mirror of
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0bb8a011d5
In particular, this lets Eshell show a "#" root prompt sigil when the user has sudo'ed via "cd /sudo::" (bug#60722). * lisp/simple.el (file-user-uid): New function. * lisp/net/tramp.el (tramp-file-name-for-operation): Add 'file-user-uid'. (tramp-handle-file-user-uid): New function. * lisp/net/tramp-adb.el (tramp-adb-file-name-handler-alist): * lisp/net/tramp-crypt.el (tramp-crypt-file-name-handler-alist): * lisp/net/tramp-gvfs.el (tramp-gvfs-file-name-handler-alist): * lisp/net/tramp-rclone.el (tramp-rclone-file-name-handler-alist): * lisp/net/tramp-sh.el (tramp-sh-file-name-handler-alist): * lisp/net/tramp-smb.el (tramp-smb-file-name-handler-alist): * lisp/net/tramp-sshfs.el (tramp-sshfs-file-name-handler-alist): * lisp/net/tramp-sudoedit.el (tramp-sudoedit-file-name-handler-alist): Add 'file-user-uid'. * lisp/net/tramp-archive.el (tramp-archive-handle-file-user-uid): New function... (tramp-archive-file-name-handler-alist): ... use it. * lisp/eshell/em-prompt.el (eshell-prompt-function): Use 'file-user-uid'. * lisp/eshell/esh-var.el (eshell-variable-aliases-list): Add '$UID'. * test/lisp/eshell/esh-var-tests.el (esh-var-test/uid-var): New test. * doc/lispref/os.texi (User Identification): Document 'file-user-uid'. * doc/lispref/files.texi (Magic File Names): Mention 'file-user-uid'. * doc/misc/eshell.texi (Variables): Document '$UID'. Add a missing index entry for '$INSIDE_EMACS'. * etc/NEWS: Announce 'file-user-uid'.
3561 lines
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Plaintext
3561 lines
137 KiB
Plaintext
@c -*-texinfo-*-
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@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
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@c Copyright (C) 1990--1995, 1998--1999, 2001--2023 Free Software
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@c Foundation, Inc.
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@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
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@node System Interface
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@chapter Operating System Interface
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This chapter is about starting and getting out of Emacs, access to
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values in the operating system environment, and terminal input, output.
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@xref{Building Emacs}, for related information. @xref{Display}, for
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additional operating system status information pertaining to the
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terminal and the screen.
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@menu
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* Starting Up:: Customizing Emacs startup processing.
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* Getting Out:: How exiting works (permanent or temporary).
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* System Environment:: Distinguish the name and kind of system.
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* User Identification:: Finding the name and user id of the user.
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* Time of Day:: Getting the current time.
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* Time Zone Rules:: Rules for time zones and daylight saving time.
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* Time Conversion:: Converting among timestamp forms.
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* Time Parsing:: Converting timestamps to text and vice versa.
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* Processor Run Time:: Getting the run time used by Emacs.
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* Time Calculations:: Adding, subtracting, comparing times, etc.
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* Timers:: Setting a timer to call a function at a certain time.
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* Idle Timers:: Setting a timer to call a function when Emacs has
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been idle for a certain length of time.
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* Terminal Input:: Accessing and recording terminal input.
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* Terminal Output:: Controlling and recording terminal output.
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* Sound Output:: Playing sounds on the computer's speaker.
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* X11 Keysyms:: Operating on key symbols for X Windows.
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* Batch Mode:: Running Emacs without terminal interaction.
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* Session Management:: Saving and restoring state with X Session Management.
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* Desktop Notifications:: Desktop notifications.
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* File Notifications:: File notifications.
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* Dynamic Libraries:: On-demand loading of support libraries.
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* Security Considerations:: Running Emacs in an unfriendly environment.
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@end menu
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@node Starting Up
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@section Starting Up Emacs
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This section describes what Emacs does when it is started, and how you
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can customize these actions.
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@menu
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* Startup Summary:: Sequence of actions Emacs performs at startup.
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* Init File:: Details on reading the init file.
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* Terminal-Specific:: How the terminal-specific Lisp file is read.
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* Command-Line Arguments:: How command-line arguments are processed,
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and how you can customize them.
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@end menu
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@node Startup Summary
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@subsection Summary: Sequence of Actions at Startup
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@cindex initialization of Emacs
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@cindex startup of Emacs
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@cindex @file{startup.el}
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When Emacs is started up, it performs the following operations
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(see @code{normal-top-level} in @file{startup.el}):
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@enumerate
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@item
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It adds subdirectories to @code{load-path}, by running the file named
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@file{subdirs.el} in each directory in the list. Normally, this file
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adds the directory's subdirectories to the list, and those are scanned
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in their turn. The files @file{subdirs.el} are normally generated
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automatically when Emacs is installed.
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@item
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It loads any @file{leim-list.el} that it finds in the @code{load-path}
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directories. This file is intended for registering input methods.
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The search is only for any personal @file{leim-list.el} files that you
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may have created; it skips the directories containing the standard Emacs
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libraries (these should contain only a single @file{leim-list.el} file,
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which is compiled into the Emacs executable).
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@vindex before-init-time
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@item
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It sets the variable @code{before-init-time} to the value of
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@code{current-time} (@pxref{Time of Day}). It also sets
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@code{after-init-time} to @code{nil}, which signals to Lisp programs
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that Emacs is being initialized.
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@c set-locale-environment
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@item
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It sets the language environment and the terminal coding system,
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if requested by environment variables such as @env{LANG}.
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@item
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It does some basic parsing of the command-line arguments.
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@item
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It loads your early init file (@pxref{Early Init File,,, emacs, The
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GNU Emacs Manual}). This is not done if the options @samp{-q},
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@samp{-Q}, or @samp{--batch} were specified. If the @samp{-u} option
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was specified, Emacs looks for the init file in that user's home
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directory instead.
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@item
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It calls the function @code{package-activate-all} to activate any
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optional Emacs Lisp package that has been installed. @xref{Packaging
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Basics}. However, Emacs doesn't activate the packages when
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@code{package-enable-at-startup} is @code{nil} or when it's started
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with one of the options @samp{-q}, @samp{-Q}, or @samp{--batch}. To
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activate the packages in the latter case, @code{package-activate-all}
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should be called explicitly (e.g., via the @samp{--funcall} option).
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@vindex initial-window-system@r{, and startup}
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@findex window-system-initialization
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@item
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If not running in batch mode, it initializes the window system that
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the variable @code{initial-window-system} specifies (@pxref{Window
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Systems, initial-window-system}). The initialization function,
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@code{window-system-initialization}, is a @dfn{generic function}
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(@pxref{Generic Functions}) whose actual implementation is different
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for each supported window system. If the value of
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@code{initial-window-system} is @var{windowsystem}, then the
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appropriate implementation of the initialization function is defined
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in the file @file{term/@var{windowsystem}-win.el}. This file should
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have been compiled into the Emacs executable when it was built.
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@item
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It runs the normal hook @code{before-init-hook}.
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@item
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If appropriate, it creates a graphical frame. As part of creating the
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graphical frame, it initializes the window system specified by
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@code{initial-frame-alist} and @code{default-frame-alist}
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(@pxref{Initial Parameters}) for the graphical frame, by calling the
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@code{window-system-initialization} function for that window system.
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This is not done in batch (noninteractive) or daemon mode.
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@item
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It initializes the initial frame's faces, and sets up the menu bar
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and tool bar if needed. If graphical frames are supported, it sets up
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the tool bar even if the current frame is not a graphical one, since a
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graphical frame may be created later on.
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@item
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It use @code{custom-reevaluate-setting} to re-initialize the members
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of the list @code{custom-delayed-init-variables}. These are any
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pre-loaded user options whose default value depends on the run-time,
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rather than build-time, context.
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@xref{Building Emacs, custom-initialize-delay}.
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@c @item
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@c It registers the colors available for tty frames.
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@item
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It loads the library @file{site-start}, if it exists. This is not
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done if the options @samp{-Q} or @samp{--no-site-file} were specified.
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@cindex @file{site-start.el}
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@item
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It loads your init file (@pxref{Init File}). This is not done if the
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options @samp{-q}, @samp{-Q}, or @samp{--batch} were specified. If
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the @samp{-u} option was specified, Emacs looks for the init file in
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that user's home directory instead.
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@item
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It loads the library @file{default}, if it exists. This is not done
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if @code{inhibit-default-init} is non-@code{nil}, nor if the options
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@samp{-q}, @samp{-Q}, or @samp{--batch} were specified.
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@cindex @file{default.el}
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@item
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It loads your abbrevs from the file specified by
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@code{abbrev-file-name}, if that file exists and can be read
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(@pxref{Abbrev Files, abbrev-file-name}). This is not done if the
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option @samp{--batch} was specified.
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@vindex after-init-time
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@item
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It sets the variable @code{after-init-time} to the value of
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@code{current-time}. This variable was set to @code{nil} earlier;
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setting it to the current time signals that the initialization phase
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is over, and, together with @code{before-init-time}, provides the
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measurement of how long it took.
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@item
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It runs the normal hook @code{after-init-hook}.
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@item
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If the buffer @file{*scratch*} exists and is still in Fundamental mode
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(as it should be by default), it sets its major mode according to
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@code{initial-major-mode}.
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@item
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If started on a text terminal, it loads the terminal-specific
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Lisp library (@pxref{Terminal-Specific}), and runs the hook
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@code{tty-setup-hook}. This is not done
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in @code{--batch} mode, nor if @code{term-file-prefix} is @code{nil}.
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@c Now command-line calls command-line-1.
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@item
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It displays the initial echo area message, unless you have suppressed
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that with @code{inhibit-startup-echo-area-message}.
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@item
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It processes any command-line options that were not handled earlier.
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@c This next one is back in command-line, but the remaining bits of
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@c command-line-1 are not done if noninteractive.
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@item
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It now exits if the option @code{--batch} was specified.
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@item
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If the @file{*scratch*} buffer exists and is empty, it inserts
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@code{(substitute-command-keys initial-scratch-message)} into that buffer.
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@item
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If @code{initial-buffer-choice} is a string, it visits the file (or
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directory) with that name. If it is a function, it calls the function
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with no arguments and selects the buffer that it returns. If one file
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is given as a command line argument, that file is visited and its
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buffer displayed alongside @code{initial-buffer-choice}. If more than
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one file is given, all of the files are visited and the @file{*Buffer
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List*} buffer is displayed alongside @code{initial-buffer-choice}.
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@ignore
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@c I do not think this should be mentioned. AFAICS it is just a dodge
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@c around inhibit-startup-screen not being settable on a site-wide basis.
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If it is @code{t}, it selects the @file{*scratch*} buffer.
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@end ignore
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@c To make things nice and confusing, the next three items can be
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@c called from two places. If displaying a startup screen, they are
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@c called in command-line-1 before the startup screen is shown.
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@c inhibit-startup-hooks is then set and window-setup-hook set to nil.
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@c If not displaying a startup screen, they are called in
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@c normal-top-level.
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@c FIXME? So it seems they can be called before or after the
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@c daemon/session restore step?
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@item
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It runs @code{emacs-startup-hook}.
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@item
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It calls @code{frame-notice-user-settings}, which modifies the
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parameters of the selected frame according to whatever the init files
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specify.
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@item
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It runs @code{window-setup-hook}. The only difference between this
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hook and @code{emacs-startup-hook} is that this one runs after the
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previously mentioned modifications to the frame parameters.
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@item
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@cindex startup screen
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It displays the @dfn{startup screen}, which is a special buffer that
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contains information about copyleft and basic Emacs usage. This is
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not done if @code{inhibit-startup-screen} or @code{initial-buffer-choice}
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are non-@code{nil}, or if the @samp{--no-splash} or @samp{-Q} command-line
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options were specified.
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@c End of command-line-1.
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@c Back to command-line from command-line-1.
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@c This is the point at which we actually exit in batch mode, but the
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@c last few bits of command-line-1 are not done in batch mode.
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@item
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If a daemon was requested, it calls @code{server-start}.
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(On POSIX systems, if a background daemon was requested, it then
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detaches from the controlling terminal.) @xref{Emacs
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Server,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
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@item
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If started by the X session manager, it calls
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@code{emacs-session-restore} passing it as argument the ID of the
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previous session. @xref{Session Management}.
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@c End of command-line.
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@c Back to normal-top-level from command-line.
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@end enumerate
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@noindent
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The following options affect some aspects of the startup sequence.
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@defopt inhibit-startup-screen
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This variable, if non-@code{nil}, inhibits the startup screen. In
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that case, Emacs typically displays the @file{*scratch*} buffer; but
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see @code{initial-buffer-choice}, below.
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Do not set this variable in the init file of a new user, or in a way
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that affects more than one user, as that would prevent new users from
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receiving information about copyleft and basic Emacs usage.
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@vindex inhibit-startup-message
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@vindex inhibit-splash-screen
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@code{inhibit-startup-message} and @code{inhibit-splash-screen} are
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aliases for this variable.
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@end defopt
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@defopt initial-buffer-choice
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If non-@code{nil}, this variable is a string that specifies a file or
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directory for Emacs to display after starting up, instead of the
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startup screen.
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If its value is a function, Emacs calls that function which must
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return a buffer which is then displayed.
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If its value is @code{t}, Emacs displays the @file{*scratch*} buffer.
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@end defopt
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@defopt inhibit-startup-echo-area-message
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This variable controls the display of the startup echo area message.
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You can suppress the startup echo area message by adding text with this
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form to your init file:
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@example
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(setq inhibit-startup-echo-area-message
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"@var{your-login-name}")
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@end example
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Emacs explicitly checks for an expression as shown above in your init
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file; your login name must appear in the expression as a Lisp string
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constant. You can also use the Customize interface. Other methods of
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setting @code{inhibit-startup-echo-area-message} to the same value do
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not inhibit the startup message. This way, you can easily inhibit the
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message for yourself if you wish, but thoughtless copying of your init
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file will not inhibit the message for someone else.
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@end defopt
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@defopt initial-scratch-message
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This variable, if non-@code{nil}, should be a string, which is treated
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as documentation to be inserted into the @file{*scratch*} buffer when
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Emacs starts up or when that buffer is recreated. If it is
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@code{nil}, the @file{*scratch*} buffer is empty.
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@end defopt
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@noindent
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The following command-line options affect some aspects of the startup
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sequence. @xref{Initial Options,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
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@table @code
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@item --no-splash
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Do not display a splash screen.
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@item --batch
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Run without an interactive terminal. @xref{Batch Mode}.
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@item --daemon
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@itemx --bg-daemon
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@itemx --fg-daemon
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Do not initialize any display; just start a server.
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(A ``background'' daemon automatically runs in the background.)
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@item --no-init-file
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@itemx -q
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Do not load either the init file, or the @file{default} library.
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@item --no-site-file
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Do not load the @file{site-start} library.
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@item --quick
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@itemx -Q
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Equivalent to @samp{-q --no-site-file --no-splash}.
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@c and --no-site-lisp, but let's not mention that here.
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@item --init-directory
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Specify the directory to use when finding the Emacs init files.
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@end table
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@node Init File
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@subsection The Init File
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@cindex init file
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@cindex @file{.emacs}
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@cindex @file{init.el}
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@cindex @file{early-init.el}
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When you start Emacs, it normally attempts to load your @dfn{init
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file}. This is either a file named @file{.emacs} or @file{.emacs.el}
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in your home directory, or a file named @file{init.el} in a
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subdirectory named @file{.emacs.d} in your home directory.
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@ignore
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Whichever place you use, you can also compile the file (@pxref{Byte
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Compilation}); then the actual file loaded will be @file{.emacs.elc}
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or @file{init.elc}.
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@end ignore
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The command-line switches @samp{-q}, @samp{-Q}, and @samp{-u}
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control whether and where to find the init file; @samp{-q} (and the
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stronger @samp{-Q}) says not to load an init file, while @samp{-u
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@var{user}} says to load @var{user}'s init file instead of yours.
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@xref{Entering Emacs,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. If neither
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option is specified, Emacs uses the @env{LOGNAME} environment
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variable, or the @env{USER} (most systems) or @env{USERNAME} (MS
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systems) variable, to find your home directory and thus your init
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file; this way, even if you have su'd, Emacs still loads your own init
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file. If those environment variables are absent, though, Emacs uses
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your user-id to find your home directory.
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@cindex early init file
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Emacs also attempts to load a second init file, called the
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@dfn{early init file}, if it exists. This is a file named
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@file{early-init.el} in your @file{~/.emacs.d} directory. The
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difference between the early init file and the regular init file is
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that the early init file is loaded much earlier during the startup
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process, so you can use it to customize some things that are
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initialized before loading the regular init file. For example, you
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can customize the process of initializing the package system, by
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setting variables such as @var{package-load-list} or
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@var{package-enable-at-startup}. @xref{Package Installation,,,
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emacs,The GNU Emacs Manual}.
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@cindex default init file
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An Emacs installation may have a @dfn{default init file}, which is a
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Lisp library named @file{default.el}. Emacs finds this file through
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the standard search path for libraries (@pxref{How Programs Do
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Loading}). The Emacs distribution does not come with this file; it is
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intended for local customizations. If the default init file exists,
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it is loaded whenever you start Emacs. But your own personal init
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file, if any, is loaded first; if it sets @code{inhibit-default-init}
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to a non-@code{nil} value, then Emacs does not subsequently load the
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@file{default.el} file. In batch mode, or if you specify @samp{-q}
|
|
(or @samp{-Q}), Emacs loads neither your personal init file nor
|
|
the default init file.
|
|
|
|
Another file for site-customization is @file{site-start.el}. Emacs
|
|
loads this @emph{before} the user's init file. You can inhibit the
|
|
loading of this file with the option @samp{--no-site-file}.
|
|
|
|
@defopt site-run-file
|
|
This variable specifies the site-customization file to load before the
|
|
user's init file. Its normal value is @code{"site-start"}. The only
|
|
way you can change it with real effect is to do so before dumping
|
|
Emacs.
|
|
@c So why even mention it here. I imagine it is almost never changed.
|
|
@end defopt
|
|
|
|
@xref{Init Examples,, Init File Examples, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for
|
|
examples of how to make various commonly desired customizations in your
|
|
@file{.emacs} file.
|
|
|
|
@defopt inhibit-default-init
|
|
If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it prevents Emacs from loading the
|
|
default initialization library file. The default value is @code{nil}.
|
|
@end defopt
|
|
|
|
@defvar before-init-hook
|
|
This normal hook is run, once, just before loading all the init files
|
|
(@file{site-start.el}, your init file, and @file{default.el}).
|
|
(The only way to change it with real effect is before dumping Emacs.)
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar after-init-hook
|
|
This normal hook is run, once, just after loading all the init files
|
|
(@file{site-start.el}, your init file, and @file{default.el}),
|
|
before loading the terminal-specific library (if started on a text
|
|
terminal) and processing the command-line action arguments.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar emacs-startup-hook
|
|
This normal hook is run, once, just after handling the command line
|
|
arguments. In batch mode, Emacs does not run this hook.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar window-setup-hook
|
|
This normal hook is very similar to @code{emacs-startup-hook}.
|
|
The only difference is that it runs slightly later, after setting
|
|
of the frame parameters. @xref{Startup Summary, window-setup-hook}.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar user-init-file
|
|
This variable holds the absolute file name of the user's init file. If the
|
|
actual init file loaded is a compiled file, such as @file{.emacs.elc},
|
|
the value refers to the corresponding source file.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar user-emacs-directory
|
|
This variable holds the name of the Emacs default directory.
|
|
It defaults to @file{$@{XDG_CONFIG_HOME-'~/.config'@}/emacs/}
|
|
if that directory exists and @file{~/.emacs.d/} and @file{~/.emacs} do
|
|
not exist,
|
|
otherwise to @file{~/.emacs.d/} on all platforms but MS-DOS@.
|
|
Here, @file{$@{XDG_CONFIG_HOME-'~/.config'@}}
|
|
stands for the value of the environment variable @env{XDG_CONFIG_HOME}
|
|
if that variable is set, and for @file{~/.config} otherwise.
|
|
@xref{Find Init,,How Emacs Finds Your Init File, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@node Terminal-Specific
|
|
@subsection Terminal-Specific Initialization
|
|
@cindex terminal-specific initialization
|
|
|
|
Each terminal type can have its own Lisp library that Emacs loads when
|
|
run on that type of terminal. The library's name is constructed by
|
|
concatenating the value of the variable @code{term-file-prefix} and the
|
|
terminal type (specified by the environment variable @env{TERM}).
|
|
Normally, @code{term-file-prefix} has the value @code{"term/"};
|
|
changing this is not recommended. If there is an entry matching
|
|
@env{TERM} in the @code{term-file-aliases} association list,
|
|
Emacs uses the associated value in place of @env{TERM}.
|
|
Emacs finds the file in the normal manner, by searching the
|
|
@code{load-path} directories, and trying the @samp{.elc} and
|
|
@samp{.el} suffixes.
|
|
|
|
@cindex Termcap
|
|
The usual role of a terminal-specific library is to enable special
|
|
keys to send sequences that Emacs can recognize. It may also need to
|
|
set or add to @code{input-decode-map} if the Termcap or Terminfo entry
|
|
does not specify all the terminal's function keys. @xref{Terminal Input}.
|
|
|
|
When the name of the terminal type contains a hyphen or underscore,
|
|
and no library is found whose name is identical to the terminal's
|
|
name, Emacs strips from the terminal's name the last hyphen or
|
|
underscore and everything that follows
|
|
it, and tries again. This process is repeated until Emacs finds a
|
|
matching library, or until there are no more hyphens or underscores in the name
|
|
(i.e., there is no terminal-specific library). For example, if the
|
|
terminal name is @samp{xterm-256color} and there is no
|
|
@file{term/xterm-256color.el} library, Emacs tries to load
|
|
@file{term/xterm.el}. If necessary, the terminal library can evaluate
|
|
@code{(getenv "TERM")} to find the full name of the terminal type.
|
|
|
|
Your init file can prevent the loading of the terminal-specific
|
|
library by setting the variable @code{term-file-prefix} to @code{nil}.
|
|
|
|
You can also arrange to override some of the actions of the
|
|
terminal-specific library by using @code{tty-setup-hook}. This is
|
|
a normal hook that Emacs runs after initializing a new text terminal.
|
|
You could use this hook to define initializations for terminals that do not
|
|
have their own libraries. @xref{Hooks}.
|
|
|
|
@defopt term-file-prefix
|
|
@cindex @env{TERM} environment variable
|
|
If the value of this variable is non-@code{nil}, Emacs loads a
|
|
terminal-specific initialization file as follows:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
(load (concat term-file-prefix (getenv "TERM")))
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
@noindent
|
|
You may set the @code{term-file-prefix} variable to @code{nil} in your
|
|
init file if you do not wish to load the
|
|
terminal-initialization file.
|
|
|
|
On MS-DOS, Emacs sets the @env{TERM} environment variable to @samp{internal}.
|
|
@end defopt
|
|
|
|
@defopt term-file-aliases
|
|
This variable is an association list mapping terminal types to
|
|
their aliases. For example, an element of the form @code{("vt102"
|
|
. "vt100")} means to treat a terminal of type @samp{vt102} like one of
|
|
type @samp{vt100}.
|
|
@end defopt
|
|
|
|
@defvar tty-setup-hook
|
|
This variable is a normal hook that Emacs runs after initializing a
|
|
new text terminal. (This applies when Emacs starts up in non-windowed
|
|
mode, and when making a tty @command{emacsclient} connection.) The
|
|
hook runs after loading your init file (if applicable) and the
|
|
terminal-specific Lisp file, so you can use it to adjust the
|
|
definitions made by that file.
|
|
|
|
For a related feature, @pxref{Init File, window-setup-hook}.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@node Command-Line Arguments
|
|
@subsection Command-Line Arguments
|
|
@cindex command-line arguments
|
|
|
|
You can use command-line arguments to request various actions when
|
|
you start Emacs. Note that the recommended way of using Emacs is to
|
|
start it just once, after logging in, and then do all editing in the same
|
|
Emacs session (@pxref{Entering Emacs,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
|
|
For this reason, you might not use command-line arguments very often;
|
|
nonetheless, they can be useful when invoking Emacs from session
|
|
scripts or debugging Emacs. This section describes how Emacs
|
|
processes command-line arguments.
|
|
|
|
@defun command-line
|
|
This function parses the command line that Emacs was called with,
|
|
processes it, and (amongst other things) loads the user's init file and
|
|
displays the startup messages.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defvar command-line-processed
|
|
The value of this variable is @code{t} once the command line has been
|
|
processed.
|
|
|
|
If you redump Emacs by calling @code{dump-emacs} (@pxref{Building
|
|
Emacs}), you may wish to set this variable to @code{nil} first in
|
|
order to cause the new dumped Emacs to process its new command-line
|
|
arguments.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar command-switch-alist
|
|
@cindex switches on command line
|
|
@cindex options on command line
|
|
@cindex command-line options
|
|
This variable is an alist of user-defined command-line options and
|
|
associated handler functions. By default it is empty, but you can
|
|
add elements if you wish.
|
|
|
|
A @dfn{command-line option} is an argument on the command line, which
|
|
has the form:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
-@var{option}
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
The elements of the @code{command-switch-alist} look like this:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
(@var{option} . @var{handler-function})
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
The @sc{car}, @var{option}, is a string, the name of a command-line
|
|
option (including the initial hyphen). The @var{handler-function}
|
|
is called to handle @var{option}, and receives the option name as its
|
|
sole argument.
|
|
|
|
In some cases, the option is followed in the command line by an
|
|
argument. In these cases, the @var{handler-function} can find all the
|
|
remaining command-line arguments in the variable
|
|
@code{command-line-args-left} (see below). (The entire list of
|
|
command-line arguments is in @code{command-line-args}.)
|
|
|
|
Note that the handling of @code{command-switch-alist} doesn't treat
|
|
equals signs in @var{option} specially. That is, if there's an option
|
|
like @code{--name=value} on the command line, then only a
|
|
@code{command-switch-alist} member whose @code{car} is literally
|
|
@code{--name=value} will match this option. If you want to parse such
|
|
options, you need to use @code{command-line-functions} instead (see
|
|
below).
|
|
|
|
The command-line arguments are parsed by the @code{command-line-1}
|
|
function in the @file{startup.el} file. See also @ref{Emacs
|
|
Invocation, , Command Line Arguments for Emacs Invocation, emacs, The
|
|
GNU Emacs Manual}.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar command-line-args
|
|
The value of this variable is the list of command-line arguments passed
|
|
to Emacs.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar command-line-args-left
|
|
@vindex argv
|
|
The value of this variable is the list of command-line arguments that
|
|
have not yet been processed.
|
|
@c Don't mention this, since it is a "bad name for a dynamically bound variable"
|
|
@c @code{argv} is an alias for this.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar command-line-functions
|
|
This variable's value is a list of functions for handling an
|
|
unrecognized command-line argument. Each time the next argument to be
|
|
processed has no special meaning, the functions in this list are called,
|
|
in order of appearance, until one of them returns a non-@code{nil}
|
|
value.
|
|
|
|
These functions are called with no arguments. They can access the
|
|
command-line argument under consideration through the variable
|
|
@code{argi}, which is bound temporarily at this point. The remaining
|
|
arguments (not including the current one) are in the variable
|
|
@code{command-line-args-left}.
|
|
|
|
When a function recognizes and processes the argument in @code{argi}, it
|
|
should return a non-@code{nil} value to say it has dealt with that
|
|
argument. If it has also dealt with some of the following arguments, it
|
|
can indicate that by deleting them from @code{command-line-args-left}.
|
|
|
|
If all of these functions return @code{nil}, then the argument is treated
|
|
as a file name to visit.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@node Getting Out
|
|
@section Getting Out of Emacs
|
|
@cindex exiting Emacs
|
|
|
|
There are two ways to get out of Emacs: you can kill the Emacs job,
|
|
which exits permanently, or you can suspend it, which permits you to
|
|
reenter the Emacs process later. (In a graphical environment, you can
|
|
of course simply switch to another application without doing anything
|
|
special to Emacs, then switch back to Emacs when you want.)
|
|
|
|
@menu
|
|
* Killing Emacs:: Exiting Emacs irreversibly.
|
|
* Suspending Emacs:: Exiting Emacs reversibly.
|
|
@end menu
|
|
|
|
@node Killing Emacs
|
|
@subsection Killing Emacs
|
|
@cindex killing Emacs
|
|
|
|
Killing Emacs means ending the execution of the Emacs process.
|
|
If you started Emacs from a terminal, the parent process normally
|
|
resumes control. The low-level primitive for killing Emacs is
|
|
@code{kill-emacs}.
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command kill-emacs &optional exit-data restart
|
|
This command calls the hook @code{kill-emacs-hook}, then exits the
|
|
Emacs process and kills it.
|
|
|
|
If @var{exit-data} is an integer, that is used as the exit status of
|
|
the Emacs process. (This is useful primarily in batch operation; see
|
|
@ref{Batch Mode}.)
|
|
|
|
If @var{exit-data} is a string, its contents are stuffed into the
|
|
terminal input buffer so that the shell (or whatever program next reads
|
|
input) can read them.
|
|
|
|
If @var{exit-data} is neither an integer nor a string, or is omitted,
|
|
that means to use the (system-specific) exit status which indicates
|
|
successful program termination.
|
|
|
|
If @var{restart} is non-@code{nil}, instead of just exiting at the
|
|
end, start a new Emacs process, using the same command line arguments
|
|
as the currently running Emacs process.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@cindex SIGTERM
|
|
@cindex SIGHUP
|
|
@cindex SIGINT
|
|
@cindex operating system signal
|
|
The @code{kill-emacs} function is normally called via the
|
|
higher-level command @kbd{C-x C-c}
|
|
(@code{save-buffers-kill-terminal}). @xref{Exiting,,, emacs, The GNU
|
|
Emacs Manual}. It is also called automatically if Emacs receives a
|
|
@code{SIGTERM} or @code{SIGHUP} operating system signal (e.g., when the
|
|
controlling terminal is disconnected), or if it receives a
|
|
@code{SIGINT} signal while running in batch mode (@pxref{Batch Mode}).
|
|
|
|
@defvar kill-emacs-hook
|
|
This normal hook is run by @code{kill-emacs}, before it kills Emacs.
|
|
|
|
Because @code{kill-emacs} can be called in situations where user
|
|
interaction is impossible (e.g., when the terminal is disconnected),
|
|
functions on this hook should not attempt to interact with the user.
|
|
If you want to interact with the user when Emacs is shutting down, use
|
|
@code{kill-emacs-query-functions}, described below.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
When Emacs is killed, all the information in the Emacs process,
|
|
aside from files that have been saved, is lost. Because killing Emacs
|
|
inadvertently can lose a lot of work, the
|
|
@code{save-buffers-kill-terminal} command queries for confirmation if
|
|
you have buffers that need saving or subprocesses that are running.
|
|
It also runs the abnormal hook @code{kill-emacs-query-functions}:
|
|
|
|
@defopt kill-emacs-query-functions
|
|
When @code{save-buffers-kill-terminal} is killing Emacs, it calls the
|
|
functions in this hook, after asking the standard questions and before
|
|
calling @code{kill-emacs}. The functions are called in order of
|
|
appearance, with no arguments. Each function can ask for additional
|
|
confirmation from the user. If any of them returns @code{nil},
|
|
@code{save-buffers-kill-emacs} does not kill Emacs, and does not run
|
|
the remaining functions in this hook. Calling @code{kill-emacs}
|
|
directly does not run this hook.
|
|
@end defopt
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command restart-emacs
|
|
This command does the same as @code{save-buffers-kill-emacs}, but
|
|
instead of just killing the current Emacs process at the end, it'll
|
|
restart a new Emacs process, using the same command line arguments as
|
|
the currently running Emacs process.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@node Suspending Emacs
|
|
@subsection Suspending Emacs
|
|
@cindex suspending Emacs
|
|
|
|
On text terminals, it is possible to @dfn{suspend Emacs}, which
|
|
means stopping Emacs temporarily and returning control to its superior
|
|
process, which is usually the shell. This allows you to resume
|
|
editing later in the same Emacs process, with the same buffers, the
|
|
same kill ring, the same undo history, and so on. To resume Emacs,
|
|
use the appropriate command in the parent shell---most likely
|
|
@code{fg}.
|
|
|
|
@cindex controlling terminal
|
|
Suspending works only on a terminal device from which the Emacs
|
|
session was started. We call that device the @dfn{controlling
|
|
terminal} of the session. Suspending is not allowed if the
|
|
controlling terminal is a graphical terminal. Suspending is usually
|
|
not relevant in graphical environments, since you can simply switch to
|
|
another application without doing anything special to Emacs.
|
|
|
|
@c FIXME? Are there any systems Emacs still supports that do not
|
|
@c have SIGTSTP?
|
|
@cindex SIGTSTP
|
|
Some operating systems (those without @code{SIGTSTP}, or MS-DOS) do
|
|
not support suspension of jobs; on these systems, suspension
|
|
actually creates a new shell temporarily as a subprocess of Emacs.
|
|
Then you would exit the shell to return to Emacs.
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command suspend-emacs &optional string
|
|
This function stops Emacs and returns control to the superior process.
|
|
If and when the superior process resumes Emacs, @code{suspend-emacs}
|
|
returns @code{nil} to its caller in Lisp.
|
|
|
|
This function works only on the controlling terminal of the Emacs
|
|
session; to relinquish control of other tty devices, use
|
|
@code{suspend-tty} (see below). If the Emacs session uses more than
|
|
one terminal, you must delete the frames on all the other terminals
|
|
before suspending Emacs, or this function signals an error.
|
|
@xref{Multiple Terminals}.
|
|
|
|
If @var{string} is non-@code{nil}, its characters are sent to Emacs's
|
|
superior shell, to be read as terminal input.
|
|
@c FIXME? It seems to me that shell does echo STRING.
|
|
The characters in @var{string} are not echoed by the superior shell;
|
|
only the results appear.
|
|
|
|
Before suspending, @code{suspend-emacs} runs the normal hook
|
|
@code{suspend-hook}. After the user resumes Emacs,
|
|
@code{suspend-emacs} runs the normal hook @code{suspend-resume-hook}.
|
|
@xref{Hooks}.
|
|
|
|
The next redisplay after resumption will redraw the entire screen,
|
|
unless the variable @code{no-redraw-on-reenter} is non-@code{nil}.
|
|
@xref{Refresh Screen}.
|
|
|
|
Here is an example of how you could use these hooks:
|
|
|
|
@smallexample
|
|
@group
|
|
(add-hook 'suspend-hook
|
|
(lambda () (or (y-or-n-p "Really suspend?")
|
|
(error "Suspend canceled"))))
|
|
@end group
|
|
(add-hook 'suspend-resume-hook (lambda () (message "Resumed!")
|
|
(sit-for 2)))
|
|
@end smallexample
|
|
@c The sit-for prevents the @code{nil} that suspend-emacs returns
|
|
@c hiding the message.
|
|
|
|
Here is what you would see upon evaluating @code{(suspend-emacs "pwd")}:
|
|
|
|
@smallexample
|
|
@group
|
|
---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
|
|
Really suspend? @kbd{y}
|
|
---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
---------- Parent Shell ----------
|
|
bash$ /home/username
|
|
bash$ fg
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
---------- Echo Area ----------
|
|
Resumed!
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end smallexample
|
|
|
|
@c FIXME? AFAICS, it is echoed.
|
|
Note that @samp{pwd} is not echoed after Emacs is suspended. But it
|
|
is read and executed by the shell.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@defvar suspend-hook
|
|
This variable is a normal hook that Emacs runs before suspending.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar suspend-resume-hook
|
|
This variable is a normal hook that Emacs runs on resuming
|
|
after a suspension.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defun suspend-tty &optional tty
|
|
If @var{tty} specifies a terminal device used by Emacs, this function
|
|
relinquishes the device and restores it to its prior state. Frames
|
|
that used the device continue to exist, but are not updated and Emacs
|
|
doesn't read input from them. @var{tty} can be a terminal object, a
|
|
frame (meaning the terminal for that frame), or @code{nil} (meaning
|
|
the terminal for the selected frame). @xref{Multiple Terminals}.
|
|
|
|
If @var{tty} is already suspended, this function does nothing.
|
|
|
|
@vindex suspend-tty-functions
|
|
This function runs the hook @code{suspend-tty-functions}, passing the
|
|
terminal object as an argument to each function.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun resume-tty &optional tty
|
|
This function resumes the previously suspended terminal device
|
|
@var{tty}; where @var{tty} has the same possible values as it does
|
|
for @code{suspend-tty}.
|
|
|
|
@vindex resume-tty-functions
|
|
This function reopens the terminal device, re-initializes it, and
|
|
redraws it with that terminal's selected frame. It then runs the
|
|
hook @code{resume-tty-functions}, passing the terminal object as an
|
|
argument to each function.
|
|
|
|
If the same device is already used by another Emacs terminal, this
|
|
function signals an error. If @var{tty} is not suspended, this
|
|
function does nothing.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun controlling-tty-p &optional tty
|
|
This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{tty} is the
|
|
controlling terminal of the Emacs session; @var{tty} can be a
|
|
terminal object, a frame (meaning the terminal for that frame), or
|
|
@code{nil} (meaning the terminal for the selected frame).
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command suspend-frame
|
|
This command @dfn{suspends} a frame. For GUI frames, it calls
|
|
@code{iconify-frame} (@pxref{Visibility of Frames}); for frames on
|
|
text terminals, it calls either @code{suspend-emacs} or
|
|
@code{suspend-tty}, depending on whether the frame is displayed on the
|
|
controlling terminal device or not.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@node System Environment
|
|
@section Operating System Environment
|
|
@cindex operating system environment
|
|
|
|
Emacs provides access to variables in the operating system environment
|
|
through various functions. These variables include the name of the
|
|
system, the user's @acronym{UID}, and so on.
|
|
|
|
@defvar system-configuration
|
|
This variable holds the standard GNU configuration name for the
|
|
hardware/software configuration of your system, as a string. For
|
|
example, a typical value for a 64-bit GNU/Linux system is
|
|
@samp{"x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"}.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@cindex system type and name
|
|
@defvar system-type
|
|
The value of this variable is a symbol indicating the type of operating
|
|
system Emacs is running on. The possible values are:
|
|
|
|
@table @code
|
|
@item aix
|
|
IBM's AIX.
|
|
|
|
@item berkeley-unix
|
|
Berkeley BSD and its variants.
|
|
|
|
@item cygwin
|
|
Cygwin, a POSIX layer on top of MS-Windows.
|
|
|
|
@item darwin
|
|
Darwin (macOS).
|
|
|
|
@item gnu
|
|
The GNU system (using the GNU kernel, which consists of the HURD and Mach).
|
|
|
|
@item gnu/linux
|
|
A GNU/Linux system---that is, a variant GNU system, using the Linux
|
|
kernel. (These systems are the ones people often call ``Linux'', but
|
|
actually Linux is just the kernel, not the whole system.)
|
|
|
|
@item gnu/kfreebsd
|
|
A GNU (glibc-based) system with a FreeBSD kernel.
|
|
|
|
@item haiku
|
|
The Haiku operating system, a derivative of the Be Operating System.
|
|
|
|
@item hpux
|
|
Hewlett-Packard HPUX operating system.
|
|
|
|
@item nacl
|
|
Google Native Client (@acronym{NaCl}) sandboxing system.
|
|
|
|
@item ms-dos
|
|
Microsoft's DOS@. Emacs compiled with DJGPP for MS-DOS binds
|
|
@code{system-type} to @code{ms-dos} even when you run it on MS-Windows.
|
|
|
|
@item usg-unix-v
|
|
AT&T Unix System V.
|
|
|
|
@item windows-nt
|
|
Microsoft Windows NT, 9X and later. The value of @code{system-type}
|
|
is always @code{windows-nt}, e.g., even on Windows 10.
|
|
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
We do not wish to add new symbols to make finer distinctions unless it
|
|
is absolutely necessary! In fact, we hope to eliminate some of these
|
|
alternatives in the future. If you need to make a finer distinction
|
|
than @code{system-type} allows for, you can test
|
|
@code{system-configuration}, e.g., against a regexp.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defun system-name
|
|
This function returns the name of the machine you are running on, as a
|
|
string.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@c FIXME seems like this section is not the best place for this option?
|
|
@defopt mail-host-address
|
|
If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it is used instead of
|
|
@code{system-name} for purposes of generating email addresses. For
|
|
example, it is used when constructing the default value of
|
|
@code{user-mail-address}. @xref{User Identification}.
|
|
@end defopt
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command getenv var &optional frame
|
|
@cindex environment variable access
|
|
This function returns the value of the environment variable @var{var},
|
|
as a string. @var{var} should be a string. If @var{var} is undefined
|
|
in the environment, @code{getenv} returns @code{nil}. It returns
|
|
@samp{""} if @var{var} is set but null. Within Emacs, a list of environment
|
|
variables and their values is kept in the variable @code{process-environment}.
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(getenv "USER")
|
|
@result{} "lewis"
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
The shell command @code{printenv} prints all or part of the environment:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
bash$ printenv
|
|
PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin
|
|
USER=lewis
|
|
@end group
|
|
@group
|
|
TERM=xterm
|
|
SHELL=/bin/bash
|
|
HOME=/home/lewis
|
|
@end group
|
|
@dots{}
|
|
@end example
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command setenv variable &optional value substitute
|
|
This command sets the value of the environment variable named
|
|
@var{variable} to @var{value}. @var{variable} should be a string.
|
|
Internally, Emacs Lisp can handle any string. However, normally
|
|
@var{variable} should be a valid shell identifier, that is, a sequence
|
|
of letters, digits and underscores, starting with a letter or
|
|
underscore. Otherwise, errors may occur if subprocesses of Emacs try
|
|
to access the value of @var{variable}. If @var{value} is omitted or
|
|
@code{nil} (or, interactively, with a prefix argument), @code{setenv}
|
|
removes @var{variable} from the environment. Otherwise, @var{value}
|
|
should be a string.
|
|
|
|
@c FIXME: Document 'substitute-env-vars'? --xfq
|
|
If the optional argument @var{substitute} is non-@code{nil}, Emacs
|
|
calls the function @code{substitute-env-vars} to expand any
|
|
environment variables in @var{value}.
|
|
|
|
@code{setenv} works by modifying @code{process-environment}; binding
|
|
that variable with @code{let} is also reasonable practice.
|
|
|
|
@code{setenv} returns the new value of @var{variable}, or @code{nil}
|
|
if it removed @var{variable} from the environment.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@defmac with-environment-variables variables body@dots{}
|
|
This macro sets the environment variables according to @var{variables}
|
|
temporarily when executing @var{body}. The previous values are
|
|
restored when the form finishes. The argument @var{variables} should
|
|
be a list of pairs of strings of the form
|
|
@w{@code{(@var{var} @var{value})}}, where @var{var} is the name of the
|
|
environment variable and @var{value} is that variable's value.
|
|
|
|
@lisp
|
|
(with-environment-variables (("LANG" "C")
|
|
("LANGUAGE" "en_US:en"))
|
|
(call-process "ls" nil t))
|
|
@end lisp
|
|
@end defmac
|
|
|
|
@defvar process-environment
|
|
This variable is a list of strings, each describing one environment
|
|
variable. The functions @code{getenv} and @code{setenv} work by means
|
|
of this variable.
|
|
|
|
@smallexample
|
|
@group
|
|
process-environment
|
|
@result{} ("PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin"
|
|
"USER=lewis"
|
|
@end group
|
|
@group
|
|
"TERM=xterm"
|
|
"SHELL=/bin/bash"
|
|
"HOME=/home/lewis"
|
|
@dots{})
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end smallexample
|
|
|
|
If @code{process-environment} contains multiple elements that
|
|
specify the same environment variable, the first of these elements
|
|
specifies the variable, and the others are ignored.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar initial-environment
|
|
This variable holds the list of environment variables Emacs inherited
|
|
from its parent process when Emacs started.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar path-separator
|
|
This variable holds a string that says which character separates
|
|
directories in a search path (as found in an environment variable). Its
|
|
value is @code{":"} for Unix and GNU systems, and @code{";"} for MS systems.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defun path-separator
|
|
This function returns the connection-local value of variable
|
|
@code{path-separator}. That is @code{";"} for MS systems and a local
|
|
@code{default-directory}, and @code{":"} for Unix and GNU systems, or
|
|
a remote @code{default-directory}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun parse-colon-path path
|
|
This function takes a search path string such as the value of
|
|
the @env{PATH} environment variable, and splits it at the separators,
|
|
returning a list of directories. @code{nil} in this list means
|
|
the current directory. Although the function's name says
|
|
``colon'', it actually uses the value of variable @code{path-separator}.
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
(parse-colon-path ":/foo:/bar")
|
|
@result{} (nil "/foo/" "/bar/")
|
|
@end example
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defvar invocation-name
|
|
This variable holds the program name under which Emacs was invoked. The
|
|
value is a string, and does not include a directory name.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar invocation-directory
|
|
This variable holds the directory in which the Emacs executable was
|
|
located when it was run, or @code{nil} if that directory cannot be
|
|
determined.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar installation-directory
|
|
If non-@code{nil}, this is a directory within which to look for the
|
|
@file{lib-src} and @file{etc} subdirectories. In an installed Emacs,
|
|
it is normally @code{nil}. It is non-@code{nil}
|
|
when Emacs can't find those directories in their standard installed
|
|
locations, but can find them in a directory related somehow to the one
|
|
containing the Emacs executable (i.e., @code{invocation-directory}).
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defun load-average &optional use-float
|
|
This function returns the current 1-minute, 5-minute, and 15-minute
|
|
system load averages, in a list. The load average indicates the
|
|
number of processes trying to run on the system.
|
|
|
|
By default, the values are integers that are 100 times the system load
|
|
averages, but if @var{use-float} is non-@code{nil}, then they are
|
|
returned as floating-point numbers without multiplying by 100.
|
|
|
|
If it is impossible to obtain the load average, this function signals
|
|
an error. On some platforms, access to load averages requires
|
|
installing Emacs as setuid or setgid so that it can read kernel
|
|
information, and that usually isn't advisable.
|
|
@c FIXME which platforms are these? Are they still relevant?
|
|
|
|
If the 1-minute load average is available, but the 5- or 15-minute
|
|
averages are not, this function returns a shortened list containing
|
|
the available averages.
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(load-average)
|
|
@result{} (169 48 36)
|
|
@end group
|
|
@group
|
|
(load-average t)
|
|
@result{} (1.69 0.48 0.36)
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
The shell command @code{uptime} returns similar information.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun emacs-pid
|
|
This function returns the process @acronym{ID} of the Emacs process,
|
|
as an integer.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defvar tty-erase-char
|
|
This variable holds the erase character that was selected
|
|
in the system's terminal driver, before Emacs was started.
|
|
@c FIXME? Seems untrue since 23.1. For me, it is 0.
|
|
@c The value is @code{nil} if Emacs is running under a window system.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defvar null-device
|
|
This variable holds the system null device. Its value is
|
|
@code{"/dev/null"} for Unix and GNU systems, and @code{"NUL"} for MS
|
|
systems.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defun null-device
|
|
This function returns the connection-local value of variable
|
|
@code{null-device}. That is @code{"NUL"} for MS systems and a local
|
|
@code{default-directory}, and @code{"/dev/null"} for Unix and GNU
|
|
systems, or a remote @code{default-directory}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@node User Identification
|
|
@section User Identification
|
|
@cindex user identification
|
|
|
|
@defvar init-file-user
|
|
This variable says which user's init files should be used by
|
|
Emacs---or @code{nil} if none. @code{""} stands for the user who
|
|
originally logged in. The value reflects command-line options such as
|
|
@samp{-q} or @samp{-u @var{user}}.
|
|
|
|
Lisp packages that load files of customizations, or any other sort of
|
|
user profile, should obey this variable in deciding where to find it.
|
|
They should load the profile of the user name found in this variable.
|
|
If @code{init-file-user} is @code{nil}, meaning that the @samp{-q},
|
|
@samp{-Q}, or @samp{-batch} option was used, then Lisp packages should
|
|
not load any customization files or user profile.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defopt user-mail-address
|
|
This holds the email address of the user who is using Emacs.
|
|
@end defopt
|
|
|
|
@defun user-login-name &optional uid
|
|
This function returns the name under which the user is logged in.
|
|
It uses the environment variables @env{LOGNAME} or @env{USER} if
|
|
either is set. Otherwise, the value is based on the effective
|
|
@acronym{UID}, not the real @acronym{UID}.
|
|
|
|
If you specify @var{uid} (a number), the result is the user name that
|
|
corresponds to @var{uid}, or @code{nil} if there is no such user.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun user-real-login-name
|
|
This function returns the user name corresponding to Emacs's real
|
|
@acronym{UID}. This ignores the effective @acronym{UID}, and the
|
|
environment variables @env{LOGNAME} and @env{USER}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun user-full-name &optional uid
|
|
This function returns the full name of the logged-in user---or the value
|
|
of the environment variable @env{NAME}, if that is set.
|
|
|
|
If the Emacs process's user-id does not correspond to any known user (and
|
|
provided @env{NAME} is not set), the result is @code{"unknown"}.
|
|
|
|
If @var{uid} is non-@code{nil}, then it should be a number (a user-id)
|
|
or a string (a login name). Then @code{user-full-name} returns the full
|
|
name corresponding to that user-id or login name. If you specify a
|
|
user-id or login name that isn't defined, it returns @code{nil}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@vindex user-full-name
|
|
@vindex user-real-login-name
|
|
@vindex user-login-name
|
|
The symbols @code{user-login-name}, @code{user-real-login-name} and
|
|
@code{user-full-name} are variables as well as functions. The functions
|
|
return the same values that the variables hold. These variables allow
|
|
you to fake out Emacs by telling the functions what to return. The
|
|
variables are also useful for constructing frame titles (@pxref{Frame
|
|
Titles}).
|
|
|
|
@cindex UID
|
|
@defun user-real-uid
|
|
This function returns the real @acronym{UID} of the user.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun user-uid
|
|
This function returns the effective @acronym{UID} of the user.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun file-user-uid
|
|
This function returns the connection-local value for the user's
|
|
effective @acronym{UID}. If @code{default-directory} is local, this
|
|
is equivalent to @code{user-uid}, but for remote files (@pxref{Remote
|
|
Files, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}), it will return the
|
|
@acronym{UID} for the user associated with that remote connection; if
|
|
the remote connection has no associated user, it will instead return
|
|
-1.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@cindex GID
|
|
@defun group-gid
|
|
This function returns the effective @acronym{GID} of the Emacs process.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun group-real-gid
|
|
This function returns the real @acronym{GID} of the Emacs process.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun system-users
|
|
This function returns a list of strings, listing the user names on the
|
|
system. If Emacs cannot retrieve this information, the return value
|
|
is a list containing just the value of @code{user-real-login-name}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@cindex user groups
|
|
@defun system-groups
|
|
This function returns a list of strings, listing the names of user
|
|
groups on the system. If Emacs cannot retrieve this information, the
|
|
return value is @code{nil}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun group-name gid
|
|
This function returns the group name that corresponds to the numeric
|
|
group ID @var{gid}, or @code{nil} if there is no such group.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
|
|
@node Time of Day
|
|
@section Time of Day
|
|
@cindex time of day
|
|
|
|
This section explains how to determine the current time and time
|
|
zone.
|
|
|
|
@cindex Lisp timestamp
|
|
@cindex timestamp, Lisp
|
|
@cindex Coordinated Universal Time
|
|
@cindex Universal Time
|
|
@cindex UTC
|
|
@cindex leap seconds
|
|
Many functions like @code{current-time} and @code{file-attributes}
|
|
return @dfn{Lisp timestamp} values that count seconds, and that can
|
|
represent absolute time by counting seconds since the @dfn{epoch} of
|
|
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC (Coordinated Universal Time). Typically these
|
|
counts ignore leap seconds; however, GNU and some other operating
|
|
systems can be configured to count leap seconds.
|
|
|
|
Although traditionally Lisp timestamps were integer pairs, their
|
|
form has evolved and programs ordinarily should not depend on the
|
|
current default form. If your program needs a particular timestamp
|
|
form, you can use the @code{time-convert} function to convert it to the
|
|
needed form. @xref{Time Conversion}.
|
|
|
|
@cindex epoch
|
|
There are currently three forms of Lisp timestamps, each of
|
|
which represents a number of seconds:
|
|
|
|
@itemize @bullet
|
|
@item
|
|
An integer. Although this is the simplest form, it cannot represent
|
|
subsecond timestamps.
|
|
|
|
@item
|
|
A pair of integers @code{(@var{ticks} . @var{hz})}, where @var{hz} is
|
|
positive. This represents @var{ticks}/@var{hz} seconds, which is the
|
|
same time as plain @var{ticks} if @var{hz} is 1. A common value for
|
|
@var{hz} is 1000000000, for a nanosecond-resolution
|
|
clock.
|
|
|
|
@item
|
|
A list of four integers @code{(@var{high} @var{low} @var{micro}
|
|
@var{pico})}, where 0@leq{}@var{low}<65536,
|
|
0@leq{}@var{micro}<1000000, and 0@leq{}@var{pico}<1000000.
|
|
This represents the number of seconds using the formula:
|
|
@ifnottex
|
|
@var{high} * 2**16 + @var{low} + @var{micro} * 10**@minus{}6 +
|
|
@var{pico} * 10**@minus{}12.
|
|
@end ifnottex
|
|
@tex
|
|
$high \times 2^{16} + low + micro \times 10^{-6} + pico \times 10^{-12}$.
|
|
@end tex
|
|
If @code{current-time-list} is @code{t},
|
|
some functions may default to returning two- or
|
|
three-element lists, with omitted @var{micro} and @var{pico}
|
|
components defaulting to zero.
|
|
On all current machines @var{pico} is a multiple of 1000, but this
|
|
may change as higher-resolution clocks become available.
|
|
@end itemize
|
|
|
|
@cindex time value
|
|
Function arguments, e.g., the @var{time} argument to
|
|
@code{format-time-string}, accept a more-general @dfn{time value}
|
|
format, which can be a Lisp timestamp, @code{nil} for the current
|
|
time, a finite floating-point number for seconds, or a list
|
|
@code{(@var{high} @var{low} @var{micro})} or @code{(@var{high}
|
|
@var{low})} that is a truncated list timestamp with missing elements
|
|
taken to be zero.
|
|
|
|
@cindex Specified time is not representable
|
|
Time values can be converted to and from calendrical and other forms.
|
|
Some of these conversions rely on operating system functions that
|
|
limit the range of possible time values, and signal an error such as
|
|
@samp{"Specified time is not representable"} if the
|
|
limits are exceeded. For instance, a system might not support
|
|
timestamps before the epoch, or years far in the future.
|
|
You can convert a time value into
|
|
a human-readable string using @code{format-time-string}, into a Lisp
|
|
timestamp using @code{time-convert}, and into other forms using
|
|
@code{decode-time} and @code{float-time}. These functions are
|
|
described in the following sections.
|
|
|
|
@defun current-time-string &optional time zone
|
|
This function returns the current time and date as a human-readable
|
|
string. The format does not vary for the initial part of the string,
|
|
which contains the day of week, month, day of month, and time of day
|
|
in that order: the number of characters used for these fields is
|
|
always the same, although (unless you require English weekday or
|
|
month abbreviations regardless of locale) it is typically more
|
|
convenient to use @code{format-time-string} than to extract
|
|
fields from the output of @code{current-time-string},
|
|
as the year might not have exactly four digits, and additional
|
|
information may some day be added at the end.
|
|
|
|
The argument @var{time}, if given, specifies a time to format,
|
|
instead of the current time. The optional argument @var{zone}
|
|
defaults to the current time zone rule. @xref{Time Zone Rules}.
|
|
The operating system limits the range of time and zone values.
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(current-time-string)
|
|
@result{} "Fri Nov @ 1 15:59:49 2019"
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defvar current-time-list
|
|
This boolean variable is a transition aid. If @code{t},
|
|
@code{current-time} and related functions return timestamps in list
|
|
form, typically @code{(@var{high} @var{low} @var{micro} @var{pico})};
|
|
otherwise, they use @code{(@var{ticks} . @var{hz})} form. Currently
|
|
this variable defaults to @code{t}, for behavior compatible with
|
|
previous Emacs versions. Developers are encouraged to test
|
|
timestamp-related code with this variable set to @code{nil}, as it
|
|
will default to @code{nil} in a future Emacs version, and will be
|
|
removed in some version after that.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@defun current-time
|
|
This function returns the current time as a Lisp timestamp.
|
|
If @code{current-time-list} is @code{nil},
|
|
the timestamp has the form @code{(@var{ticks} . @var{hz})} where
|
|
@var{ticks} counts clock ticks and @var{hz} is the clock ticks per second.
|
|
Otherwise, the timestamp has the list form
|
|
@code{(@var{high} @var{low} @var{usec} @var{psec})}.
|
|
You can use @code{(time-convert nil t)} or @code{(time-convert nil 'list)}
|
|
to obtain a particular form regardless of the value of
|
|
@code{current-time-list}. @xref{Time Conversion}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun float-time &optional time
|
|
This function returns the current time as a floating-point number of
|
|
seconds since the epoch. The optional argument @var{time}, if
|
|
given, specifies a time to convert instead of the current time.
|
|
|
|
@emph{Warning}: Since the result is floating point, it may not be
|
|
exact. Do not use this function if precise time stamps are required.
|
|
For example, on typical systems @code{(float-time '(1 . 10))} displays
|
|
as @samp{0.1} but is slightly greater than 1/10.
|
|
|
|
@code{time-to-seconds} is an alias for this function.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun current-cpu-time
|
|
Return the current @acronym{CPU} time along with its resolution. The
|
|
return value is a pair @code{(CPU-TICKS . TICKS-PER-SEC)}. The
|
|
@var{CPU-TICKS} counter can wrap around, so values cannot be
|
|
meaningfully compared if too much time has passed between them.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@node Time Zone Rules
|
|
@section Time Zone Rules
|
|
@cindex time zone rules
|
|
|
|
@vindex TZ@r{, environment variable}
|
|
The default time zone is determined by the @env{TZ} environment
|
|
variable. @xref{System Environment}. For example, you can tell Emacs
|
|
to default to Universal Time with @code{(setenv "TZ" "UTC0")}. If
|
|
@env{TZ} is not in the environment, Emacs uses system wall clock time,
|
|
which is a platform-dependent default time zone.
|
|
|
|
The set of supported @env{TZ} strings is system-dependent. GNU and
|
|
many other systems support TZDB timezones, e.g.,
|
|
@samp{"America/New_York"} specifies the time zone and daylight saving
|
|
time history for locations near New York City. GNU and most other
|
|
systems support POSIX-style @env{TZ} strings, e.g.,
|
|
@samp{"EST5EDT,M4.1.0,M10.5.0"} specifies the rules used in New
|
|
York from 1987 through 2006. All systems support the string
|
|
@samp{"UTC0"} meaning Universal Time.
|
|
|
|
@cindex time zone rule
|
|
Functions that convert to and from local time accept an optional
|
|
@dfn{time zone rule} argument, which specifies the conversion's time
|
|
zone and daylight saving time history. If the time zone rule is
|
|
omitted or @code{nil}, the conversion uses Emacs's default time zone.
|
|
If it is @code{t}, the conversion uses Universal Time. If it is
|
|
@code{wall}, the conversion uses the system wall clock time. If it is
|
|
a string, the conversion uses the time zone rule equivalent to setting
|
|
@env{TZ} to that string. If it is a list (@var{offset} @var{abbr}), where
|
|
@var{offset} is an integer number of seconds east of Universal Time
|
|
and @var{abbr} is a string, the conversion uses a fixed time zone with
|
|
the given offset and abbreviation. An integer @var{offset} is treated
|
|
as if it were (@var{offset} @var{abbr}), where @var{abbr} is a numeric
|
|
abbreviation on POSIX-compatible platforms and is unspecified on
|
|
MS-Windows.
|
|
|
|
@defun current-time-zone &optional time zone
|
|
@cindex time zone, current
|
|
This function returns a list describing the time zone that the user is
|
|
in.
|
|
|
|
The value has the form @code{(@var{offset} @var{abbr})}. Here
|
|
@var{offset} is an integer giving the number of seconds ahead of Universal Time
|
|
(east of Greenwich). A negative value means west of Greenwich. The
|
|
second element, @var{abbr}, is a string giving an abbreviation for the
|
|
time zone, e.g., @samp{"CST"} for China Standard Time or for
|
|
U.S. Central Standard Time. Both elements can change when daylight
|
|
saving time begins or ends; if the user has specified a time zone that
|
|
does not use a seasonal time adjustment, then the value is constant
|
|
through time.
|
|
|
|
If the operating system doesn't supply all the information necessary to
|
|
compute the value, the unknown elements of the list are @code{nil}.
|
|
|
|
The argument @var{time}, if given, specifies a time value to
|
|
analyze instead of the current time. The optional argument @var{zone}
|
|
defaults to the current time zone rule.
|
|
The operating system limits the range of time and zone values.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@node Time Conversion
|
|
@section Time Conversion
|
|
@cindex calendrical information
|
|
@cindex time conversion
|
|
|
|
These functions convert time values (@pxref{Time of Day}) to Lisp
|
|
timestamps, or into calendrical information and vice versa.
|
|
|
|
Many operating systems use 64-bit signed integers to count seconds,
|
|
and can represent times far in the past or future. However, some are
|
|
more limited. For example, old-fashioned operating systems that use
|
|
32-bit signed integers typically handle only times from 1901-12-13
|
|
20:45:52 through 2038-01-19 03:14:07 Universal Time.
|
|
|
|
Calendrical conversion functions use the Gregorian calendar even for
|
|
dates before the Gregorian calendar was introduced, and for dates in
|
|
the far distant past or future for which the Gregorian calendar
|
|
is wildly inaccurate and disagrees with common practice in scientific fields
|
|
like astronomy and paleontology, which use Julian-calendar year lengths.
|
|
Year numbers count since the year 1 BCE, and do not skip zero
|
|
as traditional Gregorian years do; for example, the year number
|
|
@minus{}37 represents the Gregorian year 38 BCE@.
|
|
|
|
@defun time-convert time form
|
|
This function converts a time value into a Lisp timestamp.
|
|
|
|
The @var{form} argument specifies the timestamp form to be returned.
|
|
If @var{form} is the symbol @code{integer}, this function returns an
|
|
integer count of seconds. If @var{form} is a positive integer, it
|
|
specifies a clock frequency and this function returns an integer-pair
|
|
timestamp @code{(@var{ticks} . @var{form})}. If @var{form} is
|
|
@code{t}, this function treats it as a positive integer suitable for
|
|
representing the timestamp; for example, it is treated as 1000000000
|
|
if @var{time} is @code{nil} and the platform timestamp has nanosecond
|
|
resolution. If @var{form} is @code{list}, this function returns an
|
|
integer list @code{(@var{high} @var{low} @var{micro} @var{pico})}.
|
|
Although a @code{nil} @var{form} currently acts like
|
|
@code{list}, this is planned to change in a future Emacs version, so
|
|
callers requiring list timestamps should pass @code{list} explicitly.
|
|
|
|
If @var{time} is not a time value, this function signals an error.
|
|
Otherwise, if @var{time} cannot be represented exactly, conversion
|
|
truncates it toward minus infinity. When @var{form} is @code{t},
|
|
conversion is always exact so no truncation occurs, and the returned
|
|
clock resolution is no less than that of @var{time}. By way of
|
|
contrast, although @code{float-time} can also convert any time value
|
|
without signaling an error, the result might not be exact.
|
|
@xref{Time of Day}.
|
|
|
|
For efficiency this function might return a value that is @code{eq} to
|
|
@var{time}, or that otherwise shares structure with @var{time}.
|
|
|
|
Although @code{(time-convert nil nil)} is equivalent to
|
|
@code{(current-time)}, the latter may be a bit faster.
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(setq a (time-convert nil t))
|
|
@result{} (1564826753904873156 . 1000000000)
|
|
@end group
|
|
@group
|
|
(time-convert a 100000)
|
|
@result{} (156482675390487 . 100000)
|
|
@end group
|
|
@group
|
|
(time-convert a 'integer)
|
|
@result{} 1564826753
|
|
@end group
|
|
@group
|
|
(time-convert a 'list)
|
|
@result{} (23877 23681 904873 156000)
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun decode-time &optional time zone form
|
|
This function converts a time value into calendrical information. If
|
|
you don't specify @var{time}, it decodes the current time, and similarly
|
|
@var{zone} defaults to the current time zone rule. @xref{Time Zone Rules}.
|
|
The operating system limits the range of time and zone values.
|
|
|
|
The @var{form} argument controls the form of the returned
|
|
@var{seconds} element, as described below.
|
|
The return value is a list of nine elements, as follows:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
(@var{seconds} @var{minutes} @var{hour} @var{day} @var{month} @var{year} @var{dow} @var{dst} @var{utcoff})
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
Here is what the elements mean:
|
|
|
|
@table @var
|
|
@item seconds
|
|
The number of seconds past the minute, with form described below.
|
|
@item minutes
|
|
The number of minutes past the hour, as an integer between 0 and 59.
|
|
@item hour
|
|
The hour of the day, as an integer between 0 and 23.
|
|
@item day
|
|
The day of the month, as an integer between 1 and 31.
|
|
@item month
|
|
The month of the year, as an integer between 1 and 12.
|
|
@item year
|
|
The year, an integer typically greater than 1900.
|
|
@item dow
|
|
The day of week, as an integer between 0 and 6, where 0 stands for
|
|
Sunday.
|
|
@item dst
|
|
@code{t} if daylight saving time is effect, @code{nil} if it is not
|
|
in effect, and @minus{}1 if this information is not available.
|
|
@item utcoff
|
|
An integer indicating the Universal Time offset in seconds, i.e., the number of
|
|
seconds east of Greenwich.
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
The @var{seconds} element is a Lisp timestamp that is nonnegative and
|
|
less than 61; it is less than 60 except during positive leap seconds
|
|
(assuming the operating system supports leap seconds). If the
|
|
optional @var{form} argument is @code{t}, @var{seconds} uses the same
|
|
precision as @var{time}; if @var{form} is @code{integer},
|
|
@var{seconds} is truncated to an integer. For example, if @var{time}
|
|
is the timestamp @code{(1566009571321 . 1000)}, which represents
|
|
2019-08-17 02:39:31.321 UTC on typical systems that lack leap seconds,
|
|
then @code{(decode-time @var{time} t t)} returns @code{((31321 . 1000)
|
|
39 2 17 8 2019 6 nil 0)}, whereas @code{(decode-time @var{time} t
|
|
'integer)} returns @code{(31 39 2 17 8 2019 6 nil 0)}. If @var{form}
|
|
is omitted or @code{nil}, it currently defaults to @code{integer} but
|
|
this default may change in future Emacs releases, so callers requiring
|
|
a particular form should specify @var{form}.
|
|
|
|
@strong{Common Lisp Note:} Common Lisp has different meanings for
|
|
@var{dow}, @code{dst} and @var{utcoff}, and its @var{second} is an
|
|
integer between 0 and 59 inclusive.
|
|
|
|
To access (or alter) the elements in the calendrical information, the
|
|
@code{decoded-time-second}, @code{decoded-time-minute},
|
|
@code{decoded-time-hour}, @code{decoded-time-day},
|
|
@code{decoded-time-month}, @code{decoded-time-year},
|
|
@code{decoded-time-weekday}, @code{decoded-time-dst} and
|
|
@code{decoded-time-zone} accessors can be used.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun encode-time time &rest obsolescent-arguments
|
|
This function converts @var{time} to a Lisp timestamp.
|
|
It can act as the inverse of @code{decode-time}.
|
|
|
|
Ordinarily the first argument is a list
|
|
@code{(@var{second} @var{minute} @var{hour} @var{day} @var{month}
|
|
@var{year} @var{ignored} @var{dst} @var{zone})} that specifies a
|
|
decoded time in the style of @code{decode-time}. For the meanings of
|
|
these list elements, see the table under @code{decode-time}.
|
|
In particular, @var{dst} says how to interpret timestamps during a
|
|
daylight saving fallback when timestamps are repeated.
|
|
If @var{dst} is @minus{}1, the DST value is guessed; if it
|
|
is @code{t} or @code{nil} the timestamp with that DST value
|
|
is returned, with an error signaled if no such timestamp exists.
|
|
Unfortunately a @var{dst} value of @code{t} or @code{nil} does not
|
|
disambiguate timestamps duplicated when a TZDB-based timezone moves
|
|
further west of Greenwich, such as disambiguating the two
|
|
standard-time timestamps 2020-12-27 01:30 when @var{zone} is
|
|
@samp{"Europe/Volgograd"}, which at 02:00 that day changed
|
|
standard time from 4 to 3 hours east of Greenwich; if you need to
|
|
handle situations like this you can use a numeric @var{zone} to
|
|
disambiguate instead.
|
|
|
|
The first argument can also be a list @code{(@var{second} @var{minute}
|
|
@var{hour} @var{day} @var{month} @var{year})}, which is treated like
|
|
the list @code{(@var{second} @var{minute} @var{hour} @var{day}
|
|
@var{month} @var{year} nil -1 nil)}.
|
|
|
|
As an obsolescent calling convention, this function can be given six
|
|
or more arguments. The first six arguments @var{second},
|
|
@var{minute}, @var{hour}, @var{day}, @var{month}, and @var{year}
|
|
specify most of the components of a decoded time. If there are more
|
|
than six arguments the @emph{last} argument is used as @var{zone} and
|
|
any other extra arguments are ignored, so that @code{(apply
|
|
#'encode-time (decode-time ...))} works. In this obsolescent
|
|
convention, @var{dst} is @minus{}1 and @var{zone} defaults to the
|
|
current time zone rule (@pxref{Time Zone Rules}).
|
|
When modernizing an obsolescent caller, ensure that the more-modern
|
|
list equivalent contains 9 elements with a @code{dst} element that
|
|
is @minus{}1, not @code{nil}.
|
|
|
|
Year numbers less than 100 are not treated specially. If you want them
|
|
to stand for years above 1900, or years above 2000, you must alter them
|
|
yourself before you call @code{encode-time}.
|
|
The operating system limits the range of time and zone values.
|
|
However, timestamps ranging from the epoch to the near future are
|
|
always supported.
|
|
|
|
The @code{encode-time} function acts as a rough inverse to
|
|
@code{decode-time}. For example, you can pass the output of
|
|
the latter to the former as follows:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
(encode-time (decode-time @dots{}))
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
You can perform simple date arithmetic by using out-of-range values for
|
|
@var{seconds}, @var{minutes}, @var{hour}, @var{day}, and @var{month};
|
|
for example, day 0 means the day preceding the given month.
|
|
Take care when doing so, as it is common for this to fail in some cases.
|
|
For example:
|
|
|
|
@lisp
|
|
;; Try to compute the time one month from now.
|
|
;; Watch out; this might not work as expected.
|
|
(let ((time (decode-time)))
|
|
(setf (decoded-time-month time)
|
|
(+ (decoded-time-month time) 1))
|
|
time)
|
|
@end lisp
|
|
|
|
@noindent
|
|
Unfortunately, this code might not work as expected if the resulting
|
|
time is invalid due to month length differences,
|
|
daylight saving transitions, time zone changes,
|
|
or missing leap days or leap seconds. For example, if executed on
|
|
January 30 this code yields a nonexistent date February 30,
|
|
which @code{encode-time} would adjust to early March.
|
|
Similarly, adding four years to February 29, 2096 would yield the
|
|
nonexistent date February 29, 2100; and adding one hour to 01:30 on
|
|
March 13, 2022 in New York would yield a timestamp 02:30 that does not
|
|
exist because clocks sprang forward from 02:00 to 03:00 that day.
|
|
To avoid some (though not all) of the problem, you
|
|
can base calculations on the middle of the affected unit, e.g., start
|
|
at the 15th of the month when adding months. Alternatively, you can use the
|
|
@file{calendar} and @file{time-date} libraries.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@node Time Parsing
|
|
@section Parsing and Formatting Times
|
|
@cindex time parsing
|
|
@cindex time formatting
|
|
@cindex formatting time values
|
|
|
|
These functions convert time values to text in a string, and vice
|
|
versa. Time values are either represented as a Lisp timestamp
|
|
(@pxref{Time of Day}) or a decoded time structure (@pxref{Time
|
|
Conversion}).
|
|
|
|
@defun date-to-time string
|
|
This function parses the time-string @var{string} and returns the
|
|
corresponding Lisp timestamp. The argument @var{string} should represent
|
|
a date-time, and should be in one of the forms recognized by
|
|
@code{parse-time-string} (see below). This function assumes Universal
|
|
Time if @var{string} lacks explicit time zone information,
|
|
and assumes earliest values if @var{string} lacks month, day, or time.
|
|
The operating system limits the range of time and zone values.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun parse-time-string string
|
|
This function parses the time-string @var{string} into a decoded time
|
|
structure (@pxref{Time Conversion}). The argument @var{string} should
|
|
resemble an RFC 822 (or later) or ISO 8601 string, like ``Fri, 25 Mar
|
|
2016 16:24:56 +0100'' or ``1998-09-12T12:21:54-0200'', but this
|
|
function will attempt to parse less well-formed time strings as well.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@vindex ISO 8601 date/time strings
|
|
@defun iso8601-parse string
|
|
For a more strict function (that will error out upon invalid input),
|
|
this function can be used instead. It can parse all variants of
|
|
the ISO 8601 standard, so in addition to the formats mentioned above,
|
|
it also parses things like ``1998W45-3'' (week number) and
|
|
``1998-245'' (ordinal day number). To parse durations, there's
|
|
@code{iso8601-parse-duration}, and to parse intervals, there's
|
|
@code{iso8601-parse-interval}. All these functions return decoded
|
|
time structures, except the final one, which returns three of them
|
|
(the start, the end, and the duration).
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun format-time-string format-string &optional time zone
|
|
This function converts @var{time} (which should be a Lisp timestamp,
|
|
and defaults to the current time if @var{time} is omitted or
|
|
@code{nil}) to a string according to @var{format-string}. The
|
|
conversion uses the time zone rule @var{zone}, which defaults to the
|
|
current time zone rule. @xref{Time Zone Rules}. The argument
|
|
@var{format-string} may contain @samp{%}-sequences which say to
|
|
substitute parts of the time. Here is a table of what the
|
|
@samp{%}-sequences mean:
|
|
|
|
@table @samp
|
|
@item %a
|
|
This stands for the abbreviated name of the day of week.
|
|
@item %A
|
|
This stands for the full name of the day of week.
|
|
@item %b
|
|
This stands for the abbreviated name of the month.
|
|
@item %B
|
|
This stands for the full name of the month.
|
|
@item %c
|
|
This is a synonym for @samp{%x %X}.
|
|
@item %C
|
|
This stands for the century, that is, the year divided by 100,
|
|
truncated toward zero.
|
|
The default field width is 2.
|
|
@item %d
|
|
This stands for the day of month, zero-padded.
|
|
@item %D
|
|
This is a synonym for @samp{%m/%d/%y}.
|
|
@item %e
|
|
This stands for the day of month, blank-padded.
|
|
@item %F
|
|
This stands for the ISO 8601 date format, which is like
|
|
@samp{%+4Y-%m-%d} except that any flags or field width override the
|
|
@samp{+} and (after subtracting 6) the @samp{4}.
|
|
@item %g
|
|
@cindex ISO week, in time formatting
|
|
This stands for the year without century (00--99) corresponding to the
|
|
current @dfn{ISO week} number. ISO weeks start on Monday and end on
|
|
Sunday. If an ISO week begins in one year and ends in another, the
|
|
rules regarding which year @samp{%g} will produce are complex and will
|
|
not be described here; however, in general, if most of the week's days
|
|
are in the ending year, @samp{%g} will produce that year.
|
|
@item %G
|
|
This stands for the year with century corresponding to the current ISO
|
|
week number.
|
|
@item %h
|
|
This is a synonym for @samp{%b}.
|
|
@item %H
|
|
This stands for the hour (00--23).
|
|
@item %I
|
|
This stands for the hour (01--12).
|
|
@item %j
|
|
This stands for the day of the year (001--366).
|
|
@item %k
|
|
This stands for the hour (0--23), blank padded.
|
|
@item %l
|
|
This stands for the hour (1--12), blank padded.
|
|
@item %m
|
|
This stands for the month (01--12).
|
|
@item %M
|
|
This stands for the minute (00--59).
|
|
@item %n
|
|
This stands for a newline.
|
|
@item %N
|
|
This stands for the nanoseconds (000000000--999999999). To ask for
|
|
fewer digits, use @samp{%3N} for milliseconds, @samp{%6N} for
|
|
microseconds, etc. Any excess digits are discarded, without rounding.
|
|
@item %p
|
|
This stands for @samp{AM} or @samp{PM}, as appropriate.
|
|
@item %q
|
|
This stands for the calendar quarter (1--4).
|
|
@item %r
|
|
This is a synonym for @samp{%I:%M:%S %p}.
|
|
@item %R
|
|
This is a synonym for @samp{%H:%M}.
|
|
@item %s
|
|
This stands for the integer number of seconds since the epoch.
|
|
@item %S
|
|
This stands for the second (00--59, or 00--60 on platforms
|
|
that support leap seconds).
|
|
@item %t
|
|
This stands for a tab character.
|
|
@item %T
|
|
This is a synonym for @samp{%H:%M:%S}.
|
|
@item %u
|
|
This stands for the numeric day of week (1--7). Monday is day 1.
|
|
@item %U
|
|
This stands for the week of the year (01--52), assuming that weeks
|
|
start on Sunday.
|
|
@item %V
|
|
This stands for the week of the year according to ISO 8601.
|
|
@item %w
|
|
This stands for the numeric day of week (0--6). Sunday is day 0.
|
|
@item %W
|
|
This stands for the week of the year (01--52), assuming that weeks
|
|
start on Monday.
|
|
@item %x
|
|
This has a locale-specific meaning. In the default locale (named
|
|
@samp{C}), it is equivalent to @samp{%D}.
|
|
@item %X
|
|
This has a locale-specific meaning. In the default locale (named
|
|
@samp{C}), it is equivalent to @samp{%T}.
|
|
@item %y
|
|
This stands for the year without century (00--99).
|
|
@item %Y
|
|
This stands for the year with century.
|
|
@item %Z
|
|
This stands for the time zone abbreviation (e.g., @samp{EST}).
|
|
@item %z
|
|
This stands for the time zone numerical offset. The @samp{z} can be
|
|
preceded by one, two, or three colons; if plain @samp{%z} stands for
|
|
@samp{-0500}, then @samp{%:z} stands for @samp{-05:00}, @samp{%::z}
|
|
stands for @samp{-05:00:00}, and @samp{%:::z} is like @samp{%::z}
|
|
except it suppresses trailing instances of @samp{:00} so it stands for
|
|
@samp{-05} in the same example.
|
|
@item %%
|
|
This stands for a single @samp{%}.
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
One or more flag characters can appear immediately after the @samp{%}.
|
|
@samp{0} pads with zeros, @samp{+} pads with zeros and also puts
|
|
@samp{+} before nonnegative year numbers with more than four digits,
|
|
@samp{_} pads with blanks, @samp{-}
|
|
suppresses padding, @samp{^} upper-cases letters, and @samp{#}
|
|
reverses the case of letters.
|
|
|
|
You can also specify the field width and type of padding for any of
|
|
these @samp{%}-sequences. This works as in @code{printf}: you write
|
|
the field width as digits in a @samp{%}-sequence, after any flags.
|
|
For example, @samp{%S} specifies the number of seconds since the minute;
|
|
@samp{%03S} means to pad this with zeros to 3 positions, @samp{%_3S} to
|
|
pad with spaces to 3 positions. Plain @samp{%3S} pads with zeros,
|
|
because that is how @samp{%S} normally pads to two positions.
|
|
|
|
The characters @samp{E} and @samp{O} act as modifiers when used after
|
|
any flags and field widths in a @samp{%}-sequence. @samp{E} specifies
|
|
using the current locale's alternative version of the date and time.
|
|
In a Japanese locale, for example, @code{%Ex} might yield a date format
|
|
based on the Japanese Emperors' reigns. @samp{E} is allowed in
|
|
@samp{%Ec}, @samp{%EC}, @samp{%Ex}, @samp{%EX}, @samp{%Ey}, and
|
|
@samp{%EY}.
|
|
|
|
@samp{O} means to use the current locale's alternative
|
|
representation of numbers, instead of the ordinary decimal digits. This
|
|
is allowed with most letters, all the ones that output numbers.
|
|
|
|
To help debug programs, unrecognized @samp{%}-sequences stand for
|
|
themselves and are output as-is. Programs should not rely on this
|
|
behavior, as future versions of Emacs may recognize new
|
|
@samp{%}-sequences as extensions.
|
|
|
|
This function uses the C library function @code{strftime}
|
|
(@pxref{Formatting Calendar Time,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
|
|
Manual}) to do most of the work. In order to communicate with that
|
|
function, it first converts @var{time} and @var{zone} to internal form;
|
|
the operating system limits the range of time and zone values.
|
|
This function also encodes @var{format-string} using the coding system
|
|
specified by @code{locale-coding-system} (@pxref{Locales}); after
|
|
@code{strftime} returns the resulting string,
|
|
this function decodes the string using that same coding
|
|
system.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun format-seconds format-string seconds
|
|
This function converts its argument @var{seconds} into a string of
|
|
years, days, hours, etc., according to @var{format-string}. The
|
|
argument @var{format-string} may contain @samp{%}-sequences which
|
|
control the conversion. Here is a table of what the
|
|
@samp{%}-sequences mean:
|
|
|
|
@table @samp
|
|
@item %y
|
|
@itemx %Y
|
|
The integer number of 365-day years.
|
|
@item %d
|
|
@itemx %D
|
|
The integer number of days.
|
|
@item %h
|
|
@itemx %H
|
|
The integer number of hours.
|
|
@item %m
|
|
@itemx %M
|
|
The integer number of minutes.
|
|
@item %s
|
|
@itemx %S
|
|
The number of seconds. If the optional @samp{,} parameter is used,
|
|
it's a floating point number, and the number after the @samp{,}
|
|
specifies how many decimals to be used. @samp{%,2s} means ``use two
|
|
decimals''.
|
|
@item %z
|
|
Non-printing control flag. When it is used, other specifiers must be
|
|
given in the order of decreasing size, i.e., years before days, hours
|
|
before minutes, etc. Nothing will be produced in the result string to
|
|
the left of @samp{%z} until the first non-zero conversion is
|
|
encountered. For example, the default format used by
|
|
@code{emacs-uptime} (@pxref{Processor Run Time, emacs-uptime})
|
|
@w{@code{"%Y, %D, %H, %M, %z%S"}} means that the number of seconds
|
|
will always be produced, but years, days, hours, and minutes will only
|
|
be shown if they are non-zero.
|
|
@item %x
|
|
Non-printing control flag that works along the same lines as
|
|
@samp{%z}, but instead suppresses printing of trailing zero-value time
|
|
elements.
|
|
@item %%
|
|
Produces a literal @samp{%}.
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
Upper-case format sequences produce the units in addition to the
|
|
numbers, lower-case formats produce only the numbers.
|
|
|
|
You can also specify the field width by following the @samp{%} with a
|
|
number; shorter numbers will be padded with blanks. An optional
|
|
period before the width requests zero-padding instead. For example,
|
|
@code{"%.3Y"} might produce @code{"004 years"}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@node Processor Run Time
|
|
@section Processor Run time
|
|
@cindex processor run time
|
|
@cindex Emacs process run time
|
|
|
|
Emacs provides several functions and primitives that return time,
|
|
both elapsed and processor time, used by the Emacs process.
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command emacs-uptime &optional format
|
|
@cindex uptime of Emacs
|
|
This function returns a string representing the Emacs
|
|
@dfn{uptime}---the elapsed wall-clock time this instance of Emacs is
|
|
running. The string is formatted by @code{format-seconds} according
|
|
to the optional argument @var{format}. For the available format
|
|
descriptors, see @ref{Time Parsing, format-seconds}. If @var{format}
|
|
is @code{nil} or omitted, it defaults to @code{"%Y, %D, %H, %M,
|
|
%z%S"}.
|
|
|
|
When called interactively, it prints the uptime in the echo area.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@defun get-internal-run-time
|
|
This function returns the processor run time used by Emacs, as a Lisp
|
|
timestamp (@pxref{Time of Day}).
|
|
|
|
Note that the time returned by this function excludes the time Emacs
|
|
was not using the processor, and if the Emacs process has several
|
|
threads, the returned value is the sum of the processor times used up
|
|
by all Emacs threads.
|
|
|
|
If the system doesn't provide a way to determine the processor run
|
|
time, @code{get-internal-run-time} returns the same time as
|
|
@code{current-time}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command emacs-init-time
|
|
This function returns the duration of the Emacs initialization
|
|
(@pxref{Startup Summary}) in seconds, as a string. When called
|
|
interactively, it prints the duration in the echo area.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@node Time Calculations
|
|
@section Time Calculations
|
|
@cindex time calculations
|
|
@cindex comparing time values
|
|
@cindex calendrical computations
|
|
|
|
These functions perform calendrical computations using time values
|
|
(@pxref{Time of Day}). As with any time value, a value of
|
|
@code{nil} for any of their
|
|
time-value arguments stands for the current system time, and a finite
|
|
number stands for the number of seconds since the epoch.
|
|
|
|
@defun time-less-p t1 t2
|
|
This returns @code{t} if the time value @var{t1} is less than the time value
|
|
@var{t2}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun time-equal-p t1 t2
|
|
This returns @code{t} if the two time values @var{t1} and @var{t2} are
|
|
equal. The result is @code{nil} if either argument is a NaN.
|
|
For the purpose of comparison, a @code{nil} argument represents the
|
|
current time with infinite resolution, so this function returns
|
|
@code{nil} if one argument is @code{nil} and the other is not, and
|
|
callers can therefore use @code{nil} to represent an unknown time
|
|
value that does not equal any timestamp.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun time-subtract t1 t2
|
|
This returns the time difference @var{t1} @minus{} @var{t2} between
|
|
two time values, as a Lisp timestamp. The result is exact and its clock
|
|
resolution is no worse than the worse of its two arguments' resolutions.
|
|
If you need the difference in units
|
|
of elapsed seconds, you can convert it with @code{time-convert} or
|
|
@code{float-time}. @xref{Time Conversion}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun time-add t1 t2
|
|
This returns the sum of two time values,
|
|
using the same conversion rules as @code{time-subtract}.
|
|
One argument should represent a time difference rather than a point in time,
|
|
as a time value that is often just a single number of elapsed seconds.
|
|
Here is how to add a number of seconds to a time value:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
(time-add @var{time} @var{seconds})
|
|
@end example
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun time-to-days time-value
|
|
This function returns the number of days between the beginning of year
|
|
1 and @var{time-value}, assuming the default time zone.
|
|
The operating system limits the range of time and zone values.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun time-to-day-in-year time-value
|
|
This returns the day number within the year corresponding to @var{time-value},
|
|
assuming the default time zone.
|
|
The operating system limits the range of time and zone values.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun date-leap-year-p year
|
|
This function returns @code{t} if @var{year} is a leap year.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun date-days-in-month year month
|
|
Return the number of days in @var{month} in @var{year}. For instance,
|
|
February 2020 has 29 days.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun date-ordinal-to-time year ordinal
|
|
Return the date of @var{ordinal} in @var{year} as a decoded time
|
|
structure. For instance, the 120th day in 2004 is April 29th.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@node Timers
|
|
@section Timers for Delayed Execution
|
|
@cindex timers
|
|
|
|
You can set up a @dfn{timer} to call a function at a specified
|
|
future time or after a certain length of idleness. A timer is a
|
|
special object that stores the information about the next invocation
|
|
times and the function to invoke.
|
|
|
|
@defun timerp object
|
|
This predicate function returns non-@code{nil} if @code{object} is a
|
|
timer.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
Emacs cannot run timers at any arbitrary point in a Lisp program; it
|
|
can run them only when Emacs could accept output from a subprocess:
|
|
namely, while waiting or inside certain primitive functions such as
|
|
@code{sit-for} or @code{read-event} which @emph{can} wait. Therefore, a
|
|
timer's execution may be delayed if Emacs is busy. However, the time of
|
|
execution is very precise if Emacs is idle.
|
|
|
|
Emacs binds @code{inhibit-quit} to @code{t} before calling the timer
|
|
function, because quitting out of many timer functions can leave
|
|
things in an inconsistent state. This is normally unproblematical
|
|
because most timer functions don't do a lot of work. Indeed, for a
|
|
timer to call a function that takes substantial time to run is likely
|
|
to be annoying. If a timer function needs to allow quitting, it
|
|
should use @code{with-local-quit} (@pxref{Quitting}). For example, if
|
|
a timer function calls @code{accept-process-output} to receive output
|
|
from an external process, that call should be wrapped inside
|
|
@code{with-local-quit}, to ensure that @kbd{C-g} works if the external
|
|
process hangs.
|
|
|
|
It is usually a bad idea for timer functions to alter buffer
|
|
contents. When they do, they usually should call @code{undo-boundary}
|
|
both before and after changing the buffer, to separate the timer's
|
|
changes from user commands' changes and prevent a single undo entry
|
|
from growing to be quite large.
|
|
|
|
Timer functions should also avoid calling functions that cause Emacs
|
|
to wait, such as @code{sit-for} (@pxref{Waiting}). This can lead to
|
|
unpredictable effects, since other timers (or even the same timer) can
|
|
run while waiting. If a timer function needs to perform an action
|
|
after a certain time has elapsed, it can do this by scheduling a new
|
|
timer.
|
|
|
|
If a timer function performs a remote file operation, it can be in
|
|
conflict with an already running remote file operation of the same
|
|
connection. Such conflicts are detected, and they result in a
|
|
@code{remote-file-error} error (@pxref{Standard Errors}). This should
|
|
be protected by wrapping the timer function body with
|
|
|
|
@lisp
|
|
@group
|
|
(ignore-error 'remote-file-error
|
|
@dots{})
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end lisp
|
|
|
|
If a timer function calls functions that can change the match data,
|
|
it should save and restore the match data. @xref{Saving Match Data}.
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command run-at-time time repeat function &rest args
|
|
This sets up a timer that calls the function @var{function} with
|
|
arguments @var{args} at time @var{time}. If @var{repeat} is a number
|
|
(integer or floating point), the timer is scheduled to run again every
|
|
@var{repeat} seconds after @var{time}. If @var{repeat} is @code{nil},
|
|
the timer runs only once.
|
|
|
|
@var{time} may specify an absolute or a relative time.
|
|
|
|
Absolute times may be specified using a string with a limited variety
|
|
of formats, and are taken to be times @emph{today}, even if already in
|
|
the past. The recognized forms are @samp{@var{xxxx}},
|
|
@samp{@var{x}:@var{xx}}, or @samp{@var{xx}:@var{xx}} (military time),
|
|
and @samp{@var{xx}am}, @samp{@var{xx}AM}, @samp{@var{xx}pm},
|
|
@samp{@var{xx}PM}, @samp{@var{xx}:@var{xx}am},
|
|
@samp{@var{xx}:@var{xx}AM}, @samp{@var{xx}:@var{xx}pm}, or
|
|
@samp{@var{xx}:@var{xx}PM}. A period can be used instead of a colon
|
|
to separate the hour and minute parts.
|
|
|
|
To specify a relative time as a string, use numbers followed by units.
|
|
For example:
|
|
|
|
@table @samp
|
|
@item 1 min
|
|
denotes 1 minute from now.
|
|
@item 1 min 5 sec
|
|
denotes 65 seconds from now.
|
|
@item 1 min 2 sec 3 hour 4 day 5 week 6 fortnight 7 month 8 year
|
|
denotes exactly 103 months, 123 days, and 10862 seconds from now.
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
For relative time values, Emacs considers a month to be exactly thirty
|
|
days, and a year to be exactly 365.25 days.
|
|
|
|
Not all convenient formats are strings. If @var{time} is a number
|
|
(integer or floating point), that specifies a relative time measured in
|
|
seconds. The result of @code{encode-time} can also be used to specify
|
|
an absolute value for @var{time}.
|
|
|
|
In most cases, @var{repeat} has no effect on when @emph{first} call
|
|
takes place---@var{time} alone specifies that. There is one exception:
|
|
if @var{time} is @code{t}, then the timer runs whenever the time is a
|
|
multiple of @var{repeat} seconds after the epoch. This is useful for
|
|
functions like @code{display-time}. For instance, the following will
|
|
make @var{function} run at every ``whole'' minute (e.g.,
|
|
@samp{11:03:00}, @samp{11:04:00}, etc):
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
(run-at-time t 60 @var{function})
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
If Emacs didn't get any CPU time when the timer would have run (for
|
|
example if the system was busy running another process or if the
|
|
computer was sleeping or in a suspended state), the timer will run as
|
|
soon as Emacs resumes and is idle.
|
|
|
|
The function @code{run-at-time} returns a timer value that identifies
|
|
the particular scheduled future action. You can use this value to call
|
|
@code{cancel-timer} (see below).
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command run-with-timer secs repeat function &rest args
|
|
This is exactly the same as @code{run-at-time} (so see that definition
|
|
for an explanation of the parameters; @var{secs} is passed as
|
|
@var{time} to that function), but is meant to be used when the delay
|
|
is specified in seconds.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
A repeating timer nominally ought to run every @var{repeat} seconds,
|
|
but remember that any invocation of a timer can be late. Lateness of
|
|
one repetition has no effect on the scheduled time of the next
|
|
repetition. For instance, if Emacs is busy computing for long enough
|
|
to cover three scheduled repetitions of the timer, and then starts to
|
|
wait, it will immediately call the timer function three times in
|
|
immediate succession (presuming no other timers trigger before or
|
|
between them). If you want a timer to run again no less than @var{n}
|
|
seconds after the last invocation, don't use the @var{repeat} argument.
|
|
Instead, the timer function should explicitly reschedule the timer.
|
|
|
|
@defopt timer-max-repeats
|
|
This variable's value specifies the maximum number of times to repeat
|
|
calling a timer function in a row, when many previously scheduled
|
|
calls were unavoidably delayed.
|
|
@end defopt
|
|
|
|
@defmac with-timeout (seconds timeout-forms@dots{}) body@dots{}
|
|
Execute @var{body}, but give up after @var{seconds} seconds. If
|
|
@var{body} finishes before the time is up, @code{with-timeout} returns
|
|
the value of the last form in @var{body}. If, however, the execution of
|
|
@var{body} is cut short by the timeout, then @code{with-timeout}
|
|
executes all the @var{timeout-forms} and returns the value of the last
|
|
of them.
|
|
|
|
This macro works by setting a timer to run after @var{seconds} seconds. If
|
|
@var{body} finishes before that time, it cancels the timer. If the
|
|
timer actually runs, it terminates execution of @var{body}, then
|
|
executes @var{timeout-forms}.
|
|
|
|
Since timers can run within a Lisp program only when the program calls a
|
|
primitive that can wait, @code{with-timeout} cannot stop executing
|
|
@var{body} while it is in the midst of a computation---only when it
|
|
calls one of those primitives. So use @code{with-timeout} only with a
|
|
@var{body} that waits for input, not one that does a long computation.
|
|
@end defmac
|
|
|
|
The function @code{y-or-n-p-with-timeout} provides a simple way to use
|
|
a timer to avoid waiting too long for an answer. @xref{Yes-or-No
|
|
Queries}.
|
|
|
|
@defun cancel-timer timer
|
|
This cancels the requested action for @var{timer}, which should be a
|
|
timer---usually, one previously returned by @code{run-at-time} or
|
|
@code{run-with-idle-timer}. This cancels the effect of that call to
|
|
one of these functions; the arrival of the specified time will not
|
|
cause anything special to happen.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@findex list-timers
|
|
The @code{list-timers} command lists all the currently active timers.
|
|
The command @kbd{c} (@code{timer-list-cancel}) will cancel the timer
|
|
on the line under point. You can sort the list by column using the
|
|
command @kbd{S} (@code{tabulated-list-sort}).
|
|
|
|
@node Idle Timers
|
|
@section Idle Timers
|
|
@cindex idle timers
|
|
|
|
Here is how to set up a timer that runs when Emacs is idle for a
|
|
certain length of time. Aside from how to set them up, idle timers
|
|
work just like ordinary timers.
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command run-with-idle-timer secs repeat function &rest args
|
|
Set up a timer which runs the next time Emacs is idle for @var{secs}
|
|
seconds. The value of @var{secs} may be a number or a value of the type
|
|
returned by @code{current-idle-time}.
|
|
|
|
If @var{repeat} is @code{nil}, the timer runs just once, the first time
|
|
Emacs remains idle for a long enough time. More often @var{repeat} is
|
|
non-@code{nil}, which means to run the timer @emph{each time} Emacs
|
|
remains idle for @var{secs} seconds.
|
|
|
|
The function @code{run-with-idle-timer} returns a timer value which you
|
|
can use in calling @code{cancel-timer} (@pxref{Timers}).
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@cindex idleness
|
|
Emacs becomes @dfn{idle} when it starts waiting for user input
|
|
(unless it waits for input with a timeout, @pxref{Reading One Event}), and
|
|
it remains idle until the user provides some input. If a timer is set
|
|
for five seconds of idleness, it runs approximately five seconds after
|
|
Emacs first becomes idle. Even if @var{repeat} is non-@code{nil},
|
|
this timer will not run again as long as Emacs remains idle, because
|
|
the duration of idleness will continue to increase and will not go
|
|
down to five seconds again.
|
|
|
|
Emacs can do various things while idle: garbage collect, autosave or
|
|
handle data from a subprocess. But these interludes during idleness do
|
|
not interfere with idle timers, because they do not reset the clock of
|
|
idleness to zero. An idle timer set for 600 seconds will run when ten
|
|
minutes have elapsed since the last user command was finished, even if
|
|
subprocess output has been accepted thousands of times within those ten
|
|
minutes, and even if there have been garbage collections and autosaves.
|
|
|
|
When the user supplies input, Emacs becomes non-idle while executing the
|
|
input. Then it becomes idle again, and all the idle timers that are
|
|
set up to repeat will subsequently run another time, one by one.
|
|
|
|
Do not write an idle timer function containing a loop which does a
|
|
certain amount of processing each time around, and exits when
|
|
@code{(input-pending-p)} is non-@code{nil}. This approach seems very
|
|
natural but has two problems:
|
|
|
|
@itemize
|
|
@item
|
|
It blocks out all process output (since Emacs accepts process output
|
|
only while waiting).
|
|
|
|
@item
|
|
It blocks out any idle timers that ought to run during that time.
|
|
@end itemize
|
|
|
|
@noindent
|
|
Similarly, do not write an idle timer function that sets up another
|
|
idle timer (including the same idle timer) with @var{secs} argument
|
|
less than or equal to the current idleness time. Such a timer will
|
|
run almost immediately, and continue running again and again, instead
|
|
of waiting for the next time Emacs becomes idle. The correct approach
|
|
is to reschedule with an appropriate increment of the current value of
|
|
the idleness time, as described below.
|
|
|
|
@defun current-idle-time
|
|
If Emacs is idle, this function returns the length of time Emacs has
|
|
been idle, using the same format as
|
|
@code{current-time} (@pxref{Time of Day}).
|
|
|
|
When Emacs is not idle, @code{current-idle-time} returns @code{nil}.
|
|
This is a convenient way to test whether Emacs is idle.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
The main use of @code{current-idle-time} is when an idle timer
|
|
function wants to ``take a break'' for a while. It can set up another
|
|
idle timer to call the same function again, after a few seconds more
|
|
idleness. Here's an example:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
(defvar my-resume-timer nil
|
|
"Timer for `my-timer-function' to reschedule itself, or nil.")
|
|
|
|
(defun my-timer-function ()
|
|
;; @r{If the user types a command while @code{my-resume-timer}}
|
|
;; @r{is active, the next time this function is called from}
|
|
;; @r{its main idle timer, deactivate @code{my-resume-timer}.}
|
|
(when my-resume-timer
|
|
(cancel-timer my-resume-timer))
|
|
...@var{do the work for a while}...
|
|
(when @var{taking-a-break}
|
|
(setq my-resume-timer
|
|
(run-with-idle-timer
|
|
;; Compute an idle time @var{break-length}
|
|
;; more than the current value.
|
|
(time-add (current-idle-time) @var{break-length})
|
|
nil
|
|
'my-timer-function))))
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
@node Terminal Input
|
|
@section Terminal Input
|
|
@cindex terminal input
|
|
|
|
This section describes functions and variables for recording or
|
|
manipulating terminal input. See @ref{Display}, for related
|
|
functions.
|
|
|
|
@menu
|
|
* Input Modes:: Options for how input is processed.
|
|
* Recording Input:: Saving histories of recent or all input events.
|
|
@end menu
|
|
|
|
@node Input Modes
|
|
@subsection Input Modes
|
|
@cindex input modes
|
|
@cindex terminal input modes
|
|
|
|
@defun set-input-mode interrupt flow meta &optional quit-char
|
|
This function sets the mode for reading keyboard input. If
|
|
@var{interrupt} is non-@code{nil}, then Emacs uses input interrupts.
|
|
If it is @code{nil}, then it uses @sc{cbreak} mode. The default
|
|
setting is system-dependent. Some systems always use @sc{cbreak} mode
|
|
regardless of what is specified.
|
|
|
|
When Emacs communicates directly with X, it ignores this argument and
|
|
uses interrupts if that is the way it knows how to communicate.
|
|
|
|
If @var{flow} is non-@code{nil}, then Emacs uses @sc{xon/xoff}
|
|
(@kbd{C-q}, @kbd{C-s}) flow control for output to the terminal. This
|
|
has no effect except in @sc{cbreak} mode.
|
|
|
|
The argument @var{meta} controls support for input character codes
|
|
above 127. If @var{meta} is @code{t}, Emacs converts characters with
|
|
the 8th bit set into Meta characters, before it decodes them as needed
|
|
(@pxref{Terminal I/O Encoding}). If @var{meta} is @code{nil},
|
|
Emacs disregards the 8th bit; this is necessary when the terminal uses
|
|
it as a parity bit. If @var{meta} is the symbol @code{encoded}, Emacs
|
|
first decodes the characters using all the 8 bits of each byte, and
|
|
then converts the decoded single-byte characters into Meta characters
|
|
if they have their eighth bit set. Finally, if @var{meta} is neither
|
|
@code{t} nor @code{nil} nor @code{encoded}, Emacs uses all 8 bits of
|
|
input unchanged, both before and after decoding them. This is good
|
|
for terminals that use 8-bit character sets and don't encode the Meta
|
|
modifier as the eighth bit.
|
|
|
|
If @var{quit-char} is non-@code{nil}, it specifies the character to
|
|
use for quitting. Normally this character is @kbd{C-g}.
|
|
@xref{Quitting}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
The @code{current-input-mode} function returns the input mode settings
|
|
Emacs is currently using.
|
|
|
|
@defun current-input-mode
|
|
This function returns the current mode for reading keyboard input. It
|
|
returns a list, corresponding to the arguments of @code{set-input-mode},
|
|
of the form @code{(@var{interrupt} @var{flow} @var{meta} @var{quit})} in
|
|
which:
|
|
@table @var
|
|
@item interrupt
|
|
is non-@code{nil} when Emacs is using interrupt-driven input. If
|
|
@code{nil}, Emacs is using @sc{cbreak} mode.
|
|
@item flow
|
|
is non-@code{nil} if Emacs uses @sc{xon/xoff} (@kbd{C-q}, @kbd{C-s})
|
|
flow control for output to the terminal. This value is meaningful only
|
|
when @var{interrupt} is @code{nil}.
|
|
@item meta
|
|
is @code{t} if Emacs treats the eighth bit of input characters as
|
|
the Meta bit before decoding input; @code{encoded} if Emacs treats the
|
|
eighth bit of the decoded single-byte characters as the Meta bit;
|
|
@code{nil} if Emacs clears the eighth bit of every input character;
|
|
any other value means Emacs uses all eight bits as the basic character
|
|
code.
|
|
@item quit
|
|
is the character Emacs currently uses for quitting, usually @kbd{C-g}.
|
|
@end table
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@node Recording Input
|
|
@subsection Recording Input
|
|
@cindex recording input
|
|
|
|
@defun recent-keys &optional include-cmds
|
|
This function returns a vector containing the last 300 input events from
|
|
the keyboard or mouse. All input events are included, whether or not
|
|
they were used as parts of key sequences. Thus, you always get the last
|
|
300 input events, not counting events generated by keyboard macros.
|
|
(These are excluded because they are less interesting for debugging; it
|
|
should be enough to see the events that invoked the macros.)
|
|
|
|
If @var{include-cmds} is non-@code{nil}, complete key sequences in the
|
|
result vector are interleaved with pseudo-events of the form
|
|
@code{(nil . @var{COMMAND})}, where @var{COMMAND} is the binding of
|
|
the key sequence (@pxref{Command Overview}).
|
|
|
|
A call to @code{clear-this-command-keys} (@pxref{Command Loop Info})
|
|
causes this function to return an empty vector immediately afterward.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command open-dribble-file filename
|
|
@cindex dribble file
|
|
This function opens a @dfn{dribble file} named @var{filename}. When a
|
|
dribble file is open, each input event from the keyboard or mouse (but
|
|
not those from keyboard macros) is written in that file. A
|
|
non-character event is expressed using its printed representation
|
|
surrounded by @samp{<@dots{}>}. Be aware that sensitive information
|
|
(such as passwords) may end up recorded in the dribble file.
|
|
|
|
You close the dribble file by calling this function with an argument
|
|
of @code{nil}.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
See also the @code{open-termscript} function (@pxref{Terminal Output}).
|
|
|
|
@node Terminal Output
|
|
@section Terminal Output
|
|
@cindex terminal output
|
|
|
|
The terminal output functions send output to a text terminal, or keep
|
|
track of output sent to the terminal. The variable @code{baud-rate}
|
|
tells you what Emacs thinks is the output speed of the terminal.
|
|
|
|
@defopt baud-rate
|
|
This variable's value is the output speed of the terminal, as far as
|
|
Emacs knows. Setting this variable does not change the speed of actual
|
|
data transmission, but the value is used for calculations such as
|
|
padding.
|
|
|
|
It also affects decisions about whether to scroll part of the
|
|
screen or repaint on text terminals. @xref{Forcing Redisplay},
|
|
for the corresponding functionality on graphical terminals.
|
|
|
|
The value is measured in baud.
|
|
@end defopt
|
|
|
|
If you are running across a network, and different parts of the
|
|
network work at different baud rates, the value returned by Emacs may be
|
|
different from the value used by your local terminal. Some network
|
|
protocols communicate the local terminal speed to the remote machine, so
|
|
that Emacs and other programs can get the proper value, but others do
|
|
not. If Emacs has the wrong value, it makes decisions that are less
|
|
than optimal. To fix the problem, set @code{baud-rate}.
|
|
|
|
@defun send-string-to-terminal string &optional terminal
|
|
This function sends @var{string} to @var{terminal} without alteration.
|
|
Control characters in @var{string} have terminal-dependent effects.
|
|
(If you need to display non-ASCII text on the terminal, encode it
|
|
using one of the functions described in @ref{Explicit Encoding}.)
|
|
This function operates only on text terminals. @var{terminal} may be
|
|
a terminal object, a frame, or @code{nil} for the selected frame's
|
|
terminal. In batch mode, @var{string} is sent to @code{stdout} when
|
|
@var{terminal} is @code{nil}.
|
|
|
|
One use of this function is to define function keys on terminals that
|
|
have downloadable function key definitions. For example, this is how (on
|
|
certain terminals) to define function key 4 to move forward four
|
|
characters (by transmitting the characters @kbd{C-u C-f} to the
|
|
computer):
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(send-string-to-terminal "\eF4\^U\^F")
|
|
@result{} nil
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command open-termscript filename
|
|
@cindex termscript file
|
|
This function is used to open a @dfn{termscript file} that will record
|
|
all the characters sent by Emacs to the terminal. It returns
|
|
@code{nil}. Termscript files are useful for investigating problems
|
|
where Emacs garbles the screen, problems that are due to incorrect
|
|
Termcap entries or to undesirable settings of terminal options more
|
|
often than to actual Emacs bugs. Once you are certain which characters
|
|
were actually output, you can determine reliably whether they correspond
|
|
to the Termcap specifications in use.
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(open-termscript "../junk/termscript")
|
|
@result{} nil
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
You close the termscript file by calling this function with an
|
|
argument of @code{nil}.
|
|
|
|
See also @code{open-dribble-file} in @ref{Recording Input}.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@node Sound Output
|
|
@section Sound Output
|
|
@cindex sound
|
|
|
|
To play sound using Emacs, use the function @code{play-sound}. Only
|
|
certain systems are supported; if you call @code{play-sound} on a
|
|
system which cannot really do the job, it gives an error.
|
|
|
|
@c FIXME: Add indexes for Au and WAV? --xfq
|
|
The sound must be stored as a file in RIFF-WAVE format (@samp{.wav})
|
|
or Sun Audio format (@samp{.au}).
|
|
|
|
@defun play-sound sound
|
|
This function plays a specified sound. The argument, @var{sound}, has
|
|
the form @code{(sound @var{properties}...)}, where the @var{properties}
|
|
consist of alternating keywords (particular symbols recognized
|
|
specially) and values corresponding to them.
|
|
|
|
Here is a table of the keywords that are currently meaningful in
|
|
@var{sound}, and their meanings:
|
|
|
|
@table @code
|
|
@item :file @var{file}
|
|
This specifies the file containing the sound to play.
|
|
If the file name is not absolute, it is expanded against
|
|
the directory @code{data-directory}.
|
|
|
|
@item :data @var{data}
|
|
This specifies the sound to play without need to refer to a file. The
|
|
value, @var{data}, should be a string containing the same bytes as a
|
|
sound file. We recommend using a unibyte string.
|
|
|
|
@item :volume @var{volume}
|
|
This specifies how loud to play the sound. It should be a number in the
|
|
range of 0 to 1. The default is to use whatever volume has been
|
|
specified before.
|
|
|
|
@item :device @var{device}
|
|
This specifies the system device on which to play the sound, as a
|
|
string. The default device is system-dependent.
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
Before actually playing the sound, @code{play-sound}
|
|
calls the functions in the list @code{play-sound-functions}.
|
|
Each function is called with one argument, @var{sound}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command play-sound-file file &optional volume device
|
|
This function is an alternative interface to playing a sound @var{file}
|
|
specifying an optional @var{volume} and @var{device}.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@defvar play-sound-functions
|
|
A list of functions to be called before playing a sound. Each function
|
|
is called with one argument, a property list that describes the sound.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@node X11 Keysyms
|
|
@section Operating on X11 Keysyms
|
|
@cindex X11 keysyms
|
|
|
|
To define system-specific X11 keysyms, set the variable
|
|
@code{system-key-alist}.
|
|
|
|
@defvar system-key-alist
|
|
This variable's value should be an alist with one element for each
|
|
system-specific keysym. Each element has the form @code{(@var{code}
|
|
. @var{symbol})}, where @var{code} is the numeric keysym code (not
|
|
including the vendor-specific bit,
|
|
@ifnottex
|
|
@minus{}2**28),
|
|
@end ifnottex
|
|
@tex
|
|
$-2^{28}$),
|
|
@end tex
|
|
and @var{symbol} is the name for the function key.
|
|
|
|
For example @code{(168 . mute-acute)} defines a system-specific key (used
|
|
by HP X servers) whose numeric code is
|
|
@ifnottex
|
|
@minus{}2**28
|
|
@end ifnottex
|
|
@tex
|
|
$-2^{28}$
|
|
@end tex
|
|
+ 168.
|
|
|
|
It is not crucial to exclude from the alist the keysyms of other X
|
|
servers; those do no harm, as long as they don't conflict with the ones
|
|
used by the X server actually in use.
|
|
|
|
The variable is always local to the current terminal, and cannot be
|
|
buffer-local. @xref{Multiple Terminals}.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
You can specify which keysyms Emacs should use for the Control, Meta,
|
|
Alt, Hyper, and Super modifiers by setting these variables:
|
|
|
|
@defvar x-ctrl-keysym
|
|
@defvarx x-alt-keysym
|
|
@defvarx x-meta-keysym
|
|
@defvarx x-hyper-keysym
|
|
@defvarx x-super-keysym
|
|
The name of the keysym that should stand for the Control modifier
|
|
(respectively, for Alt, Meta, Hyper, and Super). For example, here is
|
|
how to swap the Meta and Alt modifiers within Emacs:
|
|
@lisp
|
|
(setq x-alt-keysym 'meta)
|
|
(setq x-meta-keysym 'alt)
|
|
@end lisp
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@node Batch Mode
|
|
@section Batch Mode
|
|
@cindex batch mode
|
|
|
|
The command-line option @samp{-batch} causes Emacs to run
|
|
noninteractively. In this mode, Emacs does not read commands from the
|
|
terminal, it does not alter the terminal modes, and it does not expect
|
|
to be outputting to an erasable screen. The idea is that you specify
|
|
Lisp programs to run; when they are finished, Emacs should exit. The
|
|
way to specify the programs to run is with @samp{-l @var{file}}, which
|
|
loads the library named @var{file}, or @samp{-f @var{function}}, which
|
|
calls @var{function} with no arguments, or @samp{--eval=@var{form}}.
|
|
|
|
Any Lisp program output that would normally go to the echo area,
|
|
either using @code{message}, or using @code{prin1}, etc., with
|
|
@code{t} as the stream (@pxref{Output Streams}), goes instead to
|
|
Emacs's standard descriptors when in batch mode: @code{message} writes
|
|
to the standard error descriptor, while @code{prin1} and other print
|
|
functions write to the standard output. Similarly, input that would
|
|
normally come from the minibuffer is read from the standard input
|
|
descriptor. Thus, Emacs behaves much like a noninteractive
|
|
application program. (The echo area output that Emacs itself normally
|
|
generates, such as command echoing, is suppressed entirely.)
|
|
|
|
Non-ASCII text written to the standard output or error descriptors is
|
|
by default encoded using @code{locale-coding-system} (@pxref{Locales})
|
|
if it is non-@code{nil}; this can be overridden by binding
|
|
@code{coding-system-for-write} to a coding system of you choice
|
|
(@pxref{Explicit Encoding}).
|
|
|
|
In batch mode, Emacs will enlarge the value of the
|
|
@code{gc-cons-percentage} variable from the default of @samp{0.1} up to
|
|
@samp{1.0}. Batch jobs that are supposed to run for a long time
|
|
should adjust the limit back down again, because this means that less
|
|
garbage collection will be performed by default (and more memory
|
|
consumed).
|
|
|
|
@defvar noninteractive
|
|
This variable is non-@code{nil} when Emacs is running in batch mode.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
If Emacs exits due to signaling an error in batch mode, the exit
|
|
status of the Emacs command is non-zero:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
$ emacs -Q --batch --eval '(error "foo")'; echo $?
|
|
foo
|
|
255
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
@node Session Management
|
|
@section Session Management
|
|
@cindex session manager
|
|
|
|
Emacs supports the X Session Management Protocol, which is used to
|
|
suspend and restart applications. In the X Window System, a program
|
|
called the @dfn{session manager} is responsible for keeping track of
|
|
the applications that are running. When the X server shuts down, the
|
|
session manager asks applications to save their state, and delays the
|
|
actual shutdown until they respond. An application can also cancel
|
|
the shutdown.
|
|
|
|
When the session manager restarts a suspended session, it directs
|
|
these applications to individually reload their saved state. It does
|
|
this by specifying a special command-line argument that says what
|
|
saved session to restore. For Emacs, this argument is @samp{--smid
|
|
@var{session}}.
|
|
|
|
@defvar emacs-save-session-functions
|
|
@cindex session file
|
|
Emacs supports saving state via a hook called
|
|
@code{emacs-save-session-functions}. Emacs runs this hook when the
|
|
session manager tells it that the window system is shutting down. The
|
|
functions are called with no arguments, and with the current buffer
|
|
set to a temporary buffer. Each function can use @code{insert} to add
|
|
Lisp code to this buffer. At the end, Emacs saves the buffer in a
|
|
file, called the @dfn{session file}.
|
|
|
|
@findex emacs-session-restore
|
|
Subsequently, when the session manager restarts Emacs, it loads the
|
|
session file automatically (@pxref{Loading}). This is performed by a
|
|
function named @code{emacs-session-restore}, which is called during
|
|
startup. @xref{Startup Summary}.
|
|
|
|
If a function in @code{emacs-save-session-functions} returns
|
|
non-@code{nil}, Emacs tells the session manager to cancel the
|
|
shutdown.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
Here is an example that just inserts some text into @file{*scratch*} when
|
|
Emacs is restarted by the session manager.
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(add-hook 'emacs-save-session-functions 'save-yourself-test)
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(defun save-yourself-test ()
|
|
(insert
|
|
(format "%S" '(with-current-buffer "*scratch*"
|
|
(insert "I am restored"))))
|
|
nil)
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
@node Desktop Notifications
|
|
@section Desktop Notifications
|
|
@cindex desktop notifications
|
|
@cindex notifications, on desktop
|
|
|
|
Emacs is able to send @dfn{notifications} on systems that support the
|
|
freedesktop.org Desktop Notifications Specification and on MS-Windows.
|
|
In order to use this functionality on POSIX hosts, Emacs must have
|
|
been compiled with D-Bus support, and the @code{notifications} library
|
|
must be loaded. @xref{Top, , D-Bus,dbus,D-Bus integration in Emacs}.
|
|
The following function is supported when D-Bus support is available:
|
|
|
|
@defun notifications-notify &rest params
|
|
This function sends a notification to the desktop via D-Bus,
|
|
consisting of the parameters specified by the @var{params} arguments.
|
|
These arguments should consist of alternating keyword and value pairs.
|
|
The supported keywords and values are as follows:
|
|
|
|
@table @code
|
|
@item :bus @var{bus}
|
|
The D-Bus bus. This argument is needed only if a bus other than
|
|
@code{:session} shall be used.
|
|
|
|
@item :title @var{title}
|
|
The notification title.
|
|
|
|
@item :body @var{text}
|
|
The notification body text. Depending on the implementation of the
|
|
notification server, the text could contain HTML markups, like
|
|
@samp{"<b>bold text</b>"}, hyperlinks, or images. Special HTML
|
|
characters must be encoded, as @samp{"Contact
|
|
<postmaster@@localhost>!"}.
|
|
|
|
@item :app-name @var{name}
|
|
The name of the application sending the notification. The default is
|
|
@code{notifications-application-name}.
|
|
|
|
@item :replaces-id @var{id}
|
|
The notification @var{id} that this notification replaces. @var{id}
|
|
must be the result of a previous @code{notifications-notify} call.
|
|
|
|
@item :app-icon @var{icon-file}
|
|
The file name of the notification icon. If set to @code{nil}, no icon
|
|
is displayed. The default is @code{notifications-application-icon}.
|
|
|
|
@item :actions (@var{key} @var{title} @var{key} @var{title} ...)
|
|
A list of actions to be applied. @var{key} and @var{title} are both
|
|
strings. The default action (usually invoked by clicking the
|
|
notification) should have a key named @samp{"default"}. The title can
|
|
be anything, though implementations are free not to display it.
|
|
|
|
@item :timeout @var{timeout}
|
|
The timeout time in milliseconds since the display of the notification
|
|
at which the notification should automatically close. If @minus{}1, the
|
|
notification's expiration time is dependent on the notification
|
|
server's settings, and may vary for the type of notification. If 0,
|
|
the notification never expires. Default value is @minus{}1.
|
|
|
|
@item :urgency @var{urgency}
|
|
The urgency level. It can be @code{low}, @code{normal}, or @code{critical}.
|
|
|
|
@item :action-items
|
|
When this keyword is given, the @var{title} string of the actions is
|
|
interpreted as icon name.
|
|
|
|
@item :category @var{category}
|
|
The type of notification this is, a string. See the
|
|
@uref{https://developer.gnome.org/notification-spec/#categories,
|
|
Desktop Notifications Specification} for a list of standard
|
|
categories.
|
|
|
|
@item :desktop-entry @var{filename}
|
|
This specifies the name of the desktop filename representing the
|
|
calling program, like @samp{"emacs"}.
|
|
|
|
@item :image-data (@var{width} @var{height} @var{rowstride} @var{has-alpha} @var{bits} @var{channels} @var{data})
|
|
This is a raw data image format that describes the width, height,
|
|
rowstride, whether there is an alpha channel, bits per sample,
|
|
channels and image data, respectively.
|
|
|
|
@item :image-path @var{path}
|
|
This is represented either as a URI (@samp{file://} is the only URI
|
|
schema supported right now) or a name in a freedesktop.org-compliant
|
|
icon theme from @samp{$XDG_DATA_DIRS/icons}.
|
|
|
|
@item :sound-file @var{filename}
|
|
The path to a sound file to play when the notification pops up.
|
|
|
|
@item :sound-name @var{name}
|
|
A themable named sound from the freedesktop.org sound naming
|
|
specification from @samp{$XDG_DATA_DIRS/sounds}, to play when the
|
|
notification pops up. Similar to the icon name, only for sounds. An
|
|
example would be @samp{"message-new-instant"}.
|
|
|
|
@item :suppress-sound
|
|
Causes the server to suppress playing any sounds, if it has that
|
|
ability.
|
|
|
|
@item :resident
|
|
When set the server will not automatically remove the notification
|
|
when an action has been invoked. The notification will remain resident
|
|
in the server until it is explicitly removed by the user or by the
|
|
sender. This hint is likely only useful when the server has the
|
|
@code{:persistence} capability.
|
|
|
|
@item :transient
|
|
When set the server will treat the notification as transient and
|
|
by-pass the server's persistence capability, if it should exist.
|
|
|
|
@item :x @var{position}
|
|
@itemx :y @var{position}
|
|
Specifies the X, Y location on the screen that the
|
|
notification should point to. Both arguments must be used together.
|
|
|
|
@item :on-action @var{function}
|
|
Function to call when an action is invoked. The notification @var{id}
|
|
and the @var{key} of the action are passed as arguments to the
|
|
function.
|
|
|
|
@item :on-close @var{function}
|
|
Function to call when the notification has been closed by timeout or
|
|
by the user. The function receive the notification @var{id} and the closing
|
|
@var{reason} as arguments:
|
|
|
|
@itemize
|
|
@item @code{expired} if the notification has expired
|
|
@item @code{dismissed} if the notification was dismissed by the user
|
|
@item @code{close-notification} if the notification was closed by a call to
|
|
@code{notifications-close-notification}
|
|
@item @code{undefined} if the notification server hasn't provided a reason
|
|
@end itemize
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
Which parameters are accepted by the notification server can be
|
|
checked via @code{notifications-get-capabilities}.
|
|
|
|
This function returns a notification id, an integer, which can be used
|
|
to manipulate the notification item with
|
|
@code{notifications-close-notification} or the @code{:replaces-id}
|
|
argument of another @code{notifications-notify} call. For example:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(defun my-on-action-function (id key)
|
|
(message "Message %d, key \"%s\" pressed" id key))
|
|
@result{} my-on-action-function
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(defun my-on-close-function (id reason)
|
|
(message "Message %d, closed due to \"%s\"" id reason))
|
|
@result{} my-on-close-function
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(notifications-notify
|
|
:title "Title"
|
|
:body "This is <b>important</b>."
|
|
:actions '("Confirm" "I agree" "Refuse" "I disagree")
|
|
:on-action 'my-on-action-function
|
|
:on-close 'my-on-close-function)
|
|
@result{} 22
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
A message window opens on the desktop. Press ``I agree''.
|
|
@result{} Message 22, key "Confirm" pressed
|
|
Message 22, closed due to "dismissed"
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun notifications-close-notification id &optional bus
|
|
This function closes a notification with identifier @var{id}.
|
|
@var{bus} can be a string denoting a D-Bus connection, the default is
|
|
@code{:session}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun notifications-get-capabilities &optional bus
|
|
Returns the capabilities of the notification server, a list of
|
|
symbols. @var{bus} can be a string denoting a D-Bus connection, the
|
|
default is @code{:session}. The following capabilities can be
|
|
expected:
|
|
|
|
@table @code
|
|
@item :actions
|
|
The server will provide the specified actions to the user.
|
|
|
|
@item :body
|
|
Supports body text.
|
|
|
|
@item :body-hyperlinks
|
|
The server supports hyperlinks in the notifications.
|
|
|
|
@item :body-images
|
|
The server supports images in the notifications.
|
|
|
|
@item :body-markup
|
|
Supports markup in the body text.
|
|
|
|
@item :icon-multi
|
|
The server will render an animation of all the frames in a given image
|
|
array.
|
|
|
|
@item :icon-static
|
|
Supports display of exactly 1 frame of any given image array. This
|
|
value is mutually exclusive with @code{:icon-multi}.
|
|
|
|
@item :persistence
|
|
The server supports persistence of notifications.
|
|
|
|
@item :sound
|
|
The server supports sounds on notifications.
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
Further vendor-specific caps start with @code{:x-vendor}, like
|
|
@code{:x-gnome-foo-cap}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun notifications-get-server-information &optional bus
|
|
Return information on the notification server, a list of strings.
|
|
@var{bus} can be a string denoting a D-Bus connection, the default is
|
|
@code{:session}. The returned list is @code{(@var{name} @var{vendor}
|
|
@var{version} @var{spec-version})}.
|
|
|
|
@table @var
|
|
@item name
|
|
The product name of the server.
|
|
|
|
@item vendor
|
|
The vendor name. For example, @samp{"KDE"}, @samp{"GNOME"}.
|
|
|
|
@item version
|
|
The server's version number.
|
|
|
|
@item spec-version
|
|
The specification version the server is compliant with.
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
If @var{spec_version} is @code{nil}, the server supports a
|
|
specification prior to @samp{"1.0"}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@cindex tray notifications, MS-Windows
|
|
When Emacs runs on MS-Windows as a GUI session, it supports a small
|
|
subset of the D-Bus notifications functionality via a native
|
|
primitive:
|
|
|
|
@defun w32-notification-notify &rest params
|
|
This function displays an MS-Windows tray notification as specified by
|
|
@var{params}. MS-Windows tray notifications are displayed in a
|
|
balloon from an icon in the notification area of the taskbar.
|
|
|
|
Value is the integer unique ID of the notification that can be used to
|
|
remove the notification using @code{w32-notification-close}, described
|
|
below. If the function fails, the return value is @code{nil}.
|
|
|
|
The arguments @var{params} are specified as keyword/value pairs. All the
|
|
parameters are optional, but if no parameters are specified, the
|
|
function will do nothing and return @code{nil}.
|
|
|
|
The following parameters are supported:
|
|
|
|
@table @code
|
|
@item :icon @var{icon}
|
|
Display @var{icon} in the system tray. If @var{icon} is a string, it
|
|
should specify a file name from which to load the icon; the specified
|
|
file should be a @file{.ico} Windows icon file. If @var{icon} is not
|
|
a string, or if this parameter is not specified, the standard Emacs
|
|
icon will be used.
|
|
|
|
@item :tip @var{tip}
|
|
Use @var{tip} as the tooltip for the notification. If @var{tip} is a
|
|
string, this is the text of a tooltip that will be shown when the
|
|
mouse pointer hovers over the tray icon added by the notification. If
|
|
@var{tip} is not a string, or if this parameter is not specified, the
|
|
default tooltip text is @samp{Emacs notification}. The tooltip text can
|
|
be up to 127 characters long (63 on Windows versions before W2K).
|
|
Longer strings will be truncated.
|
|
|
|
@item :level @var{level}
|
|
Notification severity level, one of @code{info}, @code{warning}, or
|
|
@code{error}. If given, the value determines the icon displayed to the
|
|
left of the notification title, but only if the @code{:title} parameter
|
|
(see below) is also specified and is a string.
|
|
|
|
@item :title @var{title}
|
|
The title of the notification. If @var{title} is a string, it is
|
|
displayed in a larger font immediately above the body text. The title
|
|
text can be up to 63 characters long; longer text will be truncated.
|
|
|
|
@item :body @var{body}
|
|
The body of the notification. If @var{body} is a string, it specifies
|
|
the text of the notification message. Use embedded newlines to
|
|
control how the text is broken into lines. The body text can be up to
|
|
255 characters long, and will be truncated if it's longer. Unlike
|
|
with D-Bus, the body text should be plain text, with no markup.
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
Note that versions of Windows before W2K support only @code{:icon} and
|
|
@code{:tip}. The other parameters can be passed, but they will be
|
|
ignored on those old systems.
|
|
|
|
There can be at most one active notification at any given time. An
|
|
active notification must be removed by calling
|
|
@code{w32-notification-close} before a new one can be shown.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
To remove the notification and its icon from the taskbar, use the
|
|
following function:
|
|
|
|
@defun w32-notification-close id
|
|
This function removes the tray notification given by its unique
|
|
@var{id}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@node File Notifications
|
|
@section Notifications on File Changes
|
|
@cindex file notifications
|
|
@cindex watch, for filesystem events
|
|
|
|
Several operating systems support watching of filesystems for changes
|
|
to files or their attributes. If configured properly, Emacs links a
|
|
respective library like @file{inotify}, @file{kqueue},
|
|
@file{gfilenotify}, or @file{w32notify} statically. These libraries
|
|
enable watching of filesystems on the local machine.
|
|
|
|
It is also possible to watch filesystems on remote machines,
|
|
@pxref{Remote Files,, Remote Files, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
|
|
This does not depend on one of the libraries linked to Emacs.
|
|
|
|
Since all these libraries emit different events upon notified file
|
|
changes, Emacs provides a special library @code{filenotify} which
|
|
presents a unified interface to applications. Lisp programs that want
|
|
to receive file notifications should always use this library in
|
|
preference to the native ones. This section documents the
|
|
@code{filenotify} library functions and variables.
|
|
|
|
@defun file-notify-add-watch file flags callback
|
|
Add a watch for filesystem events pertaining to @var{file}. This
|
|
arranges for filesystem events pertaining to @var{file} to be reported
|
|
to Emacs.
|
|
|
|
The returned value is a descriptor for the added watch. Its type
|
|
depends on the underlying library, and in general cannot be assumed to
|
|
be an integer as in the example below. It should be used for
|
|
comparison by @code{equal} only.
|
|
|
|
If the @var{file} cannot be watched for some reason, this function
|
|
signals a @code{file-notify-error} error.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes, mounted filesystems cannot be watched for file changes.
|
|
This is not detected by this function, and so a non-@code{nil} return
|
|
value does not guarantee that changes on @var{file} will be actually
|
|
notified.
|
|
|
|
If @var{file} is a symlink, it doesn't follow that link. Just
|
|
@var{file} itself will be watched.
|
|
|
|
@var{flags} is a list of conditions to set what will be watched for.
|
|
It can include the following symbols:
|
|
|
|
@table @code
|
|
@item change
|
|
watch for changes in file's contents
|
|
@item attribute-change
|
|
watch for changes in file attributes, like permissions or modification
|
|
time
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
If @var{file} is a directory, @code{change} watches for file creation
|
|
and deletion in that directory. Some of the native file notification
|
|
libraries also report file changes in that case. This does not work
|
|
recursively.
|
|
|
|
When any event happens, Emacs will call the @var{callback} function
|
|
passing it a single argument @var{event}, which is of the form
|
|
|
|
@lisp
|
|
(@var{descriptor} @var{action} @var{file} [@var{file1}])
|
|
@end lisp
|
|
|
|
@var{descriptor} is the same object as the one returned by this
|
|
function. @var{action} is the description of the event. It could be
|
|
any one of the following symbols:
|
|
|
|
@table @code
|
|
@item created
|
|
@var{file} was created
|
|
@item deleted
|
|
@var{file} was deleted
|
|
@item changed
|
|
@var{file}'s contents has changed; with @file{w32notify} library,
|
|
reports attribute changes as well
|
|
@item renamed
|
|
@var{file} has been renamed to @var{file1}
|
|
@item attribute-changed
|
|
a @var{file} attribute was changed
|
|
@item stopped
|
|
watching @var{file} has stopped
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
Note that the @file{w32notify} library does not report
|
|
@code{attribute-changed} events. When some file's attribute, like
|
|
permissions or modification time, has changed, this library reports a
|
|
@code{changed} event. Likewise, the @file{kqueue} library does not
|
|
reliably report file attribute changes when watching a directory.
|
|
|
|
The @code{stopped} event means that watching the file has been
|
|
discontinued. This could be because @code{file-notify-rm-watch} was
|
|
called (see below), or because the file being watched was deleted, or
|
|
due to another error reported from the underlying library which makes
|
|
further watching impossible.
|
|
|
|
@var{file} and @var{file1} are the name of the file(s) whose event is
|
|
being reported. For example:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(require 'filenotify)
|
|
@result{} filenotify
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(defun my-notify-callback (event)
|
|
(message "Event %S" event))
|
|
@result{} my-notify-callback
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(file-notify-add-watch
|
|
"/tmp" '(change attribute-change) 'my-notify-callback)
|
|
@result{} 35025468
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(write-region "foo" nil "/tmp/foo")
|
|
@result{} Event (35025468 created "/tmp/.#foo")
|
|
Event (35025468 created "/tmp/foo")
|
|
Event (35025468 changed "/tmp/foo")
|
|
Event (35025468 deleted "/tmp/.#foo")
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(write-region "bla" nil "/tmp/foo")
|
|
@result{} Event (35025468 created "/tmp/.#foo")
|
|
Event (35025468 changed "/tmp/foo")
|
|
Event (35025468 deleted "/tmp/.#foo")
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(set-file-modes "/tmp/foo" (default-file-modes) 'nofollow)
|
|
@result{} Event (35025468 attribute-changed "/tmp/foo")
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
Whether the action @code{renamed} is returned depends on the used
|
|
watch library. Otherwise, the actions @code{deleted} and
|
|
@code{created} could be returned in a random order.
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(rename-file "/tmp/foo" "/tmp/bla")
|
|
@result{} Event (35025468 renamed "/tmp/foo" "/tmp/bla")
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(delete-file "/tmp/bla")
|
|
@result{} Event (35025468 deleted "/tmp/bla")
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@defun file-notify-rm-watch descriptor
|
|
Removes an existing file watch specified by its @var{descriptor}.
|
|
@var{descriptor} should be an object returned by
|
|
@code{file-notify-add-watch}.
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@deffn Command file-notify-rm-all-watches
|
|
Removes all existing file notification watches from Emacs.
|
|
|
|
Use this command with caution, because it could have unexpected side
|
|
effects on packages relying on file watches. It is intended mainly
|
|
for debugging purposes, or when Emacs has been stalled.
|
|
@end deffn
|
|
|
|
@defun file-notify-valid-p descriptor
|
|
Checks a watch specified by its @var{descriptor} for validity.
|
|
@var{descriptor} should be an object returned by
|
|
@code{file-notify-add-watch}.
|
|
|
|
A watch can become invalid if the file or directory it watches is
|
|
deleted, or if the watcher thread exits abnormally for any other
|
|
reason. Removing the watch by calling @code{file-notify-rm-watch}
|
|
also makes it invalid.
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
@group
|
|
(make-directory "/tmp/foo")
|
|
@result{} Event (35025468 created "/tmp/foo")
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(setq desc
|
|
(file-notify-add-watch
|
|
"/tmp/foo" '(change) 'my-notify-callback))
|
|
@result{} 11359632
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(file-notify-valid-p desc)
|
|
@result{} t
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(write-region "bla" nil "/tmp/foo/bla")
|
|
@result{} Event (11359632 created "/tmp/foo/.#bla")
|
|
Event (11359632 created "/tmp/foo/bla")
|
|
Event (11359632 changed "/tmp/foo/bla")
|
|
Event (11359632 deleted "/tmp/foo/.#bla")
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
;; Deleting a file in the directory doesn't invalidate the watch.
|
|
(delete-file "/tmp/foo/bla")
|
|
@result{} Event (11359632 deleted "/tmp/foo/bla")
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(write-region "bla" nil "/tmp/foo/bla")
|
|
@result{} Event (11359632 created "/tmp/foo/.#bla")
|
|
Event (11359632 created "/tmp/foo/bla")
|
|
Event (11359632 changed "/tmp/foo/bla")
|
|
Event (11359632 deleted "/tmp/foo/.#bla")
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
;; Deleting the directory invalidates the watch.
|
|
;; Events arrive for different watch descriptors.
|
|
(delete-directory "/tmp/foo" 'recursive)
|
|
@result{} Event (35025468 deleted "/tmp/foo")
|
|
Event (11359632 deleted "/tmp/foo/bla")
|
|
Event (11359632 deleted "/tmp/foo")
|
|
Event (11359632 stopped "/tmp/foo")
|
|
@end group
|
|
|
|
@group
|
|
(file-notify-valid-p desc)
|
|
@result{} nil
|
|
@end group
|
|
@end example
|
|
@end defun
|
|
|
|
@node Dynamic Libraries
|
|
@section Dynamically Loaded Libraries
|
|
@cindex dynamic libraries
|
|
|
|
A @dfn{dynamically loaded library} is a library that is loaded on
|
|
demand, when its facilities are first needed. Emacs supports such
|
|
on-demand loading of support libraries for some of its features.
|
|
|
|
@defvar dynamic-library-alist
|
|
This is an alist of dynamic libraries and external library files
|
|
implementing them.
|
|
|
|
Each element is a list of the form
|
|
@w{@code{(@var{library} @var{files}@dots{})}}, where the @code{car} is
|
|
a symbol representing a supported external library, and the rest are
|
|
strings giving alternate filenames for that library.
|
|
|
|
Emacs tries to load the library from the files in the order they
|
|
appear in the list; if none is found, the Emacs session won't have
|
|
access to that library, and the features it provides will be
|
|
unavailable.
|
|
|
|
Image support on some platforms uses this facility. Here's an example
|
|
of setting this variable for supporting images on MS-Windows:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
(setq dynamic-library-alist
|
|
'((xpm "libxpm.dll" "xpm4.dll" "libXpm-nox4.dll")
|
|
(png "libpng12d.dll" "libpng12.dll" "libpng.dll"
|
|
"libpng13d.dll" "libpng13.dll")
|
|
(jpeg "jpeg62.dll" "libjpeg.dll" "jpeg-62.dll"
|
|
"jpeg.dll")
|
|
(tiff "libtiff3.dll" "libtiff.dll")
|
|
(gif "giflib4.dll" "libungif4.dll" "libungif.dll")
|
|
(svg "librsvg-2-2.dll")
|
|
(gdk-pixbuf "libgdk_pixbuf-2.0-0.dll")
|
|
(glib "libglib-2.0-0.dll")
|
|
(gobject "libgobject-2.0-0.dll")))
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
Note that image types @code{pbm} and @code{xbm} do not need entries in
|
|
this variable because they do not depend on external libraries and are
|
|
always available in Emacs.
|
|
|
|
Also note that this variable is not meant to be a generic facility for
|
|
accessing external libraries; only those already known by Emacs can
|
|
be loaded through it.
|
|
|
|
This variable is ignored if the given @var{library} is statically
|
|
linked into Emacs.
|
|
@end defvar
|
|
|
|
@node Security Considerations
|
|
@section Security Considerations
|
|
@cindex security
|
|
@cindex hardening
|
|
|
|
Like any application, Emacs can be run in a secure environment, where
|
|
the operating system enforces rules about access and the like. With
|
|
some care, Emacs-based applications can also be part of a security
|
|
perimeter that checks such rules. Although the default settings for
|
|
Emacs work well for a typical software development environment, they
|
|
may require adjustment in environments containing untrusted users that
|
|
may include attackers. Here is a compendium of security issues that
|
|
may be helpful if you are developing such applications. It is by no
|
|
means complete; it is intended to give you an idea of the security
|
|
issues involved, rather than to be a security checklist.
|
|
|
|
@table @asis
|
|
@item File local variables
|
|
@cindex file local variables
|
|
A file that Emacs visits can contain variable settings that affect
|
|
the buffer visiting that file; @xref{File Local Variables}.
|
|
Similarly, a directory can specify local variable values common to all
|
|
files in that directory; see @ref{Directory Local Variables}. Although
|
|
Emacs takes some effort to protect against misuse of these variables,
|
|
a security hole can be created merely by a package setting
|
|
@code{safe-local-variable} too optimistically, a problem that is all
|
|
too common. To disable this feature for both files and directories,
|
|
set @code{enable-local-variables} to @code{nil}.
|
|
|
|
@item Access control
|
|
Although Emacs normally respects access permissions of the underlying
|
|
operating system, in some cases it handles accesses specially. For
|
|
example, file names can have handlers that treat the files specially,
|
|
with their own access checking. @xref{Magic File Names}. Also, a
|
|
buffer can be read-only even if the corresponding file is writable,
|
|
and vice versa, which can result in messages such as @samp{File passwd
|
|
is write-protected; try to save anyway? (yes or no)}. @xref{Read Only
|
|
Buffers}.
|
|
|
|
@item Authentication
|
|
Emacs has several functions that deal with passwords, e.g.,
|
|
@code{read-passwd}. @xref{Reading a Password}.
|
|
Although these functions do not attempt to
|
|
broadcast passwords to the world, their implementations are not proof
|
|
against determined attackers with access to Emacs internals. For
|
|
example, even if Elisp code uses @code{clear-string} to scrub a password from
|
|
its memory after using it, remnants of the password may still reside
|
|
in the garbage-collected free list. @xref{Modifying Strings}.
|
|
|
|
@item Code injection
|
|
Emacs can send commands to many other applications, and applications
|
|
should take care that strings sent as operands of these commands are
|
|
not misinterpreted as directives. For example, when using a shell
|
|
command to rename a file @var{a} to @var{b}, do not simply use the
|
|
string @code{mv @var{a} @var{b}}, because either file name might start
|
|
with @samp{-}, or might contain shell metacharacters like @samp{;}.
|
|
Although functions like @code{shell-quote-argument} can help avoid
|
|
this sort of problem, they are not panaceas; for example, on a POSIX
|
|
platform @code{shell-quote-argument} quotes shell metacharacters but
|
|
not leading @samp{-}. On MS-Windows, quoting for @samp{%} assumes
|
|
none of the environment variables have @samp{^} in their name.
|
|
@xref{Shell Arguments}. Typically it is safer
|
|
to use @code{call-process} than a subshell. @xref{Synchronous
|
|
Processes}. And it is safer yet to use builtin Emacs functions; for
|
|
example, use @code{(rename-file "@var{a}" "@var{b}" t)} instead of
|
|
invoking @command{mv}. @xref{Changing Files}.
|
|
|
|
@item Coding systems
|
|
Emacs attempts to infer the coding systems of the files and network
|
|
connections it accesses. @xref{Coding Systems}.
|
|
If Emacs infers incorrectly, or if the other
|
|
parties to the network connection disagree with Emacs's inferences,
|
|
the resulting system could be unreliable. Also, even when it infers
|
|
correctly, Emacs often can use bytes that other programs cannot. For
|
|
example, although to Emacs the null byte is just a
|
|
character like any other, many other applications treat it as a string
|
|
terminator and mishandle strings or files containing null bytes.
|
|
|
|
@item Environment and configuration variables
|
|
POSIX specifies several environment variables that can affect how
|
|
Emacs behaves. Any environment variable whose name consists entirely
|
|
of uppercase ASCII letters, digits, and the underscore may affect the
|
|
internal behavior of Emacs. Emacs uses several such variables, e.g.,
|
|
@env{EMACSLOADPATH}. @xref{Library Search}. On some platforms some
|
|
environment variables (e.g., @env{PATH}, @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT},
|
|
@env{SHELL}, @env{TMPDIR}) need to have properly-configured values in
|
|
order to get standard behavior for any utility Emacs might invoke.
|
|
Even seemingly-benign variables like @env{TZ} may have security
|
|
implications. @xref{System Environment}.
|
|
|
|
Emacs has customization and other variables with similar
|
|
considerations. For example, if the variable @code{shell-file-name}
|
|
specifies a shell with nonstandard behavior, an Emacs-based
|
|
application may misbehave.
|
|
|
|
@item Installation
|
|
When Emacs is installed, if the installation directory hierarchy can
|
|
be modified by untrusted users, the application cannot be trusted.
|
|
This applies also to the directory hierarchies of the programs that
|
|
Emacs uses, and of the files that Emacs reads and writes.
|
|
|
|
@item Network access
|
|
Emacs often accesses the network, and you may want to configure it to
|
|
avoid network accesses that it would normally do. For example, unless
|
|
you set @code{tramp-mode} to @code{nil}, file names using a certain
|
|
syntax are interpreted as being network files, and are retrieved
|
|
across the network. @xref{Top, The Tramp Manual,, tramp, The Tramp
|
|
Manual}.
|
|
|
|
@item Race conditions
|
|
Emacs applications have the same sort of race-condition issues that
|
|
other applications do. For example, even when
|
|
@code{(file-readable-p "foo.txt")} returns @code{t}, it could be that
|
|
@file{foo.txt} is unreadable because some other program changed the
|
|
file's permissions between the call to @code{file-readable-p} and now.
|
|
@xref{Testing Accessibility}.
|
|
|
|
@item Resource limits
|
|
When Emacs exhausts memory or other operating system resources, its
|
|
behavior can be less reliable, in that computations that ordinarily
|
|
run to completion may abort back to the top level. This may cause
|
|
Emacs to neglect operations that it normally would have done.
|
|
@end table
|