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emacs/lisp/ls-lisp.el

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;;; ls-lisp.el --- emulate insert-directory completely in Emacs Lisp
;; Copyright (C) 1992, 1994, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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;; Author: Sebastian Kremer <sk@thp.uni-koeln.de>
;; Modified by: Francis J. Wright <F.J.Wright@maths.qmw.ac.uk>
;; Maintainer: FSF
;; Keywords: unix, dired
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;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
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;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
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;; any later version.
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;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
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;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
;;; Commentary:
;; OVERVIEW ==========================================================
1992-04-30 10:37:15 +00:00
;; This file redefines the function `insert-directory' to implement it
;; directly from Emacs lisp, without running ls in a subprocess. It
;; is useful if you cannot afford to fork Emacs on a real memory UNIX,
;; under VMS or other non-UNIX platforms if you don't have the ls
;; program, or if you want a different format from what ls offers.
;; This function can use regexps instead of shell wildcards. If you
;; enter regexps remember to double each $ sign. For example, to
;; include files *.el, enter `.*\.el$$', resulting in the regexp
;; `.*\.el$'.
;; RESTRICTIONS ======================================================
;; * A few obscure ls switches are still ignored: see the docstring of
;; `insert-directory'.
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;; * Generally only numeric uid/gid.
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;; TO DO =============================================================
;; Complete handling of F switch (if/when possible).
;; FJW: May be able to sort much faster by consing the sort key onto
;; the front of each list element, sorting and then stripping the key
;; off again!
;;; History:
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;; Written originally by Sebastian Kremer <sk@thp.uni-koeln.de>
;; Revised by Andrew Innes and Geoff Volker (and maybe others).
;; Modified by Francis J. Wright <F.J.Wright@maths.qmw.ac.uk>, mainly
;; to support many more ls options, "platform emulation", hooks for
;; external symbolic link support and more robust sorting.
;;; Code:
;;;###autoload
(defgroup ls-lisp nil
"Emulate the ls program completely in Emacs Lisp."
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:version "21.1"
:group 'dired)
(defcustom ls-lisp-emulation
(cond ((eq system-type 'macos) 'MacOS)
;; ((eq system-type 'windows-nt) 'MS-Windows)
((memq system-type
'(hpux dgux usg-unix-v unisoft-unix rtu irix berkeley-unix))
'UNIX)) ; very similar to GNU
;; Anything else defaults to nil, meaning GNU.
"*Platform to emulate: GNU (default), MacOS, MS-Windows, UNIX.
Corresponding value is one of the atoms: nil, MacOS, MS-Windows, UNIX.
Sets default values for: `ls-lisp-ignore-case', `ls-lisp-dirs-first',
`ls-lisp-verbosity'. Need not match actual platform. Changing this
option will have no effect until you restart Emacs."
:type '(choice (const :tag "GNU" nil)
(const MacOS)
(const MS-Windows)
(const UNIX))
:group 'ls-lisp)
(defcustom ls-lisp-ignore-case
;; Name change for consistency with other option names.
(or (memq ls-lisp-emulation '(MS-Windows MacOS))
(and (boundp 'ls-lisp-dired-ignore-case) ls-lisp-dired-ignore-case))
"*Non-nil causes ls-lisp alphabetic sorting to ignore case."
:type 'boolean
:group 'ls-lisp)
(defcustom ls-lisp-dirs-first (eq ls-lisp-emulation 'MS-Windows)
"*Non-nil causes ls-lisp to sort directories first in any ordering.
\(Or last if it is reversed.) Follows Microsoft Windows Explorer."
;; Functionality suggested by Chris McMahan <cmcmahan@one.net>
:type 'boolean
:group 'ls-lisp)
(defcustom ls-lisp-verbosity
(cond ((eq ls-lisp-emulation 'MacOS) nil)
((eq ls-lisp-emulation 'MS-Windows)
(if (and (fboundp 'w32-using-nt) (w32-using-nt))
'(links))) ; distinguish NT/2K from 9x
((eq ls-lisp-emulation 'UNIX) '(links uid)) ; UNIX ls
(t '(links uid gid))) ; GNU ls
"*A list of optional file attributes that ls-lisp should display.
It should contain none or more of the symbols: links, uid, gid.
Nil (or an empty list) means display none of them.
Concepts come from UNIX: `links' means count of names associated with
the file\; `uid' means user (owner) identifier\; `gid' means group
identifier.
If emulation is MacOS then default is nil\;
if emulation is MS-Windows then default is `(links)' if platform is
Windows NT/2K, nil otherwise\;
if emulation is UNIX then default is `(links uid)'\;
if emulation is GNU then default is `(links uid gid)'."
;; Functionality suggested by Howard Melman <howard@silverstream.com>
:type '(set (const :tag "Show Link Count" links)
(const :tag "Show User" uid)
(const :tag "Show Group" gid))
:group 'ls-lisp)
(defcustom ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program nil
"*Non-nil causes ls-lisp to revert back to using `insert-directory-program'.
This is useful on platforms where ls-lisp is dumped into Emacs, such as
Microsoft Windows, but you would still like to use a program to list
the contents of a directory."
:type 'boolean
:group 'ls-lisp)
(defcustom ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards t
"*Non-nil means ls-lisp treats file patterns as shell wildcards.
Otherwise they are treated as Emacs regexps (for backward compatibility)."
:type 'boolean
:group 'ls-lisp)
;; Remember the original insert-directory function
(or (featurep 'ls-lisp) ; FJW: unless this file is being reloaded!
(fset 'original-insert-directory (symbol-function 'insert-directory)))
;; This stub is to allow ls-lisp to parse symbolic links via another
;; library such as w32-symlinks.el from
;; http://centaur.qmw.ac.uk/Emacs/:
(defun ls-lisp-parse-symlink (file-name)
"This stub may be redefined to parse FILE-NAME as a symlink.
It should return nil or the link target as a string."
nil)
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
(defun insert-directory (file switches &optional wildcard full-directory-p)
"Insert directory listing for FILE, formatted according to SWITCHES.
Leaves point after the inserted text.
SWITCHES may be a string of options, or a list of strings.
Optional third arg WILDCARD means treat FILE as shell wildcard.
Optional fourth arg FULL-DIRECTORY-P means file is a directory and
switches do not contain `d', so that a full listing is expected.
This version of the function comes from `ls-lisp.el'.
If the value of `ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program' is non-nil then
it works exactly like the version from `files.el' and runs a directory
listing program whose name is in the variable
`insert-directory-program'; if also WILDCARD is non-nil then it runs
the shell specified by `shell-file-name'. If the value of
`ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program' is nil then it runs a Lisp
emulation.
The Lisp emulation does not run any external programs or shells. It
supports ordinary shell wildcards if `ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards'
is non-nil; otherwise, it interprets wildcards as regular expressions
to match file names. It does not support all `ls' switches -- those
that work are: A a c i r S s t u U X g G B C R and F partly."
(if ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program
(original-insert-directory file switches wildcard full-directory-p)
;; We need the directory in order to find the right handler.
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler (expand-file-name file)
'insert-directory)))
(if handler
(funcall handler 'insert-directory file switches
wildcard full-directory-p)
;; Convert SWITCHES to a list of characters.
(setq switches (delete ?- (append switches nil)))
(if wildcard
(setq wildcard
(if ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards
(wildcard-to-regexp (file-name-nondirectory file))
(file-name-nondirectory file))
file (file-name-directory file))
(if (memq ?B switches) (setq wildcard "[^~]\\'")))
(ls-lisp-insert-directory
file switches (ls-lisp-time-index switches)
wildcard full-directory-p)))))
(defun ls-lisp-insert-directory
(file switches time-index wildcard full-directory-p)
"Insert directory listing for FILE, formatted according to SWITCHES.
Leaves point after the inserted text. This is an internal function
optionally called by the `ls-lisp.el' version of `insert-directory'.
It is called recursively if the -R switch is used.
SWITCHES is a *list* of characters. TIME-INDEX is the time index into
file-attributes according to SWITCHES. WILDCARD is nil or an *Emacs
regexp*. FULL-DIRECTORY-P means file is a directory and SWITCHES does
not contain `d', so that a full listing is expected."
;; Sometimes we get ".../foo*/" as FILE. While the shell and
;; `ls' don't mind, we certainly do, because it makes us think
;; there is no wildcard, only a directory name.
(if (and ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards
(string-match "[[?*]" file))
(progn
(or (not (eq (aref file (1- (length file))) ?/))
(setq file (substring file 0 (1- (length file)))))
(setq wildcard t)))
(if (or wildcard full-directory-p)
(let* ((dir (file-name-as-directory file))
(default-directory dir) ; so that file-attributes works
(file-alist
(directory-files-and-attributes dir nil wildcard t))
(now (current-time))
(sum 0)
;; do all bindings here for speed
total-line files elt short file-size fil attr)
(cond ((memq ?A switches)
(setq file-alist
(ls-lisp-delete-matching "^\\.\\.?$" file-alist)))
((not (memq ?a switches))
;; if neither -A nor -a, flush . files
(setq file-alist
(ls-lisp-delete-matching "^\\." file-alist))))
(setq file-alist
(ls-lisp-handle-switches file-alist switches))
(if (memq ?C switches) ; column (-C) format
(ls-lisp-column-format file-alist)
(setq total-line (cons (point) (car-safe file-alist)))
(setq files file-alist)
(while files ; long (-l) format
(setq elt (car files)
files (cdr files)
short (car elt)
attr (cdr elt)
file-size (nth 7 attr))
(and attr
(setq sum (+ file-size
;; Even if neither SUM nor file's size
;; overflow, their sum could.
(if (or (< sum (- 134217727 file-size))
(floatp sum)
(floatp file-size))
sum
(float sum))))
(insert (ls-lisp-format short attr file-size
switches time-index now))))
;; Insert total size of all files:
(save-excursion
(goto-char (car total-line))
(or (cdr total-line)
;; Shell says ``No match'' if no files match
;; the wildcard; let's say something similar.
(insert "(No match)\n"))
(insert (format "total %.0f\n" (fceiling (/ sum 1024.0))))))
(if (memq ?R switches)
;; List the contents of all directories recursively.
;; cadr of each element of `file-alist' is t for
;; directory, string (name linked to) for symbolic
;; link, or nil.
(while file-alist
(setq elt (car file-alist)
file-alist (cdr file-alist))
(when (and (eq (cadr elt) t) ; directory
(not (string-match "\\`\\.\\.?\\'" (car elt))))
(setq elt (expand-file-name (car elt) dir))
(insert "\n" elt ":\n")
(ls-lisp-insert-directory
elt switches time-index wildcard full-directory-p)))))
;; If not full-directory-p, FILE *must not* end in /, as
;; file-attributes will not recognize a symlink to a directory,
;; so must make it a relative filename as ls does:
(if (eq (aref file (1- (length file))) ?/)
(setq file (substring file 0 -1)))
(let ((fattr (file-attributes file)))
(if fattr
(insert (ls-lisp-format file fattr (nth 7 fattr)
switches time-index (current-time)))
(message "%s: doesn't exist or is inaccessible" file)
(ding) (sit-for 2))))) ; to show user the message!
(defun ls-lisp-column-format (file-alist)
"Insert the file names (only) in FILE-ALIST into the current buffer.
Format in columns, sorted vertically, following GNU ls -C.
Responds to the window width as ls should but may not!"
(let (files fmt ncols collen (nfiles 0) (colwid 0))
;; Count number of files as `nfiles', build list of filenames as
;; `files', and find maximum filename length as `colwid':
(let (file len)
(while file-alist
(setq nfiles (1+ nfiles)
file (caar file-alist)
files (cons file files)
file-alist (cdr file-alist)
len (length file))
(if (> len colwid) (setq colwid len))))
(setq files (nreverse files)
colwid (+ 2 colwid) ; 2 character column gap
fmt (format "%%-%ds" colwid) ; print format
ncols (/ (window-width) colwid) ; no of columns
collen (/ nfiles ncols)) ; floor of column length
(if (> nfiles (* collen ncols)) (setq collen (1+ collen)))
;; Output the file names in columns, sorted vertically:
(let ((i 0) j)
(while (< i collen)
(setq j i)
(while (< j nfiles)
(insert (format fmt (nth j files)))
(setq j (+ j collen)))
;; FJW: This is completely unnecessary, but I don't like
;; trailing white space...
(delete-region (point) (progn (skip-chars-backward " \t") (point)))
(insert ?\n)
(setq i (1+ i))))))
(defun ls-lisp-delete-matching (regexp list)
"Delete all elements matching REGEXP from LIST, return new list."
;; Should perhaps use setcdr for efficiency.
(let (result)
(while list
(or (string-match regexp (caar list))
(setq result (cons (car list) result)))
(setq list (cdr list)))
result))
(defsubst ls-lisp-string-lessp (s1 s2)
"Return t if string S1 is less than string S2 in lexicographic order.
Case is significant if `ls-lisp-ignore-case' is nil.
Unibyte strings are converted to multibyte for comparison."
(let ((u (compare-strings s1 0 nil s2 0 nil ls-lisp-ignore-case)))
(and (numberp u) (< u 0))))
(defun ls-lisp-handle-switches (file-alist switches)
"Return new FILE-ALIST sorted according to SWITCHES.
SWITCHES is a list of characters. Default sorting is alphabetic."
;; FILE-ALIST's elements are (FILE . FILE-ATTRIBUTES).
(or (memq ?U switches) ; unsorted
;; Catch and ignore unexpected sorting errors
(condition-case err
(setq file-alist
(let (index)
;; Copy file-alist in case of error
(sort (copy-sequence file-alist) ; modifies its argument!
(cond ((memq ?S switches)
(lambda (x y) ; sorted on size
;; 7th file attribute is file size
;; Make largest file come first
(< (nth 7 (cdr y))
(nth 7 (cdr x)))))
((setq index (ls-lisp-time-index switches))
(lambda (x y) ; sorted on time
(ls-lisp-time-lessp (nth index (cdr y))
(nth index (cdr x)))))
((memq ?X switches)
(lambda (x y) ; sorted on extension
(ls-lisp-string-lessp
(ls-lisp-extension (car x))
(ls-lisp-extension (car y)))))
(t
(lambda (x y) ; sorted alphabetically
(ls-lisp-string-lessp (car x) (car y))))))))
(error (message "Unsorted (ls-lisp sorting error) - %s"
(error-message-string err))
(ding) (sit-for 2)))) ; to show user the message!
(if (memq ?F switches) ; classify switch
(setq file-alist (mapcar 'ls-lisp-classify file-alist)))
(if ls-lisp-dirs-first
;; Re-sort directories first, without otherwise changing the
;; ordering, and reverse whole list. cadr of each element of
;; `file-alist' is t for directory, string (name linked to) for
;; symbolic link, or nil.
(let (el dirs files)
(while file-alist
(if (eq (cadr (setq el (car file-alist))) t) ; directory
(setq dirs (cons el dirs))
(setq files (cons el files)))
(setq file-alist (cdr file-alist)))
(setq file-alist
(if (memq ?U switches) ; unsorted order is reversed
(nconc dirs files)
(nconc files dirs)
))))
;; Finally reverse file alist if necessary.
;; (eq below MUST compare `(not (memq ...))' to force comparison of
;; `t' or `nil', rather than list tails!)
(if (eq (eq (not (memq ?U switches)) ; unsorted order is reversed
(not (memq ?r switches))) ; reversed sort order requested
ls-lisp-dirs-first) ; already reversed
(nreverse file-alist)
file-alist))
(defun ls-lisp-classify (filedata)
"Append a character to each file name indicating the file type.
Also, for regular files that are executable, append `*'.
The file type indicators are `/' for directories, `@' for symbolic
links, `|' for FIFOs, `=' for sockets, and nothing for regular files.
\[But FIFOs and sockets are not recognised.]
FILEDATA has the form (filename . `file-attributes'). Its `cadr' is t
for directory, string (name linked to) for symbolic link, or nil."
(let ((dir (cadr filedata)) (file-name (car filedata)))
(cond ((or dir
;; Parsing .lnk files here is perhaps overkill!
(setq dir (ls-lisp-parse-symlink file-name)))
(cons
(concat file-name (if (eq dir t) "/" "@"))
(cdr filedata)))
((string-match "x" (nth 9 filedata))
(cons
(concat file-name "*")
(cdr filedata)))
(t filedata))))
(defun ls-lisp-extension (filename)
"Return extension of FILENAME (ignoring any version extension)
FOLLOWED by null and full filename, SOLELY for full alpha sort."
;; Force extension sort order: `no ext' then `null ext' then `ext'
;; to agree with GNU ls.
(concat
(let* ((i (length filename)) end)
(if (= (aref filename (1- i)) ?.) ; null extension
"\0"
(while (and (>= (setq i (1- i)) 0)
(/= (aref filename i) ?.)))
(if (< i 0) "\0\0" ; no extension
(if (/= (aref filename (1+ i)) ?~)
(substring filename (1+ i))
;; version extension found -- ignore it
(setq end i)
(while (and (>= (setq i (1- i)) 0)
(/= (aref filename i) ?.)))
(if (< i 0) "\0\0" ; no extension
(substring filename (1+ i) end))))
)) "\0" filename))
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;; From Roland McGrath. Can use this to sort on time.
(defun ls-lisp-time-lessp (time0 time1)
"Return t if time TIME0 is earlier than time TIME1."
(let ((hi0 (car time0)) (hi1 (car time1)))
(or (< hi0 hi1)
(and (= hi0 hi1)
(< (cadr time0) (cadr time1))))))
(defun ls-lisp-format (file-name file-attr file-size switches time-index now)
"Format one line of long ls output for file FILE-NAME.
FILE-ATTR and FILE-SIZE give the file's attributes and size.
SWITCHES, TIME-INDEX and NOW give the full switch list and time data."
(let ((file-type (nth 0 file-attr))
;; t for directory, string (name linked to)
;; for symbolic link, or nil.
(drwxrwxrwx (nth 8 file-attr))) ; attribute string ("drwxrwxrwx")
(and (null file-type)
;; Maybe no kernel support for symlinks, so...
(setq file-type (ls-lisp-parse-symlink file-name))
(aset drwxrwxrwx 0 ?l)) ; symbolic link - update attribute string
(concat (if (memq ?i switches) ; inode number
(format " %6d" (nth 10 file-attr)))
;; nil is treated like "" in concat
(if (memq ?s switches) ; size in K
(format " %4.0f" (fceiling (/ file-size 1024.0))))
drwxrwxrwx ; attribute string
(if (memq 'links ls-lisp-verbosity)
(format " %3d" (nth 1 file-attr))) ; link count
;; Numeric uid/gid are more confusing than helpful;
;; Emacs should be able to make strings of them.
;; They tend to be bogus on non-UNIX platforms anyway so
;; optionally hide them.
(if (memq 'uid ls-lisp-verbosity)
;; (user-login-name uid) works on Windows NT but not
;; on 9x and maybe not on some other platforms, so...
(let ((uid (nth 2 file-attr)))
(if (= uid (user-uid))
(format " %-8s" (user-login-name))
(format " %-8d" uid))))
(if (not (memq ?G switches)) ; GNU ls -- shows group by default
(if (or (memq ?g switches) ; UNIX ls -- no group by default
(memq 'gid ls-lisp-verbosity))
(if (memq system-type '(macos windows-nt ms-dos))
;; No useful concept of group...
" root"
(let* ((gid (nth 3 file-attr))
(group (user-login-name gid)))
(if group
(format " %-8s" group)
(format " %-8d" gid))))))
(format (if (floatp file-size) " %8.0f" " %8d") file-size)
" "
(ls-lisp-format-time file-attr time-index now)
" "
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file-name
(if (stringp file-type) ; is a symbolic link
(concat " -> " file-type))
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"\n"
)))
(defun ls-lisp-time-index (switches)
"Return time index into file-attributes according to ls SWITCHES list.
Return nil if no time switch found."
;; FJW: Default of nil is IMPORTANT and used in `ls-lisp-handle-switches'!
(cond ((memq ?c switches) 6) ; last mode change
((memq ?t switches) 5) ; last modtime
((memq ?u switches) 4))) ; last access
(defun ls-lisp-format-time (file-attr time-index now)
"Format time for file with attributes FILE-ATTR according to TIME-INDEX.
Use the same method as ls to decide whether to show time-of-day or year,
depending on distance between file date and NOW.
All ls time options, namely c, t and u, are handled."
(let* ((time (nth (or time-index 5) file-attr)) ; default is last modtime
(diff16 (- (car time) (car now)))
(diff (+ (ash diff16 16) (- (car (cdr time)) (car (cdr now)))))
(past-cutoff (- (* 6 30 24 60 60))) ; 6 30-day months
(future-cutoff (* 60 60))) ; 1 hour
(condition-case nil
(format-time-string
(if (and
(<= past-cutoff diff) (<= diff future-cutoff)
;; Sanity check in case `diff' computation overflowed.
(<= (1- (ash past-cutoff -16)) diff16)
(<= diff16 (1+ (ash future-cutoff -16))))
"%b %e %H:%M"
"%b %e %Y")
time)
(error "Unk 0 0000"))))
(provide 'ls-lisp)
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;;; ls-lisp.el ends here