gccrs: dump: Fix module dumping
[official-gcc.git] / gcc / diagnostic-color.cc
blob5f2856d18e48a642ef8646baa41a130926d8f387
1 /* Output colorization.
2 Copyright (C) 2011-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
5 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
6 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option)
7 any later version.
9 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
10 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
11 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
12 GNU General Public License for more details.
14 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
15 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
16 Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
17 02110-1301, USA. */
19 #include "config.h"
20 #include "system.h"
21 #include "diagnostic-color.h"
22 #include "diagnostic-url.h"
24 #ifdef __MINGW32__
25 # define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN
26 # include <windows.h>
27 #endif
29 #include "color-macros.h"
31 /* The context and logic for choosing default --color screen attributes
32 (foreground and background colors, etc.) are the following.
33 -- There are eight basic colors available, each with its own
34 nominal luminosity to the human eye and foreground/background
35 codes (black [0 %, 30/40], blue [11 %, 34/44], red [30 %, 31/41],
36 magenta [41 %, 35/45], green [59 %, 32/42], cyan [70 %, 36/46],
37 yellow [89 %, 33/43], and white [100 %, 37/47]).
38 -- Sometimes, white as a background is actually implemented using
39 a shade of light gray, so that a foreground white can be visible
40 on top of it (but most often not).
41 -- Sometimes, black as a foreground is actually implemented using
42 a shade of dark gray, so that it can be visible on top of a
43 background black (but most often not).
44 -- Sometimes, more colors are available, as extensions.
45 -- Other attributes can be selected/deselected (bold [1/22],
46 underline [4/24], standout/inverse [7/27], blink [5/25], and
47 invisible/hidden [8/28]). They are sometimes implemented by
48 using colors instead of what their names imply; e.g., bold is
49 often achieved by using brighter colors. In practice, only bold
50 is really available to us, underline sometimes being mapped by
51 the terminal to some strange color choice, and standout best
52 being left for use by downstream programs such as less(1).
53 -- We cannot assume that any of the extensions or special features
54 are available for the purpose of choosing defaults for everyone.
55 -- The most prevalent default terminal backgrounds are pure black
56 and pure white, and are not necessarily the same shades of
57 those as if they were selected explicitly with SGR sequences.
58 Some terminals use dark or light pictures as default background,
59 but those are covered over by an explicit selection of background
60 color with an SGR sequence; their users will appreciate their
61 background pictures not be covered like this, if possible.
62 -- Some uses of colors attributes is to make some output items
63 more understated (e.g., context lines); this cannot be achieved
64 by changing the background color.
65 -- For these reasons, the GCC color defaults should strive not
66 to change the background color from its default, unless it's
67 for a short item that should be highlighted, not understated.
68 -- The GCC foreground color defaults (without an explicitly set
69 background) should provide enough contrast to be readable on any
70 terminal with either a black (dark) or white (light) background.
71 This only leaves red, magenta, green, and cyan (and their bold
72 counterparts) and possibly bold blue. */
73 /* Default colors. The user can overwrite them using environment
74 variable GCC_COLORS. */
75 struct color_cap
77 const char *name;
78 const char *val;
79 unsigned char name_len;
80 bool free_val;
83 /* For GCC_COLORS. */
84 static struct color_cap color_dict[] =
86 { "error", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_BOLD COLOR_SEPARATOR COLOR_FG_RED), 5, false },
87 { "warning", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_BOLD COLOR_SEPARATOR COLOR_FG_MAGENTA),
88 7, false },
89 { "note", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_BOLD COLOR_SEPARATOR COLOR_FG_CYAN), 4, false },
90 { "range1", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_FG_GREEN), 6, false },
91 { "range2", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_FG_BLUE), 6, false },
92 { "locus", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_BOLD), 5, false },
93 { "quote", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_BOLD), 5, false },
94 { "path", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_BOLD COLOR_SEPARATOR COLOR_FG_CYAN), 4, false },
95 { "fnname", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_BOLD COLOR_SEPARATOR COLOR_FG_GREEN), 6, false },
96 { "targs", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_FG_MAGENTA), 5, false },
97 { "fixit-insert", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_FG_GREEN), 12, false },
98 { "fixit-delete", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_FG_RED), 12, false },
99 { "diff-filename", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_BOLD), 13, false },
100 { "diff-hunk", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_FG_CYAN), 9, false },
101 { "diff-delete", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_FG_RED), 11, false },
102 { "diff-insert", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_FG_GREEN), 11, false },
103 { "type-diff", SGR_SEQ (COLOR_BOLD COLOR_SEPARATOR COLOR_FG_GREEN), 9, false },
104 { NULL, NULL, 0, false }
107 const char *
108 colorize_start (bool show_color, const char *name, size_t name_len)
110 struct color_cap const *cap;
112 if (!show_color)
113 return "";
115 for (cap = color_dict; cap->name; cap++)
116 if (cap->name_len == name_len
117 && memcmp (cap->name, name, name_len) == 0)
118 break;
119 if (cap->name == NULL)
120 return "";
122 return cap->val;
125 const char *
126 colorize_stop (bool show_color)
128 return show_color ? SGR_RESET : "";
131 /* Parse GCC_COLORS. The default would look like:
132 GCC_COLORS='error=01;31:warning=01;35:note=01;36:\
133 range1=32:range2=34:locus=01:quote=01:path=01;36:\
134 fixit-insert=32:fixit-delete=31:'\
135 diff-filename=01:diff-hunk=32:diff-delete=31:diff-insert=32:\
136 type-diff=01;32'
137 No character escaping is needed or supported. */
138 static bool
139 parse_gcc_colors (void)
141 const char *p, *q, *name, *val;
142 char *b;
143 size_t name_len = 0, val_len = 0;
145 p = getenv ("GCC_COLORS"); /* Plural! */
146 if (p == NULL)
147 return true;
148 if (*p == '\0')
149 return false;
151 name = q = p;
152 val = NULL;
153 /* From now on, be well-formed or you're gone. */
154 for (;;)
155 if (*q == ':' || *q == '\0')
157 struct color_cap *cap;
159 if (val)
160 val_len = q - val;
161 else
162 name_len = q - name;
163 /* Empty name without val (empty cap)
164 won't match and will be ignored. */
165 for (cap = color_dict; cap->name; cap++)
166 if (cap->name_len == name_len
167 && memcmp (cap->name, name, name_len) == 0)
168 break;
169 /* If name unknown, go on for forward compatibility. */
170 if (cap->val && val)
172 if (cap->free_val)
173 free (CONST_CAST (char *, cap->val));
174 b = XNEWVEC (char, val_len + sizeof (SGR_SEQ ("")));
175 memcpy (b, SGR_START, strlen (SGR_START));
176 memcpy (b + strlen (SGR_START), val, val_len);
177 memcpy (b + strlen (SGR_START) + val_len, SGR_END,
178 sizeof (SGR_END));
179 cap->val = (const char *) b;
180 cap->free_val = true;
182 if (*q == '\0')
183 return true;
184 name = ++q;
185 val = NULL;
187 else if (*q == '=')
189 if (q == name || val)
190 return true;
192 name_len = q - name;
193 val = ++q; /* Can be the empty string. */
195 else if (val == NULL)
196 q++; /* Accumulate name. */
197 else if (*q == ';' || (*q >= '0' && *q <= '9'))
198 q++; /* Accumulate val. Protect the terminal from being sent
199 garbage. */
200 else
201 return true;
204 /* Return true if we should use color when in auto mode, false otherwise. */
205 static bool
206 should_colorize (void)
208 #ifdef __MINGW32__
209 /* For consistency reasons, one should check the handle returned by
210 _get_osfhandle(_fileno(stderr)) because the function
211 pp_write_text_to_stream() in pretty-print.cc calls fputs() on
212 that stream. However, the code below for non-Windows doesn't seem
213 to care about it either... */
214 HANDLE h;
215 DWORD m;
217 h = GetStdHandle (STD_ERROR_HANDLE);
218 return (h != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) && (h != NULL)
219 && GetConsoleMode (h, &m);
220 #else
221 char const *t = getenv ("TERM");
222 /* emacs M-x shell sets TERM="dumb". */
223 return t && strcmp (t, "dumb") != 0 && isatty (STDERR_FILENO);
224 #endif
227 bool
228 colorize_init (diagnostic_color_rule_t rule)
230 switch (rule)
232 case DIAGNOSTICS_COLOR_NO:
233 return false;
234 case DIAGNOSTICS_COLOR_YES:
235 return parse_gcc_colors ();
236 case DIAGNOSTICS_COLOR_AUTO:
237 if (should_colorize ())
238 return parse_gcc_colors ();
239 else
240 return false;
241 default:
242 gcc_unreachable ();
246 /* Return URL_FORMAT_XXX which tells how we should emit urls
247 when in always mode.
248 We use GCC_URLS and if that is not defined TERM_URLS.
249 If neither is defined the feature is enabled by default. */
251 static diagnostic_url_format
252 parse_env_vars_for_urls ()
254 const char *p;
256 p = getenv ("GCC_URLS"); /* Plural! */
257 if (p == NULL)
258 p = getenv ("TERM_URLS");
260 if (p == NULL)
261 return URL_FORMAT_DEFAULT;
263 if (*p == '\0')
264 return URL_FORMAT_NONE;
266 if (!strcmp (p, "no"))
267 return URL_FORMAT_NONE;
269 if (!strcmp (p, "st"))
270 return URL_FORMAT_ST;
272 if (!strcmp (p, "bel"))
273 return URL_FORMAT_BEL;
275 return URL_FORMAT_DEFAULT;
278 /* Return true if we should use urls when in auto mode, false otherwise. */
280 static bool
281 auto_enable_urls ()
283 #ifdef __MINGW32__
284 return false;
285 #else
286 const char *term, *colorterm;
288 /* First check the terminal is capable of printing color escapes,
289 if not URLs won't work either. */
290 if (!should_colorize ())
291 return false;
293 /* xfce4-terminal is known to not implement URLs at this time.
294 Recently new installations (0.8) will safely ignore the URL escape
295 sequences, but a large number of legacy installations (0.6.3) print
296 garbage when URLs are printed. Therefore we lose nothing by
297 disabling this feature for that specific terminal type. */
298 colorterm = getenv ("COLORTERM");
299 if (colorterm && !strcmp (colorterm, "xfce4-terminal"))
300 return false;
302 /* Old versions of gnome-terminal where URL escapes cause screen
303 corruptions set COLORTERM="gnome-terminal", recent versions
304 with working URL support set this to "truecolor". */
305 if (colorterm && !strcmp (colorterm, "gnome-terminal"))
306 return false;
308 /* Since the following checks are less specific than the ones
309 above, let GCC_URLS and TERM_URLS override the decision. */
310 if (getenv ("GCC_URLS") || getenv ("TERM_URLS"))
311 return true;
313 /* In an ssh session the COLORTERM is not there, but TERM=xterm
314 can be used as an indication of a incompatible terminal while
315 TERM=xterm-256color appears to be a working terminal. */
316 term = getenv ("TERM");
317 if (!colorterm && term && !strcmp (term, "xterm"))
318 return false;
320 /* When logging in a linux over serial line, we see TERM=linux
321 and no COLORTERM, it is unlikely that the URL escapes will
322 work in that environmen either. */
323 if (!colorterm && term && !strcmp (term, "linux"))
324 return false;
326 return true;
327 #endif
330 /* Determine if URLs should be enabled, based on RULE,
331 and, if so, which format to use.
332 This reuses the logic for colorization. */
334 diagnostic_url_format
335 determine_url_format (diagnostic_url_rule_t rule)
337 switch (rule)
339 case DIAGNOSTICS_URL_NO:
340 return URL_FORMAT_NONE;
341 case DIAGNOSTICS_URL_YES:
342 return parse_env_vars_for_urls ();
343 case DIAGNOSTICS_URL_AUTO:
344 if (auto_enable_urls ())
345 return parse_env_vars_for_urls ();
346 else
347 return URL_FORMAT_NONE;
348 default:
349 gcc_unreachable ();