace-match "/" nil nil tem
)))
1269 ;; Handle `..' by hand, since it needs to work in the
1270 ;; target of any directory symlink.
1271 ;; This code is not quite complete; it does not handle
1272 ;; embedded .. in some cases such as ./../foo and foo/bar/../../../lose.
1273 (while (string-match "\\`\\.\\./" tem
)
1274 (setq tem
(substring tem
3))
1275 (setq newname
(expand-file-name newname
))
1276 ;; Chase links in the default dir of the symlink.
1279 (directory-file-name (file-name-directory newname
))))
1280 ;; Now find the parent of that dir.
1281 (setq newname
(file-name-directory newname
)))
1282 (setq newname
(expand-file-name tem
(file-name-directory newname
)))
1283 (setq count
(1+ count
))))
1286 ;; A handy function to display file sizes in human-readable form.
1287 ;; See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kibibyte for the reference.
1288 (defun file-size-human-readable (file-size &optional flavor
)
1289 "Produce a string showing FILE-SIZE in human-readable form.
1291 Optional second argument FLAVOR controls the units and the display format:
1293 If FLAVOR is nil or omitted, each kilobyte is 1024 bytes and the produced
1294 suffixes are \"k\", \"M\", \"G\", \"T\", etc.
1295 If FLAVOR is `si', each kilobyte is 1000 bytes and the produced suffixes
1296 are \"k\", \"M\", \"G\", \"T\", etc.
1297 If FLAVOR is `iec', each kilobyte is 1024 bytes and the produced suffixes
1298 are \"KiB\", \"MiB\", \"GiB\", \"TiB\", etc."
1299 (let ((power (if (or (null flavor
) (eq flavor
'iec
))
1303 ;; none, kilo, mega, giga, tera, peta, exa, zetta, yotta
1304 (list "" "k" "M" "G" "T" "P" "E" "Z" "Y")))
1305 (while (and (>= file-size power
) (cdr post-fixes
))
1306 (setq file-size
(/ file-size power
)
1307 post-fixes
(cdr post-fixes
)))
1308 (format (if (> (mod file-size
1.0) 0.05)
1312 (if (and (eq flavor
'iec
) (string= (car post-fixes
) "k"))
1315 (if (eq flavor
'iec
) "iB" ""))))
1317 (defcustom mounted-file-systems
1318 (if (memq system-type
'(windows-nt cygwin
))
1320 ;; regexp-opt.el is not dumped into emacs binary.
1322 ;; "^" (regexp-opt '("/afs/" "/media/" "/mnt" "/net/" "/tmp_mnt/"))))
1323 "^\\(?:/\\(?:afs/\\|m\\(?:edia/\\|nt\\)\\|\\(?:ne\\|tmp_mn\\)t/\\)\\)")
1324 "File systems which ought to be mounted."
1327 :require
'regexp-opt
1330 (defun temporary-file-directory ()
1331 "The directory for writing temporary files.
1332 In case of a remote `default-directory', this is a directory for
1333 temporary files on that remote host. If such a directory does
1334 not exist, or `default-directory' ought to be located on a
1335 mounted file system (see `mounted-file-systems'), the function
1336 returns `default-directory'.
1337 For a non-remote and non-mounted `default-directory', the value of
1338 the variable `temporary-file-directory' is returned."
1339 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler
1340 default-directory
'temporary-file-directory
)))
1342 (funcall handler
'temporary-file-directory
)
1343 (if (string-match mounted-file-systems default-directory
)
1345 temporary-file-directory
))))
1347 (defun make-temp-file (prefix &optional dir-flag suffix
)
1348 "Create a temporary file.
1349 The returned file name (created by appending some random characters at the end
1350 of PREFIX, and expanding against `temporary-file-directory' if necessary),
1351 is guaranteed to point to a newly created empty file.
1352 You can then use `write-region' to write new data into the file.
1354 If DIR-FLAG is non-nil, create a new empty directory instead of a file.
1356 If SUFFIX is non-nil, add that at the end of the file name."
1357 ;; Create temp files with strict access rights. It's easy to
1358 ;; loosen them later, whereas it's impossible to close the
1359 ;; time-window of loose permissions otherwise.
1360 (with-file-modes ?
\700
1362 (while (condition-case ()
1366 (if (zerop (length prefix
))
1367 (file-name-as-directory
1368 temporary-file-directory
)
1369 (expand-file-name prefix
1370 temporary-file-directory
))))
1372 (setq file
(concat file suffix
)))
1374 (make-directory file
)
1375 (write-region "" nil file nil
'silent nil
'excl
))
1377 (file-already-exists t
))
1378 ;; the file was somehow created by someone else between
1379 ;; `make-temp-name' and `write-region', let's try again.
1383 (defun make-nearby-temp-file (prefix &optional dir-flag suffix
)
1384 "Create a temporary file as close as possible to `default-directory'.
1385 If PREFIX is a relative file name, and `default-directory' is a
1386 remote file name or located on a mounted file systems, the
1387 temporary file is created in the directory returned by the
1388 function `temporary-file-directory'. Otherwise, the function
1389 `make-temp-file' is used. PREFIX, DIR-FLAG and SUFFIX have the
1390 same meaning as in `make-temp-file'."
1391 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler
1392 default-directory
'make-nearby-temp-file
)))
1393 (if (and handler
(not (file-name-absolute-p default-directory
)))
1394 (funcall handler
'make-nearby-temp-file prefix dir-flag suffix
)
1395 (let ((temporary-file-directory (temporary-file-directory)))
1396 (make-temp-file prefix dir-flag suffix
)))))
1398 (defun recode-file-name (file coding new-coding
&optional ok-if-already-exists
)
1399 "Change the encoding of FILE's name from CODING to NEW-CODING.
1400 The value is a new name of FILE.
1401 Signals a `file-already-exists' error if a file of the new name
1402 already exists unless optional fourth argument OK-IF-ALREADY-EXISTS
1403 is non-nil. A number as fourth arg means request confirmation if
1404 the new name already exists. This is what happens in interactive
1407 (let ((default-coding (or file-name-coding-system
1408 default-file-name-coding-system
))
1409 (filename (read-file-name "Recode filename: " nil nil t
))
1410 from-coding to-coding
)
1411 (if (and default-coding
1412 ;; We provide the default coding only when it seems that
1413 ;; the filename is correctly decoded by the default
1415 (let ((charsets (find-charset-string filename
)))
1416 (and (not (memq 'eight-bit-control charsets
))
1417 (not (memq 'eight-bit-graphic charsets
)))))
1418 (setq from-coding
(read-coding-system
1419 (format "Recode filename %s from (default %s): "
1420 filename default-coding
)
1422 (setq from-coding
(read-coding-system
1423 (format "Recode filename %s from: " filename
))))
1425 ;; We provide the default coding only when a user is going to
1426 ;; change the encoding not from the default coding.
1427 (if (eq from-coding default-coding
)
1428 (setq to-coding
(read-coding-system
1429 (format "Recode filename %s from %s to: "
1430 filename from-coding
)))
1431 (setq to-coding
(read-coding-system
1432 (format "Recode filename %s from %s to (default %s): "
1433 filename from-coding default-coding
)
1435 (list filename from-coding to-coding
)))
1437 (let* ((default-coding (or file-name-coding-system
1438 default-file-name-coding-system
))
1439 ;; FILE should have been decoded by DEFAULT-CODING.
1440 (encoded (encode-coding-string file default-coding
))
1441 (newname (decode-coding-string encoded coding
))
1442 (new-encoded (encode-coding-string newname new-coding
))
1443 ;; Suppress further encoding.
1444 (file-name-coding-system nil
)
1445 (default-file-name-coding-system nil
)
1446 (locale-coding-system nil
))
1447 (rename-file encoded new-encoded ok-if-already-exists
)
1450 (defcustom confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer
'after-completion
1451 "Whether confirmation is requested before visiting a new file or buffer.
1452 If nil, confirmation is not requested.
1453 If the value is `after-completion', confirmation is only
1454 requested if the user called `minibuffer-complete' right before
1455 `minibuffer-complete-and-exit'.
1456 Any other non-nil value means to request confirmation.
1458 This affects commands like `switch-to-buffer' and `find-file'."
1461 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"After completion" after-completion
)
1462 (const :tag
"Never" nil
)
1463 (other :tag
"Always" t
)))
1465 (defun confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer ()
1466 "Whether to request confirmation before visiting a new file or buffer.
1467 The variable `confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer' determines the
1468 return value, which may be passed as the REQUIRE-MATCH arg to
1469 `read-buffer' or `find-file-read-args'."
1470 (cond ((eq confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer
'after-completion
)
1471 'confirm-after-completion
)
1472 (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer
1476 (defmacro minibuffer-with-setup-hook
(fun &rest body
)
1477 "Temporarily add FUN to `minibuffer-setup-hook' while executing BODY.
1479 By default, FUN is prepended to `minibuffer-setup-hook'. But if FUN is of
1480 the form `(:append FUN1)', FUN1 will be appended to `minibuffer-setup-hook'
1481 instead of prepending it.
1483 BODY should use the minibuffer at most once.
1484 Recursive uses of the minibuffer are unaffected (FUN is not
1485 called additional times).
1487 This macro actually adds an auxiliary function that calls FUN,
1488 rather than FUN itself, to `minibuffer-setup-hook'."
1489 (declare (indent 1) (debug t
))
1490 (let ((hook (make-symbol "setup-hook"))
1491 (funsym (make-symbol "fun"))
1493 (when (eq (car-safe fun
) :append
)
1494 (setq append
'(t) fun
(cadr fun
)))
1495 `(let ((,funsym
,fun
)
1499 ;; Clear out this hook so it does not interfere
1500 ;; with any recursive minibuffer usage.
1501 (remove-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook
,hook
)
1505 (add-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook
,hook
,@append
)
1507 (remove-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook
,hook
)))))
1509 (defun find-file-read-args (prompt mustmatch
)
1510 (list (read-file-name prompt nil default-directory mustmatch
)
1513 (defun find-file (filename &optional wildcards
)
1514 "Edit file FILENAME.
1515 Switch to a buffer visiting file FILENAME,
1516 creating one if none already exists.
1517 Interactively, the default if you just type RET is the current directory,
1518 but the visited file name is available through the minibuffer history:
1519 type M-n to pull it into the minibuffer.
1521 You can visit files on remote machines by specifying something
1522 like /ssh:SOME_REMOTE_MACHINE:FILE for the file name. You can
1523 also visit local files as a different user by specifying
1524 /sudo::FILE for the file name.
1525 See the Info node `(tramp)File name Syntax' in the Tramp Info
1526 manual, for more about this.
1528 Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
1529 expand wildcards (if any) and visit multiple files. You can
1530 suppress wildcard expansion by setting `find-file-wildcards' to nil.
1532 To visit a file without any kind of conversion and without
1533 automatically choosing a major mode, use \\[find-file-literally]."
1535 (find-file-read-args "Find file: "
1536 (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
1537 (let ((value (find-file-noselect filename nil nil wildcards
)))
1539 (mapcar 'switch-to-buffer
(nreverse value
))
1540 (switch-to-buffer value
))))
1542 (defun find-file-other-window (filename &optional wildcards
)
1543 "Edit file FILENAME, in another window.
1545 Like \\[find-file] (which see), but creates a new window or reuses
1546 an existing one. See the function `display-buffer'.
1548 Interactively, the default if you just type RET is the current directory,
1549 but the visited file name is available through the minibuffer history:
1550 type M-n to pull it into the minibuffer.
1552 Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
1553 expand wildcards (if any) and visit multiple files."
1555 (find-file-read-args "Find file in other window: "
1556 (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
1557 (let ((value (find-file-noselect filename nil nil wildcards
)))
1560 (setq value
(nreverse value
))
1561 (switch-to-buffer-other-window (car value
))
1562 (mapc 'switch-to-buffer
(cdr value
))
1564 (switch-to-buffer-other-window value
))))
1566 (defun find-file-other-frame (filename &optional wildcards
)
1567 "Edit file FILENAME, in another frame.
1569 Like \\[find-file] (which see), but creates a new frame or reuses
1570 an existing one. See the function `display-buffer'.
1572 Interactively, the default if you just type RET is the current directory,
1573 but the visited file name is available through the minibuffer history:
1574 type M-n to pull it into the minibuffer.
1576 Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
1577 expand wildcards (if any) and visit multiple files."
1579 (find-file-read-args "Find file in other frame: "
1580 (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
1581 (let ((value (find-file-noselect filename nil nil wildcards
)))
1584 (setq value
(nreverse value
))
1585 (switch-to-buffer-other-frame (car value
))
1586 (mapc 'switch-to-buffer
(cdr value
))
1588 (switch-to-buffer-other-frame value
))))
1590 (defun find-file-existing (filename)
1591 "Edit the existing file FILENAME.
1592 Like \\[find-file], but only allow a file that exists, and do not allow
1593 file names with wildcards."
1594 (interactive (nbutlast (find-file-read-args "Find existing file: " t
)))
1595 (if (and (not (called-interactively-p 'interactive
))
1596 (not (file-exists-p filename
)))
1597 (error "%s does not exist" filename
)
1598 (find-file filename
)
1601 (defun find-file--read-only (fun filename wildcards
)
1602 (unless (or (and wildcards find-file-wildcards
1603 (not (string-match "\\`/:" filename
))
1604 (string-match "[[*?]" filename
))
1605 (file-exists-p filename
))
1606 (error "%s does not exist" filename
))
1607 (let ((value (funcall fun filename wildcards
)))
1608 (mapc (lambda (b) (with-current-buffer b
(read-only-mode 1)))
1609 (if (listp value
) value
(list value
)))
1612 (defun find-file-read-only (filename &optional wildcards
)
1613 "Edit file FILENAME but don't allow changes.
1614 Like \\[find-file], but marks buffer as read-only.
1615 Use \\[read-only-mode] to permit editing."
1617 (find-file-read-args "Find file read-only: "
1618 (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
1619 (find-file--read-only #'find-file filename wildcards
))
1621 (defun find-file-read-only-other-window (filename &optional wildcards
)
1622 "Edit file FILENAME in another window but don't allow changes.
1623 Like \\[find-file-other-window], but marks buffer as read-only.
1624 Use \\[read-only-mode] to permit editing."
1626 (find-file-read-args "Find file read-only other window: "
1627 (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
1628 (find-file--read-only #'find-file-other-window filename wildcards
))
1630 (defun find-file-read-only-other-frame (filename &optional wildcards
)
1631 "Edit file FILENAME in another frame but don't allow changes.
1632 Like \\[find-file-other-frame], but marks buffer as read-only.
1633 Use \\[read-only-mode] to permit editing."
1635 (find-file-read-args "Find file read-only other frame: "
1636 (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
1637 (find-file--read-only #'find-file-other-frame filename wildcards
))
1639 (defun find-alternate-file-other-window (filename &optional wildcards
)
1640 "Find file FILENAME as a replacement for the file in the next window.
1641 This command does not select that window.
1643 See \\[find-file] for the possible forms of the FILENAME argument.
1645 Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
1646 expand wildcards (if any) and replace the file with multiple files."
1648 (save-selected-window
1650 (let ((file buffer-file-name
)
1654 (setq file-name
(file-name-nondirectory file
)
1655 file-dir
(file-name-directory file
)))
1656 (list (read-file-name
1657 "Find alternate file: " file-dir nil
1658 (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer) file-name
)
1661 (find-file-other-window filename wildcards
)
1662 (save-selected-window
1664 (find-alternate-file filename wildcards
))))
1666 ;; Defined and used in buffer.c, but not as a DEFVAR_LISP.
1667 (defvar kill-buffer-hook nil
1668 "Hook run when a buffer is killed.
1669 The buffer being killed is current while the hook is running.
1672 Note: Be careful with let-binding this hook considering it is
1673 frequently used for cleanup.")
1675 (defun find-alternate-file (filename &optional wildcards
)
1676 "Find file FILENAME, select its buffer, kill previous buffer.
1677 If the current buffer now contains an empty file that you just visited
1678 \(presumably by mistake), use this command to visit the file you really want.
1680 See \\[find-file] for the possible forms of the FILENAME argument.
1682 Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
1683 expand wildcards (if any) and replace the file with multiple files.
1685 If the current buffer is an indirect buffer, or the base buffer
1686 for one or more indirect buffers, the other buffer(s) are not
1689 (let ((file buffer-file-name
)
1693 (setq file-name
(file-name-nondirectory file
)
1694 file-dir
(file-name-directory file
)))
1695 (list (read-file-name
1696 "Find alternate file: " file-dir nil
1697 (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer) file-name
)
1699 (unless (run-hook-with-args-until-failure 'kill-buffer-query-functions
)
1700 (user-error "Aborted"))
1701 (and (buffer-modified-p) buffer-file-name
1703 (format-message "Kill and replace buffer `%s' without saving it? "
1705 (user-error "Aborted"))
1706 (let ((obuf (current-buffer))
1707 (ofile buffer-file-name
)
1708 (onum buffer-file-number
)
1709 (odir dired-directory
)
1710 (otrue buffer-file-truename
)
1711 (oname (buffer-name)))
1712 ;; Run `kill-buffer-hook' here. It needs to happen before
1713 ;; variables like `buffer-file-name' etc are set to nil below,
1714 ;; because some of the hooks that could be invoked
1715 ;; (e.g., `save-place-to-alist') depend on those variables.
1717 ;; Note that `kill-buffer-hook' is not what queries whether to
1718 ;; save a modified buffer visiting a file. Rather, `kill-buffer'
1719 ;; asks that itself. Thus, there's no need to temporarily do
1720 ;; `(set-buffer-modified-p nil)' before running this hook.
1721 (run-hooks 'kill-buffer-hook
)
1722 ;; Okay, now we can end-of-life the old buffer.
1723 (if (get-buffer " **lose**")
1724 (kill-buffer " **lose**"))
1725 (rename-buffer " **lose**")
1729 ;; This prevents us from finding the same buffer
1730 ;; if we specified the same file again.
1731 (setq buffer-file-name nil
)
1732 (setq buffer-file-number nil
)
1733 (setq buffer-file-truename nil
)
1734 ;; Likewise for dired buffers.
1735 (setq dired-directory nil
)
1736 (find-file filename wildcards
))
1737 (when (eq obuf
(current-buffer))
1738 ;; This executes if find-file gets an error
1739 ;; and does not really find anything.
1740 ;; We put things back as they were.
1741 ;; If find-file actually finds something, we kill obuf below.
1742 (setq buffer-file-name ofile
)
1743 (setq buffer-file-number onum
)
1744 (setq buffer-file-truename otrue
)
1745 (setq dired-directory odir
)
1747 (rename-buffer oname
)))
1748 (unless (eq (current-buffer) obuf
)
1749 (with-current-buffer obuf
1750 ;; We already ran these; don't run them again.
1751 (let (kill-buffer-query-functions kill-buffer-hook
)
1752 (kill-buffer obuf
))))))
1754 ;; FIXME we really need to fold the uniquify stuff in here by default,
1755 ;; not using advice, and add it to the doc string.
1756 (defun create-file-buffer (filename)
1757 "Create a suitably named buffer for visiting FILENAME, and return it.
1758 FILENAME (sans directory) is used unchanged if that name is free;
1759 otherwise a string <2> or <3> or ... is appended to get an unused name.
1761 Emacs treats buffers whose names begin with a space as internal buffers.
1762 To avoid confusion when visiting a file whose name begins with a space,
1763 this function prepends a \"|\" to the final result if necessary."
1764 (let ((lastname (file-name-nondirectory filename
)))
1765 (if (string= lastname
"")
1766 (setq lastname filename
))
1767 (generate-new-buffer (if (string-match-p "\\` " lastname
)
1768 (concat "|" lastname
)
1771 (defun generate-new-buffer (name)
1772 "Create and return a buffer with a name based on NAME.
1773 Choose the buffer's name using `generate-new-buffer-name'."
1774 (get-buffer-create (generate-new-buffer-name name
)))
1776 (defcustom automount-dir-prefix
(purecopy "^/tmp_mnt/")
1777 "Regexp to match the automounter prefix in a directory name."
1780 (make-obsolete-variable 'automount-dir-prefix
'directory-abbrev-alist
"24.3")
1782 (defvar abbreviated-home-dir nil
1783 "The user's homedir abbreviated according to `directory-abbrev-alist'.")
1785 (defun abbreviate-file-name (filename)
1786 "Return a version of FILENAME shortened using `directory-abbrev-alist'.
1787 This also substitutes \"~\" for the user's home directory (unless the
1788 home directory is a root directory) and removes automounter prefixes
1789 \(see the variable `automount-dir-prefix')."
1790 ;; Get rid of the prefixes added by the automounter.
1792 (if (and automount-dir-prefix
1793 (string-match automount-dir-prefix filename
)
1794 (file-exists-p (file-name-directory
1795 (substring filename
(1- (match-end 0))))))
1796 (setq filename
(substring filename
(1- (match-end 0)))))
1797 ;; Avoid treating /home/foo as /home/Foo during `~' substitution.
1798 ;; To fix this right, we need a `file-name-case-sensitive-p'
1799 ;; function, but we don't have that yet, so just guess.
1800 (let ((case-fold-search
1801 (memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt darwin cygwin
))))
1802 ;; If any elt of directory-abbrev-alist matches this name,
1803 ;; abbreviate accordingly.
1804 (dolist (dir-abbrev directory-abbrev-alist
)
1805 (if (string-match (car dir-abbrev
) filename
)
1807 (concat (cdr dir-abbrev
)
1808 (substring filename
(match-end 0))))))
1809 ;; Compute and save the abbreviated homedir name.
1810 ;; We defer computing this until the first time it's needed, to
1811 ;; give time for directory-abbrev-alist to be set properly.
1812 ;; We include a slash at the end, to avoid spurious matches
1813 ;; such as `/usr/foobar' when the home dir is `/usr/foo'.
1814 (or abbreviated-home-dir
1815 (setq abbreviated-home-dir
1816 (let ((abbreviated-home-dir "$foo"))
1817 (concat "\\`" (abbreviate-file-name (expand-file-name "~"))
1820 ;; If FILENAME starts with the abbreviated homedir,
1821 ;; make it start with `~' instead.
1822 (if (and (string-match abbreviated-home-dir filename
)
1823 ;; If the home dir is just /, don't change it.
1824 (not (and (= (match-end 0) 1)
1825 (= (aref filename
0) ?
/)))
1826 ;; MS-DOS root directories can come with a drive letter;
1827 ;; Novell Netware allows drive letters beyond `Z:'.
1828 (not (and (memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin
))
1830 (string-match "^[a-zA-`]:/$" filename
)))))
1833 (match-string 1 filename
)
1834 (substring filename
(match-end 0)))))
1837 (defun find-buffer-visiting (filename &optional predicate
)
1838 "Return the buffer visiting file FILENAME (a string).
1839 This is like `get-file-buffer', except that it checks for any buffer
1840 visiting the same file, possibly under a different name.
1841 If PREDICATE is non-nil, only buffers satisfying it are eligible,
1842 and others are ignored.
1843 If there is no such live buffer, return nil."
1844 (let ((predicate (or predicate
#'identity
))
1845 (truename (abbreviate-file-name (file-truename filename
))))
1846 (or (let ((buf (get-file-buffer filename
)))
1847 (when (and buf
(funcall predicate buf
)) buf
))
1848 (let ((list (buffer-list)) found
)
1849 (while (and (not found
) list
)
1850 (with-current-buffer (car list
)
1851 (if (and buffer-file-name
1852 (string= buffer-file-truename truename
)
1853 (funcall predicate
(current-buffer)))
1854 (setq found
(car list
))))
1855 (setq list
(cdr list
)))
1857 (let* ((attributes (file-attributes truename
))
1858 (number (nthcdr 10 attributes
))
1859 (list (buffer-list)) found
)
1860 (and buffer-file-numbers-unique
1861 (car-safe number
) ;Make sure the inode is not just nil.
1862 (while (and (not found
) list
)
1863 (with-current-buffer (car list
)
1864 (if (and buffer-file-name
1865 (equal buffer-file-number number
)
1866 ;; Verify this buffer's file number
1867 ;; still belongs to its file.
1868 (file-exists-p buffer-file-name
)
1869 (equal (file-attributes buffer-file-truename
)
1871 (funcall predicate
(current-buffer)))
1872 (setq found
(car list
))))
1873 (setq list
(cdr list
))))
1876 (defcustom find-file-wildcards t
1877 "Non-nil means file-visiting commands should handle wildcards.
1878 For example, if you specify `*.c', that would visit all the files
1879 whose names match the pattern."
1884 (defcustom find-file-suppress-same-file-warnings nil
1885 "Non-nil means suppress warning messages for symlinked files.
1886 When nil, Emacs prints a warning when visiting a file that is already
1887 visited, but with a different name. Setting this option to t
1888 suppresses this warning."
1893 (defcustom large-file-warning-threshold
10000000
1894 "Maximum size of file above which a confirmation is requested.
1895 When nil, never request confirmation."
1899 :type
'(choice integer
(const :tag
"Never request confirmation" nil
)))
1901 (defcustom out-of-memory-warning-percentage nil
1902 "Warn if file size exceeds this percentage of available free memory.
1903 When nil, never issue warning. Beware: This probably doesn't do what you
1904 think it does, because \"free\" is pretty hard to define in practice."
1908 :type
'(choice integer
(const :tag
"Never issue warning" nil
)))
1910 (defun abort-if-file-too-large (size op-type filename
)
1911 "If file SIZE larger than `large-file-warning-threshold', allow user to abort.
1912 OP-TYPE specifies the file operation being performed (for message to user)."
1913 (when (and large-file-warning-threshold size
1914 (> size large-file-warning-threshold
)
1915 (not (y-or-n-p (format "File %s is large (%s), really %s? "
1916 (file-name-nondirectory filename
)
1917 (file-size-human-readable size
) op-type
))))
1918 (user-error "Aborted")))
1920 (defun warn-maybe-out-of-memory (size)
1921 "Warn if an attempt to open file of SIZE bytes may run out of memory."
1922 (when (and (numberp size
) (not (zerop size
))
1923 (integerp out-of-memory-warning-percentage
))
1924 (let ((meminfo (memory-info)))
1925 (when (consp meminfo
)
1926 (let ((total-free-memory (float (+ (nth 1 meminfo
) (nth 3 meminfo
)))))
1927 (when (> (/ size
1024)
1928 (/ (* total-free-memory out-of-memory-warning-percentage
)
1931 "You are trying to open a file whose size (%s)
1932 exceeds the %S%% of currently available free memory (%s).
1933 If that fails, try to open it with `find-file-literally'
1934 \(but note that some characters might be displayed incorrectly)."
1935 (file-size-human-readable size
)
1936 out-of-memory-warning-percentage
1937 (file-size-human-readable (* total-free-memory
1024)))))))))
1939 (defun files--message (format &rest args
)
1940 "Like `message', except sometimes don't print to minibuffer.
1941 If the variable `save-silently' is non-nil, the message is not
1942 displayed on the minibuffer."
1943 (apply #'message format args
)
1944 (when save-silently
(message nil
)))
1946 (defun find-file-noselect (filename &optional nowarn rawfile wildcards
)
1947 "Read file FILENAME into a buffer and return the buffer.
1948 If a buffer exists visiting FILENAME, return that one, but
1949 verify that the file has not changed since visited or saved.
1950 The buffer is not selected, just returned to the caller.
1951 Optional second arg NOWARN non-nil means suppress any warning messages.
1952 Optional third arg RAWFILE non-nil means the file is read literally.
1953 Optional fourth arg WILDCARDS non-nil means do wildcard processing
1954 and visit all the matching files. When wildcards are actually
1955 used and expanded, return a list of buffers that are visiting
1958 (abbreviate-file-name
1959 (expand-file-name filename
)))
1960 (if (file-directory-p filename
)
1961 (or (and find-file-run-dired
1962 (run-hook-with-args-until-success
1963 'find-directory-functions
1964 (if find-file-visit-truename
1965 (abbreviate-file-name (file-truename filename
))
1967 (error "%s is a directory" filename
))
1970 (not (string-match "\\`/:" filename
))
1971 (string-match "[[*?]" filename
))
1972 (let ((files (condition-case nil
1973 (file-expand-wildcards filename t
)
1974 (error (list filename
))))
1975 (find-file-wildcards nil
))
1977 (find-file-noselect filename
)
1978 (mapcar #'find-file-noselect files
)))
1979 (let* ((buf (get-file-buffer filename
))
1980 (truename (abbreviate-file-name (file-truename filename
)))
1981 (attributes (file-attributes truename
))
1982 (number (nthcdr 10 attributes
))
1983 ;; Find any buffer for a file which has same truename.
1984 (other (and (not buf
) (find-buffer-visiting filename
))))
1985 ;; Let user know if there is a buffer with the same truename.
1989 find-file-suppress-same-file-warnings
1990 (string-equal filename
(buffer-file-name other
))
1991 (files--message "%s and %s are the same file"
1992 filename
(buffer-file-name other
)))
1993 ;; Optionally also find that buffer.
1994 (if (or find-file-existing-other-name find-file-visit-truename
)
1996 ;; Check to see if the file looks uncommonly large.
1997 (when (not (or buf nowarn
))
1998 (abort-if-file-too-large (nth 7 attributes
) "open" filename
)
1999 (warn-maybe-out-of-memory (nth 7 attributes
)))
2001 ;; We are using an existing buffer.
2004 (verify-visited-file-modtime buf
)
2005 (cond ((not (file-exists-p filename
))
2006 (setq nonexistent t
)
2007 (message "File %s no longer exists!" filename
))
2008 ;; Certain files should be reverted automatically
2009 ;; if they have changed on disk and not in the buffer.
2010 ((and (not (buffer-modified-p buf
))
2011 (let ((tail revert-without-query
)
2014 (if (string-match (car tail
) filename
)
2016 (setq tail
(cdr tail
)))
2018 (with-current-buffer buf
2019 (message "Reverting file %s..." filename
)
2021 (message "Reverting file %s...done" filename
)))
2023 (if (string= (file-name-nondirectory filename
)
2026 (if (buffer-modified-p buf
)
2027 "File %s changed on disk. Discard your edits? "
2028 "File %s changed on disk. Reread from disk? ")
2029 (file-name-nondirectory filename
))
2031 (if (buffer-modified-p buf
)
2032 "File %s changed on disk. Discard your edits in %s? "
2033 "File %s changed on disk. Reread from disk into %s? ")
2034 (file-name-nondirectory filename
)
2035 (buffer-name buf
))))
2036 (with-current-buffer buf
2037 (revert-buffer t t
)))))
2038 (with-current-buffer buf
2040 ;; Check if a formerly read-only file has become
2041 ;; writable and vice versa, but if the buffer agrees
2042 ;; with the new state of the file, that is ok too.
2043 (let ((read-only (not (file-writable-p buffer-file-name
))))
2044 (unless (or nonexistent
2045 (eq read-only buffer-file-read-only
)
2046 (eq read-only buffer-read-only
))
2049 (if read-only
"read-only" "writable"))
2051 (format "File %s is %s on disk. Make buffer %s, too? "
2053 new-status new-status
)))
2054 (y-or-n-p question
)))
2055 (setq buffer-read-only read-only
)))
2056 (setq buffer-file-read-only read-only
))
2058 (unless (or (eq (null rawfile
) (null find-file-literally
))
2060 ;; It is confusing to ask whether to visit
2061 ;; non-literally if they have the file in
2062 ;; hexl-mode or image-mode.
2063 (memq major-mode
'(hexl-mode image-mode
)))
2064 (if (buffer-modified-p)
2068 "The file %s is already visited normally,
2069 and you have edited the buffer. Now you have asked to visit it literally,
2070 meaning no coding system handling, format conversion, or local variables.
2071 Emacs can only visit a file in one way at a time.
2073 Do you want to save the file, and visit it literally instead? "
2074 "The file %s is already visited literally,
2075 meaning no coding system handling, format conversion, or local variables.
2076 You have edited the buffer. Now you have asked to visit the file normally,
2077 but Emacs can only visit a file in one way at a time.
2079 Do you want to save the file, and visit it normally instead? ")
2080 (file-name-nondirectory filename
)))
2083 (find-file-noselect-1 buf filename nowarn
2084 rawfile truename number
))
2089 Do you want to discard your changes, and visit the file literally now? "
2091 Do you want to discard your changes, and visit the file normally now? ")))
2092 (find-file-noselect-1 buf filename nowarn
2093 rawfile truename number
)
2094 (error (if rawfile
"File already visited non-literally"
2095 "File already visited literally"))))
2099 "The file %s is already visited normally.
2100 You have asked to visit it literally,
2101 meaning no coding system decoding, format conversion, or local variables.
2102 But Emacs can only visit a file in one way at a time.
2104 Do you want to revisit the file literally now? "
2105 "The file %s is already visited literally,
2106 meaning no coding system decoding, format conversion, or local variables.
2107 You have asked to visit it normally,
2108 but Emacs can only visit a file in one way at a time.
2110 Do you want to revisit the file normally now? ")
2111 (file-name-nondirectory filename
)))
2112 (find-file-noselect-1 buf filename nowarn
2113 rawfile truename number
)
2114 (error (if rawfile
"File already visited non-literally"
2115 "File already visited literally"))))))
2116 ;; Return the buffer we are using.
2118 ;; Create a new buffer.
2119 (setq buf
(create-file-buffer filename
))
2120 ;; find-file-noselect-1 may use a different buffer.
2121 (find-file-noselect-1 buf filename nowarn
2122 rawfile truename number
))))))
2124 (defun find-file-noselect-1 (buf filename nowarn rawfile truename number
)
2126 (with-current-buffer buf
2127 (kill-local-variable 'find-file-literally
)
2128 ;; Needed in case we are re-visiting the file with a different
2129 ;; text representation.
2130 (kill-local-variable 'buffer-file-coding-system
)
2131 (kill-local-variable 'cursor-type
)
2132 (let ((inhibit-read-only t
))
2134 (and (default-value 'enable-multibyte-characters
)
2136 (set-buffer-multibyte t
))
2139 (let ((inhibit-read-only t
))
2140 (insert-file-contents-literally filename t
))
2142 (when (and (file-exists-p filename
)
2143 (not (file-readable-p filename
)))
2145 (signal 'file-error
(list "File is not readable"
2147 ;; Unconditionally set error
2150 (let ((inhibit-read-only t
))
2151 (insert-file-contents filename t
))
2153 (when (and (file-exists-p filename
)
2154 (not (file-readable-p filename
)))
2156 (signal 'file-error
(list "File is not readable"
2158 ;; Run find-file-not-found-functions until one returns non-nil.
2159 (or (run-hook-with-args-until-success 'find-file-not-found-functions
)
2160 ;; If they fail too, set error.
2162 ;; Record the file's truename, and maybe use that as visited name.
2163 (if (equal filename buffer-file-name
)
2164 (setq buffer-file-truename truename
)
2165 (setq buffer-file-truename
2166 (abbreviate-file-name (file-truename buffer-file-name
))))
2167 (setq buffer-file-number number
)
2168 (if find-file-visit-truename
2169 (setq buffer-file-name
(expand-file-name buffer-file-truename
)))
2170 ;; Set buffer's default directory to that of the file.
2171 (setq default-directory
(file-name-directory buffer-file-name
))
2172 ;; Turn off backup files for certain file names. Since
2173 ;; this is a permanent local, the major mode won't eliminate it.
2174 (and backup-enable-predicate
2175 (not (funcall backup-enable-predicate buffer-file-name
))
2177 (make-local-variable 'backup-inhibited
)
2178 (setq backup-inhibited t
)))
2181 (set-buffer-multibyte nil
)
2182 (setq buffer-file-coding-system
'no-conversion
)
2183 (set-buffer-major-mode buf
)
2184 (setq-local find-file-literally t
))
2185 (after-find-file error
(not nowarn
)))
2188 (defun insert-file-contents-literally (filename &optional visit beg end replace
)
2189 "Like `insert-file-contents', but only reads in the file literally.
2190 See `insert-file-contents' for an explanation of the parameters.
2191 A buffer may be modified in several ways after reading into the buffer,
2192 due to Emacs features such as format decoding, character code
2193 conversion, `find-file-hook', automatic uncompression, etc.
2195 This function ensures that none of these modifications will take place."
2196 (let ((format-alist nil
)
2197 (after-insert-file-functions nil
)
2198 (coding-system-for-read 'no-conversion
)
2199 (coding-system-for-write 'no-conversion
)
2200 (inhibit-file-name-handlers
2201 ;; FIXME: Yuck!! We should turn insert-file-contents-literally
2202 ;; into a file operation instead!
2203 (append '(jka-compr-handler image-file-handler epa-file-handler
)
2204 inhibit-file-name-handlers
))
2205 (inhibit-file-name-operation 'insert-file-contents
))
2206 (insert-file-contents filename visit beg end replace
)))
2208 (defun insert-file-1 (filename insert-func
)
2209 (if (file-directory-p filename
)
2210 (signal 'file-error
(list "Opening input file" "Is a directory"
2212 ;; Check whether the file is uncommonly large
2213 (abort-if-file-too-large (nth 7 (file-attributes filename
)) "insert" filename
)
2214 (let* ((buffer (find-buffer-visiting (abbreviate-file-name (file-truename filename
))
2215 #'buffer-modified-p
))
2216 (tem (funcall insert-func filename
)))
2217 (push-mark (+ (point) (car (cdr tem
))))
2219 (message "File %s already visited and modified in buffer %s"
2220 filename
(buffer-name buffer
)))))
2222 (defun insert-file-literally (filename)
2223 "Insert contents of file FILENAME into buffer after point with no conversion.
2225 This function is meant for the user to run interactively.
2226 Don't call it from programs! Use `insert-file-contents-literally' instead.
2227 \(Its calling sequence is different; see its documentation)."
2228 (declare (interactive-only insert-file-contents-literally
))
2229 (interactive "*fInsert file literally: ")
2230 (insert-file-1 filename
#'insert-file-contents-literally
))
2232 (defvar find-file-literally nil
2233 "Non-nil if this buffer was made by `find-file-literally' or equivalent.
2234 This has the `permanent-local' property, which takes effect if you
2235 make the variable buffer-local.")
2236 (put 'find-file-literally
'permanent-local t
)
2238 (defun find-file-literally (filename)
2239 "Visit file FILENAME with no conversion of any kind.
2240 Format conversion and character code conversion are both disabled,
2241 and multibyte characters are disabled in the resulting buffer.
2242 The major mode used is Fundamental mode regardless of the file name,
2243 and local variable specifications in the file are ignored.
2244 Automatic uncompression and adding a newline at the end of the
2245 file due to `require-final-newline' is also disabled.
2247 You cannot absolutely rely on this function to result in
2248 visiting the file literally. If Emacs already has a buffer
2249 which is visiting the file, you get the existing buffer,
2250 regardless of whether it was created literally or not.
2252 In a Lisp program, if you want to be sure of accessing a file's
2253 contents literally, you should create a temporary buffer and then read
2254 the file contents into it using `insert-file-contents-literally'."
2256 (list (read-file-name
2257 "Find file literally: " nil default-directory
2258 (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer))))
2259 (switch-to-buffer (find-file-noselect filename nil t
)))
2261 (defun after-find-file (&optional error warn noauto
2262 _after-find-file-from-revert-buffer
2264 "Called after finding a file and by the default revert function.
2265 Sets buffer mode, parses local variables.
2266 Optional args ERROR, WARN, and NOAUTO: ERROR non-nil means there was an
2267 error in reading the file. WARN non-nil means warn if there
2268 exists an auto-save file more recent than the visited file.
2269 NOAUTO means don't mess with auto-save mode.
2270 Fourth arg AFTER-FIND-FILE-FROM-REVERT-BUFFER is ignored
2271 \(see `revert-buffer-in-progress-p' for similar functionality).
2272 Fifth arg NOMODES non-nil means don't alter the file's modes.
2273 Finishes by calling the functions in `find-file-hook'
2274 unless NOMODES is non-nil."
2275 (setq buffer-read-only
(not (file-writable-p buffer-file-name
)))
2282 ((and error
(file-attributes buffer-file-name
))
2283 (setq buffer-read-only t
)
2284 (if (and (file-symlink-p buffer-file-name
)
2286 (file-chase-links buffer-file-name
))))
2287 "Symbolic link that points to nonexistent file"
2288 "File exists, but cannot be read"))
2289 ((not buffer-read-only
)
2291 ;; No need to warn if buffer is auto-saved
2292 ;; under the name of the visited file.
2293 (not (and buffer-file-name
2294 auto-save-visited-file-name
))
2295 (file-newer-than-file-p (or buffer-auto-save-file-name
2296 (make-auto-save-file-name))
2298 (format "%s has auto save data; consider M-x recover-this-file"
2299 (file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name
))
2300 (setq not-serious t
)
2301 (if error
"(New file)" nil
)))
2303 (setq not-serious t
)
2304 "Note: file is write protected")
2305 ((file-attributes (directory-file-name default-directory
))
2306 "File not found and directory write-protected")
2307 ((file-exists-p (file-name-directory buffer-file-name
))
2308 (setq buffer-read-only nil
))
2310 (setq buffer-read-only nil
)
2311 "Use M-x make-directory RET RET to create the directory and its parents"))))
2314 (or not-serious
(sit-for 1 t
))))
2315 (when (and auto-save-default
(not noauto
))
2316 (auto-save-mode 1)))
2317 ;; Make people do a little extra work (C-x C-q)
2318 ;; before altering a backup file.
2319 (when (backup-file-name-p buffer-file-name
)
2320 (setq buffer-read-only t
))
2321 ;; When a file is marked read-only,
2322 ;; make the buffer read-only even if root is looking at it.
2323 (when (and (file-modes (buffer-file-name))
2324 (zerop (logand (file-modes (buffer-file-name)) #o222
)))
2325 (setq buffer-read-only t
))
2327 (when (and view-read-only view-mode
)
2330 ;; If requested, add a newline at the end of the file.
2331 (and (memq require-final-newline
'(visit visit-save
))
2332 (> (point-max) (point-min))
2333 (/= (char-after (1- (point-max))) ?
\n)
2334 (not (and (eq selective-display t
)
2335 (= (char-after (1- (point-max))) ?
\r)))
2336 (not buffer-read-only
)
2338 (goto-char (point-max))
2339 (ignore-errors (insert "\n"))))
2340 (when (and buffer-read-only
2342 (not (eq (get major-mode
'mode-class
) 'special
)))
2344 (run-hooks 'find-file-hook
)))
2346 (define-obsolete-function-alias 'report-errors
'with-demoted-errors
"25.1")
2348 (defun normal-mode (&optional find-file
)
2349 "Choose the major mode for this buffer automatically.
2350 Also sets up any specified local variables of the file.
2351 Uses the visited file name, the -*- line, and the local variables spec.
2353 This function is called automatically from `find-file'. In that case,
2354 we may set up the file-specified mode and local variables,
2355 depending on the value of `enable-local-variables'.
2356 In addition, if `local-enable-local-variables' is nil, we do
2357 not set local variables (though we do notice a mode specified with -*-.)
2359 `enable-local-variables' is ignored if you run `normal-mode' interactively,
2360 or from Lisp without specifying the optional argument FIND-FILE;
2361 in that case, this function acts as if `enable-local-variables' were t."
2363 (kill-all-local-variables)
2364 (unless delay-mode-hooks
2365 (run-hooks 'change-major-mode-after-body-hook
2366 'after-change-major-mode-hook
))
2367 (let ((enable-local-variables (or (not find-file
) enable-local-variables
)))
2368 ;; FIXME this is less efficient than it could be, since both
2369 ;; s-a-m and h-l-v may parse the same regions, looking for "mode:".
2370 (with-demoted-errors "File mode specification error: %s"
2372 ;; `delay-mode-hooks' being non-nil will have prevented the major
2373 ;; mode's call to `run-mode-hooks' from calling
2374 ;; `hack-local-variables'. In that case, call it now.
2375 (when delay-mode-hooks
2376 (with-demoted-errors "File local-variables error: %s"
2377 (hack-local-variables 'no-mode
))))
2378 ;; Turn font lock off and on, to make sure it takes account of
2379 ;; whatever file local variables are relevant to it.
2380 (when (and font-lock-mode
2381 ;; Font-lock-mode (now in font-core.el) can be ON when
2382 ;; font-lock.el still hasn't been loaded.
2383 (boundp 'font-lock-keywords
)
2384 (eq (car font-lock-keywords
) t
))
2385 (setq font-lock-keywords
(cadr font-lock-keywords
))
2386 (font-lock-mode 1)))
2388 (defcustom auto-mode-case-fold t
2389 "Non-nil means to try second pass through `auto-mode-alist'.
2390 This means that if the first case-sensitive search through the alist fails
2391 to find a matching major mode, a second case-insensitive search is made.
2392 On systems with case-insensitive file names, this variable is ignored,
2393 since only a single case-insensitive search through the alist is made."
2398 (defvar auto-mode-alist
2399 ;; Note: The entries for the modes defined in cc-mode.el (c-mode,
2400 ;; c++-mode, java-mode and more) are added through autoload
2401 ;; directives in that file. That way is discouraged since it
2402 ;; spreads out the definition of the initial value.
2405 (cons (purecopy (car elt
)) (cdr elt
)))
2406 `(;; do this first, so that .html.pl is Polish html, not Perl
2407 ("\\.[sx]?html?\\(\\.[a-zA-Z_]+\\)?\\'" . html-mode
)
2408 ("\\.svgz?\\'" . image-mode
)
2409 ("\\.svgz?\\'" . xml-mode
)
2410 ("\\.x[bp]m\\'" . image-mode
)
2411 ("\\.x[bp]m\\'" . c-mode
)
2412 ("\\.p[bpgn]m\\'" . image-mode
)
2413 ("\\.tiff?\\'" . image-mode
)
2414 ("\\.gif\\'" . image-mode
)
2415 ("\\.png\\'" . image-mode
)
2416 ("\\.jpe?g\\'" . image-mode
)
2417 ("\\.te?xt\\'" . text-mode
)
2418 ("\\.[tT]e[xX]\\'" . tex-mode
)
2419 ("\\.ins\\'" . tex-mode
) ;Installation files for TeX packages.
2420 ("\\.ltx\\'" . latex-mode
)
2421 ("\\.dtx\\'" . doctex-mode
)
2422 ("\\.org\\'" . org-mode
)
2423 ("\\.el\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode
)
2424 ("Project\\.ede\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode
)
2425 ("\\.\\(scm\\|stk\\|ss\\|sch\\)\\'" . scheme-mode
)
2426 ("\\.l\\'" . lisp-mode
)
2427 ("\\.li?sp\\'" . lisp-mode
)
2428 ("\\.[fF]\\'" . fortran-mode
)
2429 ("\\.for\\'" . fortran-mode
)
2430 ("\\.p\\'" . pascal-mode
)
2431 ("\\.pas\\'" . pascal-mode
)
2432 ("\\.\\(dpr\\|DPR\\)\\'" . delphi-mode
)
2433 ("\\.ad[abs]\\'" . ada-mode
)
2434 ("\\.ad[bs].dg\\'" . ada-mode
)
2435 ("\\.\\([pP]\\([Llm]\\|erl\\|od\\)\\|al\\)\\'" . perl-mode
)
2436 ("Imakefile\\'" . makefile-imake-mode
)
2437 ("Makeppfile\\(?:\\.mk\\)?\\'" . makefile-makepp-mode
) ; Put this before .mk
2438 ("\\.makepp\\'" . makefile-makepp-mode
)
2439 ,@(if (memq system-type
'(berkeley-unix darwin
))
2440 '(("\\.mk\\'" . makefile-bsdmake-mode
)
2441 ("\\.make\\'" . makefile-bsdmake-mode
)
2442 ("GNUmakefile\\'" . makefile-gmake-mode
)
2443 ("[Mm]akefile\\'" . makefile-bsdmake-mode
))
2444 '(("\\.mk\\'" . makefile-gmake-mode
) ; Might be any make, give Gnu the host advantage
2445 ("\\.make\\'" . makefile-gmake-mode
)
2446 ("[Mm]akefile\\'" . makefile-gmake-mode
)))
2447 ("\\.am\\'" . makefile-automake-mode
)
2448 ;; Less common extensions come here
2449 ;; so more common ones above are found faster.
2450 ("\\.texinfo\\'" . texinfo-mode
)
2451 ("\\.te?xi\\'" . texinfo-mode
)
2452 ("\\.[sS]\\'" . asm-mode
)
2453 ("\\.asm\\'" . asm-mode
)
2454 ("\\.css\\'" . css-mode
)
2455 ("\\.mixal\\'" . mixal-mode
)
2456 ("\\.gcov\\'" . compilation-mode
)
2457 ;; Besides .gdbinit, gdb documents other names to be usable for init
2458 ;; files, cross-debuggers can use something like
2459 ;; .PROCESSORNAME-gdbinit so that the host and target gdbinit files
2460 ;; don't interfere with each other.
2461 ("/\\.[a-z0-9-]*gdbinit" . gdb-script-mode
)
2462 ;; GDB 7.5 introduced OBJFILE-gdb.gdb script files; e.g. a file
2463 ;; named 'emacs-gdb.gdb', if it exists, will be automatically
2464 ;; loaded when GDB reads an objfile called 'emacs'.
2465 ("-gdb\\.gdb" . gdb-script-mode
)
2466 ("[cC]hange\\.?[lL]og?\\'" . change-log-mode
)
2467 ("[cC]hange[lL]og[-.][0-9]+\\'" . change-log-mode
)
2468 ("\\$CHANGE_LOG\\$\\.TXT" . change-log-mode
)
2469 ("\\.scm\\.[0-9]*\\'" . scheme-mode
)
2470 ("\\.[ckz]?sh\\'\\|\\.shar\\'\\|/\\.z?profile\\'" . sh-mode
)
2471 ("\\.bash\\'" . sh-mode
)
2472 ("\\(/\\|\\`\\)\\.\\(bash_\\(profile\\|history\\|log\\(in\\|out\\)\\)\\|z?log\\(in\\|out\\)\\)\\'" . sh-mode
)
2473 ("\\(/\\|\\`\\)\\.\\(shrc\\|[kz]shrc\\|bashrc\\|t?cshrc\\|esrc\\)\\'" . sh-mode
)
2474 ("\\(/\\|\\`\\)\\.\\([kz]shenv\\|xinitrc\\|startxrc\\|xsession\\)\\'" . sh-mode
)
2475 ("\\.m?spec\\'" . sh-mode
)
2476 ("\\.m[mes]\\'" . nroff-mode
)
2477 ("\\.man\\'" . nroff-mode
)
2478 ("\\.sty\\'" . latex-mode
)
2479 ("\\.cl[so]\\'" . latex-mode
) ;LaTeX 2e class option
2480 ("\\.bbl\\'" . latex-mode
)
2481 ("\\.bib\\'" . bibtex-mode
)
2482 ("\\.bst\\'" . bibtex-style-mode
)
2483 ("\\.sql\\'" . sql-mode
)
2484 ("\\.m[4c]\\'" . m4-mode
)
2485 ("\\.mf\\'" . metafont-mode
)
2486 ("\\.mp\\'" . metapost-mode
)
2487 ("\\.vhdl?\\'" . vhdl-mode
)
2488 ("\\.article\\'" . text-mode
)
2489 ("\\.letter\\'" . text-mode
)
2490 ("\\.i?tcl\\'" . tcl-mode
)
2491 ("\\.exp\\'" . tcl-mode
)
2492 ("\\.itk\\'" . tcl-mode
)
2493 ("\\.icn\\'" . icon-mode
)
2494 ("\\.sim\\'" . simula-mode
)
2495 ("\\.mss\\'" . scribe-mode
)
2496 ;; The Fortran standard does not say anything about file extensions.
2497 ;; .f90 was widely used for F90, now we seem to be trapped into
2498 ;; using a different extension for each language revision.
2499 ;; Anyway, the following extensions are supported by gfortran.
2500 ("\\.f9[05]\\'" . f90-mode
)
2501 ("\\.f0[38]\\'" . f90-mode
)
2502 ("\\.indent\\.pro\\'" . fundamental-mode
) ; to avoid idlwave-mode
2503 ("\\.\\(pro\\|PRO\\)\\'" . idlwave-mode
)
2504 ("\\.srt\\'" . srecode-template-mode
)
2505 ("\\.prolog\\'" . prolog-mode
)
2506 ("\\.tar\\'" . tar-mode
)
2507 ;; The list of archive file extensions should be in sync with
2508 ;; `auto-coding-alist' with `no-conversion' coding system.
2510 arc\\|zip\\|lzh\\|lha\\|zoo\\|[jew]ar\\|xpi\\|rar\\|7z\\|\
2511 ARC\\|ZIP\\|LZH\\|LHA\\|ZOO\\|[JEW]AR\\|XPI\\|RAR\\|7Z\\)\\'" . archive-mode
)
2512 ("\\.oxt\\'" . archive-mode
) ;(Open|Libre)Office extensions.
2513 ("\\.\\(deb\\|[oi]pk\\)\\'" . archive-mode
) ; Debian/Opkg packages.
2514 ;; Mailer puts message to be edited in
2515 ;; /tmp/Re.... or Message
2516 ("\\`/tmp/Re" . text-mode
)
2517 ("/Message[0-9]*\\'" . text-mode
)
2518 ;; some news reader is reported to use this
2519 ("\\`/tmp/fol/" . text-mode
)
2520 ("\\.oak\\'" . scheme-mode
)
2521 ("\\.sgml?\\'" . sgml-mode
)
2522 ("\\.x[ms]l\\'" . xml-mode
)
2523 ("\\.dbk\\'" . xml-mode
)
2524 ("\\.dtd\\'" . sgml-mode
)
2525 ("\\.ds\\(ss\\)?l\\'" . dsssl-mode
)
2526 ("\\.jsm?\\'" . javascript-mode
)
2527 ("\\.json\\'" . javascript-mode
)
2528 ("\\.[ds]?vh?\\'" . verilog-mode
)
2529 ("\\.by\\'" . bovine-grammar-mode
)
2530 ("\\.wy\\'" . wisent-grammar-mode
)
2531 ;; .emacs or .gnus or .viper following a directory delimiter in
2532 ;; Unix or MS-DOS syntax.
2533 ("[:/\\]\\..*\\(emacs\\|gnus\\|viper\\)\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode
)
2534 ("\\`\\..*emacs\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode
)
2535 ;; _emacs following a directory delimiter in MS-DOS syntax
2536 ("[:/]_emacs\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode
)
2537 ("/crontab\\.X*[0-9]+\\'" . shell-script-mode
)
2538 ("\\.ml\\'" . lisp-mode
)
2539 ;; Linux-2.6.9 uses some different suffix for linker scripts:
2540 ;; "ld", "lds", "lds.S", "lds.in", "ld.script", and "ld.script.balo".
2541 ;; eCos uses "ld" and "ldi". Netbsd uses "ldscript.*".
2542 ("\\.ld[si]?\\'" . ld-script-mode
)
2543 ("ld\\.?script\\'" . ld-script-mode
)
2544 ;; .xs is also used for ld scripts, but seems to be more commonly
2545 ;; associated with Perl .xs files (C with Perl bindings). (Bug#7071)
2546 ("\\.xs\\'" . c-mode
)
2547 ;; Explained in binutils ld/genscripts.sh. Eg:
2548 ;; A .x script file is the default script.
2549 ;; A .xr script is for linking without relocation (-r flag). Etc.
2550 ("\\.x[abdsru]?[cnw]?\\'" . ld-script-mode
)
2551 ("\\.zone\\'" . dns-mode
)
2552 ("\\.soa\\'" . dns-mode
)
2553 ;; Common Lisp ASDF package system.
2554 ("\\.asd\\'" . lisp-mode
)
2555 ("\\.\\(asn\\|mib\\|smi\\)\\'" . snmp-mode
)
2556 ("\\.\\(as\\|mi\\|sm\\)2\\'" . snmpv2-mode
)
2557 ("\\.\\(diffs?\\|patch\\|rej\\)\\'" . diff-mode
)
2558 ("\\.\\(dif\\|pat\\)\\'" . diff-mode
) ; for MS-DOS
2559 ("\\.[eE]?[pP][sS]\\'" . ps-mode
)
2560 ("\\.\\(?:PDF\\|DVI\\|OD[FGPST]\\|DOCX?\\|XLSX?\\|PPTX?\\|pdf\\|djvu\\|dvi\\|od[fgpst]\\|docx?\\|xlsx?\\|pptx?\\)\\'" . doc-view-mode-maybe
)
2561 ("configure\\.\\(ac\\|in\\)\\'" . autoconf-mode
)
2562 ("\\.s\\(v\\|iv\\|ieve\\)\\'" . sieve-mode
)
2563 ("BROWSE\\'" . ebrowse-tree-mode
)
2564 ("\\.ebrowse\\'" . ebrowse-tree-mode
)
2565 ("#\\*mail\\*" . mail-mode
)
2566 ("\\.g\\'" . antlr-mode
)
2567 ("\\.mod\\'" . m2-mode
)
2568 ("\\.ses\\'" . ses-mode
)
2569 ("\\.docbook\\'" . sgml-mode
)
2570 ("\\.com\\'" . dcl-mode
)
2571 ("/config\\.\\(?:bat\\|log\\)\\'" . fundamental-mode
)
2572 ;; Windows candidates may be opened case sensitively on Unix
2573 ("\\.\\(?:[iI][nN][iI]\\|[lL][sS][tT]\\|[rR][eE][gG]\\|[sS][yY][sS]\\)\\'" . conf-mode
)
2574 ("\\.\\(?:desktop\\|la\\)\\'" . conf-unix-mode
)
2575 ("\\.ppd\\'" . conf-ppd-mode
)
2576 ("java.+\\.conf\\'" . conf-javaprop-mode
)
2577 ("\\.properties\\(?:\\.[a-zA-Z0-9._-]+\\)?\\'" . conf-javaprop-mode
)
2578 ("\\`/etc/\\(?:DIR_COLORS\\|ethers\\|.?fstab\\|.*hosts\\|lesskey\\|login\\.?de\\(?:fs\\|vperm\\)\\|magic\\|mtab\\|pam\\.d/.*\\|permissions\\(?:\\.d/.+\\)?\\|protocols\\|rpc\\|services\\)\\'" . conf-space-mode
)
2579 ("\\`/etc/\\(?:acpid?/.+\\|aliases\\(?:\\.d/.+\\)?\\|default/.+\\|group-?\\|hosts\\..+\\|inittab\\|ksysguarddrc\\|opera6rc\\|passwd-?\\|shadow-?\\|sysconfig/.+\\)\\'" . conf-mode
)
2580 ;; ChangeLog.old etc. Other change-log-mode entries are above;
2581 ;; this has lower priority to avoid matching changelog.sgml etc.
2582 ("[cC]hange[lL]og[-.][-0-9a-z]+\\'" . change-log-mode
)
2583 ;; either user's dot-files or under /etc or some such
2584 ("/\\.?\\(?:gitconfig\\|gnokiirc\\|hgrc\\|kde.*rc\\|mime\\.types\\|wgetrc\\)\\'" . conf-mode
)
2585 ;; alas not all ~/.*rc files are like this
2586 ("/\\.\\(?:enigma\\|gltron\\|gtk\\|hxplayer\\|net\\|neverball\\|qt/.+\\|realplayer\\|scummvm\\|sversion\\|sylpheed/.+\\|xmp\\)rc\\'" . conf-mode
)
2587 ("/\\.\\(?:gdbtkinit\\|grip\\|orbital/.+txt\\|rhosts\\|tuxracer/options\\)\\'" . conf-mode
)
2588 ("/\\.?X\\(?:default\\|resource\\|re\\)s\\>" . conf-xdefaults-mode
)
2589 ("/X11.+app-defaults/\\|\\.ad\\'" . conf-xdefaults-mode
)
2590 ("/X11.+locale/.+/Compose\\'" . conf-colon-mode
)
2591 ;; this contains everything twice, with space and with colon :-(
2592 ("/X11.+locale/compose\\.dir\\'" . conf-javaprop-mode
)
2593 ;; Get rid of any trailing .n.m and try again.
2594 ;; This is for files saved by cvs-merge that look like .#<file>.<rev>
2595 ;; or .#<file>.<rev>-<rev> or VC's <file>.~<rev>~.
2596 ;; Using mode nil rather than `ignore' would let the search continue
2597 ;; through this list (with the shortened name) rather than start over.
2598 ("\\.~?[0-9]+\\.[0-9][-.0-9]*~?\\'" nil t
)
2599 ("\\.\\(?:orig\\|in\\|[bB][aA][kK]\\)\\'" nil t
)
2600 ;; This should come after "in" stripping (e.g. config.h.in).
2601 ;; *.cf, *.cfg, *.conf, *.config[.local|.de_DE.UTF8|...], */config
2602 ("[/.]c\\(?:on\\)?f\\(?:i?g\\)?\\(?:\\.[a-zA-Z0-9._-]+\\)?\\'" . conf-mode-maybe
)
2603 ;; The following should come after the ChangeLog pattern
2604 ;; for the sake of ChangeLog.1, etc.
2605 ;; and after the .scm.[0-9] and CVS' <file>.<rev> patterns too.
2606 ("\\.[1-9]\\'" . nroff-mode
)))
2607 "Alist of filename patterns vs corresponding major mode functions.
2608 Each element looks like (REGEXP . FUNCTION) or (REGEXP FUNCTION NON-NIL).
2609 \(NON-NIL stands for anything that is not nil; the value does not matter.)
2610 Visiting a file whose name matches REGEXP specifies FUNCTION as the
2611 mode function to use. FUNCTION will be called, unless it is nil.
2613 If the element has the form (REGEXP FUNCTION NON-NIL), then after
2614 calling FUNCTION (if it's not nil), we delete the suffix that matched
2615 REGEXP and search the list again for another match.
2617 The extensions whose FUNCTION is `archive-mode' should also
2618 appear in `auto-coding-alist' with `no-conversion' coding system.
2620 See also `interpreter-mode-alist', which detects executable script modes
2621 based on the interpreters they specify to run,
2622 and `magic-mode-alist', which determines modes based on file contents.")
2623 (put 'auto-mode-alist
'risky-local-variable t
)
2625 (defun conf-mode-maybe ()
2626 "Select Conf mode or XML mode according to start of file."
2630 (goto-char (point-min))
2631 (looking-at "<\\?xml \\|<!-- \\|<!DOCTYPE ")))
2635 (defvar interpreter-mode-alist
2636 ;; Note: The entries for the modes defined in cc-mode.el (awk-mode
2637 ;; and pike-mode) are added through autoload directives in that
2638 ;; file. That way is discouraged since it spreads out the
2639 ;; definition of the initial value.
2642 (cons (purecopy (car l
)) (cdr l
)))
2643 '(("\\(mini\\)?perl5?" . perl-mode
)
2644 ("wishx?" . tcl-mode
)
2645 ("tcl\\(sh\\)?" . tcl-mode
)
2646 ("expect" . tcl-mode
)
2647 ("octave" . octave-mode
)
2648 ("scm" . scheme-mode
)
2649 ("[acjkwz]sh" . sh-mode
)
2650 ("r?bash2?" . sh-mode
)
2653 ("\\(dt\\|pd\\|w\\)ksh" . sh-mode
)
2655 ("i?tcsh" . sh-mode
)
2660 ("tail" . text-mode
)
2661 ("more" . text-mode
)
2662 ("less" . text-mode
)
2664 ("make" . makefile-gmake-mode
) ; Debian uses this
2665 ("guile" . scheme-mode
)
2666 ("clisp" . lisp-mode
)
2667 ("emacs" . emacs-lisp-mode
)))
2668 "Alist mapping interpreter names to major modes.
2669 This is used for files whose first lines match `auto-mode-interpreter-regexp'.
2670 Each element looks like (REGEXP . MODE).
2671 If REGEXP matches the entire name (minus any directory part) of
2672 the interpreter specified in the first line of a script, enable
2675 See also `auto-mode-alist'.")
2677 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'inhibit-first-line-modes-regexps
2678 'inhibit-file-local-variables-regexps
"24.1")
2680 ;; TODO really this should be a list of modes (eg tar-mode), not regexps,
2681 ;; because we are duplicating info from auto-mode-alist.
2682 ;; TODO many elements of this list are also in auto-coding-alist.
2683 (defvar inhibit-local-variables-regexps
2684 (mapcar 'purecopy
'("\\.tar\\'" "\\.t[bg]z\\'"
2685 "\\.arc\\'" "\\.zip\\'" "\\.lzh\\'" "\\.lha\\'"
2686 "\\.zoo\\'" "\\.[jew]ar\\'" "\\.xpi\\'" "\\.rar\\'"
2688 "\\.sx[dmicw]\\'" "\\.odt\\'"
2689 "\\.diff\\'" "\\.patch\\'"
2690 "\\.tiff?\\'" "\\.gif\\'" "\\.png\\'" "\\.jpe?g\\'"))
2691 "List of regexps matching file names in which to ignore local variables.
2692 This includes `-*-' lines as well as trailing \"Local Variables\" sections.
2693 Files matching this list are typically binary file formats.
2694 They may happen to contain sequences that look like local variable
2695 specifications, but are not really, or they may be containers for
2696 member files with their own local variable sections, which are
2697 not appropriate for the containing file.
2698 The function `inhibit-local-variables-p' uses this.")
2700 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'inhibit-first-line-modes-suffixes
2701 'inhibit-local-variables-suffixes
"24.1")
2703 (defvar inhibit-local-variables-suffixes nil
2704 "List of regexps matching suffixes to remove from file names.
2705 The function `inhibit-local-variables-p' uses this: when checking
2706 a file name, it first discards from the end of the name anything that
2707 matches one of these regexps.")
2709 ;; Can't think of any situation in which you'd want this to be nil...
2710 (defvar inhibit-local-variables-ignore-case t
2711 "Non-nil means `inhibit-local-variables-p' ignores case.")
2713 (defun inhibit-local-variables-p ()
2714 "Return non-nil if file local variables should be ignored.
2715 This checks the file (or buffer) name against `inhibit-local-variables-regexps'
2716 and `inhibit-local-variables-suffixes'. If
2717 `inhibit-local-variables-ignore-case' is non-nil, this ignores case."
2718 (let ((temp inhibit-local-variables-regexps
)
2719 (name (if buffer-file-name
2720 (file-name-sans-versions buffer-file-name
)
2722 (case-fold-search inhibit-local-variables-ignore-case
))
2723 (while (let ((sufs inhibit-local-variables-suffixes
))
2724 (while (and sufs
(not (string-match (car sufs
) name
)))
2725 (setq sufs
(cdr sufs
)))
2727 (setq name
(substring name
0 (match-beginning 0))))
2729 (not (string-match (car temp
) name
)))
2730 (setq temp
(cdr temp
)))
2733 (defvar auto-mode-interpreter-regexp
2734 (purecopy "#![ \t]?\\([^ \t\n]*\
2735 /bin/env[ \t]\\)?\\([^ \t\n]+\\)")
2736 "Regexp matching interpreters, for file mode determination.
2737 This regular expression is matched against the first line of a file
2738 to determine the file's mode in `set-auto-mode'. If it matches, the file
2739 is assumed to be interpreted by the interpreter matched by the second group
2740 of the regular expression. The mode is then determined as the mode
2741 associated with that interpreter in `interpreter-mode-alist'.")
2743 (defvar magic-mode-alist nil
2744 "Alist of buffer beginnings vs. corresponding major mode functions.
2745 Each element looks like (REGEXP . FUNCTION) or (MATCH-FUNCTION . FUNCTION).
2746 After visiting a file, if REGEXP matches the text at the beginning of the
2747 buffer, or calling MATCH-FUNCTION returns non-nil, `normal-mode' will
2748 call FUNCTION rather than allowing `auto-mode-alist' to decide the buffer's
2751 If FUNCTION is nil, then it is not called. (That is a way of saying
2752 \"allow `auto-mode-alist' to decide for these files.\")")
2753 (put 'magic-mode-alist
'risky-local-variable t
)
2755 (defvar magic-fallback-mode-alist
2757 `((image-type-auto-detected-p . image-mode
)
2758 ("\\(PK00\\)?[P]K\003\004" . archive-mode
) ; zip
2759 ;; The < comes before the groups (but the first) to reduce backtracking.
2760 ;; TODO: UTF-16 <?xml may be preceded by a BOM 0xff 0xfe or 0xfe 0xff.
2761 ;; We use [ \t\r\n] instead of `\\s ' to make regex overflow less likely.
2762 (,(let* ((incomment-re "\\(?:[^-]\\|-[^-]\\)")
2763 (comment-re (concat "\\(?:!--" incomment-re
"*-->[ \t\r\n]*<\\)")))
2764 (concat "\\(?:<\\?xml[ \t\r\n]+[^>]*>\\)?[ \t\r\n]*<"
2766 "\\(?:!DOCTYPE[ \t\r\n]+[^>]*>[ \t\r\n]*<[ \t\r\n]*" comment-re
"*\\)?"
2767 "[Hh][Tt][Mm][Ll]"))
2769 ("<!DOCTYPE[ \t\r\n]+[Hh][Tt][Mm][Ll]" . html-mode
)
2770 ;; These two must come after html, because they are more general:
2771 ("<\\?xml " . xml-mode
)
2772 (,(let* ((incomment-re "\\(?:[^-]\\|-[^-]\\)")
2773 (comment-re (concat "\\(?:!--" incomment-re
"*-->[ \t\r\n]*<\\)")))
2774 (concat "[ \t\r\n]*<" comment-re
"*!DOCTYPE "))
2777 ("# xmcd " . conf-unix-mode
)))
2778 "Like `magic-mode-alist' but has lower priority than `auto-mode-alist'.
2779 Each element looks like (REGEXP . FUNCTION) or (MATCH-FUNCTION . FUNCTION).
2780 After visiting a file, if REGEXP matches the text at the beginning of the
2781 buffer, or calling MATCH-FUNCTION returns non-nil, `normal-mode' will
2782 call FUNCTION, provided that `magic-mode-alist' and `auto-mode-alist'
2783 have not specified a mode for this file.
2785 If FUNCTION is nil, then it is not called.")
2786 (put 'magic-fallback-mode-alist
'risky-local-variable t
)
2788 (defvar magic-mode-regexp-match-limit
4000
2789 "Upper limit on `magic-mode-alist' regexp matches.
2790 Also applies to `magic-fallback-mode-alist'.")
2792 (defun set-auto-mode (&optional keep-mode-if-same
)
2793 "Select major mode appropriate for current buffer.
2795 To find the right major mode, this function checks for a -*- mode tag
2796 checks for a `mode:' entry in the Local Variables section of the file,
2797 checks if it uses an interpreter listed in `interpreter-mode-alist',
2798 matches the buffer beginning against `magic-mode-alist',
2799 compares the filename against the entries in `auto-mode-alist',
2800 then matches the buffer beginning against `magic-fallback-mode-alist'.
2802 If `enable-local-variables' is nil, or if the file name matches
2803 `inhibit-local-variables-regexps', this function does not check
2804 for any mode: tag anywhere in the file. If `local-enable-local-variables'
2805 is nil, then the only mode: tag that can be relevant is a -*- one.
2807 If the optional argument KEEP-MODE-IF-SAME is non-nil, then we
2808 set the major mode only if that would change it. In other words
2809 we don't actually set it to the same mode the buffer already has."
2810 ;; Look for -*-MODENAME-*- or -*- ... mode: MODENAME; ... -*-
2811 (let ((try-locals (not (inhibit-local-variables-p)))
2812 end done mode modes
)
2813 ;; Once we drop the deprecated feature where mode: is also allowed to
2814 ;; specify minor-modes (ie, there can be more than one "mode:"), we can
2815 ;; remove this section and just let (hack-local-variables t) handle it.
2816 ;; Find a -*- mode tag.
2818 (goto-char (point-min))
2819 (skip-chars-forward " \t\n")
2820 ;; Note by design local-enable-local-variables does not matter here.
2821 (and enable-local-variables
2823 (setq end
(set-auto-mode-1))
2824 (if (save-excursion (search-forward ":" end t
))
2825 ;; Find all specifications for the `mode:' variable
2826 ;; and execute them left to right.
2827 (while (let ((case-fold-search t
))
2828 (or (and (looking-at "mode:")
2829 (goto-char (match-end 0)))
2830 (re-search-forward "[ \t;]mode:" end t
)))
2831 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
2832 (let ((beg (point)))
2833 (if (search-forward ";" end t
)
2836 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
2837 (push (intern (concat (downcase (buffer-substring beg
(point))) "-mode"))
2839 ;; Simple -*-MODE-*- case.
2840 (push (intern (concat (downcase (buffer-substring (point) end
))
2843 ;; If we found modes to use, invoke them now, outside the save-excursion.
2846 (dolist (mode (nreverse modes
))
2847 (if (not (functionp mode
))
2848 (message "Ignoring unknown mode `%s'" mode
)
2850 (or (set-auto-mode-0 mode keep-mode-if-same
)
2851 ;; continuing would call minor modes again, toggling them off
2852 (throw 'nop nil
))))))
2853 ;; hack-local-variables checks local-enable-local-variables etc, but
2854 ;; we might as well be explicit here for the sake of clarity.
2856 enable-local-variables
2857 local-enable-local-variables
2859 (setq mode
(hack-local-variables t
))
2860 (not (memq mode modes
)) ; already tried and failed
2861 (if (not (functionp mode
))
2862 (message "Ignoring unknown mode `%s'" mode
)
2864 (set-auto-mode-0 mode keep-mode-if-same
)))
2865 ;; If we didn't, look for an interpreter specified in the first line.
2866 ;; As a special case, allow for things like "#!/bin/env perl", which
2867 ;; finds the interpreter anywhere in $PATH.
2869 (setq mode
(save-excursion
2870 (goto-char (point-min))
2871 (if (looking-at auto-mode-interpreter-regexp
)
2873 ;; Map interpreter name to a mode, signaling we're done at the
2875 (setq done
(assoc-default
2876 (file-name-nondirectory mode
)
2879 (format "\\`%s\\'" (car e
))
2881 interpreter-mode-alist
)
2883 ;; If we found an interpreter mode to use, invoke it now.
2884 (set-auto-mode-0 done keep-mode-if-same
))
2885 ;; Next try matching the buffer beginning against magic-mode-alist.
2887 (if (setq done
(save-excursion
2888 (goto-char (point-min))
2890 (narrow-to-region (point-min)
2892 (+ (point-min) magic-mode-regexp-match-limit
)))
2893 (assoc-default nil magic-mode-alist
2897 (looking-at re
)))))))
2898 (set-auto-mode-0 done keep-mode-if-same
)))
2899 ;; Next compare the filename against the entries in auto-mode-alist.
2901 (if buffer-file-name
2902 (let ((name buffer-file-name
)
2903 (remote-id (file-remote-p buffer-file-name
)))
2904 ;; Remove backup-suffixes from file name.
2905 (setq name
(file-name-sans-versions name
))
2906 ;; Remove remote file name identification.
2907 (when (and (stringp remote-id
)
2908 (string-match (regexp-quote remote-id
) name
))
2909 (setq name
(substring name
(match-end 0))))
2911 ;; Find first matching alist entry.
2913 (if (memq system-type
'(windows-nt cygwin
))
2914 ;; System is case-insensitive.
2915 (let ((case-fold-search t
))
2916 (assoc-default name auto-mode-alist
2918 ;; System is case-sensitive.
2920 ;; First match case-sensitively.
2921 (let ((case-fold-search nil
))
2922 (assoc-default name auto-mode-alist
2924 ;; Fallback to case-insensitive match.
2925 (and auto-mode-case-fold
2926 (let ((case-fold-search t
))
2927 (assoc-default name auto-mode-alist
2932 (setq mode
(car mode
)
2933 name
(substring name
0 (match-beginning 0)))
2936 (set-auto-mode-0 mode keep-mode-if-same
)
2938 ;; Next try matching the buffer beginning against magic-fallback-mode-alist.
2940 (if (setq done
(save-excursion
2941 (goto-char (point-min))
2943 (narrow-to-region (point-min)
2945 (+ (point-min) magic-mode-regexp-match-limit
)))
2946 (assoc-default nil magic-fallback-mode-alist
2950 (looking-at re
)))))))
2951 (set-auto-mode-0 done keep-mode-if-same
)))
2953 (set-buffer-major-mode (current-buffer)))))
2955 ;; When `keep-mode-if-same' is set, we are working on behalf of
2956 ;; set-visited-file-name. In that case, if the major mode specified is the
2957 ;; same one we already have, don't actually reset it. We don't want to lose
2958 ;; minor modes such as Font Lock.
2959 (defun set-auto-mode-0 (mode &optional keep-mode-if-same
)
2960 "Apply MODE and return it.
2961 If optional arg KEEP-MODE-IF-SAME is non-nil, MODE is chased of
2962 any aliases and compared to current major mode. If they are the
2963 same, do nothing and return nil."
2964 (unless (and keep-mode-if-same
2965 (eq (indirect-function mode
)
2966 (indirect-function major-mode
)))
2971 (defvar file-auto-mode-skip
"^\\(#!\\|'\\\\\"\\)"
2972 "Regexp of lines to skip when looking for file-local settings.
2973 If the first line matches this regular expression, then the -*-...-*- file-
2974 local settings will be consulted on the second line instead of the first.")
2976 (defun set-auto-mode-1 ()
2977 "Find the -*- spec in the buffer.
2978 Call with point at the place to start searching from.
2979 If one is found, set point to the beginning and return the position
2980 of the end. Otherwise, return nil; may change point.
2981 The variable `inhibit-local-variables-regexps' can cause a -*- spec to
2982 be ignored; but `enable-local-variables' and `local-enable-local-variables'
2986 ;; Don't look for -*- if this file name matches any
2987 ;; of the regexps in inhibit-local-variables-regexps.
2988 (not (inhibit-local-variables-p))
2989 (search-forward "-*-" (line-end-position
2990 ;; If the file begins with "#!" (exec
2991 ;; interpreter magic), look for mode frobs
2992 ;; in the first two lines. You cannot
2993 ;; necessarily put them in the first line
2994 ;; of such a file without screwing up the
2995 ;; interpreter invocation. The same holds
2996 ;; for '\" in man pages (preprocessor
2997 ;; magic for the `man' program).
2998 (and (looking-at file-auto-mode-skip
) 2)) t
)
3000 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
3002 (search-forward "-*-" (line-end-position) t
))
3005 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
3010 ;;; Handling file local variables
3012 (defvar ignored-local-variables
3013 '(ignored-local-variables safe-local-variable-values
3014 file-local-variables-alist dir-local-variables-alist
)
3015 "Variables to be ignored in a file's local variable spec.")
3016 (put 'ignored-local-variables
'risky-local-variable t
)
3018 (defvar hack-local-variables-hook nil
3019 "Normal hook run after processing a file's local variables specs.
3020 Major modes can use this to examine user-specified local variables
3021 in order to initialize other data structure based on them.")
3023 (defcustom safe-local-variable-values nil
3024 "List variable-value pairs that are considered safe.
3025 Each element is a cons cell (VAR . VAL), where VAR is a variable
3026 symbol and VAL is a value that is considered safe."
3031 (defcustom safe-local-eval-forms
3032 ;; This should be here at least as long as Emacs supports write-file-hooks.
3033 '((add-hook 'write-file-hooks
'time-stamp
)
3034 (add-hook 'write-file-functions
'time-stamp
)
3035 (add-hook 'before-save-hook
'time-stamp nil t
)
3036 (add-hook 'before-save-hook
'delete-trailing-whitespace nil t
))
3037 "Expressions that are considered safe in an `eval:' local variable.
3038 Add expressions to this list if you want Emacs to evaluate them, when
3039 they appear in an `eval' local variable specification, without first
3040 asking you for confirmation."
3043 :version
"24.1" ; added write-file-hooks
3044 :type
'(repeat sexp
))
3046 ;; Risky local variables:
3047 (mapc (lambda (var) (put var
'risky-local-variable t
))
3049 buffer-auto-save-file-name
3051 buffer-file-truename
3054 default-text-properties
3058 file-name-handler-alist
3067 minor-mode-map-alist
3068 minor-mode-overriding-map-alist
3071 overriding-local-map
3072 overriding-terminal-local-map
3076 unread-command-events
))
3078 ;; Safe local variables:
3080 ;; For variables defined by major modes, the safety declarations can go into
3081 ;; the major mode's file, since that will be loaded before file variables are
3084 ;; For variables defined by minor modes, put the safety declarations in the
3085 ;; file defining the minor mode after the defcustom/defvar using an autoload
3088 ;; ;;;###autoload(put 'variable 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
3090 ;; Otherwise, when Emacs visits a file specifying that local variable, the
3091 ;; minor mode file may not be loaded yet.
3093 ;; For variables defined in the C source code the declaration should go here:
3096 '((buffer-read-only . booleanp
) ;; C source code
3097 (default-directory . stringp
) ;; C source code
3098 (fill-column . integerp
) ;; C source code
3099 (indent-tabs-mode . booleanp
) ;; C source code
3100 (left-margin . integerp
) ;; C source code
3101 (no-update-autoloads . booleanp
)
3102 (lexical-binding . booleanp
) ;; C source code
3103 (tab-width . integerp
) ;; C source code
3104 (truncate-lines . booleanp
) ;; C source code
3105 (word-wrap . booleanp
) ;; C source code
3106 (bidi-display-reordering . booleanp
))) ;; C source code
3107 (put (car pair
) 'safe-local-variable
(cdr pair
)))
3109 (put 'bidi-paragraph-direction
'safe-local-variable
3110 (lambda (v) (memq v
'(nil right-to-left left-to-right
))))
3112 (put 'c-set-style
'safe-local-eval-function t
)
3114 (defvar file-local-variables-alist nil
3115 "Alist of file-local variable settings in the current buffer.
3116 Each element in this list has the form (VAR . VALUE), where VAR
3117 is a file-local variable (a symbol) and VALUE is the value
3118 specified. The actual value in the buffer may differ from VALUE,
3119 if it is changed by the major or minor modes, or by the user.")
3120 (make-variable-buffer-local 'file-local-variables-alist
)
3121 (put 'file-local-variables-alist
'permanent-local t
)
3123 (defvar dir-local-variables-alist nil
3124 "Alist of directory-local variable settings in the current buffer.
3125 Each element in this list has the form (VAR . VALUE), where VAR
3126 is a directory-local variable (a symbol) and VALUE is the value
3127 specified in .dir-locals.el. The actual value in the buffer
3128 may differ from VALUE, if it is changed by the major or minor modes,
3130 (make-variable-buffer-local 'dir-local-variables-alist
)
3132 (defvar before-hack-local-variables-hook nil
3133 "Normal hook run before setting file-local variables.
3134 It is called after checking for unsafe/risky variables and
3135 setting `file-local-variables-alist', and before applying the
3136 variables stored in `file-local-variables-alist'. A hook
3137 function is allowed to change the contents of this alist.
3139 This hook is called only if there is at least one file-local
3142 (defun hack-local-variables-confirm (all-vars unsafe-vars risky-vars dir-name
)
3143 "Get confirmation before setting up local variable values.
3144 ALL-VARS is the list of all variables to be set up.
3145 UNSAFE-VARS is the list of those that aren't marked as safe or risky.
3146 RISKY-VARS is the list of those that are marked as risky.
3147 If these settings come from directory-local variables, then
3148 DIR-NAME is the name of the associated directory. Otherwise it is nil."
3149 (unless noninteractive
3150 (let ((name (cond (dir-name)
3152 (file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name
))
3153 ((concat "buffer " (buffer-name)))))
3154 (offer-save (and (eq enable-local-variables t
)
3156 (buf (get-buffer-create "*Local Variables*")))
3157 ;; Set up the contents of the *Local Variables* buffer.
3158 (with-current-buffer buf
3162 (insert "The local variables list in " name
3163 "\ncontains values that may not be safe (*)"
3165 ", and variables that are risky (**)."
3168 (insert "The local variables list in " name
3169 "\ncontains variables that are risky (**)."))
3171 (insert "A local variables list is specified in " name
".")))
3172 (insert "\n\nDo you want to apply it? You can type
3173 y -- to apply the local variables list.
3174 n -- to ignore the local variables list.")
3177 ! -- to apply the local variables list, and permanently mark these
3178 values (*) as safe (in the future, they will be set automatically.)\n\n")
3180 (dolist (elt all-vars
)
3181 (cond ((member elt unsafe-vars
)
3183 ((member elt risky-vars
)
3187 (princ (car elt
) buf
)
3189 ;; Make strings with embedded whitespace easier to read.
3190 (let ((print-escape-newlines t
))
3191 (prin1 (cdr elt
) buf
))
3193 (set (make-local-variable 'cursor-type
) nil
)
3194 (set-buffer-modified-p nil
)
3195 (goto-char (point-min)))
3197 ;; Display the buffer and read a choice.
3198 (save-window-excursion
3200 (let* ((exit-chars '(?y ?n ?\s ?\C-g ?\C-v
))
3201 (prompt (format "Please type %s%s: "
3202 (if offer-save
"y, n, or !" "y or n")
3203 (if (< (line-number-at-pos (point-max))
3204 (window-body-height))
3206 (push ?\C-v exit-chars
)
3207 ", or C-v to scroll")))
3209 (if offer-save
(push ?
! exit-chars
))
3211 (setq char
(read-char-choice prompt exit-chars t
))
3212 (when (eq char ?\C-v
)
3215 (error (goto-char (point-min))
3218 (when (and offer-save
(= char ?
!) unsafe-vars
)
3219 (customize-push-and-save 'safe-local-variable-values unsafe-vars
))
3220 (prog1 (memq char
'(?
! ?\s ?y
))
3221 (quit-window t
)))))))
3223 (defconst hack-local-variable-regexp
3224 "[ \t]*\\([^][;\"'?()\\ \t\n]+\\)[ \t]*:[ \t]*")
3226 (defun hack-local-variables-prop-line (&optional mode-only
)
3227 "Return local variables specified in the -*- line.
3228 Returns an alist of elements (VAR . VAL), where VAR is a variable
3229 and VAL is the specified value. Ignores any specification for
3230 `mode:' and `coding:' (which should have already been handled
3231 by `set-auto-mode' and `set-auto-coding', respectively).
3232 Return nil if the -*- line is malformed.
3234 If MODE-ONLY is non-nil, just returns the symbol specifying the
3235 mode, if there is one, otherwise nil."
3236 (catch 'malformed-line
3238 (goto-char (point-min))
3239 (let ((end (set-auto-mode-1))
3243 ((looking-at "[ \t]*\\([^ \t\n\r:;]+\\)\\([ \t]*-\\*-\\)")
3244 ;; Simple form: "-*- MODENAME -*-".
3246 (intern (concat (match-string 1) "-mode"))))
3248 ;; Hairy form: '-*-' [ <variable> ':' <value> ';' ]* '-*-'
3249 ;; (last ";" is optional).
3250 ;; If MODE-ONLY, just check for `mode'.
3251 ;; Otherwise, parse the -*- line into the RESULT alist.
3252 (while (not (or (and mode-only result
)
3254 (unless (looking-at hack-local-variable-regexp
)
3255 (message "Malformed mode-line: %S"
3256 (buffer-substring-no-properties (point) end
))
3257 (throw 'malformed-line nil
))
3258 (goto-char (match-end 0))
3259 ;; There used to be a downcase here,
3260 ;; but the manual didn't say so,
3261 ;; and people want to set var names that aren't all lc.
3262 (let* ((key (intern (match-string 1)))
3263 (val (save-restriction
3264 (narrow-to-region (point) end
)
3265 (let ((read-circle nil
))
3266 (read (current-buffer)))))
3267 ;; It is traditional to ignore
3268 ;; case when checking for `mode' in set-auto-mode,
3269 ;; so we must do that here as well.
3270 ;; That is inconsistent, but we're stuck with it.
3271 ;; The same can be said for `coding' in set-auto-coding.
3272 (keyname (downcase (symbol-name key
))))
3274 (and (equal keyname
"mode")
3276 (intern (concat (downcase (symbol-name val
))
3278 (or (equal keyname
"coding")
3280 (push (cons (cond ((eq key
'eval
) 'eval
)
3281 ;; Downcase "Mode:".
3282 ((equal keyname
"mode") 'mode
)
3283 (t (indirect-variable key
)))
3286 (skip-chars-forward " \t;")))
3289 (defun hack-local-variables-filter (variables dir-name
)
3290 "Filter local variable settings, querying the user if necessary.
3291 VARIABLES is the alist of variable-value settings. This alist is
3292 filtered based on the values of `ignored-local-variables',
3293 `enable-local-eval', `enable-local-variables', and (if necessary)
3294 user interaction. The results are added to
3295 `file-local-variables-alist', without applying them.
3296 If these settings come from directory-local variables, then
3297 DIR-NAME is the name of the associated directory. Otherwise it is nil."
3298 ;; Find those variables that we may want to save to
3299 ;; `safe-local-variable-values'.
3300 (let (all-vars risky-vars unsafe-vars
)
3301 (dolist (elt variables
)
3302 (let ((var (car elt
))
3304 (cond ((memq var ignored-local-variables
)
3305 ;; Ignore any variable in `ignored-local-variables'.
3307 ;; Obey `enable-local-eval'.
3309 (when enable-local-eval
3310 (let ((safe (or (hack-one-local-variable-eval-safep val
)
3311 ;; In case previously marked safe (bug#5636).
3312 (safe-local-variable-p var val
))))
3313 ;; If not safe and e-l-v = :safe, ignore totally.
3314 (when (or safe
(not (eq enable-local-variables
:safe
)))
3316 (or (eq enable-local-eval t
)
3318 (push elt unsafe-vars
))))))
3319 ;; Ignore duplicates (except `mode') in the present list.
3320 ((and (assq var all-vars
) (not (eq var
'mode
))) nil
)
3321 ;; Accept known-safe variables.
3322 ((or (memq var
'(mode unibyte coding
))
3323 (safe-local-variable-p var val
))
3324 (push elt all-vars
))
3325 ;; The variable is either risky or unsafe:
3326 ((not (eq enable-local-variables
:safe
))
3328 (if (risky-local-variable-p var val
)
3329 (push elt risky-vars
)
3330 (push elt unsafe-vars
))))))
3332 ;; Query, unless all vars are safe or user wants no querying.
3333 (or (and (eq enable-local-variables t
)
3336 (memq enable-local-variables
'(:all
:safe
))
3337 (hack-local-variables-confirm all-vars unsafe-vars
3338 risky-vars dir-name
))
3339 (dolist (elt all-vars
)
3340 (unless (memq (car elt
) '(eval mode
))
3342 (setq dir-local-variables-alist
3343 (assq-delete-all (car elt
) dir-local-variables-alist
)))
3344 (setq file-local-variables-alist
3345 (assq-delete-all (car elt
) file-local-variables-alist
)))
3346 (push elt file-local-variables-alist
)))))
3348 ;; TODO? Warn once per file rather than once per session?
3349 (defvar hack-local-variables--warned-lexical nil
)
3351 (defun hack-local-variables (&optional handle-mode
)
3352 "Parse and put into effect this buffer's local variables spec.
3353 Uses `hack-local-variables-apply' to apply the variables.
3355 If HANDLE-MODE is nil, we apply all the specified local
3356 variables. If HANDLE-MODE is neither nil nor t, we do the same,
3357 except that any settings of `mode' are ignored.
3359 If HANDLE-MODE is t, all we do is check whether a \"mode:\"
3360 is specified, and return the corresponding mode symbol, or nil.
3361 In this case, we try to ignore minor-modes, and only return a
3364 If `enable-local-variables' or `local-enable-local-variables' is nil,
3365 this function does nothing. If `inhibit-local-variables-regexps'
3366 applies to the file in question, the file is not scanned for
3367 local variables, but directory-local variables may still be applied."
3368 ;; We don't let inhibit-local-variables-p influence the value of
3369 ;; enable-local-variables, because then it would affect dir-local
3370 ;; variables. We don't want to search eg tar files for file local
3371 ;; variable sections, but there is no reason dir-locals cannot apply
3372 ;; to them. The real meaning of inhibit-local-variables-p is "do
3373 ;; not scan this file for local variables".
3374 (let ((enable-local-variables
3375 (and local-enable-local-variables enable-local-variables
))
3377 (unless (eq handle-mode t
)
3378 (setq file-local-variables-alist nil
)
3379 (with-demoted-errors "Directory-local variables error: %s"
3380 ;; Note this is a no-op if enable-local-variables is nil.
3381 (hack-dir-local-variables)))
3382 ;; This entire function is basically a no-op if enable-local-variables
3383 ;; is nil. All it does is set file-local-variables-alist to nil.
3384 (when enable-local-variables
3385 ;; This part used to ignore enable-local-variables when handle-mode
3386 ;; was t. That was inappropriate, eg consider the
3387 ;; (artificial) example of:
3388 ;; (setq local-enable-local-variables nil)
3389 ;; Open a file foo.txt that contains "mode: sh".
3390 ;; It correctly opens in text-mode.
3391 ;; M-x set-visited-file name foo.c, and it incorrectly stays in text-mode.
3392 (unless (or (inhibit-local-variables-p)
3393 ;; If HANDLE-MODE is t, and the prop line specifies a
3394 ;; mode, then we're done, and have no need to scan further.
3395 (and (setq result
(hack-local-variables-prop-line
3396 (eq handle-mode t
)))
3397 (eq handle-mode t
)))
3398 ;; Look for "Local variables:" line in last page.
3400 (goto-char (point-max))
3401 (search-backward "\n\^L" (max (- (point-max) 3000) (point-min))
3403 (when (let ((case-fold-search t
))
3404 (search-forward "Local Variables:" nil t
))
3405 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
3406 ;; suffix is what comes after "local variables:" in its line.
3407 ;; prefix is what comes before "local variables:" in its line.
3410 (regexp-quote (buffer-substring (point)
3411 (line-end-position)))
3414 (concat "^" (regexp-quote
3415 (buffer-substring (line-beginning-position)
3416 (match-beginning 0))))))
3419 (let ((startpos (point))
3421 (thisbuf (current-buffer)))
3423 (unless (let ((case-fold-search t
))
3425 (concat prefix
"[ \t]*End:[ \t]*" suffix
)
3427 ;; This used to be an error, but really all it means is
3428 ;; that this may simply not be a local-variables section,
3429 ;; so just ignore it.
3430 (message "Local variables list is not properly terminated"))
3432 (setq endpos
(point)))
3435 (insert-buffer-substring thisbuf startpos endpos
)
3436 (goto-char (point-min))
3437 (subst-char-in-region (point) (point-max) ?\^m ?
\n)
3439 ;; Discard the prefix.
3440 (if (looking-at prefix
)
3441 (delete-region (point) (match-end 0))
3442 (error "Local variables entry is missing the prefix"))
3444 ;; Discard the suffix.
3445 (if (looking-back suffix
(line-beginning-position))
3446 (delete-region (match-beginning 0) (point))
3447 (error "Local variables entry is missing the suffix"))
3449 (goto-char (point-min))
3451 (while (not (or (eobp)
3452 (and (eq handle-mode t
) result
)))
3453 ;; Find the variable name;
3454 (unless (looking-at hack-local-variable-regexp
)
3455 (error "Malformed local variable line: %S"
3456 (buffer-substring-no-properties
3457 (point) (line-end-position))))
3458 (goto-char (match-end 1))
3459 (let* ((str (match-string 1))
3462 (and (equal (downcase (symbol-name var
)) "mode")
3464 ;; Read the variable value.
3465 (skip-chars-forward "^:")
3467 (let ((read-circle nil
))
3468 (setq val
(read (current-buffer))))
3469 (if (eq handle-mode t
)
3471 ;; Specifying minor-modes via mode: is
3472 ;; deprecated, but try to reject them anyway.
3475 (setq val2
(downcase (symbol-name val
)))))
3476 (setq result
(intern (concat val2
"-mode"))))
3477 (cond ((eq var
'coding
))
3478 ((eq var
'lexical-binding
)
3479 (unless hack-local-variables--warned-lexical
3480 (setq hack-local-variables--warned-lexical t
)
3484 "%s: `lexical-binding' at end of file unreliable"
3485 (file-name-nondirectory
3486 ;; We are called from
3487 ;; 'with-temp-buffer', so we need
3488 ;; to use 'thisbuf's name in the
3490 (or (buffer-file-name thisbuf
) ""))))))
3491 ((and (eq var
'mode
) handle-mode
))
3494 (push (cons (if (eq var
'eval
)
3496 (indirect-variable var
))
3498 (forward-line 1))))))))
3499 ;; Now we've read all the local variables.
3500 ;; If HANDLE-MODE is t, return whether the mode was specified.
3501 (if (eq handle-mode t
) result
3502 ;; Otherwise, set the variables.
3503 (hack-local-variables-filter result nil
)
3504 (hack-local-variables-apply)))))
3506 (defun hack-local-variables-apply ()
3507 "Apply the elements of `file-local-variables-alist'.
3508 If there are any elements, runs `before-hack-local-variables-hook',
3509 then calls `hack-one-local-variable' to apply the alist elements one by one.
3510 Finishes by running `hack-local-variables-hook', regardless of whether
3511 the alist is empty or not.
3513 Note that this function ignores a `mode' entry if it specifies the same
3514 major mode as the buffer already has."
3515 (when file-local-variables-alist
3516 ;; Any 'evals must run in the Right sequence.
3517 (setq file-local-variables-alist
3518 (nreverse file-local-variables-alist
))
3519 (run-hooks 'before-hack-local-variables-hook
)
3520 (dolist (elt file-local-variables-alist
)
3521 (hack-one-local-variable (car elt
) (cdr elt
))))
3522 (run-hooks 'hack-local-variables-hook
))
3524 (defun safe-local-variable-p (sym val
)
3525 "Non-nil if SYM is safe as a file-local variable with value VAL.
3526 It is safe if any of these conditions are met:
3528 * There is a matching entry (SYM . VAL) in the
3529 `safe-local-variable-values' user option.
3531 * The `safe-local-variable' property of SYM is a function that
3532 evaluates to a non-nil value with VAL as an argument."
3533 (or (member (cons sym val
) safe-local-variable-values
)
3534 (let ((safep (get sym
'safe-local-variable
)))
3535 (and (functionp safep
)
3536 ;; If the function signals an error, that means it
3537 ;; can't assure us that the value is safe.
3538 (with-demoted-errors (funcall safep val
))))))
3540 (defun risky-local-variable-p (sym &optional _ignored
)
3541 "Non-nil if SYM could be dangerous as a file-local variable.
3542 It is dangerous if either of these conditions are met:
3544 * Its `risky-local-variable' property is non-nil.
3546 * Its name ends with \"hook(s)\", \"function(s)\", \"form(s)\", \"map\",
3547 \"program\", \"command(s)\", \"predicate(s)\", \"frame-alist\",
3548 \"mode-alist\", \"font-lock-(syntactic-)keyword*\",
3549 \"map-alist\", or \"bindat-spec\"."
3550 ;; If this is an alias, check the base name.
3552 (setq sym
(indirect-variable sym
))
3554 (or (get sym
'risky-local-variable
)
3555 (string-match "-hooks?$\\|-functions?$\\|-forms?$\\|-program$\\|\
3556 -commands?$\\|-predicates?$\\|font-lock-keywords$\\|font-lock-keywords\
3557 -[0-9]+$\\|font-lock-syntactic-keywords$\\|-frame-alist$\\|-mode-alist$\\|\
3558 -map$\\|-map-alist$\\|-bindat-spec$" (symbol-name sym
))))
3560 (defun hack-one-local-variable-quotep (exp)
3561 (and (consp exp
) (eq (car exp
) 'quote
) (consp (cdr exp
))))
3563 (defun hack-one-local-variable-constantp (exp)
3564 (or (and (not (symbolp exp
)) (not (consp exp
)))
3567 (hack-one-local-variable-quotep exp
)))
3569 (defun hack-one-local-variable-eval-safep (exp)
3570 "Return t if it is safe to eval EXP when it is found in a file."
3571 (or (not (consp exp
))
3572 ;; Detect certain `put' expressions.
3573 (and (eq (car exp
) 'put
)
3574 (hack-one-local-variable-quotep (nth 1 exp
))
3575 (hack-one-local-variable-quotep (nth 2 exp
))
3576 (let ((prop (nth 1 (nth 2 exp
)))
3578 (cond ((memq prop
'(lisp-indent-hook
3579 lisp-indent-function
3580 scheme-indent-function
))
3581 ;; Only allow safe values (not functions).
3583 (and (hack-one-local-variable-quotep val
)
3584 (eq (nth 1 val
) 'defun
))))
3585 ((eq prop
'edebug-form-spec
)
3586 ;; Only allow indirect form specs.
3587 ;; During bootstrapping, edebug-basic-spec might not be
3589 (and (fboundp 'edebug-basic-spec
)
3590 (hack-one-local-variable-quotep val
)
3591 (edebug-basic-spec (nth 1 val
)))))))
3592 ;; Allow expressions that the user requested.
3593 (member exp safe-local-eval-forms
)
3594 ;; Certain functions can be allowed with safe arguments
3595 ;; or can specify verification functions to try.
3596 (and (symbolp (car exp
))
3597 ;; Allow (minor)-modes calls with no arguments.
3598 ;; This obsoletes the use of "mode:" for such things. (Bug#8613)
3599 (or (and (member (cdr exp
) '(nil (1) (0) (-1)))
3600 (string-match "-mode\\'" (symbol-name (car exp
))))
3601 (let ((prop (get (car exp
) 'safe-local-eval-function
)))
3604 (dolist (arg (cdr exp
))
3605 (unless (hack-one-local-variable-constantp arg
)
3612 (dolist (function prop
)
3613 (if (funcall function exp
)
3617 (defun hack-one-local-variable--obsolete (var)
3618 (let ((o (get var
'byte-obsolete-variable
)))
3620 (let ((instead (nth 0 o
))
3622 (message "%s is obsolete%s; %s"
3623 var
(if since
(format " (since %s)" since
))
3624 (if (stringp instead
)
3625 (substitute-command-keys instead
)
3626 (format-message "use `%s' instead" instead
)))))))
3628 (defun hack-one-local-variable (var val
)
3629 "Set local variable VAR with value VAL.
3630 If VAR is `mode', call `VAL-mode' as a function unless it's
3631 already the major mode."
3634 (let ((mode (intern (concat (downcase (symbol-name val
))
3636 (unless (eq (indirect-function mode
)
3637 (indirect-function major-mode
))
3641 (`(add-hook ',hook .
,_
) (hack-one-local-variable--obsolete hook
)))
3642 (save-excursion (eval val
)))
3644 (hack-one-local-variable--obsolete var
)
3645 ;; Make sure the string has no text properties.
3646 ;; Some text properties can get evaluated in various ways,
3647 ;; so it is risky to put them on with a local variable list.
3649 (set-text-properties 0 (length val
) nil val
))
3650 (set (make-local-variable var
) val
))))
3652 ;;; Handling directory-local variables, aka project settings.
3654 (defvar dir-locals-class-alist
'()
3655 "Alist mapping directory-local variable classes (symbols) to variable lists.")
3657 (defvar dir-locals-directory-cache
'()
3658 "List of cached directory roots for directory-local variable classes.
3659 Each element in this list has the form (DIR CLASS MTIME).
3660 DIR is the name of the directory.
3661 CLASS is the name of a variable class (a symbol).
3662 MTIME is the recorded modification time of the directory-local
3663 variables file associated with this entry. This time is a list
3664 of integers (the same format as `file-attributes'), and is
3665 used to test whether the cache entry is still valid.
3666 Alternatively, MTIME can be nil, which means the entry is always
3669 (defsubst dir-locals-get-class-variables
(class)
3670 "Return the variable list for CLASS."
3671 (cdr (assq class dir-locals-class-alist
)))
3673 (defun dir-locals-collect-mode-variables (mode-variables variables
)
3674 "Collect directory-local variables from MODE-VARIABLES.
3675 VARIABLES is the initial list of variables.
3676 Returns the new list."
3677 (dolist (pair mode-variables variables
)
3678 (let* ((variable (car pair
))
3680 (slot (assq variable variables
)))
3681 ;; If variables are specified more than once, only use the last. (Why?)
3682 ;; The pseudo-variables mode and eval are different (bug#3430).
3683 (if (and slot
(not (memq variable
'(mode eval
))))
3685 ;; Need a new cons in case we setcdr later.
3686 (push (cons variable value
) variables
)))))
3688 (defun dir-locals-collect-variables (class-variables root variables
)
3689 "Collect entries from CLASS-VARIABLES into VARIABLES.
3690 ROOT is the root directory of the project.
3691 Return the new variables list."
3692 (let* ((file-name (or (buffer-file-name)
3693 ;; Handle non-file buffers, too.
3694 (expand-file-name default-directory
)))
3695 (sub-file-name (if file-name
3696 ;; FIXME: Why not use file-relative-name?
3697 (substring file-name
(length root
)))))
3699 (dolist (entry class-variables variables
)
3700 (let ((key (car entry
)))
3703 ;; Don't include this in the previous condition, because we
3704 ;; want to filter all strings before the next condition.
3705 (when (and sub-file-name
3706 (>= (length sub-file-name
) (length key
))
3707 (string-prefix-p key sub-file-name
))
3708 (setq variables
(dir-locals-collect-variables
3709 (cdr entry
) root variables
))))
3711 (derived-mode-p key
))
3712 (let* ((alist (cdr entry
))
3713 (subdirs (assq 'subdirs alist
)))
3714 (if (or (not subdirs
)
3716 (setq alist
(delq subdirs alist
))
3718 ;; TODO someone might want to extend this to allow
3719 ;; integer values for subdir, where N means
3720 ;; variables apply to this directory and N levels
3721 ;; below it (0 == nil).
3722 (equal root default-directory
))
3723 (setq variables
(dir-locals-collect-mode-variables
3724 alist variables
))))))))
3726 ;; The file's content might be invalid (e.g. have a merge conflict), but
3727 ;; that shouldn't prevent the user from opening the file.
3728 (message "%s error: %s" dir-locals-file
(error-message-string err
))
3731 (defun dir-locals-set-directory-class (directory class
&optional mtime
)
3732 "Declare that the DIRECTORY root is an instance of CLASS.
3733 DIRECTORY is the name of a directory, a string.
3734 CLASS is the name of a project class, a symbol.
3735 MTIME is either the modification time of the directory-local
3736 variables file that defined this class, or nil.
3738 When a file beneath DIRECTORY is visited, the mode-specific
3739 variables from CLASS are applied to the buffer. The variables
3740 for a class are defined using `dir-locals-set-class-variables'."
3741 (setq directory
(file-name-as-directory (expand-file-name directory
)))
3742 (unless (assq class dir-locals-class-alist
)
3743 (error "No such class `%s'" (symbol-name class
)))
3744 (push (list directory class mtime
) dir-locals-directory-cache
))
3746 (defun dir-locals-set-class-variables (class variables
)
3747 "Map the type CLASS to a list of variable settings.
3748 CLASS is the project class, a symbol. VARIABLES is a list
3749 that declares directory-local variables for the class.
3750 An element in VARIABLES is either of the form:
3751 (MAJOR-MODE . ALIST)
3755 In the first form, MAJOR-MODE is a symbol, and ALIST is an alist
3756 whose elements are of the form (VARIABLE . VALUE).
3758 In the second form, DIRECTORY is a directory name (a string), and
3759 LIST is a list of the form accepted by the function.
3761 When a file is visited, the file's class is found. A directory
3762 may be assigned a class using `dir-locals-set-directory-class'.
3763 Then variables are set in the file's buffer according to the
3764 VARIABLES list of the class. The list is processed in order.
3766 * If the element is of the form (MAJOR-MODE . ALIST), and the
3767 buffer's major mode is derived from MAJOR-MODE (as determined
3768 by `derived-mode-p'), then all the variables in ALIST are
3769 applied. A MAJOR-MODE of nil may be used to match any buffer.
3770 `make-local-variable' is called for each variable before it is
3773 * If the element is of the form (DIRECTORY . LIST), and DIRECTORY
3774 is an initial substring of the file's directory, then LIST is
3775 applied by recursively following these rules."
3776 (setf (alist-get class dir-locals-class-alist
) variables
))
3778 (defconst dir-locals-file
".dir-locals.el"
3779 "File that contains directory-local variables.
3780 It has to be constant to enforce uniform values across different
3781 environments and users.
3782 See also `dir-locals-file-2', whose values override this one's.
3783 See Info node `(elisp)Directory Local Variables' for details.")
3785 (defconst dir-locals-file-2
".dir-locals-2.el"
3786 "File that contains directory-local variables.
3787 This essentially a second file that can be used like
3788 `dir-locals-file', so that users can have specify their personal
3789 dir-local variables even if the current directory already has a
3790 `dir-locals-file' that is shared with other users (such as in a
3792 See Info node `(elisp)Directory Local Variables' for details.")
3794 (defun dir-locals--all-files (directory)
3795 "Return a list of all readable dir-locals files in DIRECTORY.
3796 The returned list is sorted by increasing priority. That is,
3797 values specified in the last file should take precedence over
3798 those in the first."
3799 (when (file-readable-p directory
)
3800 (let* ((file-1 (expand-file-name (if (eq system-type
'ms-dos
)
3801 (dosified-file-name dir-locals-file
)
3804 (file-2 (when (string-match "\\.el\\'" file-1
)
3805 (replace-match "-2.el" t nil file-1
)))
3807 ;; The order here is important.
3808 (dolist (f (list file-2 file-1
))
3812 (not (file-directory-p f
)))
3816 (defun dir-locals-find-file (file)
3817 "Find the directory-local variables for FILE.
3818 This searches upward in the directory tree from FILE.
3819 It stops at the first directory that has been registered in
3820 `dir-locals-directory-cache' or contains a `dir-locals-file'.
3821 If it finds an entry in the cache, it checks that it is valid.
3822 A cache entry with no modification time element (normally, one that
3823 has been assigned directly using `dir-locals-set-directory-class', not
3824 set from a file) is always valid.
3825 A cache entry based on a `dir-locals-file' is valid if the modification
3826 time stored in the cache matches the current file modification time.
3827 If not, the cache entry is cleared so that the file will be re-read.
3829 This function returns either:
3830 - nil (no directory local variables found),
3831 - the matching entry from `dir-locals-directory-cache' (a list),
3832 - or the full path to the directory (a string) containing at
3833 least one `dir-locals-file' in the case of no valid cache
3835 (setq file
(expand-file-name file
))
3836 (let* ((locals-dir (locate-dominating-file (file-name-directory file
)
3837 #'dir-locals--all-files
))
3839 ;; `locate-dominating-file' may have abbreviated the name.
3841 (setq locals-dir
(expand-file-name locals-dir
)))
3842 ;; Find the best cached value in `dir-locals-directory-cache'.
3843 (dolist (elt dir-locals-directory-cache
)
3844 (when (and (string-prefix-p (car elt
) file
3846 '(windows-nt cygwin ms-dos
)))
3847 (> (length (car elt
)) (length (car dir-elt
))))
3848 (setq dir-elt elt
)))
3850 (or (null locals-dir
)
3851 (<= (length locals-dir
)
3852 (length (car dir-elt
)))))
3853 ;; Found a potential cache entry. Check validity.
3854 ;; A cache entry with no MTIME is assumed to always be valid
3855 ;; (ie, set directly, not from a dir-locals file).
3856 ;; Note, we don't bother to check that there is a matching class
3857 ;; element in dir-locals-class-alist, since that's done by
3858 ;; dir-locals-set-directory-class.
3859 (if (or (null (nth 2 dir-elt
))
3860 (let ((cached-files (dir-locals--all-files (car dir-elt
))))
3861 ;; The entry MTIME should match the most recent
3862 ;; MTIME among matching files.
3864 (= (float-time (nth 2 dir-elt
))
3865 (apply #'max
(mapcar (lambda (f)
3867 (nth 5 (file-attributes f
))))
3869 ;; This cache entry is OK.
3871 ;; This cache entry is invalid; clear it.
3872 (setq dir-locals-directory-cache
3873 (delq dir-elt dir-locals-directory-cache
))
3874 ;; Return the first existing dir-locals file. Might be the same
3875 ;; as dir-elt's, might not (eg latter might have been deleted).
3880 (defun dir-locals-read-from-dir (dir)
3881 "Load all variables files in DIR and register a new class and instance.
3882 DIR is the absolute name of a directory which must contain at
3883 least one dir-local file (which is a file holding variables to
3885 Return the new class name, which is a symbol named DIR."
3887 (let* ((class-name (intern dir
))
3888 (files (dir-locals--all-files dir
))
3892 (with-demoted-errors "Error reading dir-locals: %S"
3893 (dolist (file files
)
3895 (insert-file-contents file
)
3896 (condition-case-unless-debug nil
3898 (map-merge-with 'list
(lambda (a b
) (map-merge 'list a b
))
3900 (read (current-buffer))))
3901 (end-of-file nil
))))
3903 (dir-locals-set-class-variables class-name variables
)
3904 (dir-locals-set-directory-class
3908 (apply #'max
(mapcar (lambda (file)
3909 (float-time (nth 5 (file-attributes file
))))
3911 ;; If there was a problem, use the values we could get but
3912 ;; don't let the cache prevent future reads.
3916 (define-obsolete-function-alias 'dir-locals-read-from-file
3917 'dir-locals-read-from-dir
"25.1")
3919 (defcustom enable-remote-dir-locals nil
3920 "Non-nil means dir-local variables will be applied to remote files."
3925 (defvar hack-dir-local-variables--warned-coding nil
)
3927 (defun hack-dir-local-variables ()
3928 "Read per-directory local variables for the current buffer.
3929 Store the directory-local variables in `dir-local-variables-alist'
3930 and `file-local-variables-alist', without applying them.
3932 This does nothing if either `enable-local-variables' or
3933 `enable-dir-local-variables' are nil."
3934 (when (and enable-local-variables
3935 enable-dir-local-variables
3936 (or enable-remote-dir-locals
3937 (not (file-remote-p (or (buffer-file-name)
3938 default-directory
)))))
3939 ;; Find the variables file.
3940 (let ((dir-or-cache (dir-locals-find-file
3941 (or (buffer-file-name) default-directory
)))
3945 ((stringp dir-or-cache
)
3946 (setq dir-name dir-or-cache
3947 class
(dir-locals-read-from-dir dir-or-cache
)))
3948 ((consp dir-or-cache
)
3949 (setq dir-name
(nth 0 dir-or-cache
))
3950 (setq class
(nth 1 dir-or-cache
))))
3953 (dir-locals-collect-variables
3954 (dir-locals-get-class-variables class
) dir-name nil
)))
3956 (dolist (elt variables
)
3957 (if (eq (car elt
) 'coding
)
3958 (unless hack-dir-local-variables--warned-coding
3959 (setq hack-dir-local-variables--warned-coding t
)
3960 (display-warning 'files
3961 "Coding cannot be specified by dir-locals"))
3962 (unless (memq (car elt
) '(eval mode
))
3963 (setq dir-local-variables-alist
3964 (assq-delete-all (car elt
) dir-local-variables-alist
)))
3965 (push elt dir-local-variables-alist
)))
3966 (hack-local-variables-filter variables dir-name
)))))))
3968 (defun hack-dir-local-variables-non-file-buffer ()
3969 "Apply directory-local variables to a non-file buffer.
3970 For non-file buffers, such as Dired buffers, directory-local
3971 variables are looked for in `default-directory' and its parent
3973 (hack-dir-local-variables)
3974 (hack-local-variables-apply))
3977 (defcustom change-major-mode-with-file-name t
3978 "Non-nil means \\[write-file] should set the major mode from the file name.
3979 However, the mode will not be changed if
3980 \(1) a local variables list or the `-*-' line specifies a major mode, or
3981 \(2) the current major mode is a \"special\" mode,
3982 not suitable for ordinary files, or
3983 \(3) the new file name does not particularly specify any mode."
3985 :group
'editing-basics
)
3987 (defun set-visited-file-name (filename &optional no-query along-with-file
)
3988 "Change name of file visited in current buffer to FILENAME.
3989 This also renames the buffer to correspond to the new file.
3990 The next time the buffer is saved it will go in the newly specified file.
3991 FILENAME nil or an empty string means mark buffer as not visiting any file.
3992 Remember to delete the initial contents of the minibuffer
3993 if you wish to pass an empty string as the argument.
3995 The optional second argument NO-QUERY, if non-nil, inhibits asking for
3996 confirmation in the case where another buffer is already visiting FILENAME.
3998 The optional third argument ALONG-WITH-FILE, if non-nil, means that
3999 the old visited file has been renamed to the new name FILENAME."
4000 (interactive "FSet visited file name: ")
4001 (if (buffer-base-buffer)
4002 (error "An indirect buffer cannot visit a file"))
4003 (let (truename old-try-locals
)
4006 (if (string-equal filename
"")
4008 (expand-file-name filename
))))
4011 (setq truename
(file-truename filename
))
4012 (if find-file-visit-truename
4013 (setq filename truename
))))
4015 (let ((new-name (file-name-nondirectory filename
)))
4016 (if (string= new-name
"")
4017 (error "Empty file name"))))
4018 (let ((buffer (and filename
(find-buffer-visiting filename
))))
4019 (and buffer
(not (eq buffer
(current-buffer)))
4021 (not (y-or-n-p (format "A buffer is visiting %s; proceed? "
4023 (user-error "Aborted")))
4024 (or (equal filename buffer-file-name
)
4026 (and filename
(lock-buffer filename
))
4028 (setq old-try-locals
(not (inhibit-local-variables-p))
4029 buffer-file-name filename
)
4030 (if filename
; make buffer name reflect filename.
4031 (let ((new-name (file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name
)))
4032 (setq default-directory
(file-name-directory buffer-file-name
))
4033 ;; If new-name == old-name, renaming would add a spurious <2>
4034 ;; and it's considered as a feature in rename-buffer.
4035 (or (string= new-name
(buffer-name))
4036 (rename-buffer new-name t
))))
4037 (setq buffer-backed-up nil
)
4039 (clear-visited-file-modtime))
4040 ;; Abbreviate the file names of the buffer.
4043 (setq buffer-file-truename
(abbreviate-file-name truename
))
4044 (if find-file-visit-truename
4045 (setq buffer-file-name truename
))))
4046 (setq buffer-file-number
4048 (nthcdr 10 (file-attributes buffer-file-name
))
4050 ;; write-file-functions is normally used for things like ftp-find-file
4051 ;; that visit things that are not local files as if they were files.
4052 ;; Changing to visit an ordinary local file instead should flush the hook.
4053 (kill-local-variable 'write-file-functions
)
4054 (kill-local-variable 'local-write-file-hooks
)
4055 (kill-local-variable 'revert-buffer-function
)
4056 (kill-local-variable 'backup-inhibited
)
4057 ;; If buffer was read-only because of version control,
4058 ;; that reason is gone now, so make it writable.
4060 (setq buffer-read-only nil
))
4061 (kill-local-variable 'vc-mode
)
4062 ;; Turn off backup files for certain file names.
4063 ;; Since this is a permanent local, the major mode won't eliminate it.
4064 (and buffer-file-name
4065 backup-enable-predicate
4066 (not (funcall backup-enable-predicate buffer-file-name
))
4068 (make-local-variable 'backup-inhibited
)
4069 (setq backup-inhibited t
)))
4070 (let ((oauto buffer-auto-save-file-name
))
4071 (cond ((null filename
)
4072 (setq buffer-auto-save-file-name nil
))
4073 ((not buffer-auto-save-file-name
)
4074 ;; If auto-save was not already on, turn it on if appropriate.
4075 (and buffer-file-name auto-save-default
(auto-save-mode t
)))
4077 ;; If auto save is on, start using a new name. We
4078 ;; deliberately don't rename or delete the old auto save
4079 ;; for the old visited file name. This is because
4080 ;; perhaps the user wants to save the new state and then
4081 ;; compare with the previous state from the auto save
4083 (setq buffer-auto-save-file-name
(make-auto-save-file-name))))
4084 ;; Rename the old auto save file if any.
4085 (and oauto buffer-auto-save-file-name
4086 (file-exists-p oauto
)
4087 (rename-file oauto buffer-auto-save-file-name t
)))
4088 (and buffer-file-name
4089 (not along-with-file
)
4090 (set-buffer-modified-p t
))
4091 ;; Update the major mode, if the file name determines it.
4093 ;; Don't change the mode if it is special.
4094 (or (not change-major-mode-with-file-name
)
4095 (get major-mode
'mode-class
)
4096 ;; Don't change the mode if the local variable list specifies it.
4097 ;; The file name can influence whether the local variables apply.
4099 ;; h-l-v also checks it, but might as well be explicit.
4100 (not (inhibit-local-variables-p))
4101 (hack-local-variables t
))
4102 ;; TODO consider making normal-mode handle this case.
4103 (let ((old major-mode
))
4105 (or (eq old major-mode
)
4106 (hack-local-variables))))
4109 (defun write-file (filename &optional confirm
)
4110 "Write current buffer into file FILENAME.
4111 This makes the buffer visit that file, and marks it as not modified.
4113 If you specify just a directory name as FILENAME, that means to use
4114 the default file name but in that directory. You can also yank
4115 the default file name into the minibuffer to edit it, using \\<minibuffer-local-map>\\[next-history-element].
4117 If the buffer is not already visiting a file, the default file name
4118 for the output file is the buffer name.
4120 If optional second arg CONFIRM is non-nil, this function
4121 asks for confirmation before overwriting an existing file.
4122 Interactively, confirmation is required unless you supply a prefix argument."
4123 ;; (interactive "FWrite file: ")
4125 (list (if buffer-file-name
4126 (read-file-name "Write file: "
4128 (read-file-name "Write file: " default-directory
4130 (file-name-nondirectory (buffer-name))
4133 (not current-prefix-arg
)))
4134 (or (null filename
) (string-equal filename
"")
4136 ;; If arg is just a directory,
4137 ;; use the default file name, but in that directory.
4138 (if (file-directory-p filename
)
4139 (setq filename
(concat (file-name-as-directory filename
)
4140 (file-name-nondirectory
4141 (or buffer-file-name
(buffer-name))))))
4143 (file-exists-p filename
)
4144 ;; NS does its own confirm dialog.
4145 (not (and (eq (framep-on-display) 'ns
)
4146 (listp last-nonmenu-event
)
4148 (or (y-or-n-p (format-message
4149 "File `%s' exists; overwrite? " filename
))
4150 (user-error "Canceled")))
4151 (set-visited-file-name filename
(not confirm
))))
4152 (set-buffer-modified-p t
)
4153 ;; Make buffer writable if file is writable.
4154 (and buffer-file-name
4155 (file-writable-p buffer-file-name
)
4156 (setq buffer-read-only nil
))
4158 ;; It's likely that the VC status at the new location is different from
4159 ;; the one at the old location.
4162 (defun file-extended-attributes (filename)
4163 "Return an alist of extended attributes of file FILENAME.
4165 Extended attributes are platform-specific metadata about the file,
4166 such as SELinux context, list of ACL entries, etc."
4167 `((acl .
,(file-acl filename
))
4168 (selinux-context .
,(file-selinux-context filename
))))
4170 (defun set-file-extended-attributes (filename attributes
)
4171 "Set extended attributes of file FILENAME to ATTRIBUTES.
4173 ATTRIBUTES must be an alist of file attributes as returned by
4174 `file-extended-attributes'.
4175 Value is t if the function succeeds in setting the attributes."
4177 (dolist (elt attributes
)
4178 (let ((attr (car elt
))
4180 (cond ((eq attr
'acl
)
4181 (setq rv
(set-file-acl filename val
)))
4182 ((eq attr
'selinux-context
)
4183 (setq rv
(set-file-selinux-context filename val
))))
4184 (setq result
(or result rv
))))
4188 (defun backup-buffer ()
4189 "Make a backup of the disk file visited by the current buffer, if appropriate.
4190 This is normally done before saving the buffer the first time.
4192 A backup may be done by renaming or by copying; see documentation of
4193 variable `make-backup-files'. If it's done by renaming, then the file is
4194 no longer accessible under its old name.
4196 The value is non-nil after a backup was made by renaming.
4197 It has the form (MODES EXTENDED-ATTRIBUTES BACKUPNAME).
4198 MODES is the result of `file-modes' on the original
4199 file; this means that the caller, after saving the buffer, should change
4200 the modes of the new file to agree with the old modes.
4201 EXTENDED-ATTRIBUTES is the result of `file-extended-attributes'
4202 on the original file; this means that the caller, after saving
4203 the buffer, should change the extended attributes of the new file
4204 to agree with the old attributes.
4205 BACKUPNAME is the backup file name, which is the old file renamed."
4206 (when (and make-backup-files
(not backup-inhibited
) (not buffer-backed-up
))
4207 (let ((attributes (file-attributes buffer-file-name
)))
4208 (when (and attributes
(memq (aref (elt attributes
8) 0) '(?- ?l
)))
4209 ;; If specified name is a symbolic link, chase it to the target.
4210 ;; This makes backups in the directory where the real file is.
4211 (let* ((real-file-name (file-chase-links buffer-file-name
))
4212 (backup-info (find-backup-file-name real-file-name
)))
4214 (let* ((backupname (car backup-info
))
4215 (targets (cdr backup-info
))
4217 ;; If have old versions to maybe delete,
4218 ;; ask the user to confirm now, before doing anything.
4219 ;; But don't actually delete til later.
4221 (booleanp delete-old-versions
)
4222 (or delete-old-versions
4224 (format "Delete excess backup versions of %s? "
4227 (modes (file-modes buffer-file-name
))
4228 (extended-attributes
4229 (file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name
))
4230 (copy-when-priv-mismatch
4231 backup-by-copying-when-privileged-mismatch
)
4233 (or file-precious-flag backup-by-copying
4234 ;; Don't rename a suid or sgid file.
4235 (and modes
(< 0 (logand modes
#o6000
)))
4236 (not (file-writable-p
4237 (file-name-directory real-file-name
)))
4238 (and backup-by-copying-when-linked
4239 (< 1 (file-nlinks real-file-name
)))
4240 (and (or backup-by-copying-when-mismatch
4241 (and (integerp copy-when-priv-mismatch
)
4242 (let ((attr (file-attributes
4246 copy-when-priv-mismatch
))))
4247 (not (file-ownership-preserved-p real-file-name
4252 ;; Actually make the backup file.
4254 (backup-buffer-copy real-file-name backupname
4255 modes extended-attributes
)
4256 ;; rename-file should delete old backup.
4257 (rename-file real-file-name backupname t
)
4258 (setq setmodes
(list modes extended-attributes
4260 (setq buffer-backed-up t
)
4261 ;; Now delete the old versions, if desired.
4262 (dolist (old-version old-versions
)
4263 (delete-file old-version
)))
4265 ;; If trouble writing the backup, write it in .emacs.d/%backup%.
4266 (when (not buffer-backed-up
)
4267 (setq backupname
(locate-user-emacs-file "%backup%~"))
4268 (message "Cannot write backup file; backing up in %s"
4271 (backup-buffer-copy real-file-name backupname
4272 modes extended-attributes
)
4273 (setq buffer-backed-up t
))
4276 (defun backup-buffer-copy (from-name to-name modes extended-attributes
)
4277 ;; Create temp files with strict access rights. It's easy to
4278 ;; loosen them later, whereas it's impossible to close the
4279 ;; time-window of loose permissions otherwise.
4280 (with-file-modes ?
\700
4281 (when (condition-case nil
4282 ;; Try to overwrite old backup first.
4283 (copy-file from-name to-name t t t
)
4285 (while (condition-case nil
4287 (when (file-exists-p to-name
)
4288 (delete-file to-name
))
4289 (copy-file from-name to-name nil t t
)
4291 (file-already-exists t
))
4292 ;; The file was somehow created by someone else between
4293 ;; `delete-file' and `copy-file', so let's try again.
4294 ;; rms says "I think there is also a possible race
4295 ;; condition for making backup files" (emacs-devel 20070821).
4297 ;; If set-file-extended-attributes fails, fall back on set-file-modes.
4298 (unless (and extended-attributes
4299 (with-demoted-errors
4300 (set-file-extended-attributes to-name extended-attributes
)))
4302 (set-file-modes to-name
(logand modes
#o1777
)))))
4304 (defvar file-name-version-regexp
4305 "\\(?:~\\|\\.~[-[:alnum:]:#@^._]+\\(?:~[[:digit:]]+\\)?~\\)"
4306 ;; The last ~[[:digit]]+ matches relative versions in git,
4307 ;; e.g. `foo.js.~HEAD~1~'.
4308 "Regular expression matching the backup/version part of a file name.
4309 Used by `file-name-sans-versions'.")
4311 (defun file-name-sans-versions (name &optional keep-backup-version
)
4312 "Return file NAME sans backup versions or strings.
4313 This is a separate procedure so your site-init or startup file can
4315 If the optional argument KEEP-BACKUP-VERSION is non-nil,
4316 we do not remove backup version numbers, only true file version numbers.
4317 See also `file-name-version-regexp'."
4318 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler name
'file-name-sans-versions
)))
4320 (funcall handler
'file-name-sans-versions name keep-backup-version
)
4322 (unless keep-backup-version
4323 (string-match (concat file-name-version-regexp
"\\'")
4326 (defun file-ownership-preserved-p (file &optional group
)
4327 "Return t if deleting FILE and rewriting it would preserve the owner.
4328 Return also t if FILE does not exist. If GROUP is non-nil, check whether
4329 the group would be preserved too."
4330 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler file
'file-ownership-preserved-p
)))
4332 (funcall handler
'file-ownership-preserved-p file group
)
4333 (let ((attributes (file-attributes file
'integer
)))
4334 ;; Return t if the file doesn't exist, since it's true that no
4335 ;; information would be lost by an (attempted) delete and create.
4336 (or (null attributes
)
4337 (and (or (= (nth 2 attributes
) (user-uid))
4338 ;; Files created on Windows by Administrator (RID=500)
4339 ;; have the Administrators group (RID=544) recorded as
4340 ;; their owner. Rewriting them will still preserve the
4342 (and (eq system-type
'windows-nt
)
4343 (= (user-uid) 500) (= (nth 2 attributes
) 544)))
4345 ;; On BSD-derived systems files always inherit the parent
4346 ;; directory's group, so skip the group-gid test.
4347 (memq system-type
'(berkeley-unix darwin gnu
/kfreebsd
))
4348 (= (nth 3 attributes
) (group-gid)))
4349 (let* ((parent (or (file-name-directory file
) "."))
4350 (parent-attributes (file-attributes parent
'integer
)))
4351 (and parent-attributes
4352 ;; On some systems, a file created in a setuid directory
4353 ;; inherits that directory's owner.
4355 (= (nth 2 parent-attributes
) (user-uid))
4356 (string-match "^...[^sS]" (nth 8 parent-attributes
)))
4357 ;; On many systems, a file created in a setgid directory
4358 ;; inherits that directory's group. On some systems
4359 ;; this happens even if the setgid bit is not set.
4361 (= (nth 3 parent-attributes
)
4362 (nth 3 attributes
)))))))))))
4364 (defun file-name-sans-extension (filename)
4365 "Return FILENAME sans final \"extension\".
4366 The extension, in a file name, is the part that begins with the last `.',
4367 except that a leading `.' of the file name, if there is one, doesn't count."
4369 (let ((file (file-name-sans-versions (file-name-nondirectory filename
)))
4371 (if (and (string-match "\\.[^.]*\\'" file
)
4372 (not (eq 0 (match-beginning 0))))
4373 (if (setq directory
(file-name-directory filename
))
4374 ;; Don't use expand-file-name here; if DIRECTORY is relative,
4375 ;; we don't want to expand it.
4376 (concat directory
(substring file
0 (match-beginning 0)))
4377 (substring file
0 (match-beginning 0)))
4380 (defun file-name-extension (filename &optional period
)
4381 "Return FILENAME's final \"extension\".
4382 The extension, in a file name, is the part that begins with the last `.',
4383 excluding version numbers and backup suffixes, except that a leading `.'
4384 of the file name, if there is one, doesn't count.
4385 Return nil for extensionless file names such as `foo'.
4386 Return the empty string for file names such as `foo.'.
4388 By default, the returned value excludes the period that starts the
4389 extension, but if the optional argument PERIOD is non-nil, the period
4390 is included in the value, and in that case, if FILENAME has no
4391 extension, the value is \"\"."
4393 (let ((file (file-name-sans-versions (file-name-nondirectory filename
))))
4394 (if (and (string-match "\\.[^.]*\\'" file
)
4395 (not (eq 0 (match-beginning 0))))
4396 (substring file
(+ (match-beginning 0) (if period
0 1)))
4400 (defun file-name-base (&optional filename
)
4401 "Return the base name of the FILENAME: no directory, no extension.
4402 FILENAME defaults to `buffer-file-name'."
4403 (file-name-sans-extension
4404 (file-name-nondirectory (or filename
(buffer-file-name)))))
4406 (defcustom make-backup-file-name-function
4407 #'make-backup-file-name--default-function
4408 "A function that `make-backup-file-name' uses to create backup file names.
4409 The function receives a single argument, the original file name.
4411 If you change this, you may need to change `backup-file-name-p' and
4412 `file-name-sans-versions' too.
4414 You could make this buffer-local to do something special for specific files.
4416 For historical reasons, a value of nil means to use the default function.
4417 This should not be relied upon.
4419 See also `backup-directory-alist'."
4420 :version
"24.4" ; nil -> make-backup-file-name--default-function
4422 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"Deprecated way to get the default function" nil
)
4423 (function :tag
"Function")))
4425 (defcustom backup-directory-alist nil
4426 "Alist of filename patterns and backup directory names.
4427 Each element looks like (REGEXP . DIRECTORY). Backups of files with
4428 names matching REGEXP will be made in DIRECTORY. DIRECTORY may be
4429 relative or absolute. If it is absolute, so that all matching files
4430 are backed up into the same directory, the file names in this
4431 directory will be the full name of the file backed up with all
4432 directory separators changed to `!' to prevent clashes. This will not
4433 work correctly if your filesystem truncates the resulting name.
4435 For the common case of all backups going into one directory, the alist
4436 should contain a single element pairing \".\" with the appropriate
4439 If this variable is nil, or it fails to match a filename, the backup
4440 is made in the original file's directory.
4442 On MS-DOS filesystems without long names this variable is always
4445 :type
'(repeat (cons (regexp :tag
"Regexp matching filename")
4446 (directory :tag
"Backup directory name"))))
4448 (defun normal-backup-enable-predicate (name)
4449 "Default `backup-enable-predicate' function.
4450 Checks for files in `temporary-file-directory',
4451 `small-temporary-file-directory', and \"/tmp\"."
4452 (let ((temporary-file-directory temporary-file-directory
)
4454 ;; On MS-Windows, file-truename will convert short 8+3 aliases to
4455 ;; their long file-name equivalents, so compare-strings does TRT.
4456 (if (memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt
))
4457 (setq temporary-file-directory
(file-truename temporary-file-directory
)
4458 name
(file-truename name
)
4460 (not (or (let ((comp (compare-strings temporary-file-directory
0 nil
4461 name
0 nil caseless
)))
4462 ;; Directory is under temporary-file-directory.
4463 (and (not (eq comp t
))
4464 (< comp
(- (length temporary-file-directory
)))))
4465 (let ((comp (compare-strings "/tmp" 0 nil
4467 ;; Directory is under /tmp.
4468 (and (not (eq comp t
))
4469 (< comp
(- (length "/tmp")))))
4470 (if small-temporary-file-directory
4471 (let ((comp (compare-strings small-temporary-file-directory
4473 name
0 nil caseless
)))
4474 ;; Directory is under small-temporary-file-directory.
4475 (and (not (eq comp t
))
4476 (< comp
(- (length small-temporary-file-directory
))))))))))
4478 (defun make-backup-file-name (file)
4479 "Create the non-numeric backup file name for FILE.
4480 This calls the function that `make-backup-file-name-function' specifies,
4481 with a single argument FILE."
4482 (funcall (or make-backup-file-name-function
4483 #'make-backup-file-name--default-function
)
4486 (defun make-backup-file-name--default-function (file)
4487 "Default function for `make-backup-file-name'.
4488 Normally this just returns FILE's name with `~' appended.
4489 It searches for a match for FILE in `backup-directory-alist'.
4490 If the directory for the backup doesn't exist, it is created."
4491 (if (and (eq system-type
'ms-dos
)
4492 (not (msdos-long-file-names)))
4493 (let ((fn (file-name-nondirectory file
)))
4494 (concat (file-name-directory file
)
4495 (or (and (string-match "\\`[^.]+\\'" fn
)
4496 (concat (match-string 0 fn
) ".~"))
4497 (and (string-match "\\`[^.]+\\.\\(..?\\)?" fn
)
4498 (concat (match-string 0 fn
) "~")))))
4499 (concat (make-backup-file-name-1 file
) "~")))
4501 (defun make-backup-file-name-1 (file)
4502 "Subroutine of `make-backup-file-name--default-function'.
4503 The function `find-backup-file-name' also uses this."
4504 (let ((alist backup-directory-alist
)
4505 elt backup-directory abs-backup-directory
)
4507 (setq elt
(pop alist
))
4508 (if (string-match (car elt
) file
)
4509 (setq backup-directory
(cdr elt
)
4511 ;; If backup-directory is relative, it should be relative to the
4512 ;; file's directory. By expanding explicitly here, we avoid
4513 ;; depending on default-directory.
4514 (if backup-directory
4515 (setq abs-backup-directory
4516 (expand-file-name backup-directory
4517 (file-name-directory file
))))
4518 (if (and abs-backup-directory
(not (file-exists-p abs-backup-directory
)))
4520 (make-directory abs-backup-directory
'parents
)
4521 (file-error (setq backup-directory nil
4522 abs-backup-directory nil
))))
4523 (if (null backup-directory
)
4525 (if (file-name-absolute-p backup-directory
)
4527 (when (memq system-type
'(windows-nt ms-dos cygwin
))
4528 ;; Normalize DOSish file names: downcase the drive
4529 ;; letter, if any, and replace the leading "x:" with
4531 (or (file-name-absolute-p file
)
4532 (setq file
(expand-file-name file
))) ; make defaults explicit
4533 ;; Replace any invalid file-name characters (for the
4534 ;; case of backing up remote files).
4535 (setq file
(expand-file-name (convert-standard-filename file
)))
4536 (if (eq (aref file
1) ?
:)
4537 (setq file
(concat "/"
4539 (char-to-string (downcase (aref file
0)))
4540 (if (eq (aref file
2) ?
/)
4543 (substring file
2)))))
4544 ;; Make the name unique by substituting directory
4545 ;; separators. It may not really be worth bothering about
4546 ;; doubling `!'s in the original name...
4548 (subst-char-in-string
4550 (replace-regexp-in-string "!" "!!" file
))
4552 (expand-file-name (file-name-nondirectory file
)
4553 (file-name-as-directory abs-backup-directory
))))))
4555 (defun backup-file-name-p (file)
4556 "Return non-nil if FILE is a backup file name (numeric or not).
4557 This is a separate function so you can redefine it for customization.
4558 You may need to redefine `file-name-sans-versions' as well."
4559 (string-match "~\\'" file
))
4561 (defvar backup-extract-version-start
)
4563 ;; This is used in various files.
4564 ;; The usage of backup-extract-version-start is not very clean,
4565 ;; but I can't see a good alternative, so as of now I am leaving it alone.
4566 (defun backup-extract-version (fn)
4567 "Given the name of a numeric backup file, FN, return the backup number.
4568 Uses the free variable `backup-extract-version-start', whose value should be
4569 the index in the name where the version number begins."
4570 (if (and (string-match "[0-9]+~/?$" fn backup-extract-version-start
)
4571 (= (match-beginning 0) backup-extract-version-start
))
4572 (string-to-number (substring fn backup-extract-version-start -
1))
4575 (defun find-backup-file-name (fn)
4576 "Find a file name for a backup file FN, and suggestions for deletions.
4577 Value is a list whose car is the name for the backup file
4578 and whose cdr is a list of old versions to consider deleting now.
4579 If the value is nil, don't make a backup.
4580 Uses `backup-directory-alist' in the same way as
4581 `make-backup-file-name--default-function' does."
4582 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler fn
'find-backup-file-name
)))
4583 ;; Run a handler for this function so that ange-ftp can refuse to do it.
4585 (funcall handler
'find-backup-file-name fn
)
4586 (if (or (eq version-control
'never
)
4587 ;; We don't support numbered backups on plain MS-DOS
4588 ;; when long file names are unavailable.
4589 (and (eq system-type
'ms-dos
)
4590 (not (msdos-long-file-names))))
4591 (list (make-backup-file-name fn
))
4592 (let* ((basic-name (make-backup-file-name-1 fn
))
4593 (base-versions (concat (file-name-nondirectory basic-name
)
4595 (backup-extract-version-start (length base-versions
))
4597 (number-to-delete 0)
4598 possibilities deserve-versions-p versions
)
4600 (setq possibilities
(file-name-all-completions
4602 (file-name-directory basic-name
))
4603 versions
(sort (mapcar #'backup-extract-version
4606 high-water-mark
(apply 'max
0 versions
)
4607 deserve-versions-p
(or version-control
4608 (> high-water-mark
0))
4609 number-to-delete
(- (length versions
)
4613 (file-error (setq possibilities nil
)))
4614 (if (not deserve-versions-p
)
4615 (list (make-backup-file-name fn
))
4616 (cons (format "%s.~%d~" basic-name
(1+ high-water-mark
))
4617 (if (and (> number-to-delete
0)
4618 ;; Delete nothing if there is overflow
4619 ;; in the number of versions to keep.
4620 (>= (+ kept-new-versions kept-old-versions -
1) 0))
4622 (format "%s.~%d~" basic-name n
))
4623 (let ((v (nthcdr kept-old-versions versions
)))
4624 (rplacd (nthcdr (1- number-to-delete
) v
) ())
4627 (defun file-nlinks (filename)
4628 "Return number of names file FILENAME has."
4629 (car (cdr (file-attributes filename
))))
4631 ;; (defun file-relative-name (filename &optional directory)
4632 ;; "Convert FILENAME to be relative to DIRECTORY (default: `default-directory').
4633 ;; This function returns a relative file name which is equivalent to FILENAME
4634 ;; when used with that default directory as the default.
4635 ;; If this is impossible (which can happen on MSDOS and Windows
4636 ;; when the file name and directory use different drive names)
4637 ;; then it returns FILENAME."
4639 ;; (let ((fname (expand-file-name filename)))
4640 ;; (setq directory (file-name-as-directory
4641 ;; (expand-file-name (or directory default-directory))))
4642 ;; ;; On Microsoft OSes, if FILENAME and DIRECTORY have different
4643 ;; ;; drive names, they can't be relative, so return the absolute name.
4644 ;; (if (and (or (eq system-type 'ms-dos)
4645 ;; (eq system-type 'cygwin)
4646 ;; (eq system-type 'windows-nt))
4647 ;; (not (string-equal (substring fname 0 2)
4648 ;; (substring directory 0 2))))
4650 ;; (let ((ancestor ".")
4651 ;; (fname-dir (file-name-as-directory fname)))
4652 ;; (while (and (not (string-match (concat "^" (regexp-quote directory)) fname-dir))
4653 ;; (not (string-match (concat "^" (regexp-quote directory)) fname)))
4654 ;; (setq directory (file-name-directory (substring directory 0 -1))
4655 ;; ancestor (if (equal ancestor ".")
4657 ;; (concat "../" ancestor))))
4658 ;; ;; Now ancestor is empty, or .., or ../.., etc.
4659 ;; (if (string-match (concat "^" (regexp-quote directory)) fname)
4660 ;; ;; We matched within FNAME's directory part.
4661 ;; ;; Add the rest of FNAME onto ANCESTOR.
4662 ;; (let ((rest (substring fname (match-end 0))))
4663 ;; (if (and (equal ancestor ".")
4664 ;; (not (equal rest "")))
4665 ;; ;; But don't bother with ANCESTOR if it would give us `./'.
4667 ;; (concat (file-name-as-directory ancestor) rest)))
4668 ;; ;; We matched FNAME's directory equivalent.
4671 (defun file-relative-name (filename &optional directory
)
4672 "Convert FILENAME to be relative to DIRECTORY (default: `default-directory').
4673 This function returns a relative file name which is equivalent to FILENAME
4674 when used with that default directory as the default.
4675 If FILENAME is a relative file name, it will be interpreted as existing in
4676 `default-directory'.
4677 If FILENAME and DIRECTORY lie on different machines or on different drives
4678 on a DOS/Windows machine, it returns FILENAME in expanded form."
4681 (file-name-as-directory (expand-file-name (or directory
4682 default-directory
))))
4683 (setq filename
(expand-file-name filename
))
4684 (let ((fremote (file-remote-p filename
))
4685 (dremote (file-remote-p directory
))
4686 (fold-case (or (memq system-type
'(ms-dos cygwin windows-nt
))
4687 read-file-name-completion-ignore-case
)))
4688 (if ;; Conditions for separate trees
4690 ;; Test for different filesystems on DOS/Windows
4692 ;; Should `cygwin' really be included here? --stef
4693 (memq system-type
'(ms-dos cygwin windows-nt
))
4695 ;; Test for different drive letters
4696 (not (eq t
(compare-strings filename
0 2 directory
0 2 fold-case
)))
4697 ;; Test for UNCs on different servers
4698 (not (eq t
(compare-strings
4700 (if (string-match "\\`//\\([^:/]+\\)/" filename
)
4701 (match-string 1 filename
)
4702 ;; Windows file names cannot have ? in
4703 ;; them, so use that to detect when
4704 ;; neither FILENAME nor DIRECTORY is a
4709 (if (string-match "\\`//\\([^:/]+\\)/" directory
)
4710 (match-string 1 directory
)
4713 ;; Test for different remote file system identification
4714 (not (equal fremote dremote
)))
4716 (let ((ancestor ".")
4717 (filename-dir (file-name-as-directory filename
)))
4719 (or (string-prefix-p directory filename-dir fold-case
)
4720 (string-prefix-p directory filename fold-case
)))
4721 (setq directory
(file-name-directory (substring directory
0 -
1))
4722 ancestor
(if (equal ancestor
".")
4724 (concat "../" ancestor
))))
4725 ;; Now ancestor is empty, or .., or ../.., etc.
4726 (if (string-prefix-p directory filename fold-case
)
4727 ;; We matched within FILENAME's directory part.
4728 ;; Add the rest of FILENAME onto ANCESTOR.
4729 (let ((rest (substring filename
(length directory
))))
4730 (if (and (equal ancestor
".") (not (equal rest
"")))
4731 ;; But don't bother with ANCESTOR if it would give us `./'.
4733 (concat (file-name-as-directory ancestor
) rest
)))
4734 ;; We matched FILENAME's directory equivalent.
4737 (defun save-buffer (&optional arg
)
4738 "Save current buffer in visited file if modified.
4739 Variations are described below.
4741 By default, makes the previous version into a backup file
4742 if previously requested or if this is the first save.
4743 Prefixed with one \\[universal-argument], marks this version
4744 to become a backup when the next save is done.
4745 Prefixed with two \\[universal-argument]'s,
4746 makes the previous version into a backup file.
4747 Prefixed with three \\[universal-argument]'s, marks this version
4748 to become a backup when the next save is done,
4749 and makes the previous version into a backup file.
4751 With a numeric prefix argument of 0, never make the previous version
4754 Note that the various variables that control backups, such
4755 as `version-control', `backup-enable-predicate', `vc-make-backup-files',
4756 and `backup-inhibited', to name just the more popular ones, still
4757 control whether a backup will actually be produced, even when you
4758 invoke this command prefixed with two or three \\[universal-argument]'s.
4760 If a file's name is FOO, the names of its numbered backup versions are
4761 FOO.~i~ for various integers i. A non-numbered backup file is called FOO~.
4762 Numeric backups (rather than FOO~) will be made if value of
4763 `version-control' is not the atom `never' and either there are already
4764 numeric versions of the file being backed up, or `version-control' is
4766 We don't want excessive versions piling up, so there are variables
4767 `kept-old-versions', which tells Emacs how many oldest versions to keep,
4768 and `kept-new-versions', which tells how many newest versions to keep.
4769 Defaults are 2 old versions and 2 new.
4770 `dired-kept-versions' controls dired's clean-directory (.) command.
4771 If `delete-old-versions' is nil, system will query user
4772 before trimming versions. Otherwise it does it silently.
4774 If `vc-make-backup-files' is nil, which is the default,
4775 no backup files are made for files managed by version control.
4776 (This is because the version control system itself records previous versions.)
4778 See the subroutine `basic-save-buffer' for more information."
4780 (let ((modp (buffer-modified-p))
4781 (make-backup-files (or (and make-backup-files
(not (eq arg
0)))
4782 (memq arg
'(16 64)))))
4783 (and modp
(memq arg
'(16 64)) (setq buffer-backed-up nil
))
4784 ;; We used to display the message below only for files > 50KB, but
4785 ;; then Rmail-mbox never displays it due to buffer swapping. If
4786 ;; the test is ever re-introduced, be sure to handle saving of
4790 (not noninteractive
)
4791 (not save-silently
))
4792 (message "Saving file %s..." (buffer-file-name)))
4793 (basic-save-buffer (called-interactively-p 'any
))
4794 (and modp
(memq arg
'(4 64)) (setq buffer-backed-up nil
))))
4796 (defun delete-auto-save-file-if-necessary (&optional force
)
4797 "Delete auto-save file for current buffer if `delete-auto-save-files' is t.
4798 Normally delete only if the file was written by this Emacs since
4799 the last real save, but optional arg FORCE non-nil means delete anyway."
4800 (and buffer-auto-save-file-name delete-auto-save-files
4801 (not (string= buffer-file-name buffer-auto-save-file-name
))
4802 (or force
(recent-auto-save-p))
4805 (delete-file buffer-auto-save-file-name
)
4807 (set-buffer-auto-saved))))
4809 (defvar auto-save-hook nil
4810 "Normal hook run just before auto-saving.")
4812 (defcustom before-save-hook nil
4813 "Normal hook that is run before a buffer is saved to its file."
4814 :options
'(copyright-update time-stamp
)
4818 (defcustom after-save-hook nil
4819 "Normal hook that is run after a buffer is saved to its file."
4820 :options
'(executable-make-buffer-file-executable-if-script-p)
4824 (defvar save-buffer-coding-system nil
4825 "If non-nil, use this coding system for saving the buffer.
4826 More precisely, use this coding system in place of the
4827 value of `buffer-file-coding-system', when saving the buffer.
4828 Calling `write-region' for any purpose other than saving the buffer
4829 will still use `buffer-file-coding-system'; this variable has no effect
4832 (make-variable-buffer-local 'save-buffer-coding-system
)
4833 (put 'save-buffer-coding-system
'permanent-local t
)
4835 (defun basic-save-buffer (&optional called-interactively
)
4836 "Save the current buffer in its visited file, if it has been modified.
4837 The hooks `write-contents-functions' and `write-file-functions' get a chance
4838 to do the job of saving; if they do not, then the buffer is saved in
4839 the visited file in the usual way.
4840 Before and after saving the buffer, this function runs
4841 `before-save-hook' and `after-save-hook', respectively."
4842 (interactive '(called-interactively))
4843 (save-current-buffer
4844 ;; In an indirect buffer, save its base buffer instead.
4845 (if (buffer-base-buffer)
4846 (set-buffer (buffer-base-buffer)))
4847 (if (or (buffer-modified-p)
4848 ;; handle the case when no modification has been made but
4849 ;; the file disappeared since visited
4850 (and buffer-file-name
4851 (not (file-exists-p buffer-file-name
))))
4852 (let ((recent-save (recent-auto-save-p))
4854 ;; If buffer has no file name, ask user for one.
4855 (or buffer-file-name
4858 (read-file-name "File to save in: "
4859 nil
(expand-file-name (buffer-name))))))
4860 (if (file-exists-p filename
)
4861 (if (file-directory-p filename
)
4862 ;; Signal an error if the user specified the name of an
4863 ;; existing directory.
4864 (error "%s is a directory" filename
)
4865 (unless (y-or-n-p (format-message
4866 "File `%s' exists; overwrite? "
4868 (error "Canceled"))))
4869 (set-visited-file-name filename
)))
4870 (or (verify-visited-file-modtime (current-buffer))
4871 (not (file-exists-p buffer-file-name
))
4874 "%s has changed since visited or saved. Save anyway? "
4875 (file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name
)))
4876 (user-error "Save not confirmed"))
4880 (and (> (point-max) (point-min))
4881 (not find-file-literally
)
4882 (/= (char-after (1- (point-max))) ?
\n)
4883 (not (and (eq selective-display t
)
4884 (= (char-after (1- (point-max))) ?
\r)))
4885 (or (eq require-final-newline t
)
4886 (eq require-final-newline
'visit-save
)
4887 (and require-final-newline
4889 (format "Buffer %s does not end in newline. Add one? "
4892 (goto-char (point-max))
4894 ;; Support VC version backups.
4896 ;; Don't let errors prevent saving the buffer.
4897 (with-demoted-errors (run-hooks 'before-save-hook
))
4898 (or (run-hook-with-args-until-success 'write-contents-functions
)
4899 (run-hook-with-args-until-success 'local-write-file-hooks
)
4900 (run-hook-with-args-until-success 'write-file-functions
)
4901 ;; If a hook returned t, file is already "written".
4902 ;; Otherwise, write it the usual way now.
4903 (let ((dir (file-name-directory
4904 (expand-file-name buffer-file-name
))))
4905 (unless (file-exists-p dir
)
4908 "Directory `%s' does not exist; create? " dir
))
4909 (make-directory dir t
)
4910 (error "Canceled")))
4911 (setq setmodes
(basic-save-buffer-1))))
4912 ;; Now we have saved the current buffer. Let's make sure
4913 ;; that buffer-file-coding-system is fixed to what
4914 ;; actually used for saving by binding it locally.
4915 (if save-buffer-coding-system
4916 (setq save-buffer-coding-system last-coding-system-used
)
4917 (setq buffer-file-coding-system last-coding-system-used
))
4918 (setq buffer-file-number
4919 (nthcdr 10 (file-attributes buffer-file-name
)))
4924 (with-demoted-errors
4925 (set-file-modes buffer-file-name
(car setmodes
)))
4926 (set-file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name
4929 ;; If the auto-save file was recent before this command,
4931 (delete-auto-save-file-if-necessary recent-save
)
4932 ;; Support VC `implicit' locking.
4934 (run-hooks 'after-save-hook
))
4936 (not called-interactively
)
4937 (files--message "(No changes need to be saved)")))))
4939 ;; This does the "real job" of writing a buffer into its visited file
4940 ;; and making a backup file. This is what is normally done
4941 ;; but inhibited if one of write-file-functions returns non-nil.
4942 ;; It returns a value (MODES EXTENDED-ATTRIBUTES BACKUPNAME), like
4944 (defun basic-save-buffer-1 ()
4946 (if save-buffer-coding-system
4947 (let ((coding-system-for-write save-buffer-coding-system
))
4948 (basic-save-buffer-2))
4949 (basic-save-buffer-2))
4950 (if buffer-file-coding-system-explicit
4951 (setcar buffer-file-coding-system-explicit last-coding-system-used
))))
4953 ;; This returns a value (MODES EXTENDED-ATTRIBUTES BACKUPNAME), like
4955 (defun basic-save-buffer-2 ()
4956 (let (tempsetmodes setmodes
)
4957 (if (not (file-writable-p buffer-file-name
))
4958 (let ((dir (file-name-directory buffer-file-name
)))
4959 (if (not (file-directory-p dir
))
4960 (if (file-exists-p dir
)
4961 (error "%s is not a directory" dir
)
4962 (error "%s: no such directory" dir
))
4963 (if (not (file-exists-p buffer-file-name
))
4964 (error "Directory %s write-protected" dir
)
4967 "File %s is write-protected; try to save anyway? "
4968 (file-name-nondirectory
4970 (setq tempsetmodes t
)
4971 (error "Attempt to save to a file which you aren't allowed to write"))))))
4972 (or buffer-backed-up
4973 (setq setmodes
(backup-buffer)))
4974 (let* ((dir (file-name-directory buffer-file-name
))
4975 (dir-writable (file-writable-p dir
)))
4976 (if (or (and file-precious-flag dir-writable
)
4977 (and break-hardlink-on-save
4978 (file-exists-p buffer-file-name
)
4979 (> (file-nlinks buffer-file-name
) 1)
4981 (error (concat "Directory %s write-protected; "
4982 "cannot break hardlink when saving")
4984 ;; Write temp name, then rename it.
4985 ;; This requires write access to the containing dir,
4986 ;; which is why we don't try it if we don't have that access.
4987 (let ((realname buffer-file-name
)
4989 (umask (default-file-modes))
4990 (old-modtime (visited-file-modtime)))
4991 ;; Create temp files with strict access rights. It's easy to
4992 ;; loosen them later, whereas it's impossible to close the
4993 ;; time-window of loose permissions otherwise.
4996 (clear-visited-file-modtime)
4997 (set-default-file-modes ?
\700)
4998 ;; Try various temporary names.
4999 ;; This code follows the example of make-temp-file,
5000 ;; but it calls write-region in the appropriate way
5001 ;; for saving the buffer.
5002 (while (condition-case ()
5006 (expand-file-name "tmp" dir
)))
5007 ;; Pass in nil&nil rather than point-min&max
5008 ;; cause we're saving the whole buffer.
5009 ;; write-region-annotate-functions may use it.
5010 (write-region nil nil
5011 tempname nil realname
5012 buffer-file-truename
'excl
)
5013 (when save-silently
(message nil
))
5015 (file-already-exists t
))
5016 ;; The file was somehow created by someone else between
5017 ;; `make-temp-name' and `write-region', let's try again.
5021 (set-default-file-modes umask
)
5022 ;; If we failed, restore the buffer's modtime.
5024 (set-visited-file-modtime old-modtime
)))
5025 ;; Since we have created an entirely new file,
5026 ;; make sure it gets the right permission bits set.
5027 (setq setmodes
(or setmodes
5028 (list (or (file-modes buffer-file-name
)
5029 (logand ?
\666 umask
))
5030 (file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name
)
5032 ;; We succeeded in writing the temp file,
5034 (rename-file tempname buffer-file-name t
))
5035 ;; If file not writable, see if we can make it writable
5036 ;; temporarily while we write it.
5037 ;; But no need to do so if we have just backed it up
5038 ;; (setmodes is set) because that says we're superseding.
5039 (cond ((and tempsetmodes
(not setmodes
))
5040 ;; Change the mode back, after writing.
5041 (setq setmodes
(list (file-modes buffer-file-name
)
5042 (file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name
)
5044 ;; If set-file-extended-attributes fails, fall back on
5047 (with-demoted-errors
5048 (set-file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name
5050 (set-file-modes buffer-file-name
5051 (logior (car setmodes
) 128))))))
5055 ;; Pass in nil&nil rather than point-min&max to indicate
5056 ;; we're saving the buffer rather than just a region.
5057 ;; write-region-annotate-functions may make us of it.
5058 (write-region nil nil
5059 buffer-file-name nil t buffer-file-truename
)
5060 (when save-silently
(message nil
))
5062 ;; If we get an error writing the new file, and we made
5063 ;; the backup by renaming, undo the backing-up.
5064 (and setmodes
(not success
)
5066 (rename-file (nth 2 setmodes
) buffer-file-name t
)
5067 (setq buffer-backed-up nil
))))))
5070 (declare-function diff-no-select
"diff"
5071 (old new
&optional switches no-async buf
))
5073 (defvar save-some-buffers-action-alist
5076 (if (not enable-recursive-minibuffers
)
5077 (progn (display-buffer buf
)
5078 (setq other-window-scroll-buffer buf
))
5079 (view-buffer buf
(lambda (_) (exit-recursive-edit)))
5081 ;; Return nil to ask about BUF again.
5083 ,(purecopy "view this buffer"))
5085 (if (null (buffer-file-name buf
))
5086 (message "Not applicable: no file")
5087 (require 'diff
) ;for diff-no-select.
5088 (let ((diffbuf (diff-no-select (buffer-file-name buf
) buf
5090 (if (not enable-recursive-minibuffers
)
5091 (progn (display-buffer diffbuf
)
5092 (setq other-window-scroll-buffer diffbuf
))
5093 (view-buffer diffbuf
(lambda (_) (exit-recursive-edit)))
5095 ;; Return nil to ask about BUF again.
5097 ,(purecopy "view changes in this buffer")))
5098 "ACTION-ALIST argument used in call to `map-y-or-n-p'.")
5099 (put 'save-some-buffers-action-alist
'risky-local-variable t
)
5101 (defvar buffer-save-without-query nil
5102 "Non-nil means `save-some-buffers' should save this buffer without asking.")
5103 (make-variable-buffer-local 'buffer-save-without-query
)
5105 (defun save-some-buffers (&optional arg pred
)
5106 "Save some modified file-visiting buffers. Asks user about each one.
5107 You can answer `y' to save, `n' not to save, `C-r' to look at the
5108 buffer in question with `view-buffer' before deciding or `d' to
5109 view the differences using `diff-buffer-with-file'.
5111 This command first saves any buffers where `buffer-save-without-query' is
5112 non-nil, without asking.
5114 Optional argument (the prefix) non-nil means save all with no questions.
5115 Optional second argument PRED determines which buffers are considered:
5116 If PRED is nil, all the file-visiting buffers are considered.
5117 If PRED is t, then certain non-file buffers will also be considered.
5118 If PRED is a zero-argument function, it indicates for each buffer whether
5119 to consider it or not when called with that buffer current.
5121 See `save-some-buffers-action-alist' if you want to
5122 change the additional actions you can take on files."
5124 (save-window-excursion
5125 (let* (queried autosaved-buffers
5126 files-done abbrevs-done
)
5127 (dolist (buffer (buffer-list))
5128 ;; First save any buffers that we're supposed to save unconditionally.
5129 ;; That way the following code won't ask about them.
5130 (with-current-buffer buffer
5131 (when (and buffer-save-without-query
(buffer-modified-p))
5132 (push (buffer-name) autosaved-buffers
)
5134 ;; Ask about those buffers that merit it,
5135 ;; and record the number thus saved.
5139 ;; Note that killing some buffers may kill others via
5140 ;; hooks (e.g. Rmail and its viewing buffer).
5141 (and (buffer-live-p buffer
)
5142 (buffer-modified-p buffer
)
5143 (not (buffer-base-buffer buffer
))
5145 (buffer-file-name buffer
)
5149 (and buffer-offer-save
(> (buffer-size) 0)))))
5150 (or (not (functionp pred
))
5151 (with-current-buffer buffer
(funcall pred
)))
5155 (if (buffer-file-name buffer
)
5156 (format "Save file %s? "
5157 (buffer-file-name buffer
))
5158 (format "Save buffer %s? "
5159 (buffer-name buffer
))))))
5161 (with-current-buffer buffer
5164 '("buffer" "buffers" "save")
5165 save-some-buffers-action-alist
))
5166 ;; Maybe to save abbrevs, and record whether
5167 ;; we either saved them or asked to.
5168 (and save-abbrevs abbrevs-changed
5171 (eq save-abbrevs
'silently
)
5172 (y-or-n-p (format "Save abbrevs in %s? " abbrev-file-name
)))
5173 (write-abbrev-file nil
))
5174 ;; Don't keep bothering user if he says no.
5175 (setq abbrevs-changed nil
)
5176 (setq abbrevs-done t
)))
5177 (or queried
(> files-done
0) abbrevs-done
5179 ((null autosaved-buffers
)
5180 (when (called-interactively-p 'any
)
5181 (files--message "(No files need saving)")))
5182 ((= (length autosaved-buffers
) 1)
5183 (files--message "(Saved %s)" (car autosaved-buffers
)))
5185 (files--message "(Saved %d files: %s)"
5186 (length autosaved-buffers
)
5187 (mapconcat 'identity autosaved-buffers
", "))))))))
5189 (defun clear-visited-file-modtime ()
5190 "Clear out records of last mod time of visited file.
5191 Next attempt to save will not complain of a discrepancy."
5192 (set-visited-file-modtime 0))
5194 (defun not-modified (&optional arg
)
5195 "Mark current buffer as unmodified, not needing to be saved.
5196 With prefix ARG, mark buffer as modified, so \\[save-buffer] will save.
5198 It is not a good idea to use this function in Lisp programs, because it
5199 prints a message in the minibuffer. Instead, use `set-buffer-modified-p'."
5200 (declare (interactive-only set-buffer-modified-p
))
5202 (files--message (if arg
"Modification-flag set"
5203 "Modification-flag cleared"))
5204 (set-buffer-modified-p arg
))
5206 (defun toggle-read-only (&optional arg interactive
)
5207 "Change whether this buffer is read-only."
5208 (declare (obsolete read-only-mode
"24.3"))
5209 (interactive (list current-prefix-arg t
))
5211 (call-interactively 'read-only-mode
)
5212 (read-only-mode (or arg
'toggle
))))
5214 (defun insert-file (filename)
5215 "Insert contents of file FILENAME into buffer after point.
5216 Set mark after the inserted text.
5218 This function is meant for the user to run interactively.
5219 Don't call it from programs! Use `insert-file-contents' instead.
5220 \(Its calling sequence is different; see its documentation)."
5221 (declare (interactive-only insert-file-contents
))
5222 (interactive "*fInsert file: ")
5223 (insert-file-1 filename
#'insert-file-contents
))
5225 (defun append-to-file (start end filename
)
5226 "Append the contents of the region to the end of file FILENAME.
5227 When called from a function, expects three arguments,
5228 START, END and FILENAME. START and END are normally buffer positions
5229 specifying the part of the buffer to write.
5230 If START is nil, that means to use the entire buffer contents.
5231 If START is a string, then output that string to the file
5232 instead of any buffer contents; END is ignored.
5234 This does character code conversion and applies annotations
5235 like `write-region' does."
5236 (interactive "r\nFAppend to file: ")
5237 (prog1 (write-region start end filename t
)
5238 (when save-silently
(message nil
))))
5240 (defun file-newest-backup (filename)
5241 "Return most recent backup file for FILENAME or nil if no backups exist."
5242 ;; `make-backup-file-name' will get us the right directory for
5243 ;; ordinary or numeric backups. It might create a directory for
5244 ;; backups as a side-effect, according to `backup-directory-alist'.
5245 (let* ((filename (file-name-sans-versions
5246 (make-backup-file-name (expand-file-name filename
))))
5247 (file (file-name-nondirectory filename
))
5248 (dir (file-name-directory filename
))
5249 (comp (file-name-all-completions file dir
))
5253 (setq tem
(pop comp
))
5254 (cond ((and (backup-file-name-p tem
)
5255 (string= (file-name-sans-versions tem
) file
))
5256 (setq tem
(concat dir tem
))
5257 (if (or (null newest
)
5258 (file-newer-than-file-p tem newest
))
5259 (setq newest tem
)))))
5262 (defun rename-uniquely ()
5263 "Rename current buffer to a similar name not already taken.
5264 This function is useful for creating multiple shell process buffers
5265 or multiple mail buffers, etc.
5267 Note that some commands, in particular those based on `compilation-mode'
5268 \(`compile', `grep', etc.) will reuse the current buffer if it has the
5269 appropriate mode even if it has been renamed. So as well as renaming
5270 the buffer, you also need to switch buffers before running another
5271 instance of such commands."
5274 (let ((base-name (buffer-name)))
5275 (and (string-match "<[0-9]+>\\'" base-name
)
5276 (not (and buffer-file-name
5278 (file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name
))))
5279 ;; If the existing buffer name has a <NNN>,
5280 ;; which isn't part of the file name (if any),
5281 ;; then get rid of that.
5282 (setq base-name
(substring base-name
0 (match-beginning 0))))
5283 (rename-buffer (generate-new-buffer-name base-name
))
5284 (force-mode-line-update))))
5286 (defun make-directory (dir &optional parents
)
5287 "Create the directory DIR and optionally any nonexistent parent dirs.
5288 If DIR already exists as a directory, signal an error, unless
5291 Interactively, the default choice of directory to create is the
5292 current buffer's default directory. That is useful when you have
5293 visited a file in a nonexistent directory.
5295 Noninteractively, the second (optional) argument PARENTS, if
5296 non-nil, says whether to create parent directories that don't
5297 exist. Interactively, this happens by default.
5299 If creating the directory or directories fail, an error will be
5302 (list (read-file-name "Make directory: " default-directory default-directory
5305 ;; If default-directory is a remote directory,
5306 ;; make sure we find its make-directory handler.
5307 (setq dir
(expand-file-name dir
))
5308 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler dir
'make-directory
)))
5310 (funcall handler
'make-directory dir parents
)
5312 (make-directory-internal dir
)
5313 (let ((dir (directory-file-name (expand-file-name dir
)))
5315 (while (and (not (file-exists-p dir
))
5316 ;; If directory is its own parent, then we can't
5317 ;; keep looping forever
5319 (directory-file-name
5320 (file-name-directory dir
)))))
5321 (setq create-list
(cons dir create-list
)
5322 dir
(directory-file-name (file-name-directory dir
))))
5324 (make-directory-internal (car create-list
))
5325 (setq create-list
(cdr create-list
))))))))
5327 (defconst directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp
5328 "^\\([^.]\\|\\.\\([^.]\\|\\..\\)\\).*"
5329 "Regexp matching any file name except \".\" and \"..\".")
5331 (defun delete-directory (directory &optional recursive trash
)
5332 "Delete the directory named DIRECTORY. Does not follow symlinks.
5333 If RECURSIVE is non-nil, all files in DIRECTORY are deleted as well.
5334 TRASH non-nil means to trash the directory instead, provided
5335 `delete-by-moving-to-trash' is non-nil.
5337 When called interactively, TRASH is t if no prefix argument is
5338 given. With a prefix argument, TRASH is nil."
5340 (let* ((trashing (and delete-by-moving-to-trash
5341 (null current-prefix-arg
)))
5342 (dir (expand-file-name
5343 (read-directory-name
5345 "Move directory to trash: "
5346 "Delete directory: ")
5347 default-directory default-directory nil nil
))))
5349 (if (directory-files dir nil directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp
)
5351 (format-message "Directory `%s' is not empty, really %s? "
5352 dir
(if trashing
"trash" "delete")))
5354 (null current-prefix-arg
))))
5355 ;; If default-directory is a remote directory, make sure we find its
5356 ;; delete-directory handler.
5357 (setq directory
(directory-file-name (expand-file-name directory
)))
5358 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler directory
'delete-directory
)))
5361 (funcall handler
'delete-directory directory recursive
))
5362 ((and delete-by-moving-to-trash trash
)
5363 ;; Only move non-empty dir to trash if recursive deletion was
5364 ;; requested. This mimics the non-`delete-by-moving-to-trash'
5365 ;; case, where the operation fails in delete-directory-internal.
5366 ;; As `move-file-to-trash' trashes directories (empty or
5367 ;; otherwise) as a unit, we do not need to recurse here.
5368 (if (and (not recursive
)
5369 ;; Check if directory is empty apart from "." and "..".
5371 directory
'full directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp
))
5372 (error "Directory is not empty, not moving to trash")
5373 (move-file-to-trash directory
)))
5374 ;; Otherwise, call ourselves recursively if needed.
5376 (if (and recursive
(not (file-symlink-p directory
)))
5377 (mapc (lambda (file)
5378 ;; This test is equivalent to
5379 ;; (and (file-directory-p fn) (not (file-symlink-p fn)))
5380 ;; but more efficient
5381 (if (eq t
(car (file-attributes file
)))
5382 (delete-directory file recursive nil
)
5383 (delete-file file nil
)))
5384 ;; We do not want to delete "." and "..".
5386 directory
'full directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp
)))
5387 (delete-directory-internal directory
)))))
5389 (defun file-equal-p (file1 file2
)
5390 "Return non-nil if files FILE1 and FILE2 name the same file.
5391 If FILE1 or FILE2 does not exist, the return value is unspecified."
5392 (let ((handler (or (find-file-name-handler file1
'file-equal-p
)
5393 (find-file-name-handler file2
'file-equal-p
))))
5395 (funcall handler
'file-equal-p file1 file2
)
5396 (let (f1-attr f2-attr
)
5397 (and (setq f1-attr
(file-attributes (file-truename file1
)))
5398 (setq f2-attr
(file-attributes (file-truename file2
)))
5399 (equal f1-attr f2-attr
))))))
5401 (defun file-in-directory-p (file dir
)
5402 "Return non-nil if FILE is in DIR or a subdirectory of DIR.
5403 A directory is considered to be \"in\" itself.
5404 Return nil if DIR is not an existing directory."
5405 (let ((handler (or (find-file-name-handler file
'file-in-directory-p
)
5406 (find-file-name-handler dir
'file-in-directory-p
))))
5408 (funcall handler
'file-in-directory-p file dir
)
5409 (when (file-directory-p dir
) ; DIR must exist.
5410 (setq file
(file-truename file
)
5411 dir
(file-truename dir
))
5412 (let ((ls1 (split-string file
"/" t
))
5413 (ls2 (split-string dir
"/" t
))
5416 ;; A UNC on Windows systems, or a "super-root" on Apollo.
5417 ((string-match "\\`//" file
) "//")
5418 ((string-match "\\`/" file
) "/")
5421 (while (and ls1 ls2
(not mismatch
))
5422 (if (string-equal (car ls1
) (car ls2
))
5423 (setq root
(concat root
(car ls1
) "/"))
5428 (file-equal-p root dir
)))))))
5430 (defun copy-directory (directory newname
&optional keep-time parents copy-contents
)
5431 "Copy DIRECTORY to NEWNAME. Both args must be strings.
5432 This function always sets the file modes of the output files to match
5433 the corresponding input file.
5435 The third arg KEEP-TIME non-nil means give the output files the same
5436 last-modified time as the old ones. (This works on only some systems.)
5438 A prefix arg makes KEEP-TIME non-nil.
5440 Noninteractively, the last argument PARENTS says whether to
5441 create parent directories if they don't exist. Interactively,
5442 this happens by default.
5444 If NEWNAME names an existing directory, copy DIRECTORY as a
5445 subdirectory there. However, if called from Lisp with a non-nil
5446 optional argument COPY-CONTENTS, copy the contents of DIRECTORY
5447 directly into NEWNAME instead."
5449 (let ((dir (read-directory-name
5450 "Copy directory: " default-directory default-directory t nil
)))
5452 (read-directory-name
5453 (format "Copy directory %s to: " dir
)
5454 default-directory default-directory nil nil
)
5455 current-prefix-arg t nil
)))
5456 (when (file-in-directory-p newname directory
)
5457 (error "Cannot copy `%s' into its subdirectory `%s'"
5459 ;; If default-directory is a remote directory, make sure we find its
5460 ;; copy-directory handler.
5461 (let ((handler (or (find-file-name-handler directory
'copy-directory
)
5462 (find-file-name-handler newname
'copy-directory
))))
5464 (funcall handler
'copy-directory directory
5465 newname keep-time parents copy-contents
)
5467 ;; Compute target name.
5468 (setq directory
(directory-file-name (expand-file-name directory
))
5469 newname
(directory-file-name (expand-file-name newname
)))
5471 (cond ((not (file-directory-p newname
))
5472 ;; If NEWNAME is not an existing directory, create it;
5473 ;; that is where we will copy the files of DIRECTORY.
5474 (make-directory newname parents
))
5475 ;; If NEWNAME is an existing directory and COPY-CONTENTS
5476 ;; is nil, copy into NEWNAME/[DIRECTORY-BASENAME].
5477 ((not copy-contents
)
5478 (setq newname
(expand-file-name
5479 (file-name-nondirectory
5480 (directory-file-name directory
))
5482 (and (file-exists-p newname
)
5483 (not (file-directory-p newname
))
5484 (error "Cannot overwrite non-directory %s with a directory"
5486 (make-directory newname t
)))
5488 ;; Copy recursively.
5490 ;; We do not want to copy "." and "..".
5491 (directory-files directory
'full
5492 directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp
))
5493 (let ((target (expand-file-name (file-name-nondirectory file
) newname
))
5494 (filetype (car (file-attributes file
))))
5496 ((eq filetype t
) ; Directory but not a symlink.
5497 (copy-directory file newname keep-time parents
))
5498 ((stringp filetype
) ; Symbolic link
5499 (make-symbolic-link filetype target t
))
5500 ((copy-file file target t keep-time
)))))
5502 ;; Set directory attributes.
5503 (let ((modes (file-modes directory
))
5504 (times (and keep-time
(nth 5 (file-attributes directory
)))))
5505 (if modes
(set-file-modes newname modes
))
5506 (if times
(set-file-times newname times
))))))
5509 ;; At time of writing, only info uses this.
5510 (defun prune-directory-list (dirs &optional keep reject
)
5511 "Return a copy of DIRS with all non-existent directories removed.
5512 The optional argument KEEP is a list of directories to retain even if
5513 they don't exist, and REJECT is a list of directories to remove from
5514 DIRS, even if they exist; REJECT takes precedence over KEEP.
5516 Note that membership in REJECT and KEEP is checked using simple string
5519 (mapcar (lambda (dir)
5520 (and (not (member dir reject
))
5521 (or (member dir keep
) (file-directory-p dir
))
5526 (put 'revert-buffer-function
'permanent-local t
)
5527 (defvar revert-buffer-function
#'revert-buffer--default
5528 "Function to use to revert this buffer.
5529 The function receives two arguments IGNORE-AUTO and NOCONFIRM,
5530 which are the arguments that `revert-buffer' received.
5531 It also has access to the `preserve-modes' argument of `revert-buffer'
5532 via the `revert-buffer-preserve-modes' dynamic variable.
5534 For historical reasons, a value of nil means to use the default function.
5535 This should not be relied upon.")
5537 (put 'revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function
'permanent-local t
)
5538 (defvar revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function
5539 #'revert-buffer-insert-file-contents--default-function
5540 "Function to use to insert contents when reverting this buffer.
5541 The function receives two arguments: the first the nominal file name to use;
5542 the second is t if reading the auto-save file.
5544 The function is responsible for updating (or preserving) point.
5546 For historical reasons, a value of nil means to use the default function.
5547 This should not be relied upon.")
5549 (defun buffer-stale--default-function (&optional _noconfirm
)
5550 "Default function to use for `buffer-stale-function'.
5551 This function ignores its argument.
5552 This returns non-nil if the current buffer is visiting a readable file
5553 whose modification time does not match that of the buffer.
5555 This function only handles buffers that are visiting files.
5556 Non-file buffers need a custom function"
5557 (and buffer-file-name
5558 (file-readable-p buffer-file-name
)
5559 (not (buffer-modified-p (current-buffer)))
5560 (not (verify-visited-file-modtime (current-buffer)))))
5562 (defvar buffer-stale-function
#'buffer-stale--default-function
5563 "Function to check whether a buffer needs reverting.
5564 This should be a function with one optional argument NOCONFIRM.
5565 Auto Revert Mode passes t for NOCONFIRM. The function should return
5566 non-nil if the buffer should be reverted. A return value of
5567 `fast' means that the need for reverting was not checked, but
5568 that reverting the buffer is fast. The buffer is current when
5569 this function is called.
5571 The idea behind the NOCONFIRM argument is that it should be
5572 non-nil if the buffer is going to be reverted without asking the
5573 user. In such situations, one has to be careful with potentially
5574 time consuming operations.
5576 For historical reasons, a value of nil means to use the default function.
5577 This should not be relied upon.
5579 For more information on how this variable is used by Auto Revert mode,
5580 see Info node `(emacs)Supporting additional buffers'.")
5582 (defvar before-revert-hook nil
5583 "Normal hook for `revert-buffer' to run before reverting.
5584 The function `revert-buffer--default' runs this.
5585 A customized `revert-buffer-function' need not run this hook.")
5587 (defvar after-revert-hook nil
5588 "Normal hook for `revert-buffer' to run after reverting.
5589 Note that the hook value that it runs is the value that was in effect
5590 before reverting; that makes a difference if you have buffer-local
5593 The function `revert-buffer--default' runs this.
5594 A customized `revert-buffer-function' need not run this hook.")
5596 (defvar revert-buffer-in-progress-p nil
5597 "Non-nil if a `revert-buffer' operation is in progress, nil otherwise.")
5599 (defvar revert-buffer-internal-hook
)
5601 ;; `revert-buffer-function' was defined long ago to be a function of only
5602 ;; 2 arguments, so we have to use a dynbind variable to pass the
5603 ;; `preserve-modes' argument of `revert-buffer'.
5604 (defvar revert-buffer-preserve-modes
)
5606 (defun revert-buffer (&optional ignore-auto noconfirm preserve-modes
)
5607 "Replace current buffer text with the text of the visited file on disk.
5608 This undoes all changes since the file was visited or saved.
5609 With a prefix argument, offer to revert from latest auto-save file, if
5610 that is more recent than the visited file.
5612 This command also implements an interface for special buffers
5613 that contain text which doesn't come from a file, but reflects
5614 some other data instead (e.g. Dired buffers, `buffer-list'
5615 buffers). This is done via the variable `revert-buffer-function'.
5616 In these cases, it should reconstruct the buffer contents from the
5619 When called from Lisp, the first argument is IGNORE-AUTO; only offer
5620 to revert from the auto-save file when this is nil. Note that the
5621 sense of this argument is the reverse of the prefix argument, for the
5622 sake of backward compatibility. IGNORE-AUTO is optional, defaulting
5625 Optional second argument NOCONFIRM means don't ask for confirmation
5626 at all. (The variable `revert-without-query' offers another way to
5627 revert buffers without querying for confirmation.)
5629 Optional third argument PRESERVE-MODES non-nil means don't alter
5630 the files modes. Normally we reinitialize them using `normal-mode'.
5632 This function binds `revert-buffer-in-progress-p' non-nil while it operates.
5634 This function calls the function that `revert-buffer-function' specifies
5635 to do the work, with arguments IGNORE-AUTO and NOCONFIRM.
5636 The default function runs the hooks `before-revert-hook' and
5637 `after-revert-hook'."
5638 ;; I admit it's odd to reverse the sense of the prefix argument, but
5639 ;; there is a lot of code out there which assumes that the first
5640 ;; argument should be t to avoid consulting the auto-save file, and
5641 ;; there's no straightforward way to encourage authors to notice a
5642 ;; reversal of the argument sense. So I'm just changing the user
5643 ;; interface, but leaving the programmatic interface the same.
5644 (interactive (list (not current-prefix-arg
)))
5645 (let ((revert-buffer-in-progress-p t
)
5646 (revert-buffer-preserve-modes preserve-modes
))
5647 (funcall (or revert-buffer-function
#'revert-buffer--default
)
5648 ignore-auto noconfirm
)))
5650 (defun revert-buffer--default (ignore-auto noconfirm
)
5651 "Default function for `revert-buffer'.
5652 The arguments IGNORE-AUTO and NOCONFIRM are as described for `revert-buffer'.
5653 Runs the hooks `before-revert-hook' and `after-revert-hook' at the
5656 Calls `revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function' to reread the
5657 contents of the visited file, with two arguments: the first is the file
5658 name, the second is non-nil if reading an auto-save file.
5660 This function only handles buffers that are visiting files.
5661 Non-file buffers need a custom function."
5662 (with-current-buffer (or (buffer-base-buffer (current-buffer))
5664 (let* ((auto-save-p (and (not ignore-auto
)
5665 (recent-auto-save-p)
5666 buffer-auto-save-file-name
5667 (file-readable-p buffer-auto-save-file-name
)
5669 "Buffer has been auto-saved recently. Revert from auto-save file? ")))
5670 (file-name (if auto-save-p
5671 buffer-auto-save-file-name
5673 (cond ((null file-name
)
5674 (error "Buffer does not seem to be associated with any file"))
5676 (and (not (buffer-modified-p))
5678 (dolist (regexp revert-without-query
)
5679 (when (string-match regexp file-name
)
5680 (throw 'found t
)))))
5681 (yes-or-no-p (format "Revert buffer from file %s? "
5683 (run-hooks 'before-revert-hook
)
5684 ;; If file was backed up but has changed since,
5685 ;; we should make another backup.
5686 (and (not auto-save-p
)
5687 (not (verify-visited-file-modtime (current-buffer)))
5688 (setq buffer-backed-up nil
))
5689 ;; Effectively copy the after-revert-hook status,
5690 ;; since after-find-file will clobber it.
5691 (let ((global-hook (default-value 'after-revert-hook
))
5692 (local-hook (when (local-variable-p 'after-revert-hook
)
5694 (inhibit-read-only t
))
5695 ;; FIXME: Throw away undo-log when preserve-modes is nil?
5697 (or revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function
5698 #'revert-buffer-insert-file-contents--default-function
)
5699 file-name auto-save-p
)
5700 ;; Recompute the truename in case changes in symlinks
5701 ;; have changed the truename.
5702 (setq buffer-file-truename
5703 (abbreviate-file-name (file-truename buffer-file-name
)))
5704 (after-find-file nil nil t nil revert-buffer-preserve-modes
)
5705 ;; Run after-revert-hook as it was before we reverted.
5706 (setq-default revert-buffer-internal-hook global-hook
)
5708 (set (make-local-variable 'revert-buffer-internal-hook
)
5710 (kill-local-variable 'revert-buffer-internal-hook
))
5711 (run-hooks 'revert-buffer-internal-hook
))
5714 (defun revert-buffer-insert-file-contents--default-function (file-name auto-save-p
)
5715 "Default function for `revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function'.
5716 The function `revert-buffer--default' calls this.
5717 FILE-NAME is the name of the file. AUTO-SAVE-P is non-nil if this is
5720 ((not (file-exists-p file-name
))
5721 (error (if buffer-file-number
5722 "File %s no longer exists!"
5723 "Cannot revert nonexistent file %s")
5725 ((not (file-readable-p file-name
))
5726 (error (if buffer-file-number
5727 "File %s no longer readable!"
5728 "Cannot revert unreadable file %s")
5731 ;; Bind buffer-file-name to nil
5732 ;; so that we don't try to lock the file.
5733 (let ((buffer-file-name nil
))
5737 (let ((coding-system-for-read
5738 ;; Auto-saved file should be read by Emacs's
5740 (if auto-save-p
'auto-save-coding
5741 (or coding-system-for-read
5743 buffer-file-coding-system-explicit
5744 (car buffer-file-coding-system-explicit
))))))
5745 (if (and (not enable-multibyte-characters
)
5746 coding-system-for-read
5747 (not (memq (coding-system-base
5748 coding-system-for-read
)
5749 '(no-conversion raw-text
))))
5750 ;; As a coding system suitable for multibyte
5751 ;; buffer is specified, make the current
5752 ;; buffer multibyte.
5753 (set-buffer-multibyte t
))
5755 ;; This force after-insert-file-set-coding
5756 ;; (called from insert-file-contents) to set
5757 ;; buffer-file-coding-system to a proper value.
5758 (kill-local-variable 'buffer-file-coding-system
)
5760 ;; Note that this preserves point in an intelligent way.
5761 (if revert-buffer-preserve-modes
5762 (let ((buffer-file-format buffer-file-format
))
5763 (insert-file-contents file-name
(not auto-save-p
)
5765 (insert-file-contents file-name
(not auto-save-p
)
5768 (defun recover-this-file ()
5769 "Recover the visited file--get contents from its last auto-save file."
5771 (recover-file buffer-file-name
))
5773 (defun recover-file (file)
5774 "Visit file FILE, but get contents from its last auto-save file."
5775 ;; Actually putting the file name in the minibuffer should be used
5777 ;; Not just because users often use the default.
5778 (interactive "FRecover file: ")
5779 (setq file
(expand-file-name file
))
5780 (if (auto-save-file-name-p (file-name-nondirectory file
))
5781 (error "%s is an auto-save file" (abbreviate-file-name file
)))
5782 (let ((file-name (let ((buffer-file-name file
))
5783 (make-auto-save-file-name))))
5784 (cond ((if (file-exists-p file
)
5785 (not (file-newer-than-file-p file-name file
))
5786 (not (file-exists-p file-name
)))
5787 (error "Auto-save file %s not current"
5788 (abbreviate-file-name file-name
)))
5789 ((with-temp-buffer-window
5791 #'(lambda (window _value
)
5792 (with-selected-window window
5794 (yes-or-no-p (format "Recover auto save file %s? " file-name
))
5795 (when (window-live-p window
)
5796 (quit-restore-window window
'kill
)))))
5797 (with-current-buffer standard-output
5798 (let ((switches dired-listing-switches
))
5799 (if (file-symlink-p file
)
5800 (setq switches
(concat switches
" -L")))
5801 ;; Use insert-directory-safely, not insert-directory,
5802 ;; because these files might not exist. In particular,
5803 ;; FILE might not exist if the auto-save file was for
5804 ;; a buffer that didn't visit a file, such as "*mail*".
5805 ;; The code in v20.x called `ls' directly, so we need
5806 ;; to emulate what `ls' did in that case.
5807 (insert-directory-safely file switches
)
5808 (insert-directory-safely file-name switches
))))
5809 (switch-to-buffer (find-file-noselect file t
))
5810 (let ((inhibit-read-only t
)
5811 ;; Keep the current buffer-file-coding-system.
5812 (coding-system buffer-file-coding-system
)
5813 ;; Auto-saved file should be read with special coding.
5814 (coding-system-for-read 'auto-save-coding
))
5816 (insert-file-contents file-name nil
)
5817 (set-buffer-file-coding-system coding-system
))
5818 (after-find-file nil nil t
))
5819 (t (user-error "Recover-file canceled")))))
5821 (defun recover-session ()
5822 "Recover auto save files from a previous Emacs session.
5823 This command first displays a Dired buffer showing you the
5824 previous sessions that you could recover from.
5825 To choose one, move point to the proper line and then type C-c C-c.
5826 Then you'll be asked about a number of files to recover."
5828 (if (null auto-save-list-file-prefix
)
5829 (error "You set `auto-save-list-file-prefix' to disable making session files"))
5830 (let ((dir (file-name-directory auto-save-list-file-prefix
))
5831 (nd (file-name-nondirectory auto-save-list-file-prefix
)))
5832 (unless (file-directory-p dir
)
5833 (make-directory dir t
))
5834 (unless (directory-files dir nil
5836 directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp
5837 (concat "\\`" (regexp-quote nd
)))
5839 (error "No previous sessions to recover")))
5840 (let ((ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards t
))
5841 (dired (concat auto-save-list-file-prefix
"*")
5842 (concat dired-listing-switches
" -t")))
5843 (use-local-map (nconc (make-sparse-keymap) (current-local-map)))
5844 (define-key (current-local-map) "\C-c\C-c" 'recover-session-finish
)
5846 (goto-char (point-min))
5847 (or (looking-at " Move to the session you want to recover,")
5848 (let ((inhibit-read-only t
))
5849 ;; Each line starts with a space
5850 ;; so that Font Lock mode won't highlight the first character.
5851 (insert " To recover a session, move to it and type C-c C-c.\n"
5852 (substitute-command-keys
5853 " To delete a session file, type \
5854 \\[dired-flag-file-deletion] on its line to flag
5855 the file for deletion, then \\[dired-do-flagged-delete] to \
5856 delete flagged files.\n\n"))))))
5858 (defun recover-session-finish ()
5859 "Choose one saved session to recover auto-save files from.
5860 This command is used in the special Dired buffer created by
5861 \\[recover-session]."
5863 ;; Get the name of the session file to recover from.
5864 (let ((file (dired-get-filename))
5866 (buffer (get-buffer-create " *recover*")))
5868 (dired-do-flagged-delete t
)
5870 (with-current-buffer buffer
5871 ;; Read in the auto-save-list file.
5873 (insert-file-contents file
)
5874 ;; Loop thru the text of that file
5875 ;; and get out the names of the files to recover.
5877 (let (thisfile autofile
)
5879 ;; This is a pair of lines for a non-file-visiting buffer.
5880 ;; Get the auto-save file name and manufacture
5881 ;; a "visited file name" from that.
5884 ;; If there is no auto-save file name, the
5885 ;; auto-save-list file is probably corrupted.
5888 (buffer-substring-no-properties
5890 (line-end-position)))
5894 (file-name-nondirectory autofile
)
5896 (file-name-directory autofile
))))
5898 ;; This pair of lines is a file-visiting
5899 ;; buffer. Use the visited file name.
5902 (buffer-substring-no-properties
5903 (point) (progn (end-of-line) (point))))
5906 (buffer-substring-no-properties
5907 (point) (progn (end-of-line) (point))))
5909 ;; Ignore a file if its auto-save file does not exist now.
5910 (if (and autofile
(file-exists-p autofile
))
5911 (setq files
(cons thisfile files
)))))
5912 (setq files
(nreverse files
))
5913 ;; The file contains a pair of line for each auto-saved buffer.
5914 ;; The first line of the pair contains the visited file name
5915 ;; or is empty if the buffer was not visiting a file.
5916 ;; The second line is the auto-save file name.
5918 (map-y-or-n-p "Recover %s? "
5921 (save-excursion (recover-file file
))
5923 "Failed to recover `%s'" file
)))
5925 '("file" "files" "recover"))
5926 (message "No files can be recovered from this session now")))
5927 (kill-buffer buffer
))))
5929 (defun kill-buffer-ask (buffer)
5930 "Kill BUFFER if confirmed."
5931 (when (yes-or-no-p (format "Buffer %s %s. Kill? "
5932 (buffer-name buffer
)
5933 (if (buffer-modified-p buffer
)
5934 "HAS BEEN EDITED" "is unmodified")))
5935 (kill-buffer buffer
)))
5937 (defun kill-some-buffers (&optional list
)
5938 "Kill some buffers. Asks the user whether to kill each one of them.
5939 Non-interactively, if optional argument LIST is non-nil, it
5940 specifies the list of buffers to kill, asking for approval for each one."
5943 (setq list
(buffer-list)))
5945 (let* ((buffer (car list
))
5946 (name (buffer-name buffer
)))
5947 (and name
; Can be nil for an indirect buffer
5948 ; if we killed the base buffer.
5949 (not (string-equal name
""))
5950 (/= (aref name
0) ?\s
)
5951 (kill-buffer-ask buffer
)))
5952 (setq list
(cdr list
))))
5954 (defun kill-matching-buffers (regexp &optional internal-too
)
5955 "Kill buffers whose name matches the specified REGEXP.
5956 The optional second argument indicates whether to kill internal buffers too."
5957 (interactive "sKill buffers matching this regular expression: \nP")
5958 (dolist (buffer (buffer-list))
5959 (let ((name (buffer-name buffer
)))
5960 (when (and name
(not (string-equal name
""))
5961 (or internal-too
(/= (aref name
0) ?\s
))
5962 (string-match regexp name
))
5963 (kill-buffer-ask buffer
)))))
5966 (defun rename-auto-save-file ()
5967 "Adjust current buffer's auto save file name for current conditions.
5968 Also rename any existing auto save file, if it was made in this session."
5969 (let ((osave buffer-auto-save-file-name
))
5970 (setq buffer-auto-save-file-name
5971 (make-auto-save-file-name))
5972 (if (and osave buffer-auto-save-file-name
5973 (not (string= buffer-auto-save-file-name buffer-file-name
))
5974 (not (string= buffer-auto-save-file-name osave
))
5975 (file-exists-p osave
)
5976 (recent-auto-save-p))
5977 (rename-file osave buffer-auto-save-file-name t
))))
5979 (defun make-auto-save-file-name ()
5980 "Return file name to use for auto-saves of current buffer.
5981 Does not consider `auto-save-visited-file-name' as that variable is checked
5982 before calling this function. You can redefine this for customization.
5983 See also `auto-save-file-name-p'."
5984 (if buffer-file-name
5985 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler buffer-file-name
5986 'make-auto-save-file-name
)))
5988 (funcall handler
'make-auto-save-file-name
)
5989 (let ((list auto-save-file-name-transforms
)
5990 (filename buffer-file-name
)
5992 ;; Apply user-specified translations
5993 ;; to the file name.
5994 (while (and list
(not result
))
5995 (if (string-match (car (car list
)) filename
)
5996 (setq result
(replace-match (cadr (car list
)) t nil
5998 uniq
(car (cddr (car list
)))))
5999 (setq list
(cdr list
)))
6002 (setq filename
(concat
6003 (file-name-directory result
)
6004 (subst-char-in-string
6006 (replace-regexp-in-string "!" "!!"
6008 (setq filename result
)))
6010 (if (and (eq system-type
'ms-dos
)
6011 (not (msdos-long-file-names)))
6012 ;; We truncate the file name to DOS 8+3 limits
6013 ;; before doing anything else, because the regexp
6014 ;; passed to string-match below cannot handle
6015 ;; extensions longer than 3 characters, multiple
6016 ;; dots, and other atrocities.
6017 (let ((fn (dos-8+3-filename
6018 (file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name
))))
6020 "\\`\\([^.]+\\)\\(\\.\\(..?\\)?.?\\|\\)\\'"
6022 (concat (file-name-directory buffer-file-name
)
6023 "#" (match-string 1 fn
)
6024 "." (match-string 3 fn
) "#"))
6025 (concat (file-name-directory filename
)
6027 (file-name-nondirectory filename
)
6029 ;; Make sure auto-save file names don't contain characters
6030 ;; invalid for the underlying filesystem.
6031 (if (and (memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin
))
6032 ;; Don't modify remote (ange-ftp) filenames
6033 (not (string-match "^/\\w+@[-A-Za-z0-9._]+:" result
)))
6034 (convert-standard-filename result
)
6037 ;; Deal with buffers that don't have any associated files. (Mail
6038 ;; mode tends to create a good number of these.)
6040 (let ((buffer-name (buffer-name))
6043 ;; Restrict the characters used in the file name to those which
6044 ;; are known to be safe on all filesystems, url-encoding the
6046 ;; We do this on all platforms, because even if we are not
6047 ;; running on DOS/Windows, the current directory may be on a
6048 ;; mounted VFAT filesystem, such as a USB memory stick.
6049 (while (string-match "[^A-Za-z0-9-_.~#+]" buffer-name limit
)
6050 (let* ((character (aref buffer-name
(match-beginning 0)))
6052 ;; For multibyte characters, this will produce more than
6053 ;; 2 hex digits, so is not true URL encoding.
6054 (format "%%%02X" character
)))
6055 (setq buffer-name
(replace-match replacement t t buffer-name
))
6056 (setq limit
(1+ (match-end 0)))))
6057 ;; Generate the file name.
6062 (format "#%s#" buffer-name
)
6063 ;; Try a few alternative directories, to get one we can
6066 ((file-writable-p default-directory
) default-directory
)
6067 ((file-writable-p "/var/tmp/") "/var/tmp/")
6069 (if (and (memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin
))
6070 ;; Don't modify remote (ange-ftp) filenames
6071 (not (string-match "^/\\w+@[-A-Za-z0-9._]+:" fname
)))
6072 ;; The call to convert-standard-filename is in case
6073 ;; buffer-name includes characters not allowed by the
6074 ;; DOS/Windows filesystems. make-temp-file writes to the
6075 ;; file it creates, so we must fix the file name _before_
6076 ;; make-temp-file is called.
6077 (convert-standard-filename fname
)
6080 ;; make-temp-file creates the file,
6081 ;; but we don't want it to exist until we do an auto-save.
6083 (delete-file file-name
)
6087 (defun auto-save-file-name-p (filename)
6088 "Return non-nil if FILENAME can be yielded by `make-auto-save-file-name'.
6089 FILENAME should lack slashes. You can redefine this for customization."
6090 (string-match "\\`#.*#\\'" filename
))
6092 (defun wildcard-to-regexp (wildcard)
6093 "Given a shell file name pattern WILDCARD, return an equivalent regexp.
6094 The generated regexp will match a filename only if the filename
6095 matches that wildcard according to shell rules. Only wildcards known
6096 by `sh' are supported."
6097 (let* ((i (string-match "[[.*+\\^$?]" wildcard
))
6098 ;; Copy the initial run of non-special characters.
6099 (result (substring wildcard
0 i
))
6100 (len (length wildcard
)))
6101 ;; If no special characters, we're almost done.
6104 (let ((ch (aref wildcard i
))
6112 (eq (aref wildcard
(1+ i
)) ?\
]))
6114 ((eq ch ?\
[) ; [...] maps to regexp char class
6119 ((eq (aref wildcard i
) ?
!) ; [!...] -> [^...]
6122 (if (eq (aref wildcard i
) ?\
])
6127 ((eq (aref wildcard i
) ?^
)
6128 ;; Found "[^". Insert a `\0' character
6129 ;; (which cannot happen in a filename)
6130 ;; into the character class, so that `^'
6131 ;; is not the first character after `[',
6132 ;; and thus non-special in a regexp.
6136 ((eq (aref wildcard i
) ?\
])
6137 ;; I don't think `]' can appear in a
6138 ;; character class in a wildcard, but
6139 ;; let's be general here.
6144 (prog1 ; copy everything upto next `]'.
6147 (setq j
(string-match
6149 (setq i
(if j
(1- j
) (1- len
)))))))
6151 ((eq ch ?
*) "[^\000]*")
6155 ((eq ch ?
\\) "\\\\") ; probably cannot happen...
6156 ((eq ch ??
) "[^\000]")
6157 (t (char-to-string ch
)))))
6159 ;; Shell wildcards should match the entire filename,
6160 ;; not its part. Make the regexp say so.
6161 (concat "\\`" result
"\\'")))
6163 (defcustom list-directory-brief-switches
6165 "Switches for `list-directory' to pass to `ls' for brief listing."
6169 (defcustom list-directory-verbose-switches
6171 "Switches for `list-directory' to pass to `ls' for verbose listing."
6175 (defun file-expand-wildcards (pattern &optional full
)
6176 "Expand wildcard pattern PATTERN.
6177 This returns a list of file names which match the pattern.
6178 Files are sorted in `string<' order.
6180 If PATTERN is written as an absolute file name,
6181 the values are absolute also.
6183 If PATTERN is written as a relative file name, it is interpreted
6184 relative to the current default directory, `default-directory'.
6185 The file names returned are normally also relative to the current
6186 default directory. However, if FULL is non-nil, they are absolute."
6188 (let* ((nondir (file-name-nondirectory pattern
))
6189 (dirpart (file-name-directory pattern
))
6190 ;; A list of all dirs that DIRPART specifies.
6191 ;; This can be more than one dir
6192 ;; if DIRPART contains wildcards.
6193 (dirs (if (and dirpart
6194 (string-match "[[*?]"
6195 (or (file-remote-p dirpart
'localname
)
6197 (mapcar 'file-name-as-directory
6198 (file-expand-wildcards (directory-file-name dirpart
)))
6202 (when (or (null dir
) ; Possible if DIRPART is not wild.
6203 (file-accessible-directory-p dir
))
6204 (let ((this-dir-contents
6205 ;; Filter out "." and ".."
6207 (mapcar #'(lambda (name)
6208 (unless (string-match "\\`\\.\\.?\\'"
6209 (file-name-nondirectory name
))
6211 (directory-files (or dir
".") full
6212 (wildcard-to-regexp nondir
))))))
6215 (if (and dir
(not full
))
6216 (mapcar #'(lambda (name) (concat dir name
))
6222 ;; Let Tramp know that `file-expand-wildcards' does not need an advice.
6223 (provide 'files
'(remote-wildcards))
6225 (defun list-directory (dirname &optional verbose
)
6226 "Display a list of files in or matching DIRNAME, a la `ls'.
6227 DIRNAME is globbed by the shell if necessary.
6228 Prefix arg (second arg if noninteractive) means supply -l switch to `ls'.
6229 Actions controlled by variables `list-directory-brief-switches'
6230 and `list-directory-verbose-switches'."
6231 (interactive (let ((pfx current-prefix-arg
))
6232 (list (read-directory-name (if pfx
"List directory (verbose): "
6233 "List directory (brief): ")
6234 nil default-directory nil
)
6236 (let ((switches (if verbose list-directory-verbose-switches
6237 list-directory-brief-switches
))
6239 (or dirname
(setq dirname default-directory
))
6240 (setq dirname
(expand-file-name dirname
))
6241 (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Directory*"
6242 (setq buffer standard-output
)
6243 (buffer-disable-undo standard-output
)
6244 (princ "Directory ")
6247 (with-current-buffer "*Directory*"
6248 (let ((wildcard (not (file-directory-p dirname
))))
6249 (insert-directory dirname switches wildcard
(not wildcard
)))))
6250 ;; Finishing with-output-to-temp-buffer seems to clobber default-directory.
6251 (with-current-buffer buffer
6252 (setq default-directory
6253 (if (file-directory-p dirname
)
6254 (file-name-as-directory dirname
)
6255 (file-name-directory dirname
))))))
6257 (defun shell-quote-wildcard-pattern (pattern)
6258 "Quote characters special to the shell in PATTERN, leave wildcards alone.
6260 PATTERN is assumed to represent a file-name wildcard suitable for the
6261 underlying filesystem. For Unix and GNU/Linux, each character from the
6262 set [ \\t\\n;<>&|()\\=`\\='\"#$] is quoted with a backslash; for DOS/Windows, all
6263 the parts of the pattern which don't include wildcard characters are
6264 quoted with double quotes.
6266 This function leaves alone existing quote characters (\\ on Unix and \"
6267 on Windows), so PATTERN can use them to quote wildcard characters that
6268 need to be passed verbatim to shell commands."
6271 ((memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin
))
6272 ;; DOS/Windows don't allow `"' in file names. So if the
6273 ;; argument has quotes, we can safely assume it is already
6274 ;; quoted by the caller.
6275 (if (or (string-match "[\"]" pattern
)
6276 ;; We quote [&()#$`'] in case their shell is a port of a
6277 ;; Unixy shell. We quote [,=+] because stock DOS and
6278 ;; Windows shells require that in some cases, such as
6279 ;; passing arguments to batch files that use positional
6280 ;; arguments like %1.
6281 (not (string-match "[ \t;&()#$`',=+]" pattern
)))
6286 (while (string-match "[*?]+" pattern beg
)
6287 (setq end
(match-beginning 0)
6288 result
(concat result
(substring pattern beg end
)
6290 (substring pattern end
(match-end 0))
6293 (concat result
(substring pattern beg
) "\""))))
6296 (while (string-match "[ \t\n;<>&|()`'\"#$]" pattern beg
)
6298 (concat (substring pattern
0 (match-beginning 0))
6300 (substring pattern
(match-beginning 0)))
6301 beg
(1+ (match-end 0)))))
6305 (defvar insert-directory-program
(purecopy "ls")
6306 "Absolute or relative name of the `ls' program used by `insert-directory'.")
6308 (defcustom directory-free-space-program
(purecopy "df")
6309 "Program to get the amount of free space on a file system.
6310 We assume the output has the format of `df'.
6311 The value of this variable must be just a command name or file name;
6312 if you want to specify options, use `directory-free-space-args'.
6314 A value of nil disables this feature.
6316 If the function `file-system-info' is defined, it is always used in
6317 preference to the program given by this variable."
6318 :type
'(choice (string :tag
"Program") (const :tag
"None" nil
))
6321 (defcustom directory-free-space-args
6322 (purecopy (if (eq system-type
'darwin
) "-k" "-Pk"))
6323 "Options to use when running `directory-free-space-program'."
6327 (defun get-free-disk-space (dir)
6328 "Return the amount of free space on directory DIR's file system.
6329 The return value is a string describing the amount of free
6330 space (normally, the number of free 1KB blocks).
6332 This function calls `file-system-info' if it is available, or
6333 invokes the program specified by `directory-free-space-program'
6334 and `directory-free-space-args'. If the system call or program
6335 is unsuccessful, or if DIR is a remote directory, this function
6337 (unless (file-remote-p (expand-file-name dir
))
6338 ;; Try to find the number of free blocks. Non-Posix systems don't
6339 ;; always have df, but might have an equivalent system call.
6340 (if (fboundp 'file-system-info
)
6341 (let ((fsinfo (file-system-info dir
)))
6343 (format "%.0f" (/ (nth 2 fsinfo
) 1024))))
6344 (setq dir
(expand-file-name dir
))
6347 (when (and directory-free-space-program
6348 ;; Avoid failure if the default directory does
6349 ;; not exist (Bug#2631, Bug#3911).
6350 (let ((default-directory
6351 (locate-dominating-file dir
'file-directory-p
)))
6352 (eq (process-file directory-free-space-program
6354 directory-free-space-args
6355 (file-relative-name dir
))
6357 ;; Assume that the "available" column is before the
6358 ;; "capacity" column. Find the "%" and scan backward.
6359 (goto-char (point-min))
6361 (when (re-search-forward
6362 "[[:space:]]+[^[:space:]]+%[^%]*$"
6363 (line-end-position) t
)
6364 (goto-char (match-beginning 0))
6365 (let ((endpt (point)))
6366 (skip-chars-backward "^[:space:]")
6367 (buffer-substring-no-properties (point) endpt
)))))))))
6369 ;; The following expression replaces `dired-move-to-filename-regexp'.
6370 (defvar directory-listing-before-filename-regexp
6371 (let* ((l "\\([A-Za-z]\\|[^\0-\177]\\)")
6372 (l-or-quote "\\([A-Za-z']\\|[^\0-\177]\\)")
6373 ;; In some locales, month abbreviations are as short as 2 letters,
6374 ;; and they can be followed by ".".
6375 ;; In Breton, a month name can include a quote character.
6376 (month (concat l-or-quote l-or-quote
"+\\.?"))
6378 (yyyy "[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]")
6380 (HH:MM
"[ 0-2][0-9][:.][0-5][0-9]")
6381 (seconds "[0-6][0-9]\\([.,][0-9]+\\)?")
6382 (zone "[-+][0-2][0-9][0-5][0-9]")
6383 (iso-mm-dd "[01][0-9]-[0-3][0-9]")
6384 (iso-time (concat HH
:MM
"\\(:" seconds
"\\( ?" zone
"\\)?\\)?"))
6385 (iso (concat "\\(\\(" yyyy
"-\\)?" iso-mm-dd
"[ T]" iso-time
6386 "\\|" yyyy
"-" iso-mm-dd
"\\)"))
6387 (western (concat "\\(" month s
"+" dd
"\\|" dd
"\\.?" s month
"\\)"
6389 "\\(" HH
:MM
"\\|" yyyy
"\\)"))
6390 (western-comma (concat month s
"+" dd
"," s
"+" yyyy
))
6391 ;; Japanese MS-Windows ls-lisp has one-digit months, and
6392 ;; omits the Kanji characters after month and day-of-month.
6393 ;; On Mac OS X 10.3, the date format in East Asian locales is
6394 ;; day-of-month digits followed by month digits.
6397 (concat "\\(" mm l
"?" s dd l
"?" s
"+"
6398 "\\|" dd s mm s
"+" "\\)"
6399 "\\(" HH
:MM
"\\|" yyyy l
"?" "\\)")))
6400 ;; The "[0-9]" below requires the previous column to end in a digit.
6401 ;; This avoids recognizing `1 may 1997' as a date in the line:
6402 ;; -r--r--r-- 1 may 1997 1168 Oct 19 16:49 README
6404 ;; The "[BkKMGTPEZY]?" below supports "ls -alh" output.
6406 ;; For non-iso date formats, we add the ".*" in order to find
6407 ;; the last possible match. This avoids recognizing
6408 ;; `jservice 10 1024' as a date in the line:
6409 ;; drwxr-xr-x 3 jservice 10 1024 Jul 2 1997 esg-host
6411 ;; vc dired listings provide the state or blanks between file
6412 ;; permissions and date. The state is always surrounded by
6414 ;; -rw-r--r-- (modified) 2005-10-22 21:25 files.el
6415 ;; This is not supported yet.
6416 (purecopy (concat "\\([0-9][BkKMGTPEZY]? " iso
6417 "\\|.*[0-9][BkKMGTPEZY]? "
6418 "\\(" western
"\\|" western-comma
"\\|" east-asian
"\\)"
6420 "Regular expression to match up to the file name in a directory listing.
6421 The default value is designed to recognize dates and times
6422 regardless of the language.")
6424 (defvar insert-directory-ls-version
'unknown
)
6427 ;; - must insert _exactly_one_line_ describing FILE if WILDCARD and
6428 ;; FULL-DIRECTORY-P is nil.
6429 ;; The single line of output must display FILE's name as it was
6430 ;; given, namely, an absolute path name.
6431 ;; - must insert exactly one line for each file if WILDCARD or
6432 ;; FULL-DIRECTORY-P is t, plus one optional "total" line
6433 ;; before the file lines, plus optional text after the file lines.
6434 ;; Lines are delimited by "\n", so filenames containing "\n" are not
6436 ;; File lines should display the basename.
6437 ;; - must be consistent with
6438 ;; - functions dired-move-to-filename, (these two define what a file line is)
6439 ;; dired-move-to-end-of-filename,
6440 ;; dired-between-files, (shortcut for (not (dired-move-to-filename)))
6441 ;; dired-insert-headerline
6442 ;; dired-after-subdir-garbage (defines what a "total" line is)
6443 ;; - variable dired-subdir-regexp
6444 ;; - may be passed "--dired" as the first argument in SWITCHES.
6445 ;; Filename handlers might have to remove this switch if their
6446 ;; "ls" command does not support it.
6447 (defun insert-directory (file switches
&optional wildcard full-directory-p
)
6448 "Insert directory listing for FILE, formatted according to SWITCHES.
6449 Leaves point after the inserted text.
6450 SWITCHES may be a string of options, or a list of strings
6451 representing individual options.
6452 Optional third arg WILDCARD means treat FILE as shell wildcard.
6453 Optional fourth arg FULL-DIRECTORY-P means file is a directory and
6454 switches do not contain `d', so that a full listing is expected.
6456 This works by running a directory listing program
6457 whose name is in the variable `insert-directory-program'.
6458 If WILDCARD, it also runs the shell specified by `shell-file-name'.
6460 When SWITCHES contains the long `--dired' option, this function
6461 treats it specially, for the sake of dired. However, the
6462 normally equivalent short `-D' option is just passed on to
6463 `insert-directory-program', as any other option."
6464 ;; We need the directory in order to find the right handler.
6465 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler (expand-file-name file
)
6466 'insert-directory
)))
6468 (funcall handler
'insert-directory file switches
6469 wildcard full-directory-p
)
6470 (let (result (beg (point)))
6472 ;; Read the actual directory using `insert-directory-program'.
6473 ;; RESULT gets the status code.
6474 (let* (;; We at first read by no-conversion, then after
6475 ;; putting text property `dired-filename, decode one
6476 ;; bunch by one to preserve that property.
6477 (coding-system-for-read 'no-conversion
)
6478 ;; This is to control encoding the arguments in call-process.
6479 (coding-system-for-write
6480 (and enable-multibyte-characters
6481 (or file-name-coding-system
6482 default-file-name-coding-system
))))
6485 ;; Run ls in the directory part of the file pattern
6486 ;; using the last component as argument.
6487 (let ((default-directory
6488 (if (file-name-absolute-p file
)
6489 (file-name-directory file
)
6490 (file-name-directory (expand-file-name file
))))
6491 (pattern (file-name-nondirectory file
)))
6492 ;; NB since switches is passed to the shell, be
6493 ;; careful of malicious values, eg "-l;reboot".
6494 ;; See eg dired-safe-switches-p.
6496 shell-file-name nil t nil
6498 (concat (if (memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt
))
6500 "\\") ; Disregard Unix shell aliases!
6501 insert-directory-program
6503 (if (stringp switches
)
6505 (mapconcat 'identity switches
" "))
6507 ;; Quote some characters that have
6508 ;; special meanings in shells; but
6509 ;; don't quote the wildcards--we want
6510 ;; them to be special. We also
6511 ;; currently don't quote the quoting
6512 ;; characters in case people want to
6513 ;; use them explicitly to quote
6514 ;; wildcard characters.
6515 (shell-quote-wildcard-pattern pattern
))))
6516 ;; SunOS 4.1.3, SVr4 and others need the "." to list the
6517 ;; directory if FILE is a symbolic link.
6518 (unless full-directory-p
6521 ((stringp switches
) (concat switches
" -d"))
6522 ((member "-d" switches
) switches
)
6523 (t (append switches
'("-d"))))))
6524 (apply 'call-process
6525 insert-directory-program nil t nil
6527 (if (listp switches
) switches
6528 (unless (equal switches
"")
6529 ;; Split the switches at any spaces so we can
6530 ;; pass separate options as separate args.
6531 (split-string switches
)))
6532 ;; Avoid lossage if FILE starts with `-'.
6535 (if (string-match "\\`~" file
)
6536 (setq file
(expand-file-name file
)))
6538 (if full-directory-p
6539 (concat (file-name-as-directory file
) ".")
6542 ;; If we got "//DIRED//" in the output, it means we got a real
6543 ;; directory listing, even if `ls' returned nonzero.
6544 ;; So ignore any errors.
6545 (when (if (stringp switches
)
6546 (string-match "--dired\\>" switches
)
6547 (member "--dired" switches
))
6550 (when (looking-at "//SUBDIRED//")
6552 (if (looking-at "//DIRED//")
6555 (when (and (not (eq 0 result
))
6556 (eq insert-directory-ls-version
'unknown
))
6557 ;; The first time ls returns an error,
6558 ;; find the version numbers of ls,
6559 ;; and set insert-directory-ls-version
6560 ;; to > if it is more than 5.2.1, < if it is less, nil if it
6561 ;; is equal or if the info cannot be obtained.
6562 ;; (That can mean it isn't GNU ls.)
6565 (call-process "ls" nil t nil
"--version")
6567 (if (string-match "ls (.*utils) \\([0-9.]*\\)$" version-out
)
6568 (let* ((version (match-string 1 version-out
))
6569 (split (split-string version
"[.]"))
6570 (numbers (mapcar 'string-to-number split
))
6573 (while (and (not comparison
) (or numbers min
))
6575 (setq comparison
'>))
6577 (setq comparison
'<))
6578 ((> (car numbers
) (car min
))
6579 (setq comparison
'>))
6580 ((< (car numbers
) (car min
))
6581 (setq comparison
'<))
6583 (setq numbers
(cdr numbers
)
6585 (setq insert-directory-ls-version
(or comparison
'=)))
6586 (setq insert-directory-ls-version nil
))))
6588 ;; For GNU ls versions 5.2.2 and up, ignore minor errors.
6589 (when (and (eq 1 result
) (eq insert-directory-ls-version
'>))
6592 ;; If `insert-directory-program' failed, signal an error.
6593 (unless (eq 0 result
)
6594 ;; Delete the error message it may have output.
6595 (delete-region beg
(point))
6596 ;; On non-Posix systems, we cannot open a directory, so
6597 ;; don't even try, because that will always result in
6598 ;; the ubiquitous "Access denied". Instead, show the
6599 ;; command line so the user can try to guess what went wrong.
6600 (if (and (file-directory-p file
)
6601 (memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt
)))
6603 "Reading directory: \"%s %s -- %s\" exited with status %s"
6604 insert-directory-program
6605 (if (listp switches
) (concat switches
) switches
)
6607 ;; Unix. Access the file to get a suitable error.
6608 (access-file file
"Reading directory")
6609 (error "Listing directory failed but `access-file' worked")))
6611 (when (if (stringp switches
)
6612 (string-match "--dired\\>" switches
)
6613 (member "--dired" switches
))
6614 ;; The following overshoots by one line for an empty
6615 ;; directory listed with "--dired", but without "-a"
6616 ;; switch, where the ls output contains a
6617 ;; "//DIRED-OPTIONS//" line, but no "//DIRED//" line.
6618 ;; We take care of that case later.
6620 (when (looking-at "//SUBDIRED//")
6621 (delete-region (point) (progn (forward-line 1) (point)))
6623 (if (looking-at "//DIRED//")
6624 (let ((end (line-end-position))
6627 ;; Find all the lines that are error messages,
6628 ;; and record the bounds of each one.
6630 (while (< (point) linebeg
)
6631 (or (eql (following-char) ?\s
)
6632 (push (list (point) (line-end-position)) error-lines
))
6634 (setq error-lines
(nreverse error-lines
))
6635 ;; Now read the numeric positions of file names.
6637 (forward-word-strictly 1)
6639 (while (< (point) end
)
6640 (let ((start (insert-directory-adj-pos
6641 (+ beg
(read (current-buffer)))
6643 (end (insert-directory-adj-pos
6644 (+ beg
(read (current-buffer)))
6646 (if (memq (char-after end
) '(?
\n ?\s
))
6647 ;; End is followed by \n or by " -> ".
6648 (put-text-property start end
'dired-filename t
)
6649 ;; It seems that we can't trust ls's output as to
6650 ;; byte positions of filenames.
6651 (put-text-property beg
(point) 'dired-filename nil
)
6655 (delete-region (point) (progn (forward-line 1) (point))))
6656 ;; Take care of the case where the ls output contains a
6657 ;; "//DIRED-OPTIONS//"-line, but no "//DIRED//"-line
6658 ;; and we went one line too far back (see above).
6660 (if (looking-at "//DIRED-OPTIONS//")
6661 (delete-region (point) (progn (forward-line 1) (point)))))
6663 ;; Now decode what read if necessary.
6664 (let ((coding (or coding-system-for-read
6665 file-name-coding-system
6666 default-file-name-coding-system
6670 (when (and enable-multibyte-characters
6671 (not (memq (coding-system-base coding
)
6672 '(raw-text no-conversion
))))
6673 ;; If no coding system is specified or detection is
6674 ;; requested, detect the coding.
6675 (if (eq (coding-system-base coding
) 'undecided
)
6676 (setq coding
(detect-coding-region beg
(point) t
)))
6677 (if (not (eq (coding-system-base coding
) 'undecided
))
6680 (coding-system-change-eol-conversion coding
'unix
))
6681 (narrow-to-region beg
(point))
6682 (goto-char (point-min))
6685 val
(get-text-property (point) 'dired-filename
))
6686 (goto-char (next-single-property-change
6687 (point) 'dired-filename nil
(point-max)))
6688 ;; Force no eol conversion on a file name, so
6689 ;; that CR is preserved.
6690 (decode-coding-region pos
(point)
6691 (if val coding-no-eol coding
))
6693 (put-text-property pos
(point)
6694 'dired-filename t
)))))))
6696 (if full-directory-p
6697 ;; Try to insert the amount of free space.
6700 ;; First find the line to put it on.
6701 (when (re-search-forward "^ *\\(total\\)" nil t
)
6702 (let ((available (get-free-disk-space ".")))
6704 ;; Replace "total" with "used", to avoid confusion.
6705 (replace-match "total used in directory" nil nil nil
1)
6707 (insert " available " available
))))))))))
6709 (defun insert-directory-adj-pos (pos error-lines
)
6710 "Convert `ls --dired' file name position value POS to a buffer position.
6711 File name position values returned in ls --dired output
6712 count only stdout; they don't count the error messages sent to stderr.
6713 So this function converts to them to real buffer positions.
6714 ERROR-LINES is a list of buffer positions of error message lines,
6715 of the form (START END)."
6716 (while (and error-lines
(< (caar error-lines
) pos
))
6717 (setq pos
(+ pos
(- (nth 1 (car error-lines
)) (nth 0 (car error-lines
)))))
6721 (defun insert-directory-safely (file switches
6722 &optional wildcard full-directory-p
)
6723 "Insert directory listing for FILE, formatted according to SWITCHES.
6725 Like `insert-directory', but if FILE does not exist, it inserts a
6726 message to that effect instead of signaling an error."
6727 (if (file-exists-p file
)
6728 (insert-directory file switches wildcard full-directory-p
)
6729 ;; Simulate the message printed by `ls'.
6730 (insert (format "%s: No such file or directory\n" file
))))
6732 (defcustom kill-emacs-query-functions nil
6733 "Functions to call with no arguments to query about killing Emacs.
6734 If any of these functions returns nil, killing Emacs is canceled.
6735 `save-buffers-kill-emacs' calls these functions, but `kill-emacs',
6736 the low level primitive, does not. See also `kill-emacs-hook'."
6739 :group
'convenience
)
6741 (defcustom confirm-kill-emacs nil
6742 "How to ask for confirmation when leaving Emacs.
6743 If nil, the default, don't ask at all. If the value is non-nil, it should
6744 be a predicate function; for example `yes-or-no-p'."
6745 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"Ask with yes-or-no-p" yes-or-no-p
)
6746 (const :tag
"Ask with y-or-n-p" y-or-n-p
)
6747 (const :tag
"Don't confirm" nil
)
6748 (function :tag
"Predicate function"))
6752 (defun save-buffers-kill-emacs (&optional arg
)
6753 "Offer to save each buffer, then kill this Emacs process.
6754 With prefix ARG, silently save all file-visiting buffers without asking.
6755 If there are active processes where `process-query-on-exit-flag'
6756 returns non-nil, asks whether processes should be killed.
6757 Runs the members of `kill-emacs-query-functions' in turn and stops
6758 if any returns nil. If `confirm-kill-emacs' is non-nil, calls it."
6760 (save-some-buffers arg t
)
6761 (let ((confirm confirm-kill-emacs
))
6763 (or (not (memq t
(mapcar (function
6764 (lambda (buf) (and (buffer-file-name buf
)
6765 (buffer-modified-p buf
))))
6767 (progn (setq confirm nil
)
6768 (yes-or-no-p "Modified buffers exist; exit anyway? ")))
6769 (or (not (fboundp 'process-list
))
6770 ;; process-list is not defined on MSDOS.
6771 (let ((processes (process-list))
6774 (and (memq (process-status (car processes
)) '(run stop open listen
))
6775 (process-query-on-exit-flag (car processes
))
6777 (setq processes
(cdr processes
)))
6779 (with-current-buffer-window
6780 (get-buffer-create "*Process List*") nil
6781 #'(lambda (window _value
)
6782 (with-selected-window window
6786 (yes-or-no-p "Active processes exist; kill them and exit anyway? "))
6787 (when (window-live-p window
)
6788 (quit-restore-window window
'kill
)))))
6789 (list-processes t
)))))
6790 ;; Query the user for other things, perhaps.
6791 (run-hook-with-args-until-failure 'kill-emacs-query-functions
)
6793 (funcall confirm
"Really exit Emacs? "))
6796 (defun save-buffers-kill-terminal (&optional arg
)
6797 "Offer to save each buffer, then kill the current connection.
6798 If the current frame has no client, kill Emacs itself using
6799 `save-buffers-kill-emacs'.
6801 With prefix ARG, silently save all file-visiting buffers, then kill.
6803 If emacsclient was started with a list of filenames to edit, then
6804 only these files will be asked to be saved."
6806 (if (frame-parameter nil
'client
)
6807 (server-save-buffers-kill-terminal arg
)
6808 (save-buffers-kill-emacs arg
)))
6810 ;; We use /: as a prefix to "quote" a file name
6811 ;; so that magic file name handlers will not apply to it.
6813 (setq file-name-handler-alist
6814 (cons (cons (purecopy "\\`/:") 'file-name-non-special
)
6815 file-name-handler-alist
))
6817 ;; We depend on being the last handler on the list,
6818 ;; so that anything else which does need handling
6819 ;; has been handled already.
6820 ;; So it is safe for us to inhibit *all* magic file name handlers.
6822 (defun file-name-non-special (operation &rest arguments
)
6823 (let ((file-name-handler-alist nil
)
6825 (if (eq operation
'insert-directory
)
6826 (directory-file-name
6828 (unhandled-file-name-directory default-directory
)))
6830 ;; Get a list of the indices of the args which are file names.
6832 (cdr (or (assq operation
6833 ;; The first six are special because they
6834 ;; return a file name. We want to include the /:
6835 ;; in the return value.
6836 ;; So just avoid stripping it in the first place.
6837 '((expand-file-name . nil
)
6838 (file-name-directory . nil
)
6839 (file-name-as-directory . nil
)
6840 (directory-file-name . nil
)
6841 (file-name-sans-versions . nil
)
6842 (find-backup-file-name . nil
)
6843 ;; `identity' means just return the first arg
6844 ;; not stripped of its quoting.
6845 (substitute-in-file-name identity
)
6846 ;; `add' means add "/:" to the result.
6847 (file-truename add
0)
6848 (insert-file-contents insert-file-contents
0)
6849 ;; `unquote-then-quote' means set buffer-file-name
6850 ;; temporarily to unquoted filename.
6851 (verify-visited-file-modtime unquote-then-quote
)
6852 ;; List the arguments which are filenames.
6853 (file-name-completion 1)
6854 (file-name-all-completions 1)
6858 (make-symbolic-link 0 1)
6859 (add-name-to-file 0 1)))
6860 ;; For all other operations, treat the first argument only
6861 ;; as the file name.
6864 ;; Copy ARGUMENTS so we can replace elements in it.
6865 (arguments (copy-sequence arguments
)))
6866 (if (symbolp (car file-arg-indices
))
6867 (setq method
(pop file-arg-indices
)))
6868 ;; Strip off the /: from the file names that have it.
6870 (while (consp file-arg-indices
)
6871 (let ((pair (nthcdr (car file-arg-indices
) arguments
)))
6873 (string-match "\\`/:" (car pair
))
6875 (if (= (length (car pair
)) 2)
6877 (substring (car pair
) 2)))))
6878 (setq file-arg-indices
(cdr file-arg-indices
))))
6880 (`identity
(car arguments
))
6881 (`add
(concat "/:" (apply operation arguments
)))
6882 (`insert-file-contents
6883 (let ((visit (nth 1 arguments
)))
6885 (apply operation arguments
)
6886 (when (and visit buffer-file-name
)
6887 (setq buffer-file-name
(concat "/:" buffer-file-name
))))))
6888 (`unquote-then-quote
6889 (let ((buffer-file-name (substring buffer-file-name
2)))
6890 (apply operation arguments
)))
6892 (apply operation arguments
)))))
6894 ;; Symbolic modes and read-file-modes.
6896 (defun file-modes-char-to-who (char)
6897 "Convert CHAR to a numeric bit-mask for extracting mode bits.
6898 CHAR is in [ugoa] and represents the category of users (Owner, Group,
6899 Others, or All) for whom to produce the mask.
6900 The bit-mask that is returned extracts from mode bits the access rights
6901 for the specified category of users."
6902 (cond ((= char ?u
) #o4700
)
6903 ((= char ?g
) #o2070
)
6904 ((= char ?o
) #o1007
)
6905 ((= char ?a
) #o7777
)
6906 (t (error "%c: bad `who' character" char
))))
6908 (defun file-modes-char-to-right (char &optional from
)
6909 "Convert CHAR to a numeric value of mode bits.
6910 CHAR is in [rwxXstugo] and represents symbolic access permissions.
6911 If CHAR is in [Xugo], the value is taken from FROM (or 0 if omitted)."
6912 (or from
(setq from
0))
6913 (cond ((= char ?r
) #o0444
)
6914 ((= char ?w
) #o0222
)
6915 ((= char ?x
) #o0111
)
6916 ((= char ?s
) #o6000
)
6917 ((= char ?t
) #o1000
)
6918 ;; Rights relative to the previous file modes.
6919 ((= char ?X
) (if (= (logand from
#o111
) 0) 0 #o0111
))
6920 ((= char ?u
) (let ((uright (logand #o4700 from
)))
6921 (+ uright
(/ uright
#o10
) (/ uright
#o100
))))
6922 ((= char ?g
) (let ((gright (logand #o2070 from
)))
6923 (+ gright
(/ gright
#o10
) (* gright
#o10
))))
6924 ((= char ?o
) (let ((oright (logand #o1007 from
)))
6925 (+ oright
(* oright
#o10
) (* oright
#o100
))))
6926 (t (error "%c: bad right character" char
))))
6928 (defun file-modes-rights-to-number (rights who-mask
&optional from
)
6929 "Convert a symbolic mode string specification to an equivalent number.
6930 RIGHTS is the symbolic mode spec, it should match \"([+=-][rwxXstugo]*)+\".
6931 WHO-MASK is the bit-mask specifying the category of users to which to
6932 apply the access permissions. See `file-modes-char-to-who'.
6933 FROM (or 0 if nil) gives the mode bits on which to base permissions if
6934 RIGHTS request to add, remove, or set permissions based on existing ones,
6936 (let* ((num-rights (or from
0))
6937 (list-rights (string-to-list rights
))
6938 (op (pop list-rights
)))
6939 (while (memq op
'(?
+ ?- ?
=))
6942 (while (memq (setq char-right
(pop list-rights
))
6943 '(?r ?w ?x ?X ?s ?t ?u ?g ?o
))
6946 (file-modes-char-to-right char-right num-rights
))))
6947 (setq num-right
(logand who-mask num-right
)
6949 (cond ((= op ?
+) (logior num-rights num-right
))
6950 ((= op ?-
) (logand num-rights
(lognot num-right
)))
6951 (t (logior (logand num-rights
(lognot who-mask
)) num-right
)))
6955 (defun file-modes-symbolic-to-number (modes &optional from
)
6956 "Convert symbolic file modes to numeric file modes.
6957 MODES is the string to convert, it should match
6958 \"[ugoa]*([+-=][rwxXstugo]*)+,...\".
6959 See Info node `(coreutils)File permissions' for more information on this
6961 FROM (or 0 if nil) gives the mode bits on which to base permissions if
6962 MODES request to add, remove, or set permissions based on existing ones,
6965 (let ((case-fold-search nil
)
6966 (num-modes (or from
0)))
6967 (while (/= (string-to-char modes
) 0)
6968 (if (string-match "^\\([ugoa]*\\)\\([+=-][rwxXstugo]*\\)+\\(,\\|\\)" modes
)
6969 (let ((num-who (apply 'logior
0
6970 (mapcar 'file-modes-char-to-who
6971 (match-string 1 modes
)))))
6973 (setq num-who
(logior #o7000
(default-file-modes))))
6975 (file-modes-rights-to-number (substring modes
(match-end 1))
6977 modes
(substring modes
(match-end 3))))
6978 (error "Parse error in modes near `%s'" (substring modes
0))))
6981 (defun read-file-modes (&optional prompt orig-file
)
6982 "Read file modes in octal or symbolic notation and return its numeric value.
6983 PROMPT is used as the prompt, default to \"File modes (octal or symbolic): \".
6984 ORIG-FILE is the name of a file on whose mode bits to base returned
6985 permissions if what user types requests to add, remove, or set permissions
6986 based on existing mode bits, as in \"og+rX-w\"."
6987 (let* ((modes (or (if orig-file
(file-modes orig-file
) 0)
6988 (error "File not found")))
6989 (modestr (and (stringp orig-file
)
6990 (nth 8 (file-attributes orig-file
))))
6992 (and (stringp modestr
)
6993 (string-match "^.\\(...\\)\\(...\\)\\(...\\)$" modestr
)
6994 (replace-regexp-in-string
6996 (format "u=%s,g=%s,o=%s"
6997 (match-string 1 modestr
)
6998 (match-string 2 modestr
)
6999 (match-string 3 modestr
)))))
7000 (value (read-string (or prompt
"File modes (octal or symbolic): ")
7003 (if (string-match "^[0-7]+" value
)
7004 (string-to-number value
8)
7005 (file-modes-symbolic-to-number value modes
)))))
7007 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'cache-long-line-scans
7008 'cache-long-scans
"24.4")
7010 ;; Trashcan handling.
7011 (defcustom trash-directory nil
7012 "Directory for `move-file-to-trash' to move files and directories to.
7013 This directory is only used when the function `system-move-file-to-trash'
7015 Relative paths are interpreted relative to `default-directory'.
7016 If the value is nil, Emacs uses a freedesktop.org-style trashcan."
7017 :type
'(choice (const nil
) directory
)
7021 (defvar trash--hexify-table
)
7023 (declare-function system-move-file-to-trash
"w32fns.c" (filename))
7025 (defun move-file-to-trash (filename)
7026 "Move the file (or directory) named FILENAME to the trash.
7027 When `delete-by-moving-to-trash' is non-nil, this function is
7028 called by `delete-file' and `delete-directory' instead of
7029 deleting files outright.
7031 If the function `system-move-file-to-trash' is defined, call it
7032 with FILENAME as an argument.
7033 Otherwise, if `trash-directory' is non-nil, move FILENAME to that
7035 Otherwise, trash FILENAME using the freedesktop.org conventions,
7036 like the GNOME, KDE and XFCE desktop environments. Emacs only
7037 moves files to \"home trash\", ignoring per-volume trashcans."
7038 (interactive "fMove file to trash: ")
7039 (cond (trash-directory
7040 ;; If `trash-directory' is non-nil, move the file there.
7041 (let* ((trash-dir (expand-file-name trash-directory
))
7042 (fn (directory-file-name (expand-file-name filename
)))
7043 (new-fn (expand-file-name (file-name-nondirectory fn
)
7045 ;; We can't trash a parent directory of trash-directory.
7046 (if (string-prefix-p fn trash-dir
)
7047 (error "Trash directory `%s' is a subdirectory of `%s'"
7048 trash-dir filename
))
7049 (unless (file-directory-p trash-dir
)
7050 (make-directory trash-dir t
))
7051 ;; Ensure that the trashed file-name is unique.
7052 (if (file-exists-p new-fn
)
7053 (let ((version-control t
)
7054 (backup-directory-alist nil
))
7055 (setq new-fn
(car (find-backup-file-name new-fn
)))))
7056 (let (delete-by-moving-to-trash)
7057 (rename-file fn new-fn
))))
7058 ;; If `system-move-file-to-trash' is defined, use it.
7059 ((fboundp 'system-move-file-to-trash
)
7060 (system-move-file-to-trash filename
))
7061 ;; Otherwise, use the freedesktop.org method, as specified at
7062 ;; http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/trash-spec
7064 (let* ((xdg-data-dir
7065 (directory-file-name
7066 (expand-file-name "Trash"
7067 (or (getenv "XDG_DATA_HOME")
7068 "~/.local/share"))))
7069 (trash-files-dir (expand-file-name "files" xdg-data-dir
))
7070 (trash-info-dir (expand-file-name "info" xdg-data-dir
))
7071 (fn (directory-file-name (expand-file-name filename
))))
7073 ;; Check if we have permissions to delete.
7074 (unless (file-writable-p (directory-file-name
7075 (file-name-directory fn
)))
7076 (error "Cannot move %s to trash: Permission denied" filename
))
7077 ;; The trashed file cannot be the trash dir or its parent.
7078 (if (string-prefix-p fn trash-files-dir
)
7079 (error "The trash directory %s is a subdirectory of %s"
7080 trash-files-dir filename
))
7081 (if (string-prefix-p fn trash-info-dir
)
7082 (error "The trash directory %s is a subdirectory of %s"
7083 trash-info-dir filename
))
7085 ;; Ensure that the trash directory exists; otherwise, create it.
7086 (with-file-modes #o700
7087 (unless (file-exists-p trash-files-dir
)
7088 (make-directory trash-files-dir t
))
7089 (unless (file-exists-p trash-info-dir
)
7090 (make-directory trash-info-dir t
)))
7092 ;; Try to move to trash with .trashinfo undo information
7095 (set-buffer-file-coding-system 'utf-8-unix
)
7096 (insert "[Trash Info]\nPath=")
7097 ;; Perform url-encoding on FN. For compatibility with
7098 ;; other programs (e.g. XFCE Thunar), allow literal "/"
7099 ;; for path separators.
7100 (unless (boundp 'trash--hexify-table
)
7101 (setq trash--hexify-table
(make-vector 256 nil
))
7102 (let ((unreserved-chars
7103 (list ?
/ ?a ?b ?c ?d ?e ?f ?g ?h ?i ?j ?k ?l ?m
7104 ?n ?o ?p ?q ?r ?s ?t ?u ?v ?w ?x ?y ?z ?A
7105 ?B ?C ?D ?E ?F ?G ?H ?I ?J ?K ?L ?M ?N ?O
7106 ?P ?Q ?R ?S ?T ?U ?V ?W ?X ?Y ?Z ?
0 ?
1 ?
2
7107 ?
3 ?
4 ?
5 ?
6 ?
7 ?
8 ?
9 ?- ?_ ?. ?
! ?~ ?
* ?
'
7110 (aset trash--hexify-table byte
7111 (if (memq byte unreserved-chars
)
7112 (char-to-string byte
)
7113 (format "%%%02x" byte
))))))
7114 (mapc (lambda (byte)
7115 (insert (aref trash--hexify-table byte
)))
7116 (if (multibyte-string-p fn
)
7117 (encode-coding-string fn
'utf-8
)
7119 (insert "\nDeletionDate="
7120 (format-time-string "%Y-%m-%dT%T")
7123 ;; Attempt to make .trashinfo file, trying up to 5
7124 ;; times. The .trashinfo file is opened with O_EXCL,
7125 ;; as per trash-spec 0.7, even if that can be a problem
7126 ;; on old NFS versions...
7128 (base-fn (expand-file-name
7129 (file-name-nondirectory fn
)
7134 (setq info-fn
(expand-file-name
7135 (concat (file-name-nondirectory new-fn
)
7138 (unless (condition-case nil
7140 (write-region nil nil info-fn nil
7141 'quiet info-fn
'excl
)
7142 (setq tries
0 success t
))
7143 (file-already-exists nil
))
7144 (setq tries
(1- tries
))
7145 ;; Uniquify new-fn. (Some file managers do not
7146 ;; like Emacs-style backup file names---e.g. bug
7147 ;; 170956 in Konqueror bug tracker.)
7148 (setq new-fn
(make-temp-name (concat base-fn
"_")))))
7150 (error "Cannot move %s to trash: Lock failed" filename
))
7152 ;; Finally, try to move the file to the trashcan.
7153 (let ((delete-by-moving-to-trash nil
))
7154 (rename-file fn new-fn
)))))))))
7156 (defsubst file-attribute-type
(attributes)
7157 "The type field in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
7158 The value is either t for directory, string (name linked to) for
7159 symbolic link, or nil."
7162 (defsubst file-attribute-link-number
(attributes)
7163 "Return the number of links in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'."
7166 (defsubst file-attribute-user-id
(attributes)
7167 "The UID field in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
7168 This is either a string or a number. If a string value cannot be
7169 looked up, a numeric value, either an integer or a float, is
7173 (defsubst file-attribute-group-id
(attributes)
7174 "The GID field in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
7175 This is either a string or a number. If a string value cannot be
7176 looked up, a numeric value, either an integer or a float, is
7180 (defsubst file-attribute-access-time
(attributes)
7181 "The last access time in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
7182 This a list of integers (HIGH LOW USEC PSEC) in the same style
7186 (defsubst file-attribute-modification-time
(attributes)
7187 "The modification time in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
7188 This is the time of the last change to the file's contents, and
7189 is a list of integers (HIGH LOW USEC PSEC) in the same style
7193 (defsubst file-attribute-status-change-time
(attributes)
7194 "The status modification time in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
7195 This is the time of last change to the file's attributes: owner
7196 and group, access mode bits, etc, and is a list of integers (HIGH
7197 LOW USEC PSEC) in the same style as (current-time)."
7200 (defsubst file-attribute-size
(attributes)
7201 "The size (in bytes) in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
7202 This is a floating point number if the size is too large for an integer."
7205 (defsubst file-attribute-modes
(attributes)
7206 "The file modes in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
7207 This is a string of ten letters or dashes as in ls -l."
7210 (defsubst file-attribute-inode-number
(attributes)
7211 "The inode number in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
7212 If it is larger than what an Emacs integer can hold, this is of
7213 the form (HIGH . LOW): first the high bits, then the low 16 bits.
7214 If even HIGH is too large for an Emacs integer, this is instead
7215 of the form (HIGH MIDDLE . LOW): first the high bits, then the
7216 middle 24 bits, and finally the low 16 bits."
7217 (nth 10 attributes
))
7219 (defsubst file-attribute-device-number
(attributes)
7220 "The file system device number in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
7221 If it is larger than what an Emacs integer can hold, this is of
7222 the form (HIGH . LOW): first the high bits, then the low 16 bits.
7223 If even HIGH is too large for an Emacs integer, this is instead
7224 of the form (HIGH MIDDLE . LOW): first the high bits, then the
7225 middle 24 bits, and finally the low 16 bits."
7226 (nth 11 attributes
))
7229 (define-key ctl-x-map
"\C-f" 'find-file
)
7230 (define-key ctl-x-map
"\C-r" 'find-file-read-only
)
7231 (define-key ctl-x-map
"\C-v" 'find-alternate-file
)
7232 (define-key ctl-x-map
"\C-s" 'save-buffer
)
7233 (define-key ctl-x-map
"s" 'save-some-buffers
)
7234 (define-key ctl-x-map
"\C-w" 'write-file
)
7235 (define-key ctl-x-map
"i" 'insert-file
)
7236 (define-key esc-map
"~" 'not-modified
)
7237 (define-key ctl-x-map
"\C-d" 'list-directory
)
7238 (define-key ctl-x-map
"\C-c" 'save-buffers-kill-terminal
)
7239 (define-key ctl-x-map
"\C-q" 'read-only-mode
)
7241 (define-key ctl-x-4-map
"f" 'find-file-other-window
)
7242 (define-key ctl-x-4-map
"r" 'find-file-read-only-other-window
)
7243 (define-key ctl-x-4-map
"\C-f" 'find-file-other-window
)
7244 (define-key ctl-x-4-map
"b" 'switch-to-buffer-other-window
)
7245 (define-key ctl-x-4-map
"\C-o" 'display-buffer
)
7247 (define-key ctl-x-5-map
"b" 'switch-to-buffer-other-frame
)
7248 (define-key ctl-x-5-map
"f" 'find-file-other-frame
)
7249 (define-key ctl-x-5-map
"\C-f" 'find-file-other-frame
)
7250 (define-key ctl-x-5-map
"r" 'find-file-read-only-other-frame
)
7251 (define-key ctl-x-5-map
"\C-o" 'display-buffer-other-frame
)
7253 ;;; files.el ends here