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fa0bf96837
* lisp/emacs-lisp/comp-common.el (comp-primitive-type-specifiers): Remove type declaration of lisp functions. * lisp/window.el (get-lru-window, get-largest-window) (one-window-p): Declare type. * lisp/subr.el (ignore, error, zerop, fixnump, bignump, lsh) (last, eventp, mouse-movement-p, log10, memory-limit) (interactive-p): Likewise. * lisp/simple.el (count-lines, mark, lax-plist-get): Likewise. * lisp/files.el (parse-colon-path): Likewise. * lisp/env.el (getenv): Likewise. * lisp/emacs-lisp/regexp-opt.el (regexp-opt): Likewise. * lisp/emacs-lisp/lisp.el (buffer-end): Likewise. * lisp/emacs-lisp/comp.el (comp-hint-fixnum, comp-hint-cons): Likewise. * lisp/custom.el (custom-variable-p): Likewise.
9068 lines
383 KiB
EmacsLisp
9068 lines
383 KiB
EmacsLisp
;;; files.el --- file input and output commands for Emacs -*- lexical-binding:t -*-
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;; Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1992-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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;; Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org
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;; Package: emacs
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;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
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;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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;; (at your option) any later version.
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;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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;; GNU General Public License for more details.
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;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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;;; Commentary:
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;; Defines most of Emacs's file- and directory-handling functions,
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;; including basic file visiting, backup generation, link handling,
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;; ITS-id version control, load- and write-hook handling, and the like.
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;;; Code:
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(eval-when-compile
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(require 'pcase)
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(require 'easy-mmode)) ; For `define-minor-mode'.
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(defvar font-lock-keywords)
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(defgroup backup nil
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"Backups of edited data files."
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:group 'files)
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(defgroup find-file nil
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"Finding files."
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:group 'files)
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(defcustom directory-abbrev-alist
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nil
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"Alist of abbreviations for file directories.
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A list of elements of the form (FROM . TO), each meaning to replace
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a match for FROM with TO when a directory name matches FROM. This
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replacement is done when setting up the default directory of a
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newly visited file buffer.
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FROM is a regexp that is matched against directory names anchored at
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the first character, so it should start with a \"\\\\\\=`\", or, if
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directory names cannot have embedded newlines, with a \"^\".
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FROM and TO should be equivalent names, which refer to the
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same directory. TO should be an absolute directory name.
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Do not use `~' in the TO strings.
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Use this feature when you have directories that you normally refer to
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via absolute symbolic links. Make TO the name of the link, and FROM
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a regexp matching the name it is linked to."
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:type '(repeat (cons :format "%v"
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:value ("\\`" . "")
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(regexp :tag "From")
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(string :tag "To")))
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:group 'abbrev
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:group 'find-file)
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(defun directory-abbrev-make-regexp (directory)
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"Create a regexp to match DIRECTORY for `directory-abbrev-alist'."
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(let ((regexp
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;; We include a slash at the end, to avoid spurious
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;; matches such as `/usr/foobar' when the home dir is
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;; `/usr/foo'.
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(concat "\\`" (regexp-quote directory) "\\(/\\|\\'\\)")))
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;; The value of regexp could be multibyte or unibyte. In the
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;; latter case, we need to decode it.
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(if (multibyte-string-p regexp)
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regexp
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(decode-coding-string regexp
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(if (eq system-type 'windows-nt)
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'utf-8
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locale-coding-system)))))
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(defun directory-abbrev-apply (filename)
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"Apply the abbreviations in `directory-abbrev-alist' to FILENAME.
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Note that when calling this, you should set `case-fold-search' as
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appropriate for the filesystem used for FILENAME."
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(dolist (dir-abbrev directory-abbrev-alist filename)
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(when (string-match (car dir-abbrev) filename)
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(setq filename (concat (cdr dir-abbrev)
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(substring filename (match-end 0)))))))
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(defcustom make-backup-files t
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"Non-nil means make a backup of a file the first time it is saved.
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This can be done by renaming the file or by copying.
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Renaming means that Emacs renames the existing file so that it is a
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backup file, then writes the buffer into a new file. Any other names
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that the old file had will now refer to the backup file. The new file
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is owned by you and its group is defaulted.
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Copying means that Emacs copies the existing file into the backup
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file, then writes the buffer on top of the existing file. Any other
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names that the old file had will now refer to the new (edited) file.
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The file's owner and group are unchanged.
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The choice of renaming or copying is controlled by the variables
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`backup-by-copying', `backup-by-copying-when-linked',
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`backup-by-copying-when-mismatch' and
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`backup-by-copying-when-privileged-mismatch'. See also `backup-inhibited'."
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:type 'boolean
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:group 'backup)
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;; Do this so that local variables based on the file name
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;; are not overridden by the major mode.
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(defvar backup-inhibited nil
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"If non-nil, backups will be inhibited.
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This variable is intended for use by making it local to a buffer,
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but it is not an automatically buffer-local variable.")
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(put 'backup-inhibited 'permanent-local t)
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(defcustom backup-by-copying nil
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"Non-nil means always use copying to create backup files.
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See documentation of variable `make-backup-files'."
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:type 'boolean
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:group 'backup)
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(defcustom backup-by-copying-when-linked nil
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"Non-nil means use copying to create backups for files with multiple names.
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This causes the alternate names to refer to the latest version as edited.
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This variable is relevant only if `backup-by-copying' is nil."
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:type 'boolean
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:group 'backup)
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(defcustom backup-by-copying-when-mismatch t
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"Non-nil means create backups by copying if this preserves owner or group.
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Renaming may still be used (subject to control of other variables)
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when it would not result in changing the owner or group of the file;
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that is, for files that are owned by you and whose group matches
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the default for a new file created there by you.
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This variable is relevant only if `backup-by-copying' is nil."
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:version "24.1"
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:type 'boolean
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:group 'backup)
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(put 'backup-by-copying-when-mismatch 'permanent-local t)
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(defcustom backup-by-copying-when-privileged-mismatch 200
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"Non-nil means create backups by copying to preserve a privileged owner.
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Renaming may still be used (subject to control of other variables)
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when it would not result in changing the owner of the file or if the
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user id and group id of the file are both greater than the value of
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this variable. This is useful when low-numbered uid's and gid's are
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used for special system users (such as root) that must maintain
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ownership of certain files.
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This variable is relevant only if `backup-by-copying' and
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`backup-by-copying-when-mismatch' are nil."
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:type '(choice (const nil) integer)
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:group 'backup)
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(defvar backup-enable-predicate 'normal-backup-enable-predicate
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"Predicate that looks at a file name and decides whether to make backups.
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Called with an absolute file name as argument, it returns t to enable backup.")
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(defcustom buffer-offer-save nil
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"Non-nil in a buffer means always offer to save buffer on exiting Emacs.
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Do so even if the buffer is not visiting a file.
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Automatically local in all buffers.
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Set to the symbol `always' to offer to save buffer whenever
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`save-some-buffers' is called.
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Note that this option has no effect on `kill-buffer';
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if you want to control what happens when a buffer is killed,
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use `kill-buffer-query-functions'."
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:type '(choice (const :tag "Never" nil)
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(const :tag "On Emacs exit" t)
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(const :tag "Whenever save-some-buffers is called" always))
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:group 'backup)
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(make-variable-buffer-local 'buffer-offer-save)
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(put 'buffer-offer-save 'permanent-local t)
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(defcustom find-file-existing-other-name t
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"Non-nil means find a file under alternative names, in existing buffers.
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This means if any existing buffer is visiting the file you want
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under another name, you get the existing buffer instead of a new buffer."
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:type 'boolean
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:group 'find-file)
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(defcustom find-file-visit-truename nil
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"Non-nil means visiting a file uses its truename as the visited-file name.
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That is, the buffer visiting the file has the truename as the
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value of `buffer-file-name'. The truename of a file is found by
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chasing all links both at the file level and at the levels of the
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containing directories."
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:type 'boolean
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:group 'find-file)
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(defcustom revert-without-query nil
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"Specify which files should be reverted without query.
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The value is a list of regular expressions.
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If the file name matches one of these regular expressions,
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then `revert-buffer' reverts the file without querying
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if the file has changed on disk and you have not edited the buffer."
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:type '(repeat regexp)
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:group 'find-file)
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(defvar-local buffer-file-number nil
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"The inode number and the device of the file visited in the current buffer.
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The value is a list of the form (INODENUM DEVICE), where DEVICE can be
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either a single number or a cons cell of two numbers.
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This tuple of numbers uniquely identifies the file.
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If the buffer is visiting a new file, the value is nil.")
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(put 'buffer-file-number 'permanent-local t)
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(defvar buffer-file-numbers-unique (not (memq system-type '(windows-nt)))
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"Non-nil means that `buffer-file-number' uniquely identifies files.")
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(defvar-local buffer-file-read-only nil
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"Non-nil if visited file was read-only when visited.")
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(defcustom small-temporary-file-directory
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(if (eq system-type 'ms-dos) (getenv "TMPDIR"))
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"The directory for writing small temporary files.
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If non-nil, this directory is used instead of `temporary-file-directory'
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by programs that create small temporary files. This is for systems that
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have fast storage with limited space, such as a RAM disk."
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:group 'files
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:initialize #'custom-initialize-delay
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:type '(choice (const nil) directory))
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;; The system null device. (Should reference NULL_DEVICE from C.)
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(defvar null-device (purecopy "/dev/null") "The system null device.")
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(declare-function msdos-long-file-names "msdos.c")
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(declare-function w32-long-file-name "w32proc.c")
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(declare-function dired-get-filename "dired" (&optional localp no-error-if-not-filep))
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(declare-function dired-unmark "dired" (arg &optional interactive))
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(declare-function dired-do-flagged-delete "dired" (&optional nomessage))
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(declare-function dos-8+3-filename "dos-fns" (filename))
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(declare-function dosified-file-name "dos-fns" (file-name))
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(defvar file-name-invalid-regexp
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(cond ((and (eq system-type 'ms-dos) (not (msdos-long-file-names)))
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(purecopy
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(concat "^\\([^A-Z[-`a-z]\\|..+\\)?:\\|" ; colon except after drive
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"[+, ;=|<>\"?*]\\|\\[\\|\\]\\|" ; invalid characters
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"[\000-\037]\\|" ; control characters
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"\\(/\\.\\.?[^/]\\)\\|" ; leading dots
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"\\(/[^/.]+\\.[^/.]*\\.\\)"))) ; more than a single dot
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((memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin))
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(purecopy
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(concat "^\\([^A-Z[-`a-z]\\|..+\\)?:\\|" ; colon except after drive
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"[|<>\"?*\000-\037]"))) ; invalid characters
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(t (purecopy "[\000]")))
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"Regexp recognizing file names that aren't allowed by the filesystem.")
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(defcustom file-precious-flag nil
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"Non-nil means protect against I/O errors while saving files.
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Some modes set this non-nil in particular buffers.
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This feature works by writing the new contents into a temporary file
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and then renaming the temporary file to replace the original.
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In this way, any I/O error in writing leaves the original untouched,
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and there is never any instant where the file is nonexistent.
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Note that this feature forces backups to be made by copying.
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Yet, at the same time, saving a precious file
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breaks any hard links between it and other files.
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This feature is advisory: for example, if the directory in which the
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file is being saved is not writable, Emacs may ignore a non-nil value
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of `file-precious-flag' and write directly into the file.
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See also: `break-hardlink-on-save' and `file-preserve-symlinks-on-save'."
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:type 'boolean
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:group 'backup)
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(defcustom break-hardlink-on-save nil
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"Whether to allow breaking hardlinks when saving files.
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If non-nil, then when saving a file that exists under several
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names \(i.e., has multiple hardlinks), break the hardlink
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associated with `buffer-file-name' and write to a new file, so
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that the other instances of the file are not affected by the
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save.
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If `buffer-file-name' refers to a symlink, do not break the symlink.
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Unlike `file-precious-flag', `break-hardlink-on-save' is not advisory.
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For example, if the directory in which a file is being saved is not
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itself writable, then error instead of saving in some
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hardlink-nonbreaking way.
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See also `backup-by-copying' and `backup-by-copying-when-linked'."
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:type 'boolean
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:group 'files
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:version "23.1")
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(defcustom version-control nil
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"Control use of version numbers for backup files.
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When t, make numeric backup versions unconditionally.
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When nil, make them for files that have some already.
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The value `never' means do not make them."
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:type '(choice (const :tag "Never" never)
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(const :tag "If existing" nil)
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(other :tag "Always" t))
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:safe #'version-control-safe-local-p
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:group 'backup)
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(defun version-control-safe-local-p (x)
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"Return whether X is safe as local value for `version-control'."
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(or (booleanp x) (equal x 'never)))
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(defcustom dired-kept-versions 2
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"When cleaning directory, number of versions to keep."
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:type 'natnum
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:group 'backup
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:group 'dired)
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(defcustom delete-old-versions nil
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"If t, delete excess backup versions silently.
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If nil, ask confirmation. Any other value prevents any trimming."
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:type '(choice (const :tag "Delete" t)
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(const :tag "Ask" nil)
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(other :tag "Leave" other))
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:group 'backup)
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(defcustom kept-old-versions 2
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"Number of oldest versions to keep when a new numbered backup is made."
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:type 'natnum
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:safe #'natnump
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:group 'backup)
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(defcustom kept-new-versions 2
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"Number of newest versions to keep when a new numbered backup is made.
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Includes the new backup. Must be greater than 0."
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:type 'natnum
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:safe #'natnump
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:group 'backup)
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(defcustom require-final-newline nil
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"Whether to add a newline automatically at the end of the file.
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A value of t means do this only when the file is about to be saved.
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A value of `visit' means do this right after the file is visited.
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A value of `visit-save' means do it at both of those times.
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Any other non-nil value means ask user whether to add a newline, when saving.
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A value of nil means don't add newlines.
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Certain major modes set this locally to the value obtained
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from `mode-require-final-newline'.
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This variable is heeded only when visiting files (or saving
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buffers into files they visit). Writing data to the file system
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with `write-region' and the like is not influenced by this variable."
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:safe #'symbolp
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:type '(choice (const :tag "When visiting" visit)
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(const :tag "When saving" t)
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(const :tag "When visiting or saving" visit-save)
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(const :tag "Don't add newlines" nil)
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(other :tag "Ask each time" ask))
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:group 'editing-basics)
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(defcustom mode-require-final-newline t
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"Whether to add a newline at end of file, in certain major modes.
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Those modes set `require-final-newline' to this value when you enable them.
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They do so because they are often used for files that are supposed
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to end in newlines, and the question is how to arrange that.
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A value of t means do this only when the file is about to be saved.
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A value of `visit' means do this right after the file is visited.
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A value of `visit-save' means do it at both of those times.
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Any other non-nil value means ask user whether to add a newline, when saving.
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A value of nil means do not add newlines. That is a risky choice in this
|
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variable since this value is used for modes for files that ought to have
|
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final newlines. So if you set this to nil, you must explicitly check and
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add a final newline, whenever you save a file that really needs one."
|
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:type '(choice (const :tag "When visiting" visit)
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(const :tag "When saving" t)
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(const :tag "When visiting or saving" visit-save)
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(const :tag "Don't add newlines" nil)
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(other :tag "Ask each time" ask))
|
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:group 'editing-basics
|
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:version "22.1")
|
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(defcustom auto-save-default t
|
||
"Non-nil says by default do auto-saving of every file-visiting buffer."
|
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:type 'boolean
|
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:group 'auto-save)
|
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|
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(defcustom auto-save-file-name-transforms
|
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`(("\\`/[^/]*:\\([^/]*/\\)*\\([^/]*\\)\\'"
|
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;; Don't put "\\2" inside expand-file-name, since it will be
|
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;; transformed to "/2" on DOS/Windows.
|
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,(concat temporary-file-directory "\\2") t))
|
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"Transforms to apply to buffer file name before making auto-save file name.
|
||
|
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Each transform is a list (REGEXP REPLACEMENT UNIQUIFY):
|
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REGEXP is a regular expression to match against the file name.
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If it matches, `replace-match' is used to replace the
|
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matching part with REPLACEMENT.
|
||
|
||
If the optional element UNIQUIFY is nil, Emacs does not check for
|
||
file name clashes, so using that is not recommended. If UNIQUIFY
|
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is one of the members of `secure-hash-algorithms', Emacs
|
||
constructs the nondirectory part of the auto-save file name by
|
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applying that `secure-hash' to the buffer file name. This avoids
|
||
any risk of excessively long file names. Finally, if UNIQUIFY is
|
||
any other value the auto-save file name is constructed by taking
|
||
the directory part of the replaced file-name, concatenated with
|
||
the buffer file name with all directory separators changed to `!'
|
||
to prevent clashes. This will not work correctly if your
|
||
filesystem truncates the resulting name.
|
||
|
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All the transforms in the list are tried, in the order they are listed.
|
||
When one transform applies, its result is final;
|
||
no further transforms are tried.
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||
The default value is set up to put the auto-save file into the
|
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temporary directory (see the variable `temporary-file-directory') for
|
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editing a remote file.
|
||
|
||
On MS-DOS filesystems without long names this variable is always
|
||
ignored."
|
||
:group 'auto-save
|
||
:type `(repeat (list (regexp :tag "Regexp")
|
||
(string :tag "Replacement")
|
||
(choice
|
||
(const :tag "Uniquify" t)
|
||
,@(mapcar (lambda (algo)
|
||
(list 'const algo))
|
||
(secure-hash-algorithms)))))
|
||
:initialize #'custom-initialize-delay
|
||
:version "21.1")
|
||
|
||
(defvar auto-save--timer nil "Timer for `auto-save-visited-mode'.")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom auto-save-visited-interval 5
|
||
"Interval in seconds for `auto-save-visited-mode'.
|
||
If `auto-save-visited-mode' is enabled, Emacs will save all
|
||
buffers visiting a file to the visited file after it has been
|
||
idle for `auto-save-visited-interval' seconds."
|
||
:group 'auto-save
|
||
:type 'number
|
||
:version "26.1"
|
||
:set (lambda (symbol value)
|
||
(set-default symbol value)
|
||
(when auto-save--timer
|
||
(timer-set-idle-time auto-save--timer value :repeat))))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom auto-save-visited-predicate nil
|
||
"Predicate function for `auto-save-visited-mode'.
|
||
|
||
If non-nil, the value should be a function of no arguments; it
|
||
will be called once in each file-visiting buffer when the time
|
||
comes to auto-save. A buffer will be saved only if the predicate
|
||
function returns a non-nil value.
|
||
|
||
For example, you could add this to your Init file to only save
|
||
files that are both in Org mode and in a particular directory:
|
||
|
||
(setq auto-save-visited-predicate
|
||
(lambda () (and (eq major-mode \\='org-mode)
|
||
(string-match \"^/home/skangas/org/\"
|
||
buffer-file-name))))
|
||
|
||
If the value of this variable is not a function, it is ignored.
|
||
This is the same as having a predicate that always returns
|
||
non-nil."
|
||
:group 'auto-save
|
||
:type '(choice :tag "Function:"
|
||
(const :tag "No extra predicate" :value nil)
|
||
(function :tag "Predicate function" :value always))
|
||
:risky t
|
||
:version "29.1")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom remote-file-name-inhibit-auto-save-visited nil
|
||
"When nil, `auto-save-visited-mode' will auto-save remote files.
|
||
Any other value means that it will not."
|
||
:group 'auto-save
|
||
:group 'tramp
|
||
:type 'boolean
|
||
:version "29.1")
|
||
|
||
(define-minor-mode auto-save-visited-mode
|
||
"Toggle automatic saving of file-visiting buffers to their files.
|
||
|
||
When this mode is enabled, file-visiting buffers are automatically
|
||
saved to their files. This is in contrast to `auto-save-mode', which
|
||
auto-saves those buffers to a separate file, leaving the original
|
||
file intact. See Info node `Saving' for details of the save process.
|
||
|
||
The user option `auto-save-visited-interval' controls how often to
|
||
auto-save a buffer into its visited file.
|
||
|
||
You can use `auto-save-visited-predicate' to control which
|
||
buffers are saved.
|
||
|
||
You can also set the buffer-local value of the variable
|
||
`auto-save-visited-mode' to nil. A buffer where the buffer-local
|
||
value of this variable is nil is ignored for the purpose of
|
||
`auto-save-visited-mode', even if `auto-save-visited-mode' is
|
||
enabled.
|
||
|
||
For more details, see Info node `(emacs) Auto Save Files'."
|
||
:group 'auto-save
|
||
:global t
|
||
(when auto-save--timer (cancel-timer auto-save--timer))
|
||
(setq auto-save--timer
|
||
(when auto-save-visited-mode
|
||
(run-with-idle-timer
|
||
auto-save-visited-interval :repeat
|
||
#'save-some-buffers :no-prompt
|
||
(lambda ()
|
||
(and buffer-file-name
|
||
auto-save-visited-mode
|
||
(not (and buffer-auto-save-file-name
|
||
auto-save-visited-file-name))
|
||
(or (not (file-remote-p buffer-file-name))
|
||
(not remote-file-name-inhibit-auto-save-visited))
|
||
(or (not (functionp auto-save-visited-predicate))
|
||
(funcall auto-save-visited-predicate))))))))
|
||
|
||
;; The 'set' part is so we don't get a warning for using this variable
|
||
;; above, while still catching code that _sets_ the variable to get
|
||
;; the same effect as the new auto-save-visited-mode.
|
||
(make-obsolete-variable 'auto-save-visited-file-name 'auto-save-visited-mode
|
||
"Emacs 26.1" 'set)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom save-abbrevs t
|
||
"Non-nil means save word abbrevs too when files are saved.
|
||
If `silently', don't ask the user before saving."
|
||
:type '(choice (const t) (const nil) (const silently))
|
||
:group 'abbrev)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom lock-file-name-transforms nil
|
||
"Transforms to apply to buffer file name before making a lock file name.
|
||
This has the same syntax as `auto-save-file-name-transforms',
|
||
but applies to lock file names instead of auto-save file names.
|
||
|
||
By default, Emacs puts each lock file into the same directory as the
|
||
file it locks, prepending \".#\" to the base file name.
|
||
|
||
Note that changing this could break lock file functionality, e.g.:
|
||
if different users access the same file, using different lock file settings;
|
||
if accessing files on a shared file system from different hosts,
|
||
using a transform that puts the lock files on a local file system."
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:type '(repeat (list (regexp :tag "Regexp")
|
||
(string :tag "Replacement")
|
||
(boolean :tag "Uniquify")))
|
||
:version "28.1")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom remote-file-name-inhibit-locks nil
|
||
"Whether to create file locks for remote files."
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:group 'tramp
|
||
:version "28.1"
|
||
:type 'boolean)
|
||
|
||
(define-minor-mode lock-file-mode
|
||
"Toggle file locking in the current buffer (Lock File mode)."
|
||
:version "28.1"
|
||
(setq-local create-lockfiles (and lock-file-mode t)))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom find-file-run-dired t
|
||
"Non-nil means allow `find-file' to visit directories.
|
||
To visit the directory, `find-file' runs `find-directory-functions'."
|
||
:type 'boolean
|
||
:group 'find-file)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom find-directory-functions '(cvs-dired-noselect dired-noselect)
|
||
"List of functions to try in sequence to visit a directory.
|
||
Each function is called with the directory name as the sole argument
|
||
and should return either a buffer or nil."
|
||
:type '(hook :options (cvs-dired-noselect dired-noselect))
|
||
:group 'find-file)
|
||
|
||
;; FIXME: also add a hook for `(thing-at-point 'filename)'
|
||
(defcustom file-name-at-point-functions '(ffap-guess-file-name-at-point)
|
||
"List of functions to try in sequence to get a file name at point.
|
||
Each function should return either nil or a file name found at the
|
||
location of point in the current buffer."
|
||
:type '(hook :options (ffap-guess-file-name-at-point))
|
||
:group 'find-file)
|
||
|
||
;;;It is not useful to make this a local variable.
|
||
;;;(put 'find-file-not-found-functions 'permanent-local t)
|
||
(defvar find-file-not-found-functions nil
|
||
"List of functions to be called for `find-file' on nonexistent file.
|
||
These functions are called as soon as the error is detected.
|
||
Variable `buffer-file-name' is already set up.
|
||
The functions are called in the order given until one of them returns non-nil.")
|
||
|
||
;;;It is not useful to make this a local variable.
|
||
;;;(put 'find-file-hook 'permanent-local t)
|
||
;; I found some external files still using the obsolete form in 2018.
|
||
(define-obsolete-variable-alias 'find-file-hooks 'find-file-hook "22.1")
|
||
(defcustom find-file-hook nil
|
||
"List of functions to be called after a buffer is loaded from a file.
|
||
The buffer's local variables (if any) will have been processed before the
|
||
functions are called. This includes directory-local variables, if any,
|
||
for the file's directory."
|
||
:group 'find-file
|
||
:type 'hook
|
||
:options '(auto-insert)
|
||
:version "22.1")
|
||
|
||
;; I found some external files still using the obsolete form in 2018.
|
||
(define-obsolete-variable-alias 'write-file-hooks 'write-file-functions "22.1")
|
||
(defvar write-file-functions nil
|
||
"List of functions to be called before saving a buffer to a file.
|
||
Used only by `save-buffer'.
|
||
If one of them returns non-nil, the file is considered already written
|
||
and the rest are not called.
|
||
These hooks are considered to pertain to the visited file.
|
||
So any buffer-local binding of this variable is discarded if you change
|
||
the visited file name with \\[set-visited-file-name], but not when you
|
||
change the major mode.
|
||
|
||
This hook is not run if any of the functions in
|
||
`write-contents-functions' returns non-nil. Both hooks pertain
|
||
to how to save a buffer to file, for instance, choosing a suitable
|
||
coding system and setting mode bits. (See Info
|
||
node `(elisp)Saving Buffers'.) To perform various checks or
|
||
updates before the buffer is saved, use `before-save-hook'.")
|
||
(put 'write-file-functions 'permanent-local t)
|
||
|
||
;; I found some files still using the obsolete form in 2018.
|
||
(defvar-local local-write-file-hooks nil)
|
||
(put 'local-write-file-hooks 'permanent-local t)
|
||
(make-obsolete-variable 'local-write-file-hooks 'write-file-functions "22.1")
|
||
|
||
;; I found some files still using the obsolete form in 2018.
|
||
(define-obsolete-variable-alias 'write-contents-hooks
|
||
'write-contents-functions "22.1")
|
||
(defvar-local write-contents-functions nil
|
||
"List of functions to be called before writing out a buffer to a file.
|
||
|
||
Used only by `save-buffer'. If one of them returns non-nil, the
|
||
file is considered already written and the rest are not called
|
||
and neither are the functions in `write-file-functions'. This
|
||
hook can thus be used to create save behavior for buffers that
|
||
are not visiting a file at all.
|
||
|
||
This variable is meant to be used for hooks that pertain to the
|
||
buffer's contents, not to the particular visited file; thus,
|
||
`set-visited-file-name' does not clear this variable; but changing the
|
||
major mode does clear it.
|
||
|
||
For hooks that _do_ pertain to the particular visited file, use
|
||
`write-file-functions'. Both this variable and
|
||
`write-file-functions' relate to how a buffer is saved to file.
|
||
To perform various checks or updates before the buffer is saved,
|
||
use `before-save-hook'.")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom enable-local-variables t
|
||
"Control use of local variables in files you visit.
|
||
The value can be t, nil, :safe, :all, or something else.
|
||
|
||
A value of t means file local variables specifications are obeyed
|
||
if all the specified variable values are safe; if any values are
|
||
not safe, Emacs queries you, once, whether to set them all.
|
||
\(When you say yes to certain values, they are remembered as safe.)
|
||
|
||
:safe means set the safe variables, and ignore the rest.
|
||
:all means set all variables, whether safe or not.
|
||
(Don't set it permanently to :all.)
|
||
A value of nil means always ignore the file local variables.
|
||
|
||
Any other value means always query you once whether to set them all.
|
||
\(When you say yes to certain values, they are remembered as safe, but
|
||
this has no effect when `enable-local-variables' is \"something else\".)
|
||
|
||
This variable also controls use of major modes specified in
|
||
a -*- line.
|
||
|
||
The command \\[normal-mode], when used interactively,
|
||
always obeys file local variable specifications and the -*- line,
|
||
and ignores this variable.
|
||
|
||
Also see the `permanently-enabled-local-variables' and
|
||
`safe-local-variable-directories' variables."
|
||
:risky t
|
||
:type '(choice (const :tag "Query Unsafe" t)
|
||
(const :tag "Safe Only" :safe)
|
||
(const :tag "Do all" :all)
|
||
(const :tag "Ignore" nil)
|
||
(other :tag "Query" other))
|
||
:group 'find-file)
|
||
|
||
(defvar enable-dir-local-variables t
|
||
"Non-nil means enable use of directory-local variables.
|
||
Some modes may wish to set this to nil to prevent directory-local
|
||
settings being applied, but still respect file-local ones.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar-local untrusted-content nil
|
||
"Non-nil means that current buffer originated from an untrusted source.
|
||
Email clients and some other modes may set this non-nil to mark the
|
||
buffer contents as untrusted.
|
||
|
||
This variable might be subject to change without notice.")
|
||
(put 'untrusted-content 'permanent-local t)
|
||
|
||
;; This is an odd variable IMO.
|
||
;; You might wonder why it is needed, when we could just do:
|
||
;; (setq-local enable-local-variables nil)
|
||
;; These two are not precisely the same.
|
||
;; Setting this variable does not cause -*- mode settings to be
|
||
;; ignored, whereas setting enable-local-variables does.
|
||
;; Only three places in Emacs use this variable: tar and arc modes,
|
||
;; and rmail. The first two don't need it. They already use
|
||
;; inhibit-local-variables-regexps, which is probably enough, and
|
||
;; could also just set enable-local-variables locally to nil.
|
||
;; Them setting it has the side-effect that dir-locals cannot apply to
|
||
;; eg tar files (?). FIXME Is this appropriate?
|
||
;; AFAICS, rmail is the only thing that needs this, and the only
|
||
;; reason it uses it is for BABYL files (which are obsolete).
|
||
;; These contain "-*- rmail -*-" in the first line, which rmail wants
|
||
;; to respect, so that find-file on a BABYL file will switch to
|
||
;; rmail-mode automatically (this is nice, but hardly essential,
|
||
;; since most people are used to explicitly running a command to
|
||
;; access their mail; M-x gnus etc). Rmail files may happen to
|
||
;; contain Local Variables sections in messages, which Rmail wants to
|
||
;; ignore. So AFAICS the only reason this variable exists is for a
|
||
;; minor convenience feature for handling of an obsolete Rmail file format.
|
||
(defvar local-enable-local-variables t
|
||
"Like `enable-local-variables', except for major mode in a -*- line.
|
||
The meaningful values are nil and non-nil. The default is non-nil.
|
||
It should be set in a buffer-local fashion.
|
||
|
||
Setting this to nil has the same effect as setting `enable-local-variables'
|
||
to nil, except that it does not ignore any mode: setting in a -*- line.
|
||
Unless this difference matters to you, you should set `enable-local-variables'
|
||
instead of this variable.")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom enable-local-eval 'maybe
|
||
"Control processing of the \"variable\" `eval' in a file's local variables.
|
||
The value can be t, nil or something else.
|
||
A value of t means obey `eval' variables.
|
||
A value of nil means ignore them; anything else means query."
|
||
:risky t
|
||
:type '(choice (const :tag "Obey" t)
|
||
(const :tag "Ignore" nil)
|
||
(other :tag "Query" other))
|
||
:group 'find-file)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom view-read-only nil
|
||
"Non-nil means buffers visiting files read-only do so in view mode.
|
||
In fact, this means that all read-only buffers normally have
|
||
View mode enabled, including buffers that are read-only because
|
||
you visit a file you cannot alter, and buffers you make read-only
|
||
using \\[read-only-mode]."
|
||
:type 'boolean
|
||
:group 'view)
|
||
|
||
(defvar file-name-history nil
|
||
"History list of file names entered in the minibuffer.
|
||
|
||
Maximum length of the history list is determined by the value
|
||
of `history-length', which see.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar save-silently nil
|
||
"If non-nil, avoid messages when saving files.
|
||
Error-related messages will still be printed, but all other
|
||
messages will not.")
|
||
|
||
|
||
(put 'ange-ftp-completion-hook-function 'safe-magic t)
|
||
(defun ange-ftp-completion-hook-function (op &rest args)
|
||
"Provides support for ange-ftp host name completion.
|
||
Runs the usual ange-ftp hook, but only for completion operations."
|
||
;; Having this here avoids the need to load ange-ftp when it's not
|
||
;; really in use.
|
||
(if (memq op '(file-name-completion file-name-all-completions))
|
||
(apply 'ange-ftp-hook-function op args)
|
||
(let ((inhibit-file-name-handlers
|
||
(cons 'ange-ftp-completion-hook-function
|
||
(and (eq inhibit-file-name-operation op)
|
||
inhibit-file-name-handlers)))
|
||
(inhibit-file-name-operation op))
|
||
(apply op args))))
|
||
|
||
(declare-function dos-convert-standard-filename "dos-fns.el" (filename))
|
||
(declare-function w32-convert-standard-filename "w32-fns.el" (filename))
|
||
|
||
(defun convert-standard-filename (filename)
|
||
"Convert a standard file's name to something suitable for the OS.
|
||
This means to guarantee valid names and perhaps to canonicalize
|
||
certain patterns.
|
||
|
||
FILENAME should be an absolute file name since the conversion rules
|
||
sometimes vary depending on the position in the file name. E.g. c:/foo
|
||
is a valid DOS file name, but c:/bar/c:/foo is not.
|
||
|
||
This function's standard definition is trivial; it just returns
|
||
the argument. However, on Windows and DOS, replace invalid
|
||
characters. On DOS, make sure to obey the 8.3 limitations.
|
||
In the native Windows build, turn Cygwin names into native names.
|
||
|
||
See Info node `(elisp)Standard File Names' for more details."
|
||
(cond
|
||
((eq system-type 'cygwin)
|
||
(let ((name (copy-sequence filename))
|
||
(start 0))
|
||
;; Replace invalid filename characters with !
|
||
(while (string-match "[?*:<>|\"\000-\037]" name start)
|
||
(aset name (match-beginning 0) ?!)
|
||
(setq start (match-end 0)))
|
||
name))
|
||
((eq system-type 'windows-nt)
|
||
(w32-convert-standard-filename filename))
|
||
((eq system-type 'ms-dos)
|
||
(dos-convert-standard-filename filename))
|
||
(t filename)))
|
||
|
||
(defun read-directory-name (prompt &optional dir default-dirname mustmatch initial)
|
||
"Read directory name, prompting with PROMPT and completing in directory DIR.
|
||
Value is not expanded---you must call `expand-file-name' yourself.
|
||
Default name to DEFAULT-DIRNAME if user exits with the same
|
||
non-empty string that was inserted by this function.
|
||
(If DEFAULT-DIRNAME is omitted, DIR combined with INITIAL is used,
|
||
or just DIR if INITIAL is nil.)
|
||
If the user exits with an empty minibuffer, this function returns
|
||
an empty string. (This can happen only if the user erased the
|
||
pre-inserted contents or if `insert-default-directory' is nil.)
|
||
Fourth arg MUSTMATCH non-nil means require existing directory's name.
|
||
Non-nil and non-t means also require confirmation after completion.
|
||
Fifth arg INITIAL specifies text to start with.
|
||
DIR should be an absolute directory name. It defaults to
|
||
the value of `default-directory'."
|
||
(unless dir
|
||
(setq dir default-directory))
|
||
(read-file-name prompt dir (or default-dirname
|
||
(if initial (expand-file-name initial dir)
|
||
dir))
|
||
mustmatch initial
|
||
'file-directory-p))
|
||
|
||
|
||
(defun pwd (&optional insert)
|
||
"Show the current default directory.
|
||
With prefix argument INSERT, insert the current default directory
|
||
at point instead."
|
||
(interactive "P")
|
||
(if insert
|
||
(insert default-directory)
|
||
(message "Directory %s" default-directory)))
|
||
|
||
(defvar cd-path nil
|
||
"Value of the CDPATH environment variable, as a list.
|
||
Not actually set up until the first time you use it.")
|
||
|
||
(defun parse-colon-path (search-path)
|
||
"Explode a search path into a list of directory names.
|
||
Directories are separated by `path-separator' (which is colon in
|
||
GNU and Unix systems). Substitute environment variables into the
|
||
resulting list of directory names. For an empty path element (i.e.,
|
||
a leading or trailing separator, or two adjacent separators), return
|
||
nil (meaning `default-directory') as the associated list element."
|
||
(declare (type (function (string) list)))
|
||
(when (stringp search-path)
|
||
(let ((spath (substitute-env-vars search-path))
|
||
(double-slash-special-p
|
||
(memq system-type '(windows-nt cygwin ms-dos))))
|
||
(mapcar (lambda (f)
|
||
(if (equal "" f) nil
|
||
(let ((dir (file-name-as-directory f)))
|
||
;; Previous implementation used `substitute-in-file-name'
|
||
;; which collapses multiple "/" in front, while
|
||
;; preserving double slash where it matters. Do
|
||
;; the same for backward compatibility.
|
||
(if (string-match "\\`//+" dir)
|
||
(substring dir (- (match-end 0)
|
||
(if double-slash-special-p 2 1)))
|
||
dir))))
|
||
(split-string spath path-separator)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun cd-absolute (dir)
|
||
"Change current directory to given absolute file name DIR."
|
||
;; Put the name into directory syntax now,
|
||
;; because otherwise expand-file-name may give some bad results.
|
||
(setq dir (file-name-as-directory dir))
|
||
;; We used to additionally call abbreviate-file-name here, for an
|
||
;; unknown reason. Problem is that most buffers are setup
|
||
;; without going through cd-absolute and don't call
|
||
;; abbreviate-file-name on their default-directory, so the few that
|
||
;; do end up using a superficially different directory.
|
||
(setq dir (expand-file-name dir))
|
||
(if (not (file-directory-p dir))
|
||
(error (if (file-exists-p dir)
|
||
"%s is not a directory"
|
||
"%s: no such directory")
|
||
dir)
|
||
(unless (file-accessible-directory-p dir)
|
||
(error "Cannot cd to %s: Permission denied" dir))
|
||
(setq default-directory dir)
|
||
(setq list-buffers-directory dir)))
|
||
|
||
(defun cd (dir)
|
||
"Make DIR become the current buffer's default directory.
|
||
If your environment includes a `CDPATH' variable, try each one of
|
||
that list of directories (separated by occurrences of
|
||
`path-separator') when resolving a relative directory name.
|
||
The path separator is colon in GNU and GNU-like systems."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(list
|
||
;; FIXME: There's a subtle bug in the completion below. Seems linked
|
||
;; to a fundamental difficulty of implementing `predicate' correctly.
|
||
;; The manifestation is that TAB may list non-directories in the case where
|
||
;; those files also correspond to valid directories (if your cd-path is (A/
|
||
;; B/) and you have A/a a file and B/a a directory, then both `a' and `a/'
|
||
;; will be listed as valid completions).
|
||
;; This is because `a' (listed because of A/a) is indeed a valid choice
|
||
;; (which will lead to the use of B/a).
|
||
(minibuffer-with-setup-hook
|
||
(lambda ()
|
||
(setq-local minibuffer-completion-table
|
||
(apply-partially #'locate-file-completion-table
|
||
cd-path nil))
|
||
(setq-local minibuffer-completion-predicate
|
||
(lambda (dir)
|
||
(locate-file dir cd-path nil
|
||
(lambda (f) (and (file-directory-p f) 'dir-ok))))))
|
||
(unless cd-path
|
||
(setq cd-path (or (parse-colon-path (getenv "CDPATH"))
|
||
(list "./"))))
|
||
(read-directory-name "Change default directory: "
|
||
default-directory default-directory
|
||
t))))
|
||
(unless cd-path
|
||
(setq cd-path (or (parse-colon-path (getenv "CDPATH"))
|
||
(list "./"))))
|
||
(cd-absolute
|
||
(or
|
||
;; locate-file doesn't support remote file names, so detect them
|
||
;; and support them here by hand.
|
||
(and (file-remote-p (expand-file-name dir))
|
||
(file-accessible-directory-p (expand-file-name dir))
|
||
(expand-file-name dir))
|
||
(locate-file dir cd-path nil
|
||
(lambda (f) (and (file-directory-p f) 'dir-ok)))
|
||
(if (getenv "CDPATH")
|
||
(error "No such directory found via CDPATH environment variable: %s" dir)
|
||
(error "No such directory: %s" dir)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun directory-files-recursively (dir regexp
|
||
&optional include-directories predicate
|
||
follow-symlinks)
|
||
"Return list of all files under directory DIR whose names match REGEXP.
|
||
This function works recursively. Files are returned in \"depth
|
||
first\" order, and files from each directory are sorted in
|
||
alphabetical order. Each file name appears in the returned list
|
||
in its absolute form.
|
||
|
||
By default, the returned list excludes directories, but if
|
||
optional argument INCLUDE-DIRECTORIES is non-nil, they are
|
||
included.
|
||
|
||
PREDICATE can be either nil (which means that all subdirectories
|
||
of DIR are descended into), t (which means that subdirectories that
|
||
can't be read are ignored), or a function (which is called with
|
||
the name of each subdirectory, and should return non-nil if the
|
||
subdirectory is to be descended into).
|
||
|
||
If FOLLOW-SYMLINKS is non-nil, symbolic links that point to
|
||
directories are followed. Note that this can lead to infinite
|
||
recursion."
|
||
(let* ((result nil)
|
||
(files nil)
|
||
(dir (directory-file-name dir))
|
||
;; When DIR is "/", remote file names like "/method:" could
|
||
;; also be offered. We shall suppress them.
|
||
(tramp-mode (and tramp-mode (file-remote-p (expand-file-name dir)))))
|
||
(dolist (file (sort (file-name-all-completions "" dir)
|
||
'string<))
|
||
(unless (member file '("./" "../"))
|
||
(if (directory-name-p file)
|
||
(let* ((leaf (substring file 0 (1- (length file))))
|
||
(full-file (concat dir "/" leaf)))
|
||
;; Don't follow symlinks to other directories.
|
||
(when (and (or (not (file-symlink-p full-file))
|
||
(and (file-symlink-p full-file)
|
||
follow-symlinks))
|
||
;; Allow filtering subdirectories.
|
||
(or (eq predicate nil)
|
||
(eq predicate t)
|
||
(funcall predicate full-file)))
|
||
(let ((sub-files
|
||
(if (eq predicate t)
|
||
(ignore-error file-error
|
||
(directory-files-recursively
|
||
full-file regexp include-directories
|
||
predicate follow-symlinks))
|
||
(directory-files-recursively
|
||
full-file regexp include-directories
|
||
predicate follow-symlinks))))
|
||
(setq result (nconc result sub-files))))
|
||
(when (and include-directories
|
||
(string-match regexp leaf))
|
||
(setq result (nconc result (list full-file)))))
|
||
(when (string-match regexp file)
|
||
(push (concat dir "/" file) files)))))
|
||
(nconc result (nreverse files))))
|
||
|
||
(defun directory-empty-p (dir)
|
||
"Return t if DIR names an existing directory containing no other files.
|
||
Return nil if DIR does not name a directory, or if there was
|
||
trouble determining whether DIR is a directory or empty.
|
||
|
||
Symbolic links to directories count as directories.
|
||
See `file-symlink-p' to distinguish symlinks."
|
||
(and (file-directory-p dir)
|
||
(null (directory-files dir nil directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp t 1))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar module-file-suffix)
|
||
|
||
(defun load-file (file)
|
||
"Load the Lisp file named FILE."
|
||
;; This is a case where .elc and .so/.dll make a lot of sense.
|
||
(interactive (list (let ((completion-ignored-extensions
|
||
(remove module-file-suffix
|
||
(remove ".elc"
|
||
completion-ignored-extensions))))
|
||
(read-file-name "Load file: " nil nil 'lambda))))
|
||
(load (expand-file-name file) nil nil t))
|
||
|
||
(defvar comp-eln-to-el-h)
|
||
|
||
(defun locate-file (filename path &optional suffixes predicate)
|
||
"Search for FILENAME through PATH.
|
||
If found, return the absolute file name of FILENAME; otherwise
|
||
return nil.
|
||
PATH should be a list of directories to look in, like the lists in
|
||
`exec-path' or `load-path'.
|
||
If SUFFIXES is non-nil, it should be a list of suffixes to append to
|
||
file name when searching. If SUFFIXES is nil, it is equivalent to (\"\").
|
||
Use (\"/\") to disable PATH search, but still try the suffixes in SUFFIXES.
|
||
If non-nil, PREDICATE is used instead of `file-readable-p'.
|
||
|
||
This function will normally skip directories, so if you want it to find
|
||
directories, make sure the PREDICATE function returns `dir-ok' for them.
|
||
|
||
PREDICATE can also be an integer to pass to the `access' system call,
|
||
in which case file name handlers are ignored. This usage is deprecated.
|
||
For compatibility, PREDICATE can also be one of the symbols
|
||
`executable', `readable', `writable', or `exists', or a list of
|
||
one or more of those symbols."
|
||
(if (and predicate (symbolp predicate) (not (functionp predicate)))
|
||
(setq predicate (list predicate)))
|
||
(when (and (consp predicate) (not (functionp predicate)))
|
||
(setq predicate
|
||
(logior (if (memq 'executable predicate) 1 0)
|
||
(if (memq 'writable predicate) 2 0)
|
||
(if (memq 'readable predicate) 4 0))))
|
||
(locate-file-internal filename path suffixes predicate))
|
||
|
||
(defun locate-file-completion-table (dirs suffixes string pred action)
|
||
"Do completion for file names passed to `locate-file'."
|
||
(cond
|
||
((file-name-absolute-p string)
|
||
;; FIXME: maybe we should use completion-file-name-table instead,
|
||
;; tho at least for `load', the arg is passed through
|
||
;; substitute-in-file-name for historical reasons.
|
||
(read-file-name-internal string pred action))
|
||
((eq (car-safe action) 'boundaries)
|
||
(let ((suffix (cdr action)))
|
||
`(boundaries
|
||
,(length (file-name-directory string))
|
||
,@(let ((x (file-name-directory suffix)))
|
||
(if x (1- (length x)) (length suffix))))))
|
||
(t
|
||
(let ((names '())
|
||
;; If we have files like "foo.el" and "foo.elc", we could load one of
|
||
;; them with "foo.el", "foo.elc", or "foo", where just "foo" is the
|
||
;; preferred way. So if we list all 3, that gives a lot of redundant
|
||
;; entries for the poor soul looking just for "foo". OTOH, sometimes
|
||
;; the user does want to pay attention to the extension. We try to
|
||
;; diffuse this tension by stripping the suffix, except when the
|
||
;; result is a single element (i.e. usually we list only "foo" unless
|
||
;; it's the only remaining element in the list, in which case we do
|
||
;; list "foo", "foo.elc" and "foo.el").
|
||
(fullnames '())
|
||
(suffix (concat (regexp-opt suffixes t) "\\'"))
|
||
(string-dir (file-name-directory string))
|
||
(string-file (file-name-nondirectory string)))
|
||
(dolist (dir dirs)
|
||
(unless dir
|
||
(setq dir default-directory))
|
||
(if string-dir (setq dir (expand-file-name string-dir dir)))
|
||
(when (file-directory-p dir)
|
||
(dolist (file (file-name-all-completions
|
||
string-file dir))
|
||
(if (not (string-match suffix file))
|
||
(push file names)
|
||
(push file fullnames)
|
||
(push (substring file 0 (match-beginning 0)) names)))))
|
||
;; Switching from names to names+fullnames creates a non-monotonicity
|
||
;; which can cause problems with things like partial-completion.
|
||
;; To minimize the problem, filter out completion-regexp-list, so that
|
||
;; M-x load-library RET t/x.e TAB finds some files. Also remove elements
|
||
;; from `names' that matched `string' only when they still had
|
||
;; their suffix.
|
||
(setq names (all-completions string-file names))
|
||
;; Remove duplicates of the first element, so that we can easily check
|
||
;; if `names' really contains only a single element.
|
||
(when (cdr names) (setcdr names (delete (car names) (cdr names))))
|
||
(unless (cdr names)
|
||
;; There's no more than one matching non-suffixed element, so expand
|
||
;; the list by adding the suffixed elements as well.
|
||
(setq names (nconc names fullnames)))
|
||
(completion-table-with-context
|
||
string-dir names string-file pred action)))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar locate-dominating-stop-dir-regexp
|
||
(purecopy "\\`\\(?:[\\/][\\/][^\\/]+[\\/]\\|/\\(?:net\\|afs\\|\\.\\.\\.\\)/\\)\\'")
|
||
"Regexp of directory names that stop the search in `locate-dominating-file'.
|
||
Any directory whose name matches this regexp will be treated like
|
||
a kind of root directory by `locate-dominating-file', which will stop its
|
||
search when it bumps into it.
|
||
The default regexp prevents fruitless and time-consuming attempts to find
|
||
special files in directories in which file names are interpreted as host names,
|
||
or mount points potentially requiring authentication as a different user.")
|
||
|
||
(defun locate-dominating-file (file name)
|
||
"Starting at FILE, look up directory hierarchy for directory containing NAME.
|
||
FILE can be a file or a directory. If it's a file, its directory will
|
||
serve as the starting point for searching the hierarchy of directories.
|
||
Stop at the first parent directory containing a file NAME,
|
||
and return the directory. Return nil if not found.
|
||
Instead of a string, NAME can also be a predicate taking one argument
|
||
\(a directory) and returning a non-nil value if that directory is the one for
|
||
which we're looking. The predicate will be called with every file/directory
|
||
the function needs to examine, starting with FILE."
|
||
;; Represent /home/luser/foo as ~/foo so that we don't try to look for
|
||
;; `name' in /home or in /.
|
||
(setq file (abbreviate-file-name (expand-file-name file)))
|
||
(let ((root nil)
|
||
try)
|
||
(while (not (or root
|
||
(null file)
|
||
(string-match locate-dominating-stop-dir-regexp file)))
|
||
(setq file (if (file-directory-p file)
|
||
file
|
||
(file-name-directory file))
|
||
try (if (stringp name)
|
||
(file-exists-p (expand-file-name name file))
|
||
(funcall name file)))
|
||
(cond (try (setq root file))
|
||
((equal file (setq file (file-name-directory
|
||
(directory-file-name file))))
|
||
(setq file nil))))
|
||
(if root (file-name-as-directory root))))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom user-emacs-directory-warning t
|
||
"Non-nil means warn if unable to access or create `user-emacs-directory'.
|
||
Set this to nil at your own risk, as it might lead to data loss
|
||
when Emacs tries to write something to a non-existent or
|
||
inaccessible location."
|
||
:type 'boolean
|
||
:group 'initialization
|
||
:version "24.4")
|
||
|
||
(defun locate-user-emacs-file (new-name &optional old-name)
|
||
"Return an absolute per-user Emacs-specific file name.
|
||
If NEW-NAME exists in `user-emacs-directory', return it.
|
||
Else if OLD-NAME is non-nil and ~/OLD-NAME exists, return ~/OLD-NAME.
|
||
Else return NEW-NAME in `user-emacs-directory', creating the
|
||
directory if it does not exist."
|
||
(convert-standard-filename
|
||
(let* ((home (concat "~" (or init-file-user "")))
|
||
(at-home (and old-name (expand-file-name old-name home)))
|
||
(bestname (abbreviate-file-name
|
||
(expand-file-name new-name user-emacs-directory))))
|
||
(if (and at-home (not (file-readable-p bestname))
|
||
(file-readable-p at-home))
|
||
at-home
|
||
;; Make sure `user-emacs-directory' exists,
|
||
;; unless we're in batch mode or dumping Emacs.
|
||
(or noninteractive
|
||
dump-mode
|
||
(let (errtype)
|
||
(if (file-directory-p user-emacs-directory)
|
||
(or (file-accessible-directory-p user-emacs-directory)
|
||
(setq errtype "access"))
|
||
;; We don't want to create HOME if it doesn't exist.
|
||
(if (and (not (file-exists-p "~"))
|
||
(string-prefix-p
|
||
(expand-file-name "~")
|
||
(expand-file-name user-emacs-directory)))
|
||
(setq errtype "create")
|
||
;; Create `user-emacs-directory'.
|
||
(with-file-modes ?\700
|
||
(condition-case nil
|
||
(make-directory user-emacs-directory t)
|
||
(error (setq errtype "create"))))))
|
||
(when (and errtype
|
||
user-emacs-directory-warning
|
||
(not (get 'user-emacs-directory-warning 'this-session)))
|
||
;; Warn only once per Emacs session.
|
||
(put 'user-emacs-directory-warning 'this-session t)
|
||
(display-warning 'initialization
|
||
(format "\
|
||
Unable to %s `user-emacs-directory' (%s).
|
||
Any data that would normally be written there may be lost!
|
||
If you never want to see this message again,
|
||
customize the variable `user-emacs-directory-warning'."
|
||
errtype user-emacs-directory)))))
|
||
bestname))))
|
||
|
||
(defun exec-path ()
|
||
"Return list of directories to search programs to run in remote subprocesses.
|
||
The remote host is identified by `default-directory'. For remote
|
||
hosts that do not support subprocesses, this returns nil.
|
||
If `default-directory' is a local directory, this function returns
|
||
the value of the variable `exec-path'."
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler default-directory 'exec-path)))
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'exec-path)
|
||
exec-path)))
|
||
|
||
(defun executable-find (command &optional remote)
|
||
"Search for COMMAND in `exec-path' and return the absolute file name.
|
||
Return nil if COMMAND is not found anywhere in `exec-path'. If
|
||
REMOTE is non-nil, search on the remote host indicated by
|
||
`default-directory' instead."
|
||
(if (and remote (file-remote-p default-directory))
|
||
(let ((res (locate-file
|
||
command
|
||
(mapcar
|
||
(lambda (x) (concat (file-remote-p default-directory) x))
|
||
(exec-path))
|
||
exec-suffixes 'file-executable-p)))
|
||
(when (stringp res) (file-local-name res)))
|
||
;; Use 1 rather than file-executable-p to better match the
|
||
;; behavior of call-process.
|
||
(let ((default-directory (file-name-quote default-directory 'top)))
|
||
(locate-file command exec-path exec-suffixes 1))))
|
||
|
||
(declare-function read-library-name "find-func" nil)
|
||
|
||
(defun load-library (library)
|
||
"Load the Emacs Lisp library named LIBRARY.
|
||
LIBRARY should be a string.
|
||
This is an interface to the function `load'. LIBRARY is searched
|
||
for in `load-path', both with and without `load-suffixes' (as
|
||
well as `load-file-rep-suffixes').
|
||
|
||
See Info node `(emacs)Lisp Libraries' for more details.
|
||
See `load-file' for a different interface to `load'."
|
||
(interactive (list (read-library-name)))
|
||
(load library))
|
||
|
||
(defun require-with-check (feature &optional filename noerror)
|
||
"If FEATURE is not already loaded, load it from FILENAME.
|
||
This is like `require' except if FEATURE is already a member of the list
|
||
`features’, then we check if this was provided by a different file than the
|
||
one that we would load now (presumably because `load-path' has been
|
||
changed since the file was loaded).
|
||
If it's the case, we either signal an error (the default), or forcibly reload
|
||
the new file (if NOERROR is equal to `reload'), or otherwise emit a warning."
|
||
(let ((lh load-history)
|
||
(res (require feature filename (if (eq noerror 'reload) nil noerror))))
|
||
;; If the `feature' was not yet provided, `require' just loaded the right
|
||
;; file, so we're done.
|
||
(when (eq lh load-history)
|
||
;; If `require' did nothing, we need to make sure that was warranted.
|
||
(let ((fn (locate-file (or filename (symbol-name feature))
|
||
load-path (get-load-suffixes))))
|
||
(cond
|
||
((assoc fn load-history) nil) ;We loaded the right file.
|
||
((eq noerror 'reload) (load fn nil 'nomessage))
|
||
(t (funcall (if noerror #'warn #'error)
|
||
"Feature provided by other file: %S" feature)))))
|
||
res))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-remote-p (file &optional identification connected)
|
||
"Test whether FILE specifies a location on a remote system.
|
||
A file is considered remote if accessing it is likely to
|
||
be slower or less reliable than accessing local files.
|
||
|
||
`file-remote-p' never opens a new remote connection. It can
|
||
reuse only a connection that is already open.
|
||
|
||
Return nil or a string identifying the remote connection
|
||
\(ideally a prefix of FILE). Return nil if FILE is a relative
|
||
file name.
|
||
|
||
When IDENTIFICATION is nil, the returned string is a complete
|
||
remote identifier: with components method, user, and host. The
|
||
components are those present in FILE, with defaults filled in for
|
||
any that are missing.
|
||
|
||
IDENTIFICATION can specify which part of the identification to
|
||
return. IDENTIFICATION can be the symbol `method', `user',
|
||
`host', or `localname'. Any other value is handled like nil and
|
||
means to return the complete identification. The string returned
|
||
for IDENTIFICATION `localname' can differ depending on whether
|
||
there is an existing connection.
|
||
|
||
If CONNECTED is non-nil, return an identification only if FILE is
|
||
located on a remote system and a connection is established to
|
||
that remote system. If CONNECTED is `never', never use an
|
||
existing connection to return the identification (this is
|
||
otherwise like a value of nil).
|
||
|
||
Tip: You can use this expansion of remote identifier components
|
||
to derive a new remote file name from an existing one. For
|
||
example, if FILE is \"/sudo::/path/to/file\" then
|
||
|
||
(concat (file-remote-p FILE) \"/bin/sh\")
|
||
|
||
returns a remote file name for file \"/bin/sh\" that has the
|
||
same remote identifier as FILE but expanded; a name such as
|
||
\"/sudo:root@myhost:/bin/sh\"."
|
||
(when-let ((handler (find-file-name-handler file 'file-remote-p)))
|
||
(funcall handler 'file-remote-p file identification connected)))
|
||
|
||
;; Probably this entire variable should be obsolete now, in favor of
|
||
;; something Tramp-related (?). It is not used in many places.
|
||
;; It's not clear what the best file for this to be in is, but given
|
||
;; it uses custom-initialize-delay, it is easier if it is preloaded
|
||
;; rather than autoloaded.
|
||
(defcustom remote-shell-program (or (executable-find "ssh") "ssh")
|
||
"Program to use to execute commands on a remote host (i.e. ssh)."
|
||
:version "29.1"
|
||
:initialize #'custom-initialize-delay
|
||
:group 'environment
|
||
:type 'file)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom remote-file-name-inhibit-cache 10
|
||
"Whether to use the remote file-name cache for read access.
|
||
When nil, never expire cached values (caution).
|
||
When t, never use the cache (safe, but may be slow).
|
||
A number means use cached values for that amount of seconds since caching.
|
||
|
||
The attributes of remote files are cached for better performance.
|
||
If they are changed outside of Emacs's control, the cached values
|
||
become invalid, and must be reread. If you are sure that nothing
|
||
other than Emacs changes the files, you can set this variable to nil.
|
||
|
||
If a remote file is checked regularly, it might be a good idea to
|
||
let-bind this variable to a value less than the interval between
|
||
consecutive checks. For example:
|
||
|
||
(defun display-time-file-nonempty-p (file)
|
||
(let ((remote-file-name-inhibit-cache (- display-time-interval 5)))
|
||
(and (file-exists-p file)
|
||
(< 0 (file-attribute-size
|
||
(file-attributes (file-chase-links file)))))))"
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:group 'tramp
|
||
:version "24.1"
|
||
:type '(choice
|
||
(const :tag "Do not cache remote file attributes" t)
|
||
(const :tag "Cache remote file attributes" nil)
|
||
(integer :tag "Cache remote file attributes with expiration"
|
||
:format "Cache expiry in seconds: %v"
|
||
:value 10)))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom remote-file-name-access-timeout nil
|
||
"Timeout (in seconds) for `access-file'.
|
||
This timeout limits the time to check, whether a remote file is
|
||
accessible. `access-file' returns an error after that time. If
|
||
the value is 0 or nil, no timeout is used.
|
||
|
||
This applies only when there isn't time spent for other actions,
|
||
like reading passwords."
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:group 'tramp
|
||
:version "30.1"
|
||
;;:type '(choice :tag "Timeout (seconds)" natnum (const nil)))
|
||
:type '(choice
|
||
(natnum :tag "Timeout (seconds)")
|
||
(const :tag "Do not use timeout" nil)))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-local-name (file)
|
||
"Return the local name component of FILE.
|
||
This function removes from FILE the specification of the remote host
|
||
and the method of accessing the host, leaving only the part that
|
||
identifies FILE locally on the remote system.
|
||
The returned file name can be used directly as argument of
|
||
`process-file', `start-file-process', or `shell-command'."
|
||
(or (file-remote-p file 'localname) file))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-local-copy (file)
|
||
"Copy the file FILE into a temporary file on this machine.
|
||
Returns the name of the local copy, or nil, if FILE is directly
|
||
accessible."
|
||
;; This formerly had an optional BUFFER argument that wasn't used by
|
||
;; anything.
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler file 'file-local-copy)))
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'file-local-copy file)
|
||
nil)))
|
||
|
||
(defun files--name-absolute-system-p (file)
|
||
"Return non-nil if FILE is an absolute name to the operating system.
|
||
This is like `file-name-absolute-p', except that it returns nil for
|
||
names beginning with `~'."
|
||
(and (file-name-absolute-p file)
|
||
(not (eq (aref file 0) ?~))))
|
||
|
||
(defun files--splice-dirname-file (dirname file)
|
||
"Splice DIRNAME to FILE like the operating system would.
|
||
If FILE is relative, return DIRNAME concatenated to FILE.
|
||
Otherwise return FILE, quoted as needed if DIRNAME and FILE have
|
||
different file name handlers; although this quoting is dubious if
|
||
DIRNAME is magic, it is not clear what would be better. This
|
||
function differs from `expand-file-name' in that DIRNAME must be
|
||
a directory name and leading `~' and `/:' are not special in
|
||
FILE."
|
||
(let ((unquoted (if (files--name-absolute-system-p file)
|
||
file
|
||
(concat dirname file))))
|
||
(if (eq (find-file-name-handler dirname 'file-symlink-p)
|
||
(find-file-name-handler unquoted 'file-symlink-p))
|
||
unquoted
|
||
(let (file-name-handler-alist) (file-name-quote unquoted)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-truename (filename &optional counter prev-dirs)
|
||
"Return the truename of FILENAME.
|
||
If FILENAME is not absolute, first expands it against `default-directory'.
|
||
The truename of a file name is found by chasing symbolic links
|
||
both at the level of the file and at the level of the directories
|
||
containing it, until no links are left at any level.
|
||
|
||
\(fn FILENAME)" ;; Don't document the optional arguments.
|
||
;; COUNTER and PREV-DIRS are used only in recursive calls.
|
||
;; COUNTER can be a cons cell whose car is the count of how many
|
||
;; more links to chase before getting an error.
|
||
;; PREV-DIRS can be a cons cell whose car is an alist
|
||
;; of truenames we've just recently computed.
|
||
(cond ((or (string= filename "") (string= filename "~"))
|
||
(setq filename (expand-file-name filename))
|
||
(if (string= filename "")
|
||
(setq filename "/")))
|
||
((and (string= (substring filename 0 1) "~")
|
||
(string-match "~[^/]*/?" filename))
|
||
(let ((first-part
|
||
(substring filename 0 (match-end 0)))
|
||
(rest (substring filename (match-end 0))))
|
||
(setq filename (concat (expand-file-name first-part) rest)))))
|
||
|
||
(or counter (setq counter (list 100)))
|
||
(let (done
|
||
;; For speed, remove the ange-ftp completion handler from the list.
|
||
;; We know it's not needed here.
|
||
;; For even more speed, do this only on the outermost call.
|
||
(file-name-handler-alist
|
||
(if prev-dirs file-name-handler-alist
|
||
(let ((tem (copy-sequence file-name-handler-alist)))
|
||
(delq (rassq 'ange-ftp-completion-hook-function tem) tem)))))
|
||
(or prev-dirs (setq prev-dirs (list nil)))
|
||
|
||
;; andrewi@harlequin.co.uk - on Windows, there is an issue with
|
||
;; case differences being ignored by the OS, and short "8.3 DOS"
|
||
;; name aliases existing for all files. (The short names are not
|
||
;; reported by directory-files, but can be used to refer to files.)
|
||
;; It seems appropriate for file-truename to resolve these issues in
|
||
;; the most natural way, which on Windows is to call the function
|
||
;; `w32-long-file-name' - this returns the exact name of a file as
|
||
;; it is stored on disk (expanding short name aliases with the full
|
||
;; name in the process).
|
||
(if (eq system-type 'windows-nt)
|
||
(unless (string-match "[[*?]" filename)
|
||
;; If filename exists, use its long name. If it doesn't
|
||
;; exist, the recursion below on the directory of filename
|
||
;; will drill down until we find a directory that exists,
|
||
;; and use the long name of that, with the extra
|
||
;; non-existent path components concatenated.
|
||
(let ((longname (w32-long-file-name filename)))
|
||
(if longname
|
||
(setq filename longname)))))
|
||
|
||
;; If this file directly leads to a link, process that iteratively
|
||
;; so that we don't use lots of stack.
|
||
(while (not done)
|
||
(setcar counter (1- (car counter)))
|
||
(if (< (car counter) 0)
|
||
(error "Apparent cycle of symbolic links for %s" filename))
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler filename 'file-truename)))
|
||
;; For file name that has a special handler, call handler.
|
||
;; This is so that ange-ftp can save time by doing a no-op.
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(setq filename (funcall handler 'file-truename filename)
|
||
done t)
|
||
(let ((dir (or (file-name-directory filename) default-directory))
|
||
target dirfile)
|
||
;; Get the truename of the directory.
|
||
(setq dirfile (directory-file-name dir))
|
||
;; If these are equal, we have the (or a) root directory.
|
||
(or (string= dir dirfile)
|
||
(and (file-name-case-insensitive-p dir)
|
||
(string-equal-ignore-case dir dirfile))
|
||
;; If this is the same dir we last got the truename for,
|
||
;; save time--don't recalculate.
|
||
(if (assoc dir (car prev-dirs))
|
||
(setq dir (cdr (assoc dir (car prev-dirs))))
|
||
(let ((old dir)
|
||
(new (file-name-as-directory (file-truename dirfile counter prev-dirs))))
|
||
(setcar prev-dirs (cons (cons old new) (car prev-dirs)))
|
||
(setq dir new))))
|
||
(if (equal ".." (file-name-nondirectory filename))
|
||
(setq filename
|
||
(directory-file-name (file-name-directory (directory-file-name dir)))
|
||
done t)
|
||
(if (equal "." (file-name-nondirectory filename))
|
||
(setq filename (directory-file-name dir)
|
||
done t)
|
||
;; Put it back on the file name.
|
||
(setq filename (concat dir (file-name-nondirectory filename)))
|
||
;; Is the file name the name of a link?
|
||
(setq target (file-symlink-p filename))
|
||
(if target
|
||
;; Yes => chase that link, then start all over
|
||
;; since the link may point to a directory name that uses links.
|
||
;; We can't safely use expand-file-name here
|
||
;; since target might look like foo/../bar where foo
|
||
;; is itself a link. Instead, we handle . and .. above.
|
||
(setq filename (files--splice-dirname-file dir target)
|
||
done nil)
|
||
;; No, we are done!
|
||
(setq done t))))))))
|
||
filename))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-chase-links (filename &optional limit)
|
||
"Chase links in FILENAME until a name that is not a link.
|
||
Unlike `file-truename', this does not check whether a parent
|
||
directory name is a symbolic link.
|
||
If the optional argument LIMIT is a number,
|
||
it means chase no more than that many links and then stop."
|
||
(let (tem (newname filename)
|
||
(count 0))
|
||
(while (and (or (null limit) (< count limit))
|
||
(setq tem (file-symlink-p newname)))
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(if (and (null limit) (= count 100))
|
||
(error "Apparent cycle of symbolic links for %s" filename))
|
||
;; In the context of a link, `//' doesn't mean what Emacs thinks.
|
||
(while (string-match "//+" tem)
|
||
(setq tem (replace-match "/" nil nil tem)))
|
||
;; Handle `..' by hand, since it needs to work in the
|
||
;; target of any directory symlink.
|
||
;; This code is not quite complete; it does not handle
|
||
;; embedded .. in some cases such as ./../foo and foo/bar/../../../lose.
|
||
(while (string-match "\\`\\.\\./" tem)
|
||
(setq tem (substring tem 3))
|
||
(setq newname (expand-file-name newname))
|
||
;; Chase links in the default dir of the symlink.
|
||
(setq newname
|
||
(file-chase-links
|
||
(directory-file-name (file-name-directory newname))))
|
||
;; Now find the parent of that dir.
|
||
(setq newname (file-name-directory newname)))
|
||
(setq newname (files--splice-dirname-file (file-name-directory newname)
|
||
tem))
|
||
(setq count (1+ count))))
|
||
newname))
|
||
|
||
;; A handy function to display file sizes in human-readable form.
|
||
;; See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kibibyte for the reference.
|
||
(defun file-size-human-readable (file-size &optional flavor space unit)
|
||
"Produce a string showing FILE-SIZE in human-readable form.
|
||
|
||
Optional second argument FLAVOR controls the units and the display format:
|
||
|
||
If FLAVOR is nil or omitted, each kilobyte is 1024 bytes and the produced
|
||
suffixes are \"k\", \"M\", \"G\", \"T\", etc.
|
||
If FLAVOR is `si', each kilobyte is 1000 bytes and the produced suffixes
|
||
are \"k\", \"M\", \"G\", \"T\", etc.
|
||
If FLAVOR is `iec', each kilobyte is 1024 bytes and the produced suffixes
|
||
are \"KiB\", \"MiB\", \"GiB\", \"TiB\", etc.
|
||
|
||
Optional third argument SPACE is a string put between the number and unit.
|
||
It defaults to the empty string. We recommend a single space or
|
||
non-breaking space, unless other constraints prohibit a space in that
|
||
position.
|
||
|
||
Optional fourth argument UNIT is the unit to use. It defaults to \"B\"
|
||
when FLAVOR is `iec' and the empty string otherwise. We recommend \"B\"
|
||
in all cases, since that is the standard symbol for byte."
|
||
(let ((power (if (or (null flavor) (eq flavor 'iec))
|
||
1024.0
|
||
1000.0))
|
||
(prefixes '("" "k" "M" "G" "T" "P" "E" "Z" "Y" "R" "Q")))
|
||
(while (and (>= file-size power) (cdr prefixes))
|
||
(setq file-size (/ file-size power)
|
||
prefixes (cdr prefixes)))
|
||
(let* ((prefix (car prefixes))
|
||
(prefixed-unit (if (eq flavor 'iec)
|
||
(concat
|
||
(if (string= prefix "k") "K" prefix)
|
||
(if (string= prefix "") "" "i")
|
||
(or unit "B"))
|
||
(concat prefix unit))))
|
||
;; Mimic what GNU "ls -lh" does:
|
||
;; If the formatted size will have just one digit before the decimal...
|
||
(format (if (and (< file-size 10)
|
||
;; ...and its fractional part is not too small...
|
||
(>= (mod file-size 1.0) 0.05)
|
||
(< (mod file-size 1.0) 0.95))
|
||
;; ...then emit one digit after the decimal.
|
||
"%.1f%s%s"
|
||
"%.0f%s%s")
|
||
file-size
|
||
(if (string= prefixed-unit "") "" (or space ""))
|
||
prefixed-unit))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-size-human-readable-iec (size)
|
||
"Human-readable string for SIZE bytes, using IEC prefixes."
|
||
(file-size-human-readable size 'iec " "))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom byte-count-to-string-function #'file-size-human-readable-iec
|
||
"Function that turns a number of bytes into a human-readable string.
|
||
It is for use when displaying file sizes and disk space where other
|
||
constraints do not force a specific format."
|
||
:type '(radio
|
||
(function-item file-size-human-readable-iec)
|
||
(function-item file-size-human-readable)
|
||
(function :tag "Custom function" :value number-to-string))
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:version "27.1")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom mounted-file-systems
|
||
(if (memq system-type '(windows-nt cygwin))
|
||
"^//[^/]+/"
|
||
;; regexp-opt.el is not dumped into emacs binary.
|
||
;;(concat
|
||
;; "^" (regexp-opt '("/afs/" "/media/" "/mnt" "/net/" "/tmp_mnt/"))))
|
||
"^\\(?:/\\(?:afs/\\|m\\(?:edia/\\|nt\\)\\|\\(?:ne\\|tmp_mn\\)t/\\)\\)")
|
||
"File systems that ought to be mounted."
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:version "26.1"
|
||
:require 'regexp-opt
|
||
:type 'regexp)
|
||
|
||
(defun temporary-file-directory ()
|
||
"The directory for writing temporary files.
|
||
In case of a remote `default-directory', this is a directory for
|
||
temporary files on that remote host. If such a directory does
|
||
not exist, or `default-directory' ought to be located on a
|
||
mounted file system (see `mounted-file-systems'), the function
|
||
returns `default-directory'.
|
||
For a non-remote and non-mounted `default-directory', the value of
|
||
the variable `temporary-file-directory' is returned."
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler
|
||
default-directory 'temporary-file-directory)))
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'temporary-file-directory)
|
||
(if (string-match mounted-file-systems default-directory)
|
||
default-directory
|
||
temporary-file-directory))))
|
||
|
||
(defun make-temp-file (prefix &optional dir-flag suffix text)
|
||
"Create a temporary file.
|
||
The returned file name (created by appending some random characters at the end
|
||
of PREFIX, and expanding against `temporary-file-directory' if necessary),
|
||
is guaranteed to point to a newly created file.
|
||
You can then use `write-region' to write new data into the file.
|
||
|
||
If DIR-FLAG is non-nil, create a new empty directory instead of a file.
|
||
|
||
If SUFFIX is non-nil, add that at the end of the file name.
|
||
|
||
If TEXT is a string, insert it into the new file; DIR-FLAG should be nil.
|
||
Otherwise the file will be empty."
|
||
(let ((absolute-prefix
|
||
(if (or (zerop (length prefix)) (member prefix '("." "..")))
|
||
(concat (file-name-as-directory temporary-file-directory) prefix)
|
||
(expand-file-name prefix temporary-file-directory))))
|
||
(if (find-file-name-handler absolute-prefix 'write-region)
|
||
(files--make-magic-temp-file absolute-prefix dir-flag suffix text)
|
||
(make-temp-file-internal absolute-prefix
|
||
(if dir-flag t) (or suffix "") text))))
|
||
|
||
(defun files--make-magic-temp-file (absolute-prefix
|
||
&optional dir-flag suffix text)
|
||
"Implement (make-temp-file ABSOLUTE-PREFIX DIR-FLAG SUFFIX TEXT).
|
||
This implementation works on magic file names."
|
||
;; Create temp files with strict access rights. It's easy to
|
||
;; loosen them later, whereas it's impossible to close the
|
||
;; time-window of loose permissions otherwise.
|
||
(with-file-modes ?\700
|
||
(let ((contents (if (stringp text) text ""))
|
||
file)
|
||
(while (condition-case ()
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq file (make-temp-name absolute-prefix))
|
||
(if suffix
|
||
(setq file (concat file suffix)))
|
||
(if dir-flag
|
||
(make-directory file)
|
||
(write-region contents nil file nil 'silent nil 'excl))
|
||
nil)
|
||
(file-already-exists t))
|
||
;; the file was somehow created by someone else between
|
||
;; `make-temp-name' and `write-region', let's try again.
|
||
nil)
|
||
file)))
|
||
|
||
(defun make-nearby-temp-file (prefix &optional dir-flag suffix)
|
||
"Create a temporary file as close as possible to `default-directory'.
|
||
Return the absolute file name of the created file.
|
||
If PREFIX is a relative file name, and `default-directory' is a
|
||
remote file name or located on a mounted file systems, the
|
||
temporary file is created in the directory returned by the
|
||
function `temporary-file-directory'. Otherwise, the function
|
||
`make-temp-file' is used. PREFIX, DIR-FLAG and SUFFIX have the
|
||
same meaning as in `make-temp-file'."
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler
|
||
default-directory 'make-nearby-temp-file)))
|
||
(if (and handler (not (file-name-absolute-p default-directory)))
|
||
(funcall handler 'make-nearby-temp-file prefix dir-flag suffix)
|
||
(let ((temporary-file-directory (temporary-file-directory)))
|
||
(make-temp-file prefix dir-flag suffix)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun recode-file-name (file coding new-coding &optional ok-if-already-exists)
|
||
"Change the encoding of FILE's name from CODING to NEW-CODING.
|
||
The value is a new name of FILE.
|
||
Signals a `file-already-exists' error if a file of the new name
|
||
already exists unless optional fourth argument OK-IF-ALREADY-EXISTS
|
||
is non-nil. A number as fourth arg means request confirmation if
|
||
the new name already exists. This is what happens in interactive
|
||
use with \\[execute-extended-command]."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(let ((default-coding (or file-name-coding-system
|
||
default-file-name-coding-system))
|
||
(filename (read-file-name "Recode filename: " nil nil t))
|
||
from-coding to-coding)
|
||
(if (and default-coding
|
||
;; We provide the default coding only when it seems that
|
||
;; the filename is correctly decoded by the default
|
||
;; coding.
|
||
(let ((charsets (find-charset-string filename)))
|
||
(and (not (memq 'eight-bit-control charsets))
|
||
(not (memq 'eight-bit-graphic charsets)))))
|
||
(setq from-coding (read-coding-system
|
||
(format-prompt "Recode filename %s from"
|
||
filename default-coding)
|
||
default-coding))
|
||
(setq from-coding (read-coding-system
|
||
(format "Recode filename %s from: " filename))))
|
||
|
||
;; We provide the default coding only when a user is going to
|
||
;; change the encoding not from the default coding.
|
||
(if (eq from-coding default-coding)
|
||
(setq to-coding (read-coding-system
|
||
(format "Recode filename %s from %s to: "
|
||
filename from-coding)))
|
||
(setq to-coding (read-coding-system
|
||
(format-prompt "Recode filename %s from %s to"
|
||
default-coding filename from-coding)
|
||
default-coding)))
|
||
(list filename from-coding to-coding)))
|
||
|
||
(let* ((default-coding (or file-name-coding-system
|
||
default-file-name-coding-system))
|
||
;; FILE should have been decoded by DEFAULT-CODING.
|
||
(encoded (encode-coding-string file default-coding))
|
||
(newname (decode-coding-string encoded coding))
|
||
(new-encoded (encode-coding-string newname new-coding))
|
||
;; Suppress further encoding.
|
||
(file-name-coding-system nil)
|
||
(default-file-name-coding-system nil)
|
||
(locale-coding-system nil))
|
||
(rename-file encoded new-encoded ok-if-already-exists)
|
||
newname))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer 'after-completion
|
||
"Whether confirmation is requested before visiting a new file or buffer.
|
||
If nil, confirmation is not requested.
|
||
If the value is `after-completion', confirmation is requested
|
||
only if the user called `minibuffer-complete' right before
|
||
`minibuffer-complete-and-exit'.
|
||
Any other non-nil value means to request confirmation.
|
||
|
||
This affects commands like `switch-to-buffer' and `find-file'."
|
||
:group 'find-file
|
||
:version "23.1"
|
||
:type '(choice (const :tag "After completion" after-completion)
|
||
(const :tag "Never" nil)
|
||
(other :tag "Always" t)))
|
||
|
||
(defun confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer ()
|
||
"Whether to request confirmation before visiting a new file or buffer.
|
||
The variable `confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer' determines the
|
||
return value, which may be passed as the REQUIRE-MATCH arg to
|
||
`read-buffer' or `find-file-read-args'."
|
||
(cond ((eq confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer 'after-completion)
|
||
'confirm-after-completion)
|
||
(confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer
|
||
'confirm)
|
||
(t nil)))
|
||
|
||
(defmacro minibuffer-with-setup-hook (fun &rest body)
|
||
"Temporarily add FUN to `minibuffer-setup-hook' while executing BODY.
|
||
|
||
By default, FUN is prepended to `minibuffer-setup-hook'. But if FUN is of
|
||
the form `(:append FUN1)', FUN1 will be appended to `minibuffer-setup-hook'
|
||
instead of prepending it.
|
||
|
||
BODY should use the minibuffer at most once.
|
||
Recursive uses of the minibuffer are unaffected (FUN is not
|
||
called additional times).
|
||
|
||
This macro actually adds an auxiliary function that calls FUN,
|
||
rather than FUN itself, to `minibuffer-setup-hook'."
|
||
(declare (indent 1) (debug ([&or (":append" form) [&or symbolp form]] body)))
|
||
(let ((hook (make-symbol "setup-hook"))
|
||
(funsym (make-symbol "fun"))
|
||
(append nil))
|
||
(when (eq (car-safe fun) :append)
|
||
(setq append '(t) fun (cadr fun)))
|
||
`(let ((,funsym ,fun)
|
||
;; Use a symbol to make sure `add-hook' doesn't waste time
|
||
;; in `equal'ity testing (bug#46326).
|
||
(,hook (make-symbol "minibuffer-setup")))
|
||
(fset ,hook (lambda ()
|
||
;; Clear out this hook so it does not interfere
|
||
;; with any recursive minibuffer usage.
|
||
(remove-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook ,hook)
|
||
(funcall ,funsym)))
|
||
(unwind-protect
|
||
(progn
|
||
(add-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook ,hook ,@append)
|
||
,@body)
|
||
(remove-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook ,hook)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file-read-args (prompt mustmatch)
|
||
(list (read-file-name prompt nil default-directory mustmatch)
|
||
t))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-name-history--add (file)
|
||
"Add FILE to `file-name-history'."
|
||
(add-to-history 'file-name-history (abbreviate-file-name file)))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file (filename &optional wildcards)
|
||
"Edit file FILENAME.
|
||
\\<minibuffer-local-map>Switch to a buffer visiting file FILENAME, creating one if none
|
||
already exists.
|
||
Interactively, the default if you just type RET is the current directory,
|
||
but the visited file name is available through the minibuffer history:
|
||
type \\[next-history-element] to pull it into the minibuffer.
|
||
|
||
The first time \\[next-history-element] is used after Emacs prompts for the file name,
|
||
the result is affected by `file-name-at-point-functions', which by
|
||
default try to guess the file name by looking at point in the current
|
||
buffer. Customize the value of `file-name-at-point-functions' or set
|
||
it to nil, if you want only the visited file name and the current
|
||
directory to be available on first \\[next-history-element] request.
|
||
|
||
You can visit files on remote machines by specifying something
|
||
like /ssh:SOME_REMOTE_MACHINE:FILE for the file name. You can
|
||
also visit local files as a different user by specifying
|
||
/sudo::FILE for the file name.
|
||
See the Info node `(tramp)File name Syntax' in the Tramp Info
|
||
manual, for more about this.
|
||
|
||
Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
|
||
expand wildcards (if any) and visit multiple files. You can
|
||
suppress wildcard expansion by setting `find-file-wildcards' to nil.
|
||
|
||
\\<global-map>To visit a file without any kind of conversion and without
|
||
automatically choosing a major mode, use \\[find-file-literally]."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(find-file-read-args "Find file: "
|
||
(confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
|
||
(let ((value (find-file-noselect filename nil nil wildcards)))
|
||
(if (listp value)
|
||
(mapcar 'pop-to-buffer-same-window (nreverse value))
|
||
(pop-to-buffer-same-window value))))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file-other-window (filename &optional wildcards)
|
||
"Edit file FILENAME, in another window.
|
||
|
||
Like \\[find-file] (which see), but creates a new window or reuses
|
||
an existing one. See the function `display-buffer'.
|
||
|
||
\\<minibuffer-local-map>\
|
||
Interactively, the default if you just type RET is the current directory,
|
||
but the visited file name is available through the minibuffer history:
|
||
type \\[next-history-element] to pull it into the minibuffer.
|
||
|
||
The first time \\[next-history-element] is used after Emacs prompts for
|
||
the file name, the result is affected by `file-name-at-point-functions',
|
||
which by default try to guess the file name by looking at point in the
|
||
current buffer. Customize the value of `file-name-at-point-functions'
|
||
or set it to nil, if you want only the visited file name and the
|
||
current directory to be available on first \\[next-history-element]
|
||
request.
|
||
|
||
Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
|
||
expand wildcards (if any) and visit multiple files."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(find-file-read-args "Find file in other window: "
|
||
(confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
|
||
(let ((value (find-file-noselect filename nil nil wildcards)))
|
||
(if (listp value)
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq value (nreverse value))
|
||
(switch-to-buffer-other-window (car value))
|
||
(mapc 'switch-to-buffer (cdr value))
|
||
value)
|
||
(switch-to-buffer-other-window value))))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file-other-frame (filename &optional wildcards)
|
||
"Edit file FILENAME, in another frame.
|
||
|
||
Like \\[find-file] (which see), but creates a new frame or reuses
|
||
an existing one. See the function `display-buffer'.
|
||
|
||
\\<minibuffer-local-map>\
|
||
Interactively, the default if you just type RET is the current directory,
|
||
but the visited file name is available through the minibuffer history:
|
||
type \\[next-history-element] to pull it into the minibuffer.
|
||
|
||
The first time \\[next-history-element] is used after Emacs prompts for
|
||
the file name, the result is affected by `file-name-at-point-functions',
|
||
which by default try to guess the file name by looking at point in the
|
||
current buffer. Customize the value of `file-name-at-point-functions'
|
||
or set it to nil, if you want only the visited file name and the
|
||
current directory to be available on first \\[next-history-element]
|
||
request.
|
||
|
||
Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
|
||
expand wildcards (if any) and visit multiple files."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(find-file-read-args "Find file in other frame: "
|
||
(confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
|
||
(let ((value (find-file-noselect filename nil nil wildcards)))
|
||
(if (listp value)
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq value (nreverse value))
|
||
(switch-to-buffer-other-frame (car value))
|
||
(mapc 'switch-to-buffer (cdr value))
|
||
value)
|
||
(switch-to-buffer-other-frame value))))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file-existing (filename)
|
||
"Edit the existing file FILENAME.
|
||
Like \\[find-file], but allow only a file that exists, and do not allow
|
||
file names with wildcards."
|
||
(interactive (nbutlast (find-file-read-args "Find existing file: " t)))
|
||
(if (and (not (called-interactively-p 'interactive))
|
||
(not (file-exists-p filename)))
|
||
(error "%s does not exist" filename)
|
||
(find-file filename)
|
||
(current-buffer)))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file--read-only (fun filename wildcards)
|
||
(unless (or (and wildcards find-file-wildcards
|
||
(not (file-name-quoted-p filename))
|
||
(string-match "[[*?]" filename))
|
||
(file-exists-p filename))
|
||
(error "%s does not exist" filename))
|
||
(let ((value (funcall fun filename wildcards)))
|
||
(mapc (lambda (b) (with-current-buffer b (read-only-mode 1)))
|
||
(if (listp value) value (list value)))
|
||
value))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file-read-only (filename &optional wildcards)
|
||
"Edit file FILENAME but don't allow changes.
|
||
Like \\[find-file], but marks buffer as read-only.
|
||
Use \\[read-only-mode] to permit editing."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(find-file-read-args "Find file read-only: "
|
||
(confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
|
||
(find-file--read-only #'find-file filename wildcards))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file-read-only-other-window (filename &optional wildcards)
|
||
"Edit file FILENAME in another window but don't allow changes.
|
||
Like \\[find-file-other-window], but marks buffer as read-only.
|
||
Use \\[read-only-mode] to permit editing."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(find-file-read-args "Find file read-only other window: "
|
||
(confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
|
||
(find-file--read-only #'find-file-other-window filename wildcards))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file-read-only-other-frame (filename &optional wildcards)
|
||
"Edit file FILENAME in another frame but don't allow changes.
|
||
Like \\[find-file-other-frame], but marks buffer as read-only.
|
||
Use \\[read-only-mode] to permit editing."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(find-file-read-args "Find file read-only other frame: "
|
||
(confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer)))
|
||
(find-file--read-only #'find-file-other-frame filename wildcards))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-alternate-file-other-window (filename &optional wildcards)
|
||
"Find file FILENAME as a replacement for the file in the next window.
|
||
This command does not select that window.
|
||
|
||
See \\[find-file] for the possible forms of the FILENAME argument.
|
||
|
||
Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
|
||
expand wildcards (if any) and replace the file with multiple files."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(save-selected-window
|
||
(other-window 1)
|
||
(let ((file buffer-file-name)
|
||
(file-name nil)
|
||
(file-dir nil))
|
||
(and file
|
||
(setq file-name (file-name-nondirectory file)
|
||
file-dir (file-name-directory file)))
|
||
(list (read-file-name
|
||
"Find alternate file: " file-dir nil
|
||
(confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer) file-name)
|
||
t))))
|
||
(if (one-window-p)
|
||
(find-file-other-window filename wildcards)
|
||
(save-selected-window
|
||
(other-window 1)
|
||
(find-alternate-file filename wildcards))))
|
||
|
||
;; Defined and used in buffer.c, but not as a DEFVAR_LISP.
|
||
(defvar kill-buffer-hook nil
|
||
"Hook run when a buffer is killed.
|
||
The buffer being killed is current while the hook is running.
|
||
See `kill-buffer'.
|
||
|
||
This hook is not run for internal or temporary buffers created by
|
||
`get-buffer-create' or `generate-new-buffer' with argument
|
||
INHIBIT-BUFFER-HOOKS non-nil.
|
||
|
||
Note: Be careful with let-binding this hook considering it is
|
||
frequently used for cleanup.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar find-alternate-file-dont-kill-client nil
|
||
"If non-nil, `server-buffer-done' should not delete the client.")
|
||
(defun find-alternate-file (filename &optional wildcards)
|
||
"Find file FILENAME, select its buffer, kill previous buffer.
|
||
If the current buffer now contains an empty file that you just visited
|
||
\(presumably by mistake), use this command to visit the file you really want.
|
||
|
||
See \\[find-file] for the possible forms of the FILENAME argument.
|
||
|
||
Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
|
||
expand wildcards (if any) and replace the file with multiple files.
|
||
|
||
If the current buffer is an indirect buffer, or the base buffer
|
||
for one or more indirect buffers, the other buffer(s) are not
|
||
killed."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(let ((file buffer-file-name)
|
||
(file-name nil)
|
||
(file-dir nil))
|
||
(and file
|
||
(setq file-name (file-name-nondirectory file)
|
||
file-dir (file-name-directory file)))
|
||
(list (read-file-name
|
||
"Find alternate file: " file-dir nil
|
||
(confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer) file-name)
|
||
t)))
|
||
(unless (run-hook-with-args-until-failure 'kill-buffer-query-functions)
|
||
(user-error "Aborted"))
|
||
(and (buffer-modified-p) buffer-file-name
|
||
(not (yes-or-no-p
|
||
(format-message "Kill and replace buffer `%s' without saving it? "
|
||
(buffer-name))))
|
||
(user-error "Aborted"))
|
||
(let ((obuf (current-buffer))
|
||
(ofile buffer-file-name)
|
||
(onum buffer-file-number)
|
||
(odir dired-directory)
|
||
(otrue buffer-file-truename)
|
||
(oname (buffer-name)))
|
||
;; Run `kill-buffer-hook' here. It needs to happen before
|
||
;; variables like `buffer-file-name' etc are set to nil below,
|
||
;; because some of the hooks that could be invoked
|
||
;; (e.g., `save-place-to-alist') depend on those variables.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; Note that `kill-buffer-hook' is not what queries whether to
|
||
;; save a modified buffer visiting a file. Rather, `kill-buffer'
|
||
;; asks that itself. Thus, there's no need to temporarily do
|
||
;; `(set-buffer-modified-p nil)' before running this hook.
|
||
(let ((find-alternate-file-dont-kill-client 'dont-kill-client))
|
||
(run-hooks 'kill-buffer-hook))
|
||
;; Okay, now we can end-of-life the old buffer.
|
||
(if (get-buffer " **lose**")
|
||
(kill-buffer " **lose**"))
|
||
(rename-buffer " **lose**")
|
||
(unwind-protect
|
||
(progn
|
||
(unlock-buffer)
|
||
;; This prevents us from finding the same buffer
|
||
;; if we specified the same file again.
|
||
(setq buffer-file-name nil)
|
||
(setq buffer-file-number nil)
|
||
(setq buffer-file-truename nil)
|
||
;; Likewise for dired buffers.
|
||
(setq dired-directory nil)
|
||
;; Don't use `find-file' because it may end up using another window
|
||
;; in some corner cases, e.g. when the selected window is
|
||
;; softly-dedicated.
|
||
(let ((newbuf (find-file-noselect filename nil nil wildcards)))
|
||
(switch-to-buffer (if (consp newbuf) (car newbuf) newbuf))))
|
||
(when (eq obuf (current-buffer))
|
||
;; This executes if find-file gets an error
|
||
;; and does not really find anything.
|
||
;; We put things back as they were.
|
||
;; If find-file actually finds something, we kill obuf below.
|
||
(setq buffer-file-name ofile)
|
||
(setq buffer-file-number onum)
|
||
(setq buffer-file-truename otrue)
|
||
(setq dired-directory odir)
|
||
(lock-buffer)
|
||
(if (get-buffer oname)
|
||
(kill-buffer oname))
|
||
(rename-buffer oname)))
|
||
(unless (eq (current-buffer) obuf)
|
||
(with-current-buffer obuf
|
||
;; Restore original buffer's file names so they can be still
|
||
;; used when referencing the now defunct buffer (Bug#68235).
|
||
(setq buffer-file-name ofile)
|
||
(setq buffer-file-number onum)
|
||
(setq buffer-file-truename otrue)
|
||
(unless (get-buffer oname)
|
||
;; Restore original's buffer name so 'kill-buffer' can use it
|
||
;; to assign its last name (Bug#68235).
|
||
(rename-buffer oname))
|
||
;; We already ran these; don't run them again.
|
||
(let (kill-buffer-query-functions kill-buffer-hook)
|
||
(kill-buffer obuf))))))
|
||
|
||
;; FIXME we really need to fold the uniquify stuff in here by default,
|
||
(defun create-file-buffer (filename)
|
||
"Create a suitably named buffer for visiting FILENAME, and return it.
|
||
FILENAME (sans directory) is used unchanged if that name is free;
|
||
otherwise the buffer is renamed according to
|
||
`uniquify-buffer-name-style' to get an unused name.
|
||
|
||
Emacs treats buffers whose names begin with a space as internal buffers.
|
||
To avoid confusion when visiting a file whose name begins with a space,
|
||
this function prepends a \"|\" to the final result if necessary."
|
||
(let* ((lastname (file-name-nondirectory (directory-file-name filename)))
|
||
(lastname (if (string= lastname "") ; FILENAME is a root directory
|
||
filename lastname))
|
||
(lastname (cond
|
||
((not (and uniquify-trailing-separator-p
|
||
(file-directory-p filename)))
|
||
lastname)
|
||
((eq uniquify-buffer-name-style 'forward)
|
||
(file-name-as-directory lastname))
|
||
((eq uniquify-buffer-name-style 'reverse)
|
||
(concat (or uniquify-separator "\\") lastname))
|
||
(t lastname)))
|
||
(basename (if (string-prefix-p " " lastname)
|
||
(concat "|" lastname)
|
||
lastname))
|
||
(buf (generate-new-buffer basename)))
|
||
(uniquify--create-file-buffer-advice buf filename basename)
|
||
buf))
|
||
|
||
(defvar abbreviated-home-dir nil
|
||
"Regexp matching the user's homedir at the beginning of file name.
|
||
The value includes abbreviation according to `directory-abbrev-alist'.")
|
||
|
||
(defun abbreviate-file-name (filename)
|
||
"Return a version of FILENAME shortened using `directory-abbrev-alist'.
|
||
This also substitutes \"~\" for the user's home directory (unless the
|
||
home directory is a root directory).
|
||
|
||
When this function is first called, it caches the user's home
|
||
directory as a regexp in `abbreviated-home-dir', and reuses it
|
||
afterwards (so long as the home directory does not change;
|
||
if you want to permanently change your home directory after having
|
||
started Emacs, set `abbreviated-home-dir' to nil so it will be recalculated)."
|
||
;; Get rid of the prefixes added by the automounter.
|
||
(save-match-data ;FIXME: Why?
|
||
(if-let ((handler (find-file-name-handler filename 'abbreviate-file-name)))
|
||
(funcall handler 'abbreviate-file-name filename)
|
||
;; Avoid treating /home/foo as /home/Foo during `~' substitution.
|
||
(let ((case-fold-search (file-name-case-insensitive-p filename)))
|
||
;; If any elt of directory-abbrev-alist matches this name,
|
||
;; abbreviate accordingly.
|
||
(setq filename (directory-abbrev-apply filename))
|
||
|
||
;; Compute and save the abbreviated homedir name.
|
||
;; We defer computing this until the first time it's needed, to
|
||
;; give time for directory-abbrev-alist to be set properly.
|
||
(unless abbreviated-home-dir
|
||
(put 'abbreviated-home-dir 'home (expand-file-name "~"))
|
||
(setq abbreviated-home-dir
|
||
(directory-abbrev-make-regexp
|
||
(let ((abbreviated-home-dir "\\`\\'.")) ;Impossible regexp.
|
||
(abbreviate-file-name
|
||
(get 'abbreviated-home-dir 'home))))))
|
||
|
||
;; If FILENAME starts with the abbreviated homedir,
|
||
;; and ~ hasn't changed since abbreviated-home-dir was set,
|
||
;; make it start with `~' instead.
|
||
;; If ~ has changed, we ignore abbreviated-home-dir rather than
|
||
;; invalidating it, on the assumption that a change in HOME
|
||
;; is likely temporary (eg for testing).
|
||
;; FIXME Is it even worth caching abbreviated-home-dir?
|
||
;; Ref: https://debbugs.gnu.org/19657#20
|
||
(let (mb1)
|
||
(if (and (string-match abbreviated-home-dir filename)
|
||
(setq mb1 (match-beginning 1))
|
||
;; If the home dir is just /, don't change it.
|
||
(not (and (= (match-end 0) 1)
|
||
(= (aref filename 0) ?/)))
|
||
;; MS-DOS root directories can come with a drive letter;
|
||
;; Novell Netware allows drive letters beyond `Z:'.
|
||
(not (and (memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin))
|
||
(string-match "\\`[a-zA-`]:/\\'" filename)))
|
||
(equal (get 'abbreviated-home-dir 'home)
|
||
(expand-file-name "~")))
|
||
(setq filename
|
||
(concat "~"
|
||
(substring filename mb1))))
|
||
filename)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-buffer-visiting (filename &optional predicate)
|
||
"Return the buffer visiting file FILENAME (a string).
|
||
This is like `get-file-buffer', except that it checks for any buffer
|
||
visiting the same file, possibly under a different name.
|
||
|
||
If PREDICATE is non-nil, only buffers satisfying it are eligible,
|
||
and others are ignored. PREDICATE is called with the buffer as
|
||
the only argument, but not with the buffer as the current buffer.
|
||
|
||
If there is no such live buffer, return nil."
|
||
(or (let ((buf (get-file-buffer filename)))
|
||
(when (and buf (or (not predicate) (funcall predicate buf))) buf))
|
||
(let ((truename (abbreviate-file-name (file-truename filename))))
|
||
(or
|
||
(let ((buf (get-truename-buffer truename)))
|
||
(when (and buf (buffer-local-value 'buffer-file-name buf)
|
||
(or (not predicate) (funcall predicate buf)))
|
||
buf))
|
||
(let* ((attributes (file-attributes truename))
|
||
(number (file-attribute-file-identifier attributes)))
|
||
(and buffer-file-numbers-unique
|
||
(car-safe number) ;Make sure the inode is not just nil.
|
||
(let* ((buf (find-buffer 'buffer-file-number number))
|
||
(buf-file-name
|
||
(and buf (buffer-local-value 'buffer-file-name buf))))
|
||
(when (and buf-file-name
|
||
;; Verify this buffer's file number
|
||
;; still belongs to its file.
|
||
(file-exists-p buf-file-name)
|
||
(equal (file-attributes
|
||
(buffer-local-value
|
||
'buffer-file-truename buf))
|
||
attributes)
|
||
(or (not predicate)
|
||
(funcall predicate buf)))
|
||
buf))))))))
|
||
|
||
|
||
(defcustom find-file-wildcards t
|
||
"Non-nil means file-visiting commands should handle wildcards.
|
||
For example, if you specify `*.c', that would visit all the files
|
||
whose names match the pattern."
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:version "20.4"
|
||
:type 'boolean)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom find-file-suppress-same-file-warnings nil
|
||
"Non-nil means suppress warning messages for symlinked files.
|
||
When nil, Emacs prints a warning when visiting a file that is already
|
||
visited, but with a different name. Setting this option to t
|
||
suppresses this warning."
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:version "21.1"
|
||
:type 'boolean)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom large-file-warning-threshold 10000000
|
||
"Maximum size of file above which a confirmation is requested.
|
||
When nil, never request confirmation."
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:group 'find-file
|
||
:version "22.1"
|
||
:type '(choice integer (const :tag "Never request confirmation" nil)))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom out-of-memory-warning-percentage nil
|
||
"Warn if file size exceeds this percentage of available free memory.
|
||
When nil, never issue warning. Beware: This probably doesn't do what you
|
||
think it does, because \"free\" is pretty hard to define in practice."
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:group 'find-file
|
||
:version "25.1"
|
||
:type '(choice integer (const :tag "Never issue warning" nil)))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom query-about-changed-file t
|
||
"If non-nil, query the user when re-visiting a file that has changed.
|
||
This happens if the file is already visited in a buffer, the
|
||
file was changed externally, and the user re-visits the file.
|
||
|
||
If nil, don't prompt the user, but instead provide instructions for
|
||
reverting, after switching to the buffer with its contents before
|
||
the external changes."
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:group 'find-file
|
||
:version "28.1"
|
||
:type 'boolean)
|
||
|
||
(declare-function x-popup-dialog "menu.c" (position contents &optional header))
|
||
|
||
(defun files--ask-user-about-large-file-help-text (op-type size)
|
||
"Format the text that explains the options to open large files in Emacs.
|
||
OP-TYPE contains the kind of file operation that will be
|
||
performed. SIZE is the size of the large file."
|
||
(format
|
||
"The file that you want to %s is large (%s), which exceeds the
|
||
threshold above which Emacs asks for confirmation (%s).
|
||
|
||
Large files may be slow to edit or navigate so Emacs asks you
|
||
before you try to %s such files.
|
||
|
||
You can press:
|
||
'y' to %s the file.
|
||
'n' to abort, and not %s the file.
|
||
'l' (the letter ell) to %s the file literally, which means that
|
||
Emacs will %s the file without doing any format or character code
|
||
conversion and in Fundamental mode, without loading any potentially
|
||
expensive features.
|
||
|
||
You can customize the option `large-file-warning-threshold' to be the
|
||
file size, in bytes, from which Emacs will ask for confirmation. Set
|
||
it to nil to never request confirmation."
|
||
op-type
|
||
size
|
||
(funcall byte-count-to-string-function large-file-warning-threshold)
|
||
op-type
|
||
op-type
|
||
op-type
|
||
op-type
|
||
op-type))
|
||
|
||
(defun files--ask-user-about-large-file (size op-type filename offer-raw)
|
||
"Query the user about what to do with large files.
|
||
Files are \"large\" if file SIZE is larger than `large-file-warning-threshold'.
|
||
|
||
OP-TYPE specifies the file operation being performed on FILENAME.
|
||
|
||
If OFFER-RAW is true, give user the additional option to open the
|
||
file literally."
|
||
(let ((prompt (format "File %s is large (%s), really %s?"
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory filename)
|
||
(funcall byte-count-to-string-function size) op-type)))
|
||
(if (not offer-raw)
|
||
(if (y-or-n-p prompt) nil 'abort)
|
||
(let ((choice
|
||
(car
|
||
(read-multiple-choice
|
||
prompt '((?y "yes")
|
||
(?n "no")
|
||
(?l "literally"))
|
||
(files--ask-user-about-large-file-help-text
|
||
op-type (funcall byte-count-to-string-function size))))))
|
||
(cond ((eq choice ?y) nil)
|
||
((eq choice ?l) 'raw)
|
||
(t 'abort))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun abort-if-file-too-large (size op-type filename &optional offer-raw)
|
||
"If file SIZE larger than `large-file-warning-threshold', allow user to abort.
|
||
OP-TYPE specifies the file operation being performed (for message
|
||
to user). If OFFER-RAW is true, give user the additional option
|
||
to open the file literally. If the user chooses this option,
|
||
`abort-if-file-too-large' returns the symbol `raw'. Otherwise,
|
||
it returns nil or exits non-locally."
|
||
(let ((choice (and large-file-warning-threshold size
|
||
(> size large-file-warning-threshold)
|
||
;; No point in warning if we can't read it.
|
||
(file-readable-p filename)
|
||
(files--ask-user-about-large-file
|
||
size op-type filename offer-raw))))
|
||
(when (eq choice 'abort)
|
||
(user-error "Aborted"))
|
||
choice))
|
||
|
||
(defun warn-maybe-out-of-memory (size)
|
||
"Warn if an attempt to open file of SIZE bytes may run out of memory."
|
||
(when (and (numberp size) (not (zerop size))
|
||
(integerp out-of-memory-warning-percentage))
|
||
(let* ((default-directory temporary-file-directory)
|
||
(meminfo (memory-info)))
|
||
(when (consp meminfo)
|
||
(let ((total-free-memory (float (+ (nth 1 meminfo) (nth 3 meminfo)))))
|
||
(when (> (/ size 1024)
|
||
(/ (* total-free-memory out-of-memory-warning-percentage)
|
||
100.0))
|
||
(warn
|
||
"You are trying to open a file whose size (%s)
|
||
exceeds the %S%% of currently available free memory (%s).
|
||
If that fails, try to open it with `find-file-literally'
|
||
\(but note that some characters might be displayed incorrectly)."
|
||
(funcall byte-count-to-string-function size)
|
||
out-of-memory-warning-percentage
|
||
(funcall byte-count-to-string-function
|
||
(* total-free-memory 1024)))))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun files--message (format &rest args)
|
||
"Like `message', except sometimes don't show the message text.
|
||
If the variable `save-silently' is non-nil, the message will not
|
||
be visible in the echo area."
|
||
(apply #'message format args)
|
||
(when save-silently (message nil)))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file-noselect (filename &optional nowarn rawfile wildcards)
|
||
"Read file FILENAME into a buffer and return the buffer.
|
||
If a buffer exists visiting FILENAME, return that one, but
|
||
verify that the file has not changed since visited or saved.
|
||
The buffer is not selected, just returned to the caller.
|
||
Optional second arg NOWARN non-nil means suppress any warning messages.
|
||
Optional third arg RAWFILE non-nil means the file is read literally.
|
||
Optional fourth arg WILDCARDS non-nil means do wildcard processing
|
||
and visit all the matching files. When wildcards are actually
|
||
used and expanded, return a list of buffers that are visiting
|
||
the various files."
|
||
(setq filename
|
||
(abbreviate-file-name
|
||
(expand-file-name filename)))
|
||
(if (file-directory-p filename)
|
||
(or (and find-file-run-dired
|
||
(run-hook-with-args-until-success
|
||
'find-directory-functions
|
||
(if find-file-visit-truename
|
||
(abbreviate-file-name (file-truename filename))
|
||
filename)))
|
||
(error "%s is a directory" filename))
|
||
(if (and wildcards
|
||
find-file-wildcards
|
||
(not (file-name-quoted-p filename))
|
||
(string-match "[[*?]" filename))
|
||
(let ((files (condition-case nil
|
||
(file-expand-wildcards filename t)
|
||
(error (list filename))))
|
||
(find-file-wildcards nil))
|
||
(if (null files)
|
||
(find-file-noselect filename)
|
||
(mapcar #'find-file-noselect files)))
|
||
(let* ((buf (get-file-buffer filename))
|
||
(truename (abbreviate-file-name (file-truename filename)))
|
||
(attributes (file-attributes truename))
|
||
(number (file-attribute-file-identifier attributes))
|
||
;; Find any buffer for a file that has same truename.
|
||
(other (and (not buf)
|
||
(find-buffer-visiting
|
||
filename
|
||
;; We want to filter out buffers that we've
|
||
;; visited via symlinks and the like, where
|
||
;; the symlink no longer exists.
|
||
(lambda (buffer)
|
||
(let ((file (buffer-local-value
|
||
'buffer-file-name buffer)))
|
||
(and file (file-exists-p file))))))))
|
||
;; Let user know if there is a buffer with the same truename.
|
||
(when other
|
||
(or nowarn
|
||
find-file-suppress-same-file-warnings
|
||
(string-equal filename (buffer-file-name other))
|
||
(files--message "%s and %s are the same file"
|
||
filename (buffer-file-name other)))
|
||
;; Optionally also find that buffer.
|
||
(if (or find-file-existing-other-name find-file-visit-truename)
|
||
(setq buf other)))
|
||
;; Check to see if the file looks uncommonly large.
|
||
(when (not (or buf nowarn))
|
||
(when (eq (abort-if-file-too-large
|
||
(file-attribute-size attributes) "open" filename
|
||
(not rawfile))
|
||
'raw)
|
||
(setf rawfile t))
|
||
(warn-maybe-out-of-memory (file-attribute-size attributes)))
|
||
(if buf
|
||
;; We are using an existing buffer.
|
||
(let (nonexistent)
|
||
(or nowarn
|
||
(verify-visited-file-modtime buf)
|
||
(cond ((not (file-exists-p filename))
|
||
(setq nonexistent t)
|
||
(message "File %s no longer exists!" filename))
|
||
;; Certain files should be reverted automatically
|
||
;; if they have changed on disk and not in the buffer.
|
||
((and (not (buffer-modified-p buf))
|
||
(let ((tail revert-without-query)
|
||
(found nil))
|
||
(while tail
|
||
(if (string-match (car tail) filename)
|
||
(setq found t))
|
||
(setq tail (cdr tail)))
|
||
found))
|
||
(with-current-buffer buf
|
||
(message "Reverting file %s..." filename)
|
||
(revert-buffer t t)
|
||
(message "Reverting file %s...done" filename)))
|
||
((not query-about-changed-file)
|
||
(message
|
||
(substitute-command-keys
|
||
"File %s changed on disk. \\[revert-buffer-quick] to load new contents%s")
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory filename)
|
||
(if (buffer-modified-p buf)
|
||
" and discard your edits"
|
||
"")))
|
||
((yes-or-no-p
|
||
(if (string= (file-name-nondirectory filename)
|
||
(buffer-name buf))
|
||
(format
|
||
(if (buffer-modified-p buf)
|
||
"File %s changed on disk. Discard your edits? "
|
||
"File %s changed on disk. Reread from disk? ")
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory filename))
|
||
(format
|
||
(if (buffer-modified-p buf)
|
||
"File %s changed on disk. Discard your edits in %s? "
|
||
"File %s changed on disk. Reread from disk into %s? ")
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory filename)
|
||
(buffer-name buf))))
|
||
(with-current-buffer buf
|
||
(revert-buffer t t)))))
|
||
(with-current-buffer buf
|
||
|
||
;; Check if a formerly read-only file has become
|
||
;; writable and vice versa, but if the buffer agrees
|
||
;; with the new state of the file, that is ok too.
|
||
(let ((read-only (not (file-writable-p buffer-file-name))))
|
||
(unless (or nonexistent
|
||
(eq read-only buffer-file-read-only)
|
||
(eq read-only buffer-read-only))
|
||
(when (or nowarn
|
||
(let* ((new-status
|
||
(if read-only "read-only" "writable"))
|
||
(question
|
||
(format "File %s is %s on disk. Make buffer %s, too? "
|
||
buffer-file-name
|
||
new-status new-status)))
|
||
(y-or-n-p question)))
|
||
(setq buffer-read-only read-only)))
|
||
(setq buffer-file-read-only read-only))
|
||
|
||
(unless (or (eq (null rawfile) (null find-file-literally))
|
||
nonexistent
|
||
;; It is confusing to ask whether to visit
|
||
;; non-literally if they have the file in
|
||
;; hexl-mode or image-mode.
|
||
(memq major-mode '(hexl-mode image-mode)))
|
||
(if (buffer-modified-p)
|
||
(if (let ((help-form
|
||
(format-message
|
||
(if rawfile "\
|
||
The file %s is already visited normally,
|
||
and you have edited the buffer. Now you have asked to visit it literally,
|
||
meaning no coding system handling, format conversion, or local variables.
|
||
Emacs can visit a file in only one way at a time."
|
||
"\
|
||
The file %s is already visited literally,
|
||
meaning no coding system handling, format conversion, or local variables.
|
||
You have edited the buffer. Now you have asked to visit the file normally,
|
||
but Emacs can visit a file in only one way at a time.")
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory filename))))
|
||
(y-or-n-p
|
||
(if rawfile "\
|
||
Do you want to save the file, and visit it literally instead? " "\
|
||
Do you want to save the file, and visit it normally instead? ")))
|
||
(progn
|
||
(save-buffer)
|
||
(find-file-noselect-1 buf filename nowarn
|
||
rawfile truename number))
|
||
(if (y-or-n-p
|
||
(if rawfile "\
|
||
Do you want to discard your changes, and visit the file literally now? " "\
|
||
Do you want to discard your changes, and visit the file normally now? "))
|
||
(find-file-noselect-1 buf filename nowarn
|
||
rawfile truename number)
|
||
(error (if rawfile "File already visited non-literally"
|
||
"File already visited literally"))))
|
||
(if (let ((help-form
|
||
(format-message
|
||
(if rawfile "\
|
||
The file %s is already visited normally.
|
||
You have asked to visit it literally,
|
||
meaning no coding system decoding, format conversion, or local variables.
|
||
But Emacs can visit a file in only one way at a time."
|
||
"\
|
||
The file %s is already visited literally,
|
||
meaning no coding system decoding, format conversion, or local variables.
|
||
You have asked to visit it normally,
|
||
but Emacs can visit a file in only one way at a time.")
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory filename))))
|
||
(y-or-n-p
|
||
(if rawfile "\
|
||
Do you want to revisit the file literally now? " "\
|
||
Do you want to revisit the file normally now? ")))
|
||
(find-file-noselect-1 buf filename nowarn
|
||
rawfile truename number)
|
||
(error (if rawfile "File already visited non-literally"
|
||
"File already visited literally"))))))
|
||
;; Return the buffer we are using.
|
||
buf)
|
||
;; Create a new buffer.
|
||
(setq buf (create-file-buffer filename))
|
||
;; find-file-noselect-1 may use a different buffer.
|
||
(find-file-noselect-1 buf filename nowarn
|
||
rawfile truename number))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file-noselect-1 (buf filename nowarn rawfile truename number)
|
||
(let (error)
|
||
(with-current-buffer buf
|
||
(kill-local-variable 'find-file-literally)
|
||
;; Needed in case we are re-visiting the file with a different
|
||
;; text representation.
|
||
(kill-local-variable 'buffer-file-coding-system)
|
||
(kill-local-variable 'cursor-type)
|
||
(let ((inhibit-read-only t))
|
||
(erase-buffer))
|
||
(and (not rawfile)
|
||
(set-buffer-multibyte t))
|
||
(if rawfile
|
||
(condition-case ()
|
||
(let ((inhibit-read-only t)
|
||
(enable-local-variables nil))
|
||
(insert-file-contents-literally filename t))
|
||
(file-error
|
||
(when (and (file-exists-p filename)
|
||
(not (file-readable-p filename)))
|
||
(kill-buffer buf)
|
||
(signal 'file-error (list "File is not readable"
|
||
filename)))
|
||
;; Unconditionally set error
|
||
(setq error t)))
|
||
(condition-case ()
|
||
(let ((inhibit-read-only t))
|
||
(insert-file-contents filename t))
|
||
(file-error
|
||
(when (and (file-exists-p filename)
|
||
(not (file-readable-p filename)))
|
||
(kill-buffer buf)
|
||
(signal 'file-error (list "File is not readable"
|
||
filename)))
|
||
;; Run find-file-not-found-functions until one returns non-nil.
|
||
(or (run-hook-with-args-until-success 'find-file-not-found-functions)
|
||
;; If they fail too, set error.
|
||
(setq error t)))))
|
||
;; Record the file's truename, and maybe use that as visited name.
|
||
(setq buffer-file-truename
|
||
(if (equal filename buffer-file-name)
|
||
truename
|
||
(abbreviate-file-name (file-truename buffer-file-name))))
|
||
(setq buffer-file-number number)
|
||
(if find-file-visit-truename
|
||
(setq buffer-file-name (expand-file-name buffer-file-truename)))
|
||
;; Set buffer's default directory to that of the file.
|
||
(setq default-directory (file-name-directory buffer-file-name))
|
||
;; Turn off backup files for certain file names. Since
|
||
;; this is a permanent local, the major mode won't eliminate it.
|
||
(and backup-enable-predicate
|
||
(not (funcall backup-enable-predicate buffer-file-name))
|
||
(setq-local backup-inhibited t))
|
||
(if rawfile
|
||
(let ((enable-local-variables nil))
|
||
(set-buffer-multibyte nil)
|
||
(setq buffer-file-coding-system 'no-conversion)
|
||
(set-buffer-major-mode buf)
|
||
(setq-local find-file-literally t))
|
||
(after-find-file error (not nowarn)))
|
||
(current-buffer))))
|
||
|
||
(defun insert-file-contents-literally (filename &optional visit beg end replace)
|
||
"Like `insert-file-contents', but only read in the file literally.
|
||
See `insert-file-contents' for an explanation of the parameters.
|
||
A buffer may be modified in several ways after reading into the buffer,
|
||
due to Emacs features such as format decoding, character code
|
||
conversion, `find-file-hook', automatic uncompression, etc.
|
||
|
||
This function ensures that none of these modifications will take place.
|
||
|
||
Unlike `find-file-literally', this function does not make the
|
||
buffer unibyte, so if this function is used when handling
|
||
binary (non-character) data, it can be convenient to make the
|
||
buffer unibyte first. This isn't, strictly speaking, necessary,
|
||
because multibyte buffers can also deal with raw bytes. See info
|
||
node `(elisp)Character Codes' for details."
|
||
(let ((format-alist nil)
|
||
(after-insert-file-functions nil)
|
||
(coding-system-for-read 'no-conversion)
|
||
(coding-system-for-write 'no-conversion)
|
||
(inhibit-file-name-handlers
|
||
;; FIXME: Yuck!! We should turn insert-file-contents-literally
|
||
;; into a file operation instead!
|
||
(append '(jka-compr-handler image-file-handler epa-file-handler)
|
||
(and (eq inhibit-file-name-operation 'insert-file-contents)
|
||
inhibit-file-name-handlers)))
|
||
(inhibit-file-name-operation 'insert-file-contents))
|
||
(insert-file-contents filename visit beg end replace)))
|
||
|
||
(defun insert-file-1 (filename insert-func)
|
||
(if (file-directory-p filename)
|
||
(signal 'file-error (list "Opening input file" "Is a directory"
|
||
filename)))
|
||
;; Check whether the file is uncommonly large
|
||
(abort-if-file-too-large (file-attribute-size (file-attributes filename))
|
||
"insert" filename)
|
||
(let* ((buffer (find-buffer-visiting (abbreviate-file-name (file-truename filename))
|
||
#'buffer-modified-p))
|
||
(tem (funcall insert-func filename)))
|
||
(push-mark (+ (point) (car (cdr tem))))
|
||
(when buffer
|
||
(message "File %s already visited and modified in buffer %s"
|
||
filename (buffer-name buffer)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun insert-file-literally (filename)
|
||
"Insert contents of file FILENAME into buffer after point with no conversion.
|
||
|
||
This function is meant for the user to run interactively.
|
||
Don't call it from programs! Use `insert-file-contents-literally' instead.
|
||
\(Its calling sequence is different; see its documentation)."
|
||
(declare (interactive-only insert-file-contents-literally))
|
||
(interactive "*fInsert file literally: ")
|
||
(insert-file-1 filename #'insert-file-contents-literally))
|
||
|
||
(defvar find-file-literally nil
|
||
"Non-nil if this buffer was made by `find-file-literally' or equivalent.
|
||
This has the `permanent-local' property, which takes effect if you
|
||
make the variable buffer-local.")
|
||
(put 'find-file-literally 'permanent-local t)
|
||
|
||
(defun find-file-literally (filename)
|
||
"Visit file FILENAME with no conversion of any kind.
|
||
Format conversion and character code conversion are both disabled,
|
||
and multibyte characters are disabled in the resulting buffer.
|
||
The major mode used is Fundamental mode regardless of the file name,
|
||
and local variable specifications in the file are ignored.
|
||
Automatic uncompression and adding a newline at the end of the
|
||
file due to `require-final-newline' is also disabled.
|
||
|
||
If Emacs already has a buffer that is visiting the file,
|
||
this command asks you whether to visit it literally instead.
|
||
|
||
In non-interactive use, the value is the buffer where the file is
|
||
visited literally. If the file was visited in a buffer before
|
||
this command was invoked, it will reuse the existing buffer,
|
||
regardless of whether it was created literally or not; however,
|
||
the contents of that buffer will be the literal text of the file
|
||
without any conversions.
|
||
|
||
In a Lisp program, if you want to be sure of accessing a file's
|
||
contents literally, you should create a temporary buffer and then read
|
||
the file contents into it using `insert-file-contents-literally'."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(list (read-file-name
|
||
"Find file literally: " nil default-directory
|
||
(confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer))))
|
||
(switch-to-buffer (find-file-noselect filename nil t)))
|
||
|
||
(defun after-find-file (&optional error warn noauto
|
||
_after-find-file-from-revert-buffer
|
||
nomodes)
|
||
"Called after finding a file and by the default revert function.
|
||
Sets buffer mode, parses file-local and directory-local variables.
|
||
Optional args ERROR, WARN, and NOAUTO: ERROR non-nil means there was an
|
||
error in reading the file. WARN non-nil means warn if there
|
||
exists an auto-save file more recent than the visited file.
|
||
NOAUTO means don't mess with auto-save mode.
|
||
Fourth arg AFTER-FIND-FILE-FROM-REVERT-BUFFER is ignored
|
||
\(see `revert-buffer-in-progress-p' for similar functionality).
|
||
Fifth arg NOMODES non-nil means don't alter the file's modes.
|
||
Finishes by calling the functions in `find-file-hook'
|
||
unless NOMODES is non-nil."
|
||
(setq buffer-read-only (not (file-writable-p buffer-file-name)))
|
||
;; The above is sufficiently like turning on read-only-mode, so run
|
||
;; the mode hook here by hand.
|
||
(if buffer-read-only
|
||
(run-hooks 'read-only-mode-hook))
|
||
(if noninteractive
|
||
nil
|
||
(let* (not-serious
|
||
(msg
|
||
(cond
|
||
((and error (file-exists-p buffer-file-name))
|
||
(setq buffer-read-only t)
|
||
"File exists, but cannot be read")
|
||
((and error (file-symlink-p buffer-file-name))
|
||
"Symbolic link that points to nonexistent file")
|
||
((not buffer-read-only)
|
||
(if (and
|
||
;; No need to warn if buffer is auto-saved
|
||
;; under the name of the visited file.
|
||
(not (and buffer-file-name
|
||
auto-save-visited-file-name))
|
||
(file-newer-than-file-p (or buffer-auto-save-file-name
|
||
(make-auto-save-file-name))
|
||
buffer-file-name))
|
||
(format (substitute-command-keys
|
||
"%s has auto save data; consider \\`M-x recover-this-file'")
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name))
|
||
(setq not-serious t)
|
||
(if error "(New file)" nil)))
|
||
((not error)
|
||
(setq not-serious t)
|
||
"Note: file is write protected")
|
||
((file-accessible-directory-p default-directory)
|
||
"File not found and directory write-protected")
|
||
(t
|
||
(setq buffer-read-only nil)
|
||
(unless (file-directory-p default-directory)
|
||
"Use M-x make-directory RET RET to create the directory and its parents")))))
|
||
(when (and warn msg)
|
||
(message "%s" msg)
|
||
(or not-serious (sit-for 1 t))))
|
||
(when (and auto-save-default (not noauto))
|
||
(auto-save-mode 1)))
|
||
;; Make people do a little extra work (C-x C-q)
|
||
;; before altering a backup file.
|
||
;; When a file is marked read-only,
|
||
;; make the buffer read-only even if root is looking at it.
|
||
(unless buffer-read-only
|
||
(when (or (backup-file-name-p buffer-file-name)
|
||
(let ((modes (file-modes (buffer-file-name))))
|
||
(and modes (zerop (logand modes #o222)))))
|
||
(setq buffer-read-only t)))
|
||
(unless nomodes
|
||
(when (and view-read-only view-mode)
|
||
(view-mode -1))
|
||
(normal-mode t)
|
||
;; If requested, add a newline at the end of the file.
|
||
(and (memq require-final-newline '(visit visit-save))
|
||
(> (point-max) (point-min))
|
||
(/= (char-after (1- (point-max))) ?\n)
|
||
(not (and (eq selective-display t)
|
||
(= (char-after (1- (point-max))) ?\r)))
|
||
(not buffer-read-only)
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(goto-char (point-max))
|
||
(ignore-errors (insert "\n"))))
|
||
(when (and buffer-read-only
|
||
view-read-only
|
||
(not (eq (get major-mode 'mode-class) 'special)))
|
||
(view-mode-enter))
|
||
(run-hooks 'find-file-hook)))
|
||
|
||
(define-obsolete-function-alias 'report-errors 'with-demoted-errors "25.1")
|
||
|
||
(defun normal-mode (&optional find-file)
|
||
"Choose the major mode for this buffer automatically.
|
||
Also sets up any specified local variables of the file or its directory.
|
||
Uses the visited file name, the -*- line, and the local variables spec.
|
||
|
||
This function is called automatically from `find-file'. In that case,
|
||
we may set up the file-specified mode and local variables,
|
||
depending on the value of `enable-local-variables'.
|
||
In addition, if `local-enable-local-variables' is nil, we do
|
||
not set local variables (though we do notice a mode specified with -*-.)
|
||
|
||
`enable-local-variables' is ignored if you run `normal-mode' interactively,
|
||
or from Lisp without specifying the optional argument FIND-FILE;
|
||
in that case, this function acts as if `enable-local-variables' were t.
|
||
|
||
If invoked in a buffer that doesn't visit a file, this function
|
||
processes only the major mode specification in the -*- line and
|
||
the local variables spec."
|
||
(interactive)
|
||
(kill-all-local-variables)
|
||
(unless delay-mode-hooks
|
||
(run-hooks 'change-major-mode-after-body-hook
|
||
'after-change-major-mode-hook))
|
||
(let ((enable-local-variables (or (not find-file) enable-local-variables)))
|
||
;; FIXME this is less efficient than it could be, since both
|
||
;; s-a-m and h-l-v may parse the same regions, looking for "mode:".
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "File mode specification error: %s"
|
||
(set-auto-mode))
|
||
;; `delay-mode-hooks' being non-nil will have prevented the major
|
||
;; mode's call to `run-mode-hooks' from calling
|
||
;; `hack-local-variables'. In that case, call it now.
|
||
(when delay-mode-hooks
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "File local-variables error: %s"
|
||
(hack-local-variables 'no-mode))))
|
||
;; Turn font lock off and on, to make sure it takes account of
|
||
;; whatever file local variables are relevant to it.
|
||
(when (and font-lock-mode
|
||
;; Font-lock-mode (now in font-core.el) can be ON when
|
||
;; font-lock.el still hasn't been loaded.
|
||
(boundp 'font-lock-keywords)
|
||
(eq (car font-lock-keywords) t))
|
||
(setq font-lock-keywords (cadr font-lock-keywords))
|
||
(font-lock-mode 1)))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom auto-mode-case-fold t
|
||
"Non-nil means to try second pass through `auto-mode-alist'.
|
||
This means that if the first case-sensitive search through the alist fails
|
||
to find a matching major mode, a second case-insensitive search is made.
|
||
On systems with case-insensitive file names, this variable is ignored,
|
||
since only a single case-insensitive search through the alist is made."
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:version "22.1"
|
||
:type 'boolean)
|
||
|
||
(defvar auto-mode-alist
|
||
;; Note: The entries for the modes defined in cc-mode.el (c-mode,
|
||
;; c++-mode, java-mode and more) are added through autoload
|
||
;; directives in that file.
|
||
(mapcar
|
||
(lambda (elt)
|
||
(cons (purecopy (car elt)) (cdr elt)))
|
||
`(;; do this first, so that .html.pl is Polish html, not Perl
|
||
("\\.[sx]?html?\\(\\.[a-zA-Z_]+\\)?\\'" . mhtml-mode)
|
||
("\\.svgz?\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.svgz?\\'" . xml-mode)
|
||
("\\.x[bp]m\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.x[bp]m\\'" . c-mode)
|
||
("\\.p[bpgn]m\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.tiff?\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.gif\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.png\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.jpe?g\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.webp\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.te?xt\\'" . text-mode)
|
||
("\\.[tT]e[xX]\\'" . tex-mode)
|
||
("\\.ins\\'" . tex-mode) ;Installation files for TeX packages.
|
||
("\\.ltx\\'" . latex-mode)
|
||
("\\.dtx\\'" . doctex-mode)
|
||
("\\.org\\'" . org-mode)
|
||
;; .dir-locals.el is not really Elisp. Could use the
|
||
;; `dir-locals-file' constant if it weren't defined below.
|
||
("\\.dir-locals\\(?:-2\\)?\\.el\\'" . lisp-data-mode)
|
||
("\\.eld\\'" . lisp-data-mode)
|
||
;; FIXME: The lisp-data-mode files below should use the `.eld' extension
|
||
;; (or a -*- mode cookie) so we don't need ad-hoc entries here.
|
||
("eww-bookmarks\\'" . lisp-data-mode)
|
||
("tramp\\'" . lisp-data-mode)
|
||
("/archive-contents\\'" . lisp-data-mode)
|
||
("places\\'" . lisp-data-mode)
|
||
("\\.emacs-places\\'" . lisp-data-mode)
|
||
("\\.el\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode)
|
||
("Project\\.ede\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode)
|
||
("\\.\\(scm\\|sls\\|sld\\|stk\\|ss\\|sch\\)\\'" . scheme-mode)
|
||
("\\.l\\'" . lisp-mode)
|
||
("\\.li?sp\\'" . lisp-mode)
|
||
("\\.[fF]\\'" . fortran-mode)
|
||
("\\.for\\'" . fortran-mode)
|
||
("\\.p\\'" . pascal-mode)
|
||
("\\.pas\\'" . pascal-mode)
|
||
("\\.\\(dpr\\|DPR\\)\\'" . delphi-mode)
|
||
("\\.\\([pP]\\([Llm]\\|erl\\|od\\)\\|al\\)\\'" . perl-mode)
|
||
("Imakefile\\'" . makefile-imake-mode)
|
||
("Makeppfile\\(?:\\.mk\\)?\\'" . makefile-makepp-mode) ; Put this before .mk
|
||
("\\.makepp\\'" . makefile-makepp-mode)
|
||
,@(if (memq system-type '(berkeley-unix darwin))
|
||
'(("\\.mk\\'" . makefile-bsdmake-mode)
|
||
("\\.make\\'" . makefile-bsdmake-mode)
|
||
("GNUmakefile\\'" . makefile-gmake-mode)
|
||
("[Mm]akefile\\'" . makefile-bsdmake-mode))
|
||
'(("\\.mk\\'" . makefile-gmake-mode) ; Might be any make, give GNU the host advantage
|
||
("\\.make\\'" . makefile-gmake-mode)
|
||
("[Mm]akefile\\'" . makefile-gmake-mode)))
|
||
("\\.am\\'" . makefile-automake-mode)
|
||
;; Less common extensions come here
|
||
;; so more common ones above are found faster.
|
||
("\\.texinfo\\'" . texinfo-mode)
|
||
("\\.te?xi\\'" . texinfo-mode)
|
||
("\\.[sS]\\'" . asm-mode)
|
||
("\\.asm\\'" . asm-mode)
|
||
("\\.css\\'" . css-mode)
|
||
("\\.mixal\\'" . mixal-mode)
|
||
("\\.gcov\\'" . compilation-mode)
|
||
;; Besides .gdbinit, gdb documents other names to be usable for init
|
||
;; files, cross-debuggers can use something like
|
||
;; .PROCESSORNAME-gdbinit so that the host and target gdbinit files
|
||
;; don't interfere with each other.
|
||
("/\\.[a-z0-9-]*gdbinit" . gdb-script-mode)
|
||
;; GDB 7.5 introduced OBJFILE-gdb.gdb script files; e.g. a file
|
||
;; named 'emacs-gdb.gdb', if it exists, will be automatically
|
||
;; loaded when GDB reads an objfile called 'emacs'.
|
||
("-gdb\\.gdb" . gdb-script-mode)
|
||
("[cC]hange\\.?[lL]og?\\'" . change-log-mode)
|
||
("[cC]hange[lL]og[-.][0-9]+\\'" . change-log-mode)
|
||
("\\$CHANGE_LOG\\$\\.TXT" . change-log-mode)
|
||
("\\.scm\\.[0-9]*\\'" . scheme-mode)
|
||
("\\.[ckz]?sh\\'\\|\\.shar\\'\\|/\\.z?profile\\'" . sh-mode)
|
||
("\\.bash\\'" . sh-mode)
|
||
("/PKGBUILD\\'" . sh-mode)
|
||
("\\(/\\|\\`\\)\\.\\(bash_\\(profile\\|history\\|log\\(in\\|out\\)\\)\\|z?log\\(in\\|out\\)\\)\\'" . sh-mode)
|
||
("\\(/\\|\\`\\)\\.\\(shrc\\|zshrc\\|m?kshrc\\|bashrc\\|t?cshrc\\|esrc\\)\\'" . sh-mode)
|
||
("\\(/\\|\\`\\)\\.\\([kz]shenv\\|xinitrc\\|startxrc\\|xsession\\)\\'" . sh-mode)
|
||
("\\.m?spec\\'" . sh-mode)
|
||
("\\.m[mes]\\'" . nroff-mode)
|
||
("\\.man\\'" . nroff-mode)
|
||
("\\.sty\\'" . latex-mode)
|
||
("\\.cl[so]\\'" . latex-mode) ;LaTeX 2e class option
|
||
("\\.bbl\\'" . latex-mode)
|
||
("\\.bib\\'" . bibtex-mode)
|
||
("\\.bst\\'" . bibtex-style-mode)
|
||
("\\.sql\\'" . sql-mode)
|
||
;; These .m4 files are Autoconf files.
|
||
("\\(acinclude\\|aclocal\\|acsite\\)\\.m4\\'" . autoconf-mode)
|
||
("\\.m[4c]\\'" . m4-mode)
|
||
("\\.mf\\'" . metafont-mode)
|
||
("\\.mp\\'" . metapost-mode)
|
||
("\\.vhdl?\\'" . vhdl-mode)
|
||
("\\.article\\'" . text-mode)
|
||
("\\.letter\\'" . text-mode)
|
||
("\\.i?tcl\\'" . tcl-mode)
|
||
("\\.exp\\'" . tcl-mode)
|
||
("\\.itk\\'" . tcl-mode)
|
||
("\\.icn\\'" . icon-mode)
|
||
("\\.sim\\'" . simula-mode)
|
||
("\\.mss\\'" . scribe-mode)
|
||
;; The Fortran standard does not say anything about file extensions.
|
||
;; .f90 was widely used for F90, now we seem to be trapped into
|
||
;; using a different extension for each language revision.
|
||
;; Anyway, the following extensions are supported by gfortran.
|
||
("\\.f9[05]\\'" . f90-mode)
|
||
("\\.f0[38]\\'" . f90-mode)
|
||
("\\.indent\\.pro\\'" . fundamental-mode) ; to avoid idlwave-mode
|
||
("\\.\\(pro\\|PRO\\)\\'" . idlwave-mode)
|
||
("\\.srt\\'" . srecode-template-mode)
|
||
("\\.prolog\\'" . prolog-mode)
|
||
("\\.tar\\'" . tar-mode)
|
||
;; The list of archive file extensions should be in sync with
|
||
;; `auto-coding-alist' with `no-conversion' coding system.
|
||
("\\.\\(\
|
||
arc\\|zip\\|lzh\\|lha\\|zoo\\|[jew]ar\\|xpi\\|rar\\|cbr\\|7z\\|squashfs\\|\
|
||
ARC\\|ZIP\\|LZH\\|LHA\\|ZOO\\|[JEW]AR\\|XPI\\|RAR\\|CBR\\|7Z\\|SQUASHFS\\)\\'" . archive-mode)
|
||
("\\.oxt\\'" . archive-mode) ;(Open|Libre)Office extensions.
|
||
("\\.\\(deb\\|[oi]pk\\)\\'" . archive-mode) ; Debian/Opkg packages.
|
||
;; Mailer puts message to be edited in
|
||
;; /tmp/Re.... or Message
|
||
("\\`/tmp/Re" . text-mode)
|
||
("/Message[0-9]*\\'" . text-mode)
|
||
;; some news reader is reported to use this
|
||
("\\`/tmp/fol/" . text-mode)
|
||
("\\.oak\\'" . scheme-mode)
|
||
("\\.sgml?\\'" . sgml-mode)
|
||
("\\.x[ms]l\\'" . xml-mode)
|
||
("\\.dbk\\'" . xml-mode)
|
||
("\\.dtd\\'" . sgml-mode)
|
||
("\\.ds\\(ss\\)?l\\'" . dsssl-mode)
|
||
("\\.js[mx]?\\'" . javascript-mode)
|
||
;; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.har
|
||
("\\.har\\'" . javascript-mode)
|
||
("\\.json\\'" . js-json-mode)
|
||
("\\.[ds]?va?h?\\'" . verilog-mode)
|
||
("\\.by\\'" . bovine-grammar-mode)
|
||
("\\.wy\\'" . wisent-grammar-mode)
|
||
("\\.erts\\'" . erts-mode)
|
||
;; .emacs or .gnus or .viper following a directory delimiter in
|
||
;; Unix or MS-DOS syntax.
|
||
("[:/\\]\\..*\\(emacs\\|gnus\\|viper\\)\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode)
|
||
("\\`\\..*emacs\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode)
|
||
;; _emacs following a directory delimiter in MS-DOS syntax
|
||
("[:/]_emacs\\'" . emacs-lisp-mode)
|
||
("/crontab\\.X*[0-9]+\\'" . shell-script-mode)
|
||
("\\.ml\\'" . lisp-mode)
|
||
;; Linux-2.6.9 uses some different suffix for linker scripts:
|
||
;; "ld", "lds", "lds.S", "lds.in", "ld.script", and "ld.script.balo".
|
||
;; eCos uses "ld" and "ldi". Netbsd uses "ldscript.*".
|
||
("\\.ld[si]?\\'" . ld-script-mode)
|
||
("ld\\.?script\\'" . ld-script-mode)
|
||
;; .xs is also used for ld scripts, but seems to be more commonly
|
||
;; associated with Perl .xs files (C with Perl bindings). (Bug#7071)
|
||
("\\.xs\\'" . c-mode)
|
||
;; Explained in binutils ld/genscripts.sh. Eg:
|
||
;; A .x script file is the default script.
|
||
;; A .xr script is for linking without relocation (-r flag). Etc.
|
||
("\\.x[abdsru]?[cnw]?\\'" . ld-script-mode)
|
||
("\\.zone\\'" . dns-mode)
|
||
("\\.soa\\'" . dns-mode)
|
||
;; Common Lisp ASDF package system.
|
||
("\\.asd\\'" . lisp-mode)
|
||
("\\.\\(asn\\|mib\\|smi\\)\\'" . snmp-mode)
|
||
("\\.\\(as\\|mi\\|sm\\)2\\'" . snmpv2-mode)
|
||
("\\.\\(diffs?\\|patch\\|rej\\)\\'" . diff-mode)
|
||
("\\.\\(dif\\|pat\\)\\'" . diff-mode) ; for MS-DOS
|
||
("\\.[eE]?[pP][sS]\\'" . ps-mode)
|
||
("\\.\\(?:PDF\\|EPUB\\|CBZ\\|FB2\\|O?XPS\\|DVI\\|OD[FGPST]\\|DOCX\\|XLSX?\\|PPTX?\\|pdf\\|epub\\|cbz\\|fb2\\|o?xps\\|djvu\\|dvi\\|od[fgpst]\\|docx\\|xlsx?\\|pptx?\\)\\'" . doc-view-mode-maybe)
|
||
("configure\\.\\(ac\\|in\\)\\'" . autoconf-mode)
|
||
("\\.s\\(v\\|iv\\|ieve\\)\\'" . sieve-mode)
|
||
("BROWSE\\'" . ebrowse-tree-mode)
|
||
("\\.ebrowse\\'" . ebrowse-tree-mode)
|
||
("#\\*mail\\*" . mail-mode)
|
||
("\\.g\\'" . antlr-mode)
|
||
("\\.mod\\'" . m2-mode)
|
||
("\\.ses\\'" . ses-mode)
|
||
("\\.docbook\\'" . sgml-mode)
|
||
("\\.com\\'" . dcl-mode)
|
||
("/config\\.\\(?:bat\\|log\\)\\'" . fundamental-mode)
|
||
("/\\.?\\(authinfo\\|netrc\\)\\'" . authinfo-mode)
|
||
;; Windows candidates may be opened case sensitively on Unix
|
||
("\\.\\(?:[iI][nN][iI]\\|[lL][sS][tT]\\|[rR][eE][gG]\\|[sS][yY][sS]\\)\\'" . conf-mode)
|
||
("\\.la\\'" . conf-unix-mode)
|
||
("\\.ppd\\'" . conf-ppd-mode)
|
||
("java.+\\.conf\\'" . conf-javaprop-mode)
|
||
("\\.properties\\(?:\\.[a-zA-Z0-9._-]+\\)?\\'" . conf-javaprop-mode)
|
||
("\\.toml\\'" . conf-toml-mode)
|
||
("\\.desktop\\'" . conf-desktop-mode)
|
||
("/\\.redshift\\.conf\\'" . conf-windows-mode)
|
||
("\\`/etc/\\(?:DIR_COLORS\\|ethers\\|.?fstab\\|.*hosts\\|lesskey\\|login\\.?de\\(?:fs\\|vperm\\)\\|magic\\|mtab\\|pam\\.d/.*\\|permissions\\(?:\\.d/.+\\)?\\|protocols\\|rpc\\|services\\)\\'" . conf-space-mode)
|
||
("\\`/etc/\\(?:acpid?/.+\\|aliases\\(?:\\.d/.+\\)?\\|default/.+\\|group-?\\|hosts\\..+\\|inittab\\|ksysguarddrc\\|opera6rc\\|passwd-?\\|shadow-?\\|sysconfig/.+\\)\\'" . conf-mode)
|
||
;; ChangeLog.old etc. Other change-log-mode entries are above;
|
||
;; this has lower priority to avoid matching changelog.sgml etc.
|
||
("[cC]hange[lL]og[-.][-0-9a-z]+\\'" . change-log-mode)
|
||
;; either user's dot-files or under /etc or some such
|
||
("/\\.?\\(?:gitconfig\\|gnokiirc\\|hgrc\\|kde.*rc\\|mime\\.types\\|wgetrc\\)\\'" . conf-mode)
|
||
("/\\.mailmap\\'" . conf-unix-mode)
|
||
;; alas not all ~/.*rc files are like this
|
||
("/\\.\\(?:asound\\|enigma\\|fetchmail\\|gltron\\|gtk\\|hxplayer\\|mairix\\|mbsync\\|msmtp\\|net\\|neverball\\|nvidia-settings-\\|offlineimap\\|qt/.+\\|realplayer\\|reportbug\\|rtorrent\\.\\|screen\\|scummvm\\|sversion\\|sylpheed/.+\\|xmp\\)rc\\'" . conf-mode)
|
||
("/\\.\\(?:gdbtkinit\\|grip\\|mpdconf\\|notmuch-config\\|orbital/.+txt\\|rhosts\\|tuxracer/options\\)\\'" . conf-mode)
|
||
("/\\.?X\\(?:default\\|resource\\|re\\)s\\>" . conf-xdefaults-mode)
|
||
("/X11.+app-defaults/\\|\\.ad\\'" . conf-xdefaults-mode)
|
||
("/X11.+locale/.+/Compose\\'" . conf-colon-mode)
|
||
;; this contains everything twice, with space and with colon :-(
|
||
("/X11.+locale/compose\\.dir\\'" . conf-javaprop-mode)
|
||
;; Get rid of any trailing .n.m and try again.
|
||
;; This is for files saved by cvs-merge that look like .#<file>.<rev>
|
||
;; or .#<file>.<rev>-<rev> or VC's <file>.~<rev>~.
|
||
;; Using mode nil rather than `ignore' would let the search continue
|
||
;; through this list (with the shortened name) rather than start over.
|
||
("\\.~?[0-9]+\\.[0-9][-.0-9]*~?\\'" nil t)
|
||
("\\.\\(?:orig\\|in\\|[bB][aA][kK]\\)\\'" nil t)
|
||
;; This should come after "in" stripping (e.g. config.h.in).
|
||
;; *.cf, *.cfg, *.conf, *.config[.local|.de_DE.UTF8|...], */config
|
||
("[/.]c\\(?:on\\)?f\\(?:i?g\\)?\\(?:\\.[a-zA-Z0-9._-]+\\)?\\'" . conf-mode-maybe)
|
||
;; The following should come after the ChangeLog pattern
|
||
;; for the sake of ChangeLog.1, etc.
|
||
;; and after the .scm.[0-9] and CVS' <file>.<rev> patterns too.
|
||
("\\.[1-9]\\'" . nroff-mode)
|
||
;; Image file types probably supported by `image-convert'.
|
||
("\\.art\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.avs\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.bmp\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.cmyk\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.cmyka\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.crw\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.dcr\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.dcx\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.dng\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.dpx\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.fax\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.heic\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.hrz\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.icb\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.icc\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.icm\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.ico\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.icon\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.jbg\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.jbig\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.jng\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.jnx\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.miff\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.mng\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.mvg\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.otb\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.p7\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.pcx\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.pdb\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.pfa\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.pfb\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.picon\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.pict\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.rgb\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.rgba\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.tga\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.wbmp\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.webp\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.wmf\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.wpg\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.xcf\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.xmp\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.xwd\\'" . image-mode)
|
||
("\\.yuv\\'" . image-mode)))
|
||
"Alist of file name patterns vs corresponding major mode functions.
|
||
Each element looks like (REGEXP . FUNCTION) or (REGEXP FUNCTION NON-NIL).
|
||
\(NON-NIL stands for anything that is not nil; the value does not matter.)
|
||
Visiting a file whose name matches REGEXP specifies FUNCTION as the
|
||
mode function to use. FUNCTION will be called, unless it is nil.
|
||
|
||
If the element has the form (REGEXP FUNCTION NON-NIL), then after
|
||
calling FUNCTION (if it's not nil), we delete the suffix that matched
|
||
REGEXP and search the list again for another match.
|
||
|
||
The extensions whose FUNCTION is `archive-mode' should also
|
||
appear in `auto-coding-alist' with `no-conversion' coding system.
|
||
|
||
See also `interpreter-mode-alist', which detects executable script modes
|
||
based on the interpreters they specify to run,
|
||
and `magic-mode-alist', which determines modes based on file contents.")
|
||
(put 'auto-mode-alist 'risky-local-variable t)
|
||
|
||
(defun conf-mode-maybe ()
|
||
"Select Conf mode or XML mode according to start of file."
|
||
(if (save-excursion
|
||
(save-restriction
|
||
(widen)
|
||
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||
(looking-at "<\\?xml \\|<!-- \\|<!DOCTYPE ")))
|
||
(xml-mode)
|
||
(conf-mode)))
|
||
|
||
(defvar interpreter-mode-alist
|
||
;; Note: The entries for the modes defined in cc-mode.el (awk-mode
|
||
;; and pike-mode) are added through autoload directives in that
|
||
;; file.
|
||
(mapcar
|
||
(lambda (l)
|
||
(cons (purecopy (car l)) (cdr l)))
|
||
'(("\\(mini\\)?perl5?" . perl-mode)
|
||
("wishx?" . tcl-mode)
|
||
("tcl\\(sh\\)?" . tcl-mode)
|
||
("expect" . tcl-mode)
|
||
("octave" . octave-mode)
|
||
("scm" . scheme-mode)
|
||
("[acjkwz]sh" . sh-mode)
|
||
("r?bash2?" . sh-mode)
|
||
("dash" . sh-mode)
|
||
("mksh" . sh-mode)
|
||
("\\(dt\\|pd\\|w\\)ksh" . sh-mode)
|
||
("es" . sh-mode)
|
||
("i?tcsh" . sh-mode)
|
||
("oash" . sh-mode)
|
||
("rc" . sh-mode)
|
||
("rpm" . sh-mode)
|
||
("sh5?" . sh-mode)
|
||
("tail" . text-mode)
|
||
("more" . text-mode)
|
||
("less" . text-mode)
|
||
("pg" . text-mode)
|
||
("make" . makefile-gmake-mode) ; Debian uses this
|
||
("guile" . scheme-mode)
|
||
("clisp" . lisp-mode)
|
||
("emacs" . emacs-lisp-mode)))
|
||
"Alist mapping interpreter names to major modes.
|
||
This is used for files whose first lines match `auto-mode-interpreter-regexp'.
|
||
Each element looks like (REGEXP . MODE).
|
||
If REGEXP matches the entire name (minus any directory part) of
|
||
the interpreter specified in the first line of a script, enable
|
||
major mode MODE.
|
||
|
||
See also `auto-mode-alist'.")
|
||
|
||
;; TODO really this should be a list of modes (eg tar-mode), not regexps,
|
||
;; because we are duplicating info from auto-mode-alist.
|
||
;; TODO many elements of this list are also in auto-coding-alist.
|
||
(defvar inhibit-local-variables-regexps
|
||
(mapcar 'purecopy '("\\.tar\\'" "\\.t[bg]z\\'"
|
||
"\\.arc\\'" "\\.zip\\'" "\\.lzh\\'" "\\.lha\\'"
|
||
"\\.zoo\\'" "\\.[jew]ar\\'" "\\.xpi\\'" "\\.rar\\'"
|
||
"\\.7z\\'"
|
||
"\\.sx[dmicw]\\'" "\\.odt\\'"
|
||
"\\.diff\\'" "\\.patch\\'"
|
||
"\\.tiff?\\'" "\\.gif\\'" "\\.png\\'" "\\.jpe?g\\'"))
|
||
"List of regexps matching file names in which to ignore local variables.
|
||
This includes `-*-' lines as well as trailing \"Local Variables\" sections.
|
||
Files matching this list are typically binary file formats.
|
||
They may happen to contain sequences that look like local variable
|
||
specifications, but are not really, or they may be containers for
|
||
member files with their own local variable sections, which are
|
||
not appropriate for the containing file.
|
||
The function `inhibit-local-variables-p' uses this.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar inhibit-local-variables-suffixes nil
|
||
"List of regexps matching suffixes to remove from file names.
|
||
The function `inhibit-local-variables-p' uses this: when checking
|
||
a file name, it first discards from the end of the name anything that
|
||
matches one of these regexps.")
|
||
|
||
;; Can't think of any situation in which you'd want this to be nil...
|
||
(defvar inhibit-local-variables-ignore-case t
|
||
"Non-nil means `inhibit-local-variables-p' ignores case.")
|
||
|
||
(defun inhibit-local-variables-p ()
|
||
"Return non-nil if file local variables should be ignored.
|
||
This checks the file (or buffer) name against `inhibit-local-variables-regexps'
|
||
and `inhibit-local-variables-suffixes'. If
|
||
`inhibit-local-variables-ignore-case' is non-nil, this ignores case."
|
||
(let ((temp inhibit-local-variables-regexps)
|
||
(name (if buffer-file-name
|
||
(file-name-sans-versions buffer-file-name)
|
||
(buffer-name)))
|
||
(case-fold-search inhibit-local-variables-ignore-case))
|
||
(while (let ((sufs inhibit-local-variables-suffixes))
|
||
(while (and sufs (not (string-match (car sufs) name)))
|
||
(setq sufs (cdr sufs)))
|
||
sufs)
|
||
(setq name (substring name 0 (match-beginning 0))))
|
||
(while (and temp
|
||
(not (string-match (car temp) name)))
|
||
(setq temp (cdr temp)))
|
||
temp))
|
||
|
||
(defvar auto-mode-interpreter-regexp
|
||
(purecopy
|
||
(concat
|
||
"#![ \t]*"
|
||
;; Optional group 1: env(1) invocation.
|
||
"\\("
|
||
"[^ \t\n]*/bin/env[ \t]*"
|
||
;; Within group 1: possible -S/--split-string and environment
|
||
;; adjustments.
|
||
"\\(?:"
|
||
;; -S/--split-string
|
||
"\\(?:-[0a-z]*S[ \t]*\\|--split-string=\\)"
|
||
;; More env arguments.
|
||
"\\(?:-[^ \t\n]+[ \t]+\\)*"
|
||
;; Interpreter environment modifications.
|
||
"\\(?:[^ \t\n]+=[^ \t\n]*[ \t]+\\)*"
|
||
"\\)?"
|
||
"\\)?"
|
||
;; Group 2: interpreter.
|
||
"\\([^ \t\n]+\\)"))
|
||
"Regexp matching interpreters, for file mode determination.
|
||
This regular expression is matched against the first line of a file
|
||
to determine the file's mode in `set-auto-mode'. If it matches, the file
|
||
is assumed to be interpreted by the interpreter matched by the second group
|
||
of the regular expression. The mode is then determined as the mode
|
||
associated with that interpreter in `interpreter-mode-alist'.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar magic-mode-alist nil
|
||
"Alist of buffer beginnings vs. corresponding major mode functions.
|
||
Each element looks like (REGEXP . FUNCTION) or (MATCH-FUNCTION . FUNCTION).
|
||
After visiting a file, if REGEXP matches the text at the beginning of the
|
||
buffer (case-sensitively), or calling MATCH-FUNCTION returns non-nil,
|
||
`normal-mode' will call FUNCTION rather than allowing `auto-mode-alist' to
|
||
decide the buffer's major mode.
|
||
|
||
If FUNCTION is nil, then it is not called. (That is a way of saying
|
||
\"allow `auto-mode-alist' to decide for these files.\")")
|
||
(put 'magic-mode-alist 'risky-local-variable t)
|
||
|
||
(defvar magic-fallback-mode-alist
|
||
(purecopy
|
||
`((image-type-auto-detected-p . image-mode)
|
||
("\\(PK00\\)?[P]K\003\004" . archive-mode) ; zip
|
||
;; The < comes before the groups (but the first) to reduce backtracking.
|
||
;; TODO: UTF-16 <?xml may be preceded by a BOM 0xff 0xfe or 0xfe 0xff.
|
||
;; We use [ \t\r\n] instead of `\\s ' to make regex overflow less likely.
|
||
(,(let* ((incomment-re "\\(?:[^-]\\|-[^-]\\)")
|
||
(comment-re (concat "\\(?:!--" incomment-re "*-->[ \t\r\n]*<\\)")))
|
||
(concat "\\(?:<\\?xml[ \t\r\n]+[^>]*>\\)?[ \t\r\n]*<"
|
||
comment-re "*"
|
||
"\\(?:!DOCTYPE[ \t\r\n]+[^>]*>[ \t\r\n]*<[ \t\r\n]*" comment-re "*\\)?"
|
||
"[Hh][Tt][Mm][Ll]"))
|
||
. mhtml-mode)
|
||
("<![Dd][Oo][Cc][Tt][Yy][Pp][Ee][ \t\r\n]+[Hh][Tt][Mm][Ll]" . mhtml-mode)
|
||
;; These two must come after html, because they are more general:
|
||
("<\\?xml " . xml-mode)
|
||
(,(let* ((incomment-re "\\(?:[^-]\\|-[^-]\\)")
|
||
(comment-re (concat "\\(?:!--" incomment-re "*-->[ \t\r\n]*<\\)")))
|
||
(concat "[ \t\r\n]*<" comment-re "*!DOCTYPE "))
|
||
. sgml-mode)
|
||
("\320\317\021\340\241\261\032\341" . doc-view-mode-maybe) ; Word documents 1997-2004
|
||
("%!PS" . ps-mode)
|
||
("# xmcd " . conf-unix-mode)))
|
||
"Like `magic-mode-alist' but has lower priority than `auto-mode-alist'.
|
||
Each element looks like (REGEXP . FUNCTION) or (MATCH-FUNCTION . FUNCTION).
|
||
After visiting a file, if REGEXP matches the text at the beginning of the
|
||
buffer (case-sensitively), or calling MATCH-FUNCTION returns non-nil,
|
||
`normal-mode' will call FUNCTION, provided that `magic-mode-alist' and
|
||
`auto-mode-alist' have not specified a mode for this file.
|
||
|
||
If FUNCTION is nil, then it is not called.")
|
||
(put 'magic-fallback-mode-alist 'risky-local-variable t)
|
||
|
||
(defvar magic-mode-regexp-match-limit 4000
|
||
"Upper limit on `magic-mode-alist' regexp matches.
|
||
Also applies to `magic-fallback-mode-alist'.")
|
||
|
||
(defun set-auto-mode--apply-alist (alist keep-mode-if-same dir-local)
|
||
"Helper function for `set-auto-mode'.
|
||
This function takes an alist of the same form as
|
||
`auto-mode-alist'. It then tries to find the appropriate match
|
||
in the alist for the current buffer; setting the mode if
|
||
possible.
|
||
Return non-nil if the mode was set, nil otherwise.
|
||
DIR-LOCAL non-nil means this call is via directory-locals, and
|
||
extra checks should be done."
|
||
(if buffer-file-name
|
||
(let (mode
|
||
(name buffer-file-name)
|
||
(remote-id (file-remote-p buffer-file-name))
|
||
(case-insensitive-p (file-name-case-insensitive-p
|
||
buffer-file-name)))
|
||
;; Remove backup-suffixes from file name.
|
||
(setq name (file-name-sans-versions name))
|
||
;; Remove remote file name identification.
|
||
(when (and (stringp remote-id)
|
||
(string-match (regexp-quote remote-id) name))
|
||
(setq name (substring name (match-end 0))))
|
||
(while name
|
||
;; Find first matching alist entry.
|
||
(setq mode
|
||
(if case-insensitive-p
|
||
;; Filesystem is case-insensitive.
|
||
(let ((case-fold-search t))
|
||
(assoc-default name alist 'string-match))
|
||
;; Filesystem is case-sensitive.
|
||
(or
|
||
;; First match case-sensitively.
|
||
(let ((case-fold-search nil))
|
||
(assoc-default name alist 'string-match))
|
||
;; Fallback to case-insensitive match.
|
||
(and auto-mode-case-fold
|
||
(let ((case-fold-search t))
|
||
(assoc-default name alist 'string-match))))))
|
||
(if (and mode
|
||
(not (functionp mode))
|
||
(consp mode)
|
||
(cadr mode))
|
||
(setq mode (car mode)
|
||
name (substring name 0 (match-beginning 0)))
|
||
(setq name nil)))
|
||
(when (and dir-local mode
|
||
(not (set-auto-mode--dir-local-valid-p mode)))
|
||
(message "Ignoring invalid mode `%s'" mode)
|
||
(setq mode nil))
|
||
(when mode
|
||
(set-auto-mode-0 mode keep-mode-if-same)
|
||
t))))
|
||
|
||
(defun set-auto-mode--dir-local-valid-p (mode)
|
||
"Say whether MODE can be used in a .dir-local.el `auto-mode-alist'."
|
||
(and (symbolp mode)
|
||
(string-suffix-p "-mode" (symbol-name mode))
|
||
(commandp mode)
|
||
(not (provided-mode-derived-p mode 'special-mode))))
|
||
|
||
(defun set-auto-mode (&optional keep-mode-if-same)
|
||
"Select major mode appropriate for current buffer.
|
||
|
||
To find the right major mode, this function checks for a -*- mode tag
|
||
checks for a `mode:' entry in the Local Variables section of the file,
|
||
checks if there an `auto-mode-alist' entry in `.dir-locals.el',
|
||
checks if it uses an interpreter listed in `interpreter-mode-alist',
|
||
matches the buffer beginning against `magic-mode-alist',
|
||
compares the file name against the entries in `auto-mode-alist',
|
||
then matches the buffer beginning against `magic-fallback-mode-alist'.
|
||
It also obeys `major-mode-remap-alist' and `major-mode-remap-defaults'.
|
||
|
||
If `enable-local-variables' is nil, or if the file name matches
|
||
`inhibit-local-variables-regexps', this function does not check
|
||
for any mode: tag anywhere in the file. If `local-enable-local-variables'
|
||
is nil, then the only mode: tag that can be relevant is a -*- one.
|
||
|
||
If the optional argument KEEP-MODE-IF-SAME is non-nil, then we
|
||
set the major mode only if that would change it. In other words
|
||
we don't actually set it to the same mode the buffer already has."
|
||
;; Look for -*-MODENAME-*- or -*- ... mode: MODENAME; ... -*-
|
||
(let ((try-locals (not (inhibit-local-variables-p)))
|
||
end modes)
|
||
;; Once we drop the deprecated feature where mode: is also allowed to
|
||
;; specify minor-modes (ie, there can be more than one "mode:"), we can
|
||
;; remove this section and just let (hack-local-variables t) handle it.
|
||
;; Find a -*- mode tag.
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||
(skip-chars-forward " \t\n")
|
||
;; Note by design local-enable-local-variables does not matter here.
|
||
(and enable-local-variables
|
||
try-locals
|
||
(setq end (set-auto-mode-1))
|
||
(if (save-excursion (search-forward ":" end t))
|
||
;; Find all specifications for the `mode:' variable
|
||
;; and execute them left to right.
|
||
(while (let ((case-fold-search t))
|
||
(or (and (looking-at "mode:")
|
||
(goto-char (match-end 0)))
|
||
(re-search-forward "[ \t;]mode:" end t)))
|
||
(skip-chars-forward " \t")
|
||
(let ((beg (point)))
|
||
(if (search-forward ";" end t)
|
||
(forward-char -1)
|
||
(goto-char end))
|
||
(skip-chars-backward " \t")
|
||
(push (intern (concat (downcase (buffer-substring beg (point))) "-mode"))
|
||
modes)))
|
||
;; Simple -*-MODE-*- case.
|
||
(push (intern (concat (downcase (buffer-substring (point) end))
|
||
"-mode"))
|
||
modes))))
|
||
(or
|
||
;; If we found modes to use, invoke them now, outside the save-excursion.
|
||
;; Presume `modes' holds a major mode followed by minor modes.
|
||
(let ((done ()))
|
||
(dolist (mode (nreverse modes))
|
||
(if (eq done :keep)
|
||
;; `keep-mode-if-same' is set and the (major) mode
|
||
;; was already set. Refrain from calling the following
|
||
;; minor modes since they have already been set.
|
||
;; It was especially important in the past when calling
|
||
;; minor modes without an arg would toggle them, but it's
|
||
;; still preferable to avoid re-enabling them,
|
||
nil
|
||
(let ((res (set-auto-mode-0 mode keep-mode-if-same)))
|
||
(setq done (or res done)))))
|
||
done)
|
||
;; Check for auto-mode-alist entry in dir-locals.
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Directory-local variables error: %s"
|
||
;; Note this is a no-op if enable-local-variables is nil.
|
||
(let* ((mode-alist (cdr (hack-dir-local--get-variables
|
||
(lambda (key) (eq key 'auto-mode-alist))))))
|
||
(set-auto-mode--apply-alist mode-alist keep-mode-if-same t)))
|
||
(let ((mode (hack-local-variables t (not try-locals))))
|
||
(unless (memq mode modes) ; already tried and failed
|
||
(set-auto-mode-0 mode keep-mode-if-same)))
|
||
;; If we didn't, look for an interpreter specified in the first line.
|
||
;; As a special case, allow for things like "#!/bin/env perl", which
|
||
;; finds the interpreter anywhere in $PATH.
|
||
(when-let
|
||
((interp (save-excursion
|
||
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||
(if (looking-at auto-mode-interpreter-regexp)
|
||
(match-string 2))))
|
||
;; Map interpreter name to a mode, signaling we're done at the
|
||
;; same time.
|
||
(mode (assoc-default
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory interp)
|
||
(mapcar (lambda (e)
|
||
(cons
|
||
(format "\\`%s\\'" (car e))
|
||
(cdr e)))
|
||
interpreter-mode-alist)
|
||
#'string-match-p)))
|
||
;; If we found an interpreter mode to use, invoke it now.
|
||
(set-auto-mode-0 mode keep-mode-if-same))
|
||
;; Next try matching the buffer beginning against magic-mode-alist.
|
||
(let ((mode (save-excursion
|
||
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||
(save-restriction
|
||
(narrow-to-region (point-min)
|
||
(min (point-max)
|
||
(+ (point-min) magic-mode-regexp-match-limit)))
|
||
(assoc-default
|
||
nil magic-mode-alist
|
||
(lambda (re _dummy)
|
||
(cond
|
||
((functionp re)
|
||
(funcall re))
|
||
((stringp re)
|
||
(let ((case-fold-search nil))
|
||
(looking-at re)))
|
||
(t
|
||
(error
|
||
"Problem in magic-mode-alist with element %s"
|
||
re)))))))))
|
||
(set-auto-mode-0 mode keep-mode-if-same))
|
||
;; Next compare the filename against the entries in auto-mode-alist.
|
||
(set-auto-mode--apply-alist auto-mode-alist
|
||
keep-mode-if-same nil)
|
||
;; Next try matching the buffer beginning against magic-fallback-mode-alist.
|
||
(let ((mode (save-excursion
|
||
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||
(save-restriction
|
||
(narrow-to-region (point-min)
|
||
(min (point-max)
|
||
(+ (point-min) magic-mode-regexp-match-limit)))
|
||
(assoc-default nil magic-fallback-mode-alist
|
||
(lambda (re _dummy)
|
||
(cond
|
||
((functionp re)
|
||
(funcall re))
|
||
((stringp re)
|
||
(let ((case-fold-search nil))
|
||
(looking-at re)))
|
||
(t
|
||
(error
|
||
"Problem with magic-fallback-mode-alist element: %s"
|
||
re)))))))))
|
||
(set-auto-mode-0 mode keep-mode-if-same))
|
||
(set-buffer-major-mode (current-buffer)))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar-local set-auto-mode--last nil
|
||
"Remember the mode we have set via `set-auto-mode-0'.")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom major-mode-remap-alist nil
|
||
"Alist mapping file-specified mode to actual mode.
|
||
Every entry is of the form (MODE . FUNCTION) which means that in order
|
||
to activate the major mode MODE (specified via something like
|
||
`auto-mode-alist', file-local variables, ...) we should actually call
|
||
FUNCTION instead.
|
||
FUNCTION can be nil to hide other entries (either in this var or in
|
||
`major-mode-remap-defaults') and means that we should call MODE."
|
||
:type '(alist (symbol) (function)))
|
||
|
||
(defvar major-mode-remap-defaults nil
|
||
"Alist mapping file-specified mode to actual mode.
|
||
This works like `major-mode-remap-alist' except it has lower priority
|
||
and it is meant to be modified by packages rather than users.")
|
||
|
||
(defun major-mode-remap (mode)
|
||
"Return the function to use to enable MODE."
|
||
(or (cdr (or (assq mode major-mode-remap-alist)
|
||
(assq mode major-mode-remap-defaults)))
|
||
mode))
|
||
|
||
;; When `keep-mode-if-same' is set, we are working on behalf of
|
||
;; set-visited-file-name. In that case, if the major mode specified is the
|
||
;; same one we already have, don't actually reset it. We don't want to lose
|
||
;; minor modes such as Font Lock.
|
||
(defun set-auto-mode-0 (mode &optional keep-mode-if-same)
|
||
"Apply MODE and return it.
|
||
If optional arg KEEP-MODE-IF-SAME is non-nil, MODE is chased of
|
||
any aliases and compared to current major mode. If they are the
|
||
same, do nothing and return `:keep'.
|
||
Return nil if MODE could not be applied."
|
||
(when mode
|
||
(if (and keep-mode-if-same
|
||
(or (eq (indirect-function mode)
|
||
(indirect-function major-mode))
|
||
(and set-auto-mode--last
|
||
(eq mode (car set-auto-mode--last))
|
||
(eq major-mode (cdr set-auto-mode--last)))))
|
||
:keep
|
||
(let ((modefun (major-mode-remap mode)))
|
||
(if (not (functionp modefun))
|
||
(progn
|
||
(message "Ignoring unknown mode `%s'%s" mode
|
||
(if (eq mode modefun) ""
|
||
(format " (remapped to `%S')" modefun)))
|
||
nil)
|
||
(funcall modefun)
|
||
(unless (or (eq mode major-mode) ;`set-auto-mode--last' is overkill.
|
||
;; `modefun' is something like a minor mode.
|
||
(local-variable-p 'set-auto-mode--last))
|
||
(setq set-auto-mode--last (cons mode major-mode)))
|
||
mode)))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar file-auto-mode-skip "^\\(#!\\|'\\\\\"\\)"
|
||
"Regexp of lines to skip when looking for file-local settings.
|
||
If the first line matches this regular expression, then the -*-...-*- file-
|
||
local settings will be consulted on the second line instead of the first.")
|
||
|
||
(defun set-auto-mode-1 ()
|
||
"Find the -*- spec in the buffer.
|
||
Call with point at the place to start searching from.
|
||
If one is found, set point to the beginning and return the position
|
||
of the end. Otherwise, return nil; may change point.
|
||
The variable `inhibit-local-variables-regexps' can cause a -*- spec to
|
||
be ignored; but `enable-local-variables' and `local-enable-local-variables'
|
||
have no effect."
|
||
(let (beg end)
|
||
(and
|
||
;; Don't look for -*- if this file name matches any
|
||
;; of the regexps in inhibit-local-variables-regexps.
|
||
(not (inhibit-local-variables-p))
|
||
(search-forward "-*-" (line-end-position
|
||
;; If the file begins with "#!" (exec
|
||
;; interpreter magic), look for mode frobs
|
||
;; in the first two lines. You cannot
|
||
;; necessarily put them in the first line
|
||
;; of such a file without screwing up the
|
||
;; interpreter invocation. The same holds
|
||
;; for '\" in man pages (preprocessor
|
||
;; magic for the `man' program).
|
||
(and (looking-at file-auto-mode-skip) 2))
|
||
t)
|
||
(progn
|
||
(skip-chars-forward " \t")
|
||
(setq beg (point))
|
||
(search-forward "-*-" (line-end-position) t))
|
||
(progn
|
||
(forward-char -3)
|
||
(skip-chars-backward " \t")
|
||
(setq end (point))
|
||
(goto-char beg)
|
||
end))))
|
||
|
||
;;; Handling file local variables
|
||
|
||
(defvar ignored-local-variables
|
||
'(ignored-local-variables safe-local-variable-values
|
||
file-local-variables-alist dir-local-variables-alist)
|
||
"Variables to be ignored in a file's local variable spec.")
|
||
(put 'ignored-local-variables 'risky-local-variable t)
|
||
|
||
(defvar hack-local-variables-hook nil
|
||
"Normal hook run after processing a file's local variables specs.
|
||
Major modes can use this to examine user-specified local variables
|
||
in order to initialize other data structure based on them.")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom safe-local-variable-values nil
|
||
"List of variable-value pairs that are considered safe.
|
||
Each element is a cons cell (VAR . VAL), where VAR is a variable
|
||
symbol and VAL is a value that is considered safe.
|
||
|
||
Also see `ignored-local-variable-values'."
|
||
:risky t
|
||
:group 'find-file
|
||
:type 'alist)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom ignored-local-variable-values nil
|
||
"List of variable-value pairs that should always be ignored.
|
||
Each element is a cons cell (VAR . VAL), where VAR is a variable
|
||
symbol and VAL is its value; if VAR is set to VAL by a file-local
|
||
variables section, that setting should be ignored.
|
||
|
||
Also see `safe-local-variable-values'."
|
||
:risky t
|
||
:group 'find-file
|
||
:type 'alist
|
||
:version "28.1")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom safe-local-eval-forms
|
||
;; This should be here at least as long as Emacs supports write-file-hooks.
|
||
'((add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp)
|
||
(add-hook 'write-file-functions 'time-stamp)
|
||
(add-hook 'before-save-hook 'time-stamp nil t)
|
||
(add-hook 'before-save-hook 'delete-trailing-whitespace nil t))
|
||
"Expressions that are considered safe in an `eval:' local variable.
|
||
Add expressions to this list if you want Emacs to evaluate them, when
|
||
they appear in an `eval' local variable specification, without first
|
||
asking you for confirmation."
|
||
:risky t
|
||
:group 'find-file
|
||
:version "24.1" ; added write-file-hooks
|
||
:type '(repeat sexp))
|
||
|
||
;; Risky local variables:
|
||
(mapc (lambda (var) (put var 'risky-local-variable t))
|
||
'(after-load-alist
|
||
buffer-auto-save-file-name
|
||
buffer-file-name
|
||
buffer-file-truename
|
||
buffer-undo-list
|
||
debugger
|
||
default-text-properties
|
||
eval
|
||
exec-directory
|
||
exec-path
|
||
file-name-handler-alist
|
||
frame-title-format
|
||
global-mode-string
|
||
header-line-format
|
||
icon-title-format
|
||
inhibit-quit
|
||
load-path
|
||
max-lisp-eval-depth
|
||
minor-mode-map-alist
|
||
minor-mode-overriding-map-alist
|
||
mode-line-format
|
||
mode-name
|
||
overriding-local-map
|
||
overriding-terminal-local-map
|
||
process-environment
|
||
standard-input
|
||
standard-output
|
||
unread-command-events))
|
||
|
||
;; Safe local variables:
|
||
;;
|
||
;; For variables defined by major modes, the safety declarations can go into
|
||
;; the major mode's file, since that will be loaded before file variables are
|
||
;; processed.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; For variables defined by minor modes, put the safety declarations in the
|
||
;; file defining the minor mode after the defcustom/defvar using an autoload
|
||
;; cookie, e.g.:
|
||
;;
|
||
;; ;;;###autoload(put 'variable 'safe-local-variable 'stringp)
|
||
;;
|
||
;; Otherwise, when Emacs visits a file specifying that local variable, the
|
||
;; minor mode file may not be loaded yet.
|
||
;;
|
||
;; For variables defined in the C source code the declaration should go here:
|
||
|
||
(dolist (pair
|
||
'((buffer-read-only . booleanp) ;; C source code
|
||
(default-directory . stringp) ;; C source code
|
||
(fill-column . integerp) ;; C source code
|
||
(indent-tabs-mode . booleanp) ;; C source code
|
||
(left-margin . integerp) ;; C source code
|
||
(inhibit-compacting-font-caches . booleanp) ;; C source code
|
||
(no-update-autoloads . booleanp)
|
||
(lexical-binding . booleanp) ;; C source code
|
||
(tab-width . integerp) ;; C source code
|
||
(truncate-lines . booleanp) ;; C source code
|
||
(word-wrap . booleanp) ;; C source code
|
||
(bidi-display-reordering . booleanp))) ;; C source code
|
||
(put (car pair) 'safe-local-variable (cdr pair)))
|
||
|
||
(put 'bidi-paragraph-direction 'safe-local-variable
|
||
(lambda (v) (memq v '(nil right-to-left left-to-right))))
|
||
|
||
(put 'c-set-style 'safe-local-eval-function t)
|
||
|
||
(defvar-local file-local-variables-alist nil
|
||
"Alist of file-local variable settings in the current buffer.
|
||
Each element in this list has the form (VAR . VALUE), where VAR
|
||
is a file-local variable (a symbol) and VALUE is the value
|
||
specified. The actual value in the buffer may differ from VALUE,
|
||
if it is changed by the major or minor modes, or by the user.")
|
||
(put 'file-local-variables-alist 'permanent-local t)
|
||
|
||
(defvar-local dir-local-variables-alist nil
|
||
"Alist of directory-local variable settings in the current buffer.
|
||
Each element in this list has the form (VAR . VALUE), where VAR
|
||
is a directory-local variable (a symbol) and VALUE is the value
|
||
specified in .dir-locals.el. The actual value in the buffer
|
||
may differ from VALUE, if it is changed by the major or minor modes,
|
||
or by the user.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar before-hack-local-variables-hook nil
|
||
"Normal hook run before setting file-local variables.
|
||
It is called after checking for unsafe/risky variables and
|
||
setting `file-local-variables-alist', and before applying the
|
||
variables stored in `file-local-variables-alist'. A hook
|
||
function is allowed to change the contents of this alist.
|
||
|
||
This hook is called only if there is at least one file-local
|
||
variable to set.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar permanently-enabled-local-variables
|
||
'(lexical-binding read-symbol-shorthands)
|
||
"A list of file-local variables that are always enabled.
|
||
This overrides any `enable-local-variables' setting.")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom safe-local-variable-directories '()
|
||
"A list of directories where local variables are always enabled.
|
||
Directory-local variables loaded from these directories, such as the
|
||
variables in .dir-locals.el, will be enabled even if they are risky.
|
||
The names of the directories in the list must be absolute, and must
|
||
end in a slash. Remote directories can be included if the
|
||
variable `enable-remote-dir-locals' is non-nil."
|
||
:version "30.1"
|
||
:type '(repeat string)
|
||
:risky t
|
||
:group 'find-file)
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-local-variables-confirm (all-vars unsafe-vars risky-vars dir-name)
|
||
"Get confirmation before setting up local variable values.
|
||
ALL-VARS is the list of all variables to be set up.
|
||
UNSAFE-VARS is the list of those that aren't marked as safe or risky.
|
||
RISKY-VARS is the list of those that are marked as risky.
|
||
If these settings come from directory-local variables, then
|
||
DIR-NAME is the name of the associated directory. Otherwise it is nil."
|
||
(unless noninteractive
|
||
(let ((name (cond (dir-name)
|
||
(buffer-file-name
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name))
|
||
((concat "buffer " (buffer-name)))))
|
||
(offer-save (and (eq enable-local-variables t)
|
||
unsafe-vars))
|
||
(buf (get-buffer-create "*Local Variables*")))
|
||
;; Set up the contents of the *Local Variables* buffer.
|
||
(with-current-buffer buf
|
||
(erase-buffer)
|
||
(cond
|
||
(unsafe-vars
|
||
(insert "The local variables list in " name
|
||
"\nor .dir-locals.el contains values that may not be safe (*)"
|
||
(if risky-vars
|
||
", and variables that are risky (**)."
|
||
".")))
|
||
(risky-vars
|
||
(insert "The local variables list in " name
|
||
"\ncontains variables that are risky (**)."))
|
||
(t
|
||
(insert "A local variables list is specified in " name ".")))
|
||
(insert "\n\nDo you want to apply it? You can type
|
||
y -- to apply the local variables list.
|
||
n -- to ignore the local variables list.")
|
||
(if offer-save
|
||
(insert "
|
||
! -- to apply the local variables list, and permanently mark these
|
||
values (*) as safe (in the future, they will be set automatically.)
|
||
i -- to ignore the local variables list, and permanently mark these
|
||
values (*) as ignored"
|
||
(if dir-name "
|
||
+ -- to apply the local variables list, and trust all directory-local
|
||
variables in this directory\n\n"
|
||
"\n\n"))
|
||
(insert "\n\n"))
|
||
(dolist (elt all-vars)
|
||
(cond ((member elt unsafe-vars)
|
||
(insert " * "))
|
||
((member elt risky-vars)
|
||
(insert " ** "))
|
||
(t
|
||
(insert " ")))
|
||
(princ (car elt) buf)
|
||
(insert " : ")
|
||
;; Make strings with embedded whitespace easier to read.
|
||
(let ((print-escape-newlines t))
|
||
(prin1 (cdr elt) buf))
|
||
(insert "\n"))
|
||
(setq-local cursor-type nil)
|
||
(set-buffer-modified-p nil)
|
||
(goto-char (point-min)))
|
||
|
||
;; Display the buffer and read a choice.
|
||
(save-window-excursion
|
||
(pop-to-buffer buf '(display-buffer--maybe-at-bottom))
|
||
(let* ((exit-chars '(?y ?n ?\s))
|
||
(prompt (format "Please type %s%s: "
|
||
(if offer-save
|
||
(if dir-name
|
||
"y, n, !, i, +"
|
||
"y, n, !, i")
|
||
"y or n")
|
||
(if (< (line-number-at-pos (point-max))
|
||
(window-body-height))
|
||
""
|
||
", or C-v/M-v to scroll")))
|
||
char)
|
||
(when offer-save
|
||
(push ?i exit-chars)
|
||
(push ?! exit-chars)
|
||
(when dir-name
|
||
(push ?+ exit-chars)))
|
||
(setq char (read-char-choice prompt exit-chars))
|
||
(when (and offer-save dir-name (= char ?+))
|
||
(customize-push-and-save 'safe-local-variable-directories
|
||
(list dir-name)))
|
||
(when (and offer-save
|
||
(or (= char ?!) (= char ?i))
|
||
unsafe-vars)
|
||
(customize-push-and-save
|
||
(if (= char ?!)
|
||
'safe-local-variable-values
|
||
'ignored-local-variable-values)
|
||
unsafe-vars))
|
||
(prog1 (memq char '(?! ?\s ?y ?+))
|
||
(quit-window t)))))))
|
||
|
||
(defconst hack-local-variable-regexp
|
||
"[ \t]*\\([^][;\"'?()\\ \t\n]+\\)[ \t]*:[ \t]*")
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-local-variables-prop-line (&optional handle-mode)
|
||
"Return local variables specified in the -*- line.
|
||
Usually returns an alist of elements (VAR . VAL), where VAR is a
|
||
variable and VAL is the specified value. Ignores any
|
||
specification for `coding:', and sometimes for `mode' (which
|
||
should have already been handled by `set-auto-coding' and
|
||
`set-auto-mode', respectively). Return nil if the -*- line is
|
||
malformed.
|
||
|
||
If HANDLE-MODE is nil, we return the alist of all the local
|
||
variables in the line except `coding' as described above. If it
|
||
is neither nil nor t, we do the same, except that any settings of
|
||
`mode' and `coding' are ignored. If HANDLE-MODE is t, we ignore
|
||
all settings in the line except for `mode', which \(if present) we
|
||
return as the symbol specifying the mode."
|
||
(catch 'malformed-line
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||
(let ((end (set-auto-mode-1))
|
||
result)
|
||
(cond ((not end)
|
||
nil)
|
||
((looking-at "[ \t]*\\([^ \t\n\r:;]+\\)\\([ \t]*-\\*-\\)")
|
||
;; Simple form: "-*- MODENAME -*-".
|
||
(if (eq handle-mode t)
|
||
(intern (concat (match-string 1) "-mode"))))
|
||
(t
|
||
;; Hairy form: '-*-' [ <variable> ':' <value> ';' ]* '-*-'
|
||
;; (last ";" is optional).
|
||
;; If HANDLE-MODE is t, just check for `mode'.
|
||
;; Otherwise, parse the -*- line into the RESULT alist.
|
||
(while (not (or (and (eq handle-mode t) result)
|
||
(>= (point) end)))
|
||
(unless (looking-at hack-local-variable-regexp)
|
||
(message "Malformed mode-line: %S in buffer %S"
|
||
(buffer-substring-no-properties (point) end) (buffer-name))
|
||
(throw 'malformed-line nil))
|
||
(goto-char (match-end 0))
|
||
;; There used to be a downcase here,
|
||
;; but the manual didn't say so,
|
||
;; and people want to set var names that aren't all lc.
|
||
(let* ((key (intern (match-string 1)))
|
||
(val (save-restriction
|
||
(narrow-to-region (point) end)
|
||
;; As a defensive measure, we do not allow
|
||
;; circular data in the file-local data.
|
||
(let ((read-circle nil))
|
||
(read (current-buffer)))))
|
||
;; It is traditional to ignore
|
||
;; case when checking for `mode' in set-auto-mode,
|
||
;; so we must do that here as well.
|
||
;; That is inconsistent, but we're stuck with it.
|
||
;; The same can be said for `coding' in set-auto-coding.
|
||
(keyname (downcase (symbol-name key))))
|
||
(cond
|
||
((eq handle-mode t)
|
||
(and (equal keyname "mode")
|
||
(setq result
|
||
(intern (concat (downcase (symbol-name val))
|
||
"-mode")))))
|
||
((equal keyname "coding"))
|
||
(t
|
||
(when (or (not handle-mode)
|
||
(not (equal keyname "mode")))
|
||
(condition-case nil
|
||
(push (cons (cond ((eq key 'eval) 'eval)
|
||
;; Downcase "Mode:".
|
||
((equal keyname "mode") 'mode)
|
||
(t (indirect-variable key)))
|
||
val)
|
||
result)
|
||
(error nil)))))
|
||
(skip-chars-forward " \t;")))
|
||
result))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-local-variables-filter (variables dir-name)
|
||
"Filter local variable settings, querying the user if necessary.
|
||
VARIABLES is the alist of variable-value settings. This alist is
|
||
filtered based on the values of `ignored-local-variables',
|
||
`enable-local-eval', `enable-local-variables', and (if necessary)
|
||
user interaction. The results are added to
|
||
`file-local-variables-alist', without applying them.
|
||
If these settings come from directory-local variables, then
|
||
DIR-NAME is the name of the associated directory. Otherwise it is nil."
|
||
;; Find those variables that we may want to save to
|
||
;; `safe-local-variable-values'.
|
||
(let (all-vars risky-vars unsafe-vars)
|
||
(dolist (elt variables)
|
||
(let ((var (car elt))
|
||
(val (cdr elt)))
|
||
(cond ((memq var ignored-local-variables)
|
||
;; Ignore any variable in `ignored-local-variables'.
|
||
nil)
|
||
;; Ignore variables with the specified values.
|
||
((member elt ignored-local-variable-values)
|
||
nil)
|
||
;; Obey `enable-local-eval'.
|
||
((eq var 'eval)
|
||
(when enable-local-eval
|
||
(let ((safe (or (hack-one-local-variable-eval-safep val)
|
||
;; In case previously marked safe (bug#5636).
|
||
(safe-local-variable-p var val))))
|
||
;; If not safe and e-l-v = :safe, ignore totally.
|
||
(when (or safe (not (eq enable-local-variables :safe)))
|
||
(push elt all-vars)
|
||
(or (eq enable-local-eval t)
|
||
safe
|
||
(push elt unsafe-vars))))))
|
||
;; Ignore duplicates (except `mode') in the present list.
|
||
((and (assq var all-vars) (not (eq var 'mode))) nil)
|
||
;; Accept known-safe variables.
|
||
((or (memq var '(mode unibyte coding))
|
||
(safe-local-variable-p var val))
|
||
(push elt all-vars))
|
||
;; The variable is either risky or unsafe:
|
||
((not (eq enable-local-variables :safe))
|
||
(push elt all-vars)
|
||
(if (risky-local-variable-p var val)
|
||
(push elt risky-vars)
|
||
(push elt unsafe-vars))))))
|
||
(and all-vars
|
||
;; Query, unless all vars are safe or user wants no querying.
|
||
(or (and (eq enable-local-variables t)
|
||
(null unsafe-vars)
|
||
(null risky-vars))
|
||
(memq enable-local-variables '(:all :safe))
|
||
(delq nil (mapcar (lambda (dir)
|
||
(and dir-name dir
|
||
(file-equal-p dir dir-name)))
|
||
safe-local-variable-directories))
|
||
(hack-local-variables-confirm all-vars unsafe-vars
|
||
risky-vars dir-name))
|
||
(dolist (elt all-vars)
|
||
(unless (memq (car elt) '(eval mode))
|
||
(unless dir-name
|
||
(setq dir-local-variables-alist
|
||
(assq-delete-all (car elt) dir-local-variables-alist)))
|
||
(setq file-local-variables-alist
|
||
(assq-delete-all (car elt) file-local-variables-alist)))
|
||
(push elt file-local-variables-alist)))))
|
||
|
||
;; TODO? Warn once per file rather than once per session?
|
||
(defvar hack-local-variables--warned-lexical nil)
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-local-variables (&optional handle-mode inhibit-locals)
|
||
"Parse and put into effect this buffer's local variables spec.
|
||
For buffers visiting files, also puts into effect directory-local
|
||
variables.
|
||
|
||
Uses `hack-local-variables-apply' to apply the variables.
|
||
|
||
If `enable-local-variables' or `local-enable-local-variables' is
|
||
nil, or INHIBIT-LOCALS is non-nil, this function disregards all
|
||
normal local variables. If `inhibit-local-variables-regexps'
|
||
applies to the file in question, the file is not scanned for
|
||
local variables, but directory-local variables may still be
|
||
applied.
|
||
|
||
Variables present in `permanently-enabled-local-variables' will
|
||
still be evaluated, even if local variables are otherwise
|
||
inhibited.
|
||
|
||
If HANDLE-MODE is t, the function only checks whether a \"mode:\"
|
||
is specified, and returns the corresponding mode symbol, or nil.
|
||
In this case, try to ignore minor-modes, and return only a major-mode.
|
||
If HANDLE-MODE is nil, the function gathers all the specified local
|
||
variables. If HANDLE-MODE is neither nil nor t, the function gathers
|
||
all the specified local variables, but ignores any settings of \"mode:\"."
|
||
;; We don't let inhibit-local-variables-p influence the value of
|
||
;; enable-local-variables, because then it would affect dir-local
|
||
;; variables. We don't want to search eg tar files for file local
|
||
;; variable sections, but there is no reason dir-locals cannot apply
|
||
;; to them. The real meaning of inhibit-local-variables-p is "do
|
||
;; not scan this file for local variables".
|
||
(let ((enable-local-variables
|
||
(and (not inhibit-locals)
|
||
local-enable-local-variables enable-local-variables)))
|
||
(if (eq handle-mode t)
|
||
;; We're looking just for the major mode setting.
|
||
(and enable-local-variables
|
||
(not (inhibit-local-variables-p))
|
||
;; If HANDLE-MODE is t, and the prop line specifies a
|
||
;; mode, then we're done, and have no need to scan further.
|
||
(or (hack-local-variables-prop-line t)
|
||
;; Look for the mode elsewhere in the buffer.
|
||
(hack-local-variables--find-variables t)))
|
||
;; Normal handling of local variables.
|
||
(setq file-local-variables-alist nil)
|
||
(when (and (file-remote-p default-directory)
|
||
(fboundp 'hack-connection-local-variables)
|
||
(fboundp 'connection-local-criteria-for-default-directory))
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Connection-local variables error: %s"
|
||
;; Note this is a no-op if enable-local-variables is nil.
|
||
(hack-connection-local-variables
|
||
(connection-local-criteria-for-default-directory))))
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Directory-local variables error: %s"
|
||
;; Note this is a no-op if enable-local-variables is nil.
|
||
(hack-dir-local-variables))
|
||
(let ((result (append (hack-local-variables--find-variables handle-mode)
|
||
(hack-local-variables-prop-line handle-mode))))
|
||
(if (and enable-local-variables
|
||
(not (inhibit-local-variables-p)))
|
||
(progn
|
||
;; Set the variables.
|
||
(hack-local-variables-filter result nil)
|
||
(hack-local-variables-apply))
|
||
;; Handle `lexical-binding' and other special local
|
||
;; variables.
|
||
(dolist (variable permanently-enabled-local-variables)
|
||
(when-let ((elem (assq variable result)))
|
||
(push elem file-local-variables-alist)))
|
||
(hack-local-variables-apply))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-local-variables--find-variables (&optional handle-mode)
|
||
"Return all local variables in the current buffer.
|
||
If HANDLE-MODE is nil, we gather all the specified local
|
||
variables. If HANDLE-MODE is neither nil nor t, we do the same,
|
||
except that any settings of `mode' are ignored.
|
||
|
||
If HANDLE-MODE is t, all we do is check whether a \"mode:\"
|
||
is specified, and return the corresponding mode symbol, or nil.
|
||
In this case, we try to ignore minor-modes, and return only a
|
||
major-mode."
|
||
(let ((result nil))
|
||
;; Look for "Local variables:" line in last page.
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(goto-char (point-max))
|
||
(search-backward "\n\^L" (max (- (point-max) 3000) (point-min))
|
||
'move)
|
||
(when (let ((case-fold-search t))
|
||
(search-forward "Local Variables:" nil t))
|
||
(skip-chars-forward " \t")
|
||
;; suffix is what comes after "local variables:" in its line.
|
||
;; prefix is what comes before "local variables:" in its line.
|
||
(let ((suffix
|
||
(concat
|
||
(regexp-quote (buffer-substring (point)
|
||
(line-end-position)))
|
||
"$"))
|
||
(prefix
|
||
(concat "^" (regexp-quote
|
||
(buffer-substring (line-beginning-position)
|
||
(match-beginning 0))))))
|
||
|
||
(forward-line 1)
|
||
(let ((startpos (point))
|
||
endpos
|
||
(selective-p (eq selective-display t))
|
||
(thisbuf (current-buffer)))
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(unless (let ((case-fold-search t))
|
||
(re-search-forward
|
||
(concat prefix "[ \t]*End:[ \t]*" suffix)
|
||
nil t))
|
||
;; This used to be an error, but really all it means is
|
||
;; that this may simply not be a local-variables section,
|
||
;; so just ignore it.
|
||
(message "Local variables list is not properly terminated"))
|
||
(beginning-of-line)
|
||
(setq endpos (point)))
|
||
|
||
(with-temp-buffer
|
||
(insert-buffer-substring thisbuf startpos endpos)
|
||
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||
(if selective-p
|
||
(subst-char-in-region (point) (point-max) ?\r ?\n))
|
||
(while (not (eobp))
|
||
;; Discard the prefix.
|
||
(if (looking-at prefix)
|
||
(delete-region (point) (match-end 0))
|
||
(user-error "Local variables entry is missing the prefix"))
|
||
(end-of-line)
|
||
;; Discard the suffix.
|
||
(if (looking-back suffix (line-beginning-position))
|
||
(delete-region (match-beginning 0) (point))
|
||
(user-error "Local variables entry is missing the suffix"))
|
||
(forward-line 1))
|
||
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||
|
||
(while (not (eobp))
|
||
;; Find the variable name;
|
||
(unless (looking-at hack-local-variable-regexp)
|
||
(user-error "Malformed local variable line: %S"
|
||
(buffer-substring-no-properties
|
||
(point) (line-end-position))))
|
||
(goto-char (match-end 1))
|
||
(let* ((str (match-string 1))
|
||
(var (intern str))
|
||
val val2)
|
||
(and (equal (downcase (symbol-name var)) "mode")
|
||
(setq var 'mode))
|
||
;; Read the variable value.
|
||
(skip-chars-forward "^:")
|
||
(forward-char 1)
|
||
;; As a defensive measure, we do not allow
|
||
;; circular data in the file-local data.
|
||
(let ((read-circle nil))
|
||
(setq val (read (current-buffer))))
|
||
(if (eq handle-mode t)
|
||
(and (eq var 'mode)
|
||
;; Specifying minor-modes via mode: is
|
||
;; deprecated, but try to reject them anyway.
|
||
(not (string-match
|
||
"-minor\\'"
|
||
(setq val2 (downcase (symbol-name val)))))
|
||
(let ((mode (intern (concat val2 "-mode"))))
|
||
(when (fboundp (major-mode-remap mode))
|
||
(setq result mode))))
|
||
(cond ((eq var 'coding))
|
||
((eq var 'lexical-binding)
|
||
(unless hack-local-variables--warned-lexical
|
||
(setq hack-local-variables--warned-lexical t)
|
||
(display-warning
|
||
'files
|
||
(format-message
|
||
"%s: `lexical-binding' at end of file unreliable"
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory
|
||
;; We are called from
|
||
;; 'with-temp-buffer', so we need
|
||
;; to use 'thisbuf's name in the
|
||
;; warning message.
|
||
(or (buffer-file-name thisbuf) ""))))))
|
||
((eq var 'read-symbol-shorthands)
|
||
;; Sort automatically by shorthand length
|
||
;; in descending order.
|
||
(setq val (sort val
|
||
(lambda (sh1 sh2) (> (length (car sh1))
|
||
(length (car sh2))))))
|
||
(push (cons 'read-symbol-shorthands val) result))
|
||
((and (eq var 'mode) handle-mode))
|
||
(t
|
||
(ignore-errors
|
||
(push (cons (if (eq var 'eval)
|
||
'eval
|
||
(indirect-variable var))
|
||
val)
|
||
result))))))
|
||
(forward-line 1)))))))
|
||
result))
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-local-variables-apply ()
|
||
"Apply the elements of `file-local-variables-alist'.
|
||
If there are any elements, runs `before-hack-local-variables-hook',
|
||
then calls `hack-one-local-variable' to apply the alist elements one by one.
|
||
Finishes by running `hack-local-variables-hook', regardless of whether
|
||
the alist is empty or not.
|
||
|
||
Note that this function ignores a `mode' entry if it specifies the same
|
||
major mode as the buffer already has."
|
||
(when file-local-variables-alist
|
||
;; Any 'evals must run in the Right sequence.
|
||
(setq file-local-variables-alist
|
||
(nreverse file-local-variables-alist))
|
||
(run-hooks 'before-hack-local-variables-hook)
|
||
(dolist (elt file-local-variables-alist)
|
||
(hack-one-local-variable (car elt) (cdr elt))))
|
||
(run-hooks 'hack-local-variables-hook))
|
||
|
||
(defun safe-local-variable-p (sym val)
|
||
"Non-nil if SYM is safe as a file-local variable with value VAL.
|
||
It is safe if any of these conditions are met:
|
||
|
||
* There is a matching entry (SYM . VAL) in the
|
||
`safe-local-variable-values' user option.
|
||
|
||
* The `safe-local-variable' property of SYM is a function that
|
||
evaluates to a non-nil value with VAL as an argument."
|
||
(or (member (cons sym val) safe-local-variable-values)
|
||
(let ((safep (get sym 'safe-local-variable)))
|
||
(and (functionp safep)
|
||
;; If the function signals an error, that means it
|
||
;; can't assure us that the value is safe.
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Local variable error: %S"
|
||
(funcall safep val))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun risky-local-variable-p (sym &optional _ignored)
|
||
"Non-nil if SYM could be dangerous as a file-local variable.
|
||
It is dangerous if either of these conditions are met:
|
||
|
||
* Its `risky-local-variable' property is non-nil.
|
||
|
||
* Its name ends with \"hook(s)\", \"function(s)\", \"form(s)\", \"map\",
|
||
\"program\", \"command(s)\", \"predicate(s)\", \"frame-alist\",
|
||
\"mode-alist\", \"font-lock-(syntactic-)keyword*\",
|
||
\"map-alist\", or \"bindat-spec\"."
|
||
;; If this is an alias, check the base name.
|
||
(condition-case nil
|
||
(setq sym (indirect-variable sym))
|
||
(error nil))
|
||
(or (get sym 'risky-local-variable)
|
||
(string-match "-hooks?$\\|-functions?$\\|-forms?$\\|-program$\\|\
|
||
-commands?$\\|-predicates?$\\|font-lock-keywords$\\|font-lock-keywords\
|
||
-[0-9]+$\\|font-lock-syntactic-keywords$\\|-frame-alist$\\|-mode-alist$\\|\
|
||
-map$\\|-map-alist$\\|-bindat-spec$" (symbol-name sym))))
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-one-local-variable-quotep (exp)
|
||
(and (consp exp) (eq (car exp) 'quote) (consp (cdr exp))))
|
||
|
||
(define-obsolete-function-alias 'hack-one-local-variable-constantp
|
||
#'macroexp-const-p "29.1")
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-one-local-variable-eval-safep (exp)
|
||
"Return non-nil if it is safe to eval EXP when it is found in a file."
|
||
(or (not (consp exp))
|
||
;; Detect certain `put' expressions.
|
||
(and (eq (car exp) 'put)
|
||
(hack-one-local-variable-quotep (nth 1 exp))
|
||
(hack-one-local-variable-quotep (nth 2 exp))
|
||
(let ((prop (nth 1 (nth 2 exp)))
|
||
(val (nth 3 exp)))
|
||
(cond ((memq prop '(lisp-indent-hook
|
||
lisp-indent-function
|
||
scheme-indent-function))
|
||
;; Allow only safe values (not functions).
|
||
(or (numberp val)
|
||
(and (hack-one-local-variable-quotep val)
|
||
(eq (nth 1 val) 'defun))))
|
||
((eq prop 'edebug-form-spec)
|
||
;; Allow only indirect form specs.
|
||
;; During bootstrapping, edebug-basic-spec might not be
|
||
;; defined yet.
|
||
(and (fboundp 'edebug-basic-spec)
|
||
(hack-one-local-variable-quotep val)
|
||
(edebug-basic-spec (nth 1 val)))))))
|
||
;; Allow expressions that the user requested.
|
||
(member exp safe-local-eval-forms)
|
||
;; Certain functions can be allowed with safe arguments
|
||
;; or can specify verification functions to try.
|
||
(and (symbolp (car exp))
|
||
;; Allow (minor)-modes calls with no arguments.
|
||
;; This obsoletes the use of "mode:" for such things. (Bug#8613)
|
||
(or (and (member (cdr exp) '(nil (1) (0) (-1)))
|
||
(string-match "-mode\\'" (symbol-name (car exp))))
|
||
(let ((prop (get (car exp) 'safe-local-eval-function)))
|
||
(cond ((eq prop t)
|
||
(let ((ok t))
|
||
(dolist (arg (cdr exp))
|
||
(unless (macroexp-const-p arg)
|
||
(setq ok nil)))
|
||
ok))
|
||
((functionp prop)
|
||
(funcall prop exp))
|
||
((listp prop)
|
||
(let ((ok nil))
|
||
(dolist (function prop)
|
||
(if (funcall function exp)
|
||
(setq ok t)))
|
||
ok))))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-one-local-variable--obsolete (var)
|
||
(let ((o (get var 'byte-obsolete-variable)))
|
||
(when o
|
||
(let ((instead (nth 0 o))
|
||
(since (nth 2 o)))
|
||
(message "%s is obsolete%s; %s"
|
||
var (if since (format " (since %s)" since))
|
||
(if (stringp instead)
|
||
(substitute-command-keys instead)
|
||
(format-message "use `%s' instead" instead)))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-one-local-variable (var val)
|
||
"Set local variable VAR with value VAL.
|
||
If VAR is `mode', call `VAL-mode' as a function unless it's
|
||
already the major mode."
|
||
(pcase var
|
||
('mode
|
||
(let ((mode (intern (concat (downcase (symbol-name val))
|
||
"-mode"))))
|
||
(set-auto-mode-0 mode t)))
|
||
('eval
|
||
(pcase val
|
||
(`(add-hook ',hook . ,_) (hack-one-local-variable--obsolete hook)))
|
||
(save-excursion (eval val t)))
|
||
(_
|
||
(hack-one-local-variable--obsolete var)
|
||
;; Make sure the string has no text properties.
|
||
;; Some text properties can get evaluated in various ways,
|
||
;; so it is risky to put them on with a local variable list.
|
||
(if (stringp val)
|
||
(set-text-properties 0 (length val) nil val))
|
||
(set (make-local-variable var) val))))
|
||
|
||
;;; Handling directory-local variables, aka project settings.
|
||
|
||
(defvar dir-locals-class-alist '()
|
||
"Alist mapping directory-local variable classes (symbols) to variable lists.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar dir-locals-directory-cache '()
|
||
"List of cached directory roots for directory-local variable classes.
|
||
Each element in this list has the form (DIR CLASS MTIME).
|
||
DIR is the name of the directory.
|
||
CLASS is the name of a variable class (a symbol).
|
||
MTIME is the recorded modification time of the directory-local
|
||
variables file associated with this entry. This time is a Lisp
|
||
timestamp (the same format as `current-time'), and is
|
||
used to test whether the cache entry is still valid.
|
||
Alternatively, MTIME can be nil, which means the entry is always
|
||
considered valid.")
|
||
|
||
(defsubst dir-locals-get-class-variables (class)
|
||
"Return the variable list for CLASS."
|
||
(cdr (assq class dir-locals-class-alist)))
|
||
|
||
(defun dir-locals-collect-mode-variables (mode-variables variables)
|
||
"Collect directory-local variables from MODE-VARIABLES.
|
||
VARIABLES is the initial list of variables.
|
||
Returns the new list."
|
||
(dolist (pair mode-variables variables)
|
||
(let* ((variable (car pair))
|
||
(value (cdr pair))
|
||
(slot (assq variable variables)))
|
||
;; If variables are specified more than once, use only the last. (Why?)
|
||
;; The pseudo-variables mode and eval are different (bug#3430).
|
||
(if (and slot (not (memq variable '(mode eval))))
|
||
(setcdr slot value)
|
||
;; Need a new cons in case we setcdr later.
|
||
(push (cons variable value) variables)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun dir-locals-collect-variables (class-variables root variables
|
||
&optional predicate)
|
||
"Collect entries from CLASS-VARIABLES into VARIABLES.
|
||
ROOT is the root directory of the project.
|
||
Return the new variables list.
|
||
If PREDICATE is given, it is used to test a symbol key in the alist
|
||
to see whether it should be considered."
|
||
(let* ((file-name (or (buffer-file-name)
|
||
;; Handle non-file buffers, too.
|
||
(expand-file-name default-directory)))
|
||
(sub-file-name (if (and file-name
|
||
(file-name-absolute-p file-name))
|
||
;; FIXME: Why not use file-relative-name?
|
||
(substring file-name (length root)))))
|
||
(condition-case err
|
||
(dolist (entry class-variables variables)
|
||
(let ((key (car entry)))
|
||
(cond
|
||
((stringp key)
|
||
;; Don't include this in the previous condition, because we
|
||
;; want to filter all strings before the next condition.
|
||
(when (and sub-file-name
|
||
(>= (length sub-file-name) (length key))
|
||
(string-prefix-p key sub-file-name))
|
||
(setq variables (dir-locals-collect-variables
|
||
(cdr entry) root variables predicate))))
|
||
((if predicate
|
||
(funcall predicate key)
|
||
(or (not key)
|
||
(derived-mode-p key)))
|
||
;; If KEY is an extra parent it may remain not loaded
|
||
;; (hence with some of its mode-specific vars missing their
|
||
;; `safe-local-variable' property), leading to spurious
|
||
;; prompts about unsafe vars (bug#68246).
|
||
(if (and (symbolp key) (autoloadp (indirect-function key)))
|
||
(ignore-errors (autoload-do-load (indirect-function key))))
|
||
(let* ((alist (cdr entry))
|
||
(subdirs (assq 'subdirs alist)))
|
||
(if (or (not subdirs)
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq alist (remq subdirs alist))
|
||
(cdr-safe subdirs))
|
||
;; TODO someone might want to extend this to allow
|
||
;; integer values for subdir, where N means
|
||
;; variables apply to this directory and N levels
|
||
;; below it (0 == nil).
|
||
(equal root (expand-file-name default-directory)))
|
||
(setq variables (dir-locals-collect-mode-variables
|
||
alist variables))))))))
|
||
(error
|
||
;; The file's content might be invalid (e.g. have a merge conflict), but
|
||
;; that shouldn't prevent the user from opening the file.
|
||
(message "%s error: %s" dir-locals-file (error-message-string err))
|
||
nil))))
|
||
|
||
(defun dir-locals-set-directory-class (directory class &optional mtime)
|
||
"Declare that the DIRECTORY root is an instance of CLASS.
|
||
DIRECTORY is the name of a directory, a string.
|
||
CLASS is the name of a project class, a symbol.
|
||
MTIME is either the modification time of the directory-local
|
||
variables file that defined this class, or nil.
|
||
|
||
When a file beneath DIRECTORY is visited, the mode-specific
|
||
variables from CLASS are applied to the buffer. The variables
|
||
for a class are defined using `dir-locals-set-class-variables'."
|
||
(setq directory (file-name-as-directory (expand-file-name directory)))
|
||
(unless (assq class dir-locals-class-alist)
|
||
(error "No such class `%s'" (symbol-name class)))
|
||
(push (list directory class mtime) dir-locals-directory-cache))
|
||
|
||
(defun dir-locals-set-class-variables (class variables)
|
||
"Map the type CLASS to a list of variable settings.
|
||
CLASS is the project class, a symbol. VARIABLES is a list
|
||
that declares directory-local variables for the class.
|
||
An element in VARIABLES is either of the form:
|
||
(MAJOR-MODE . ALIST)
|
||
or
|
||
(DIRECTORY . LIST)
|
||
|
||
In the first form, MAJOR-MODE is a symbol, and ALIST is an alist
|
||
whose elements are of the form (VARIABLE . VALUE).
|
||
|
||
In the second form, DIRECTORY is a directory name (a string), and
|
||
LIST is a list of the form accepted by the function.
|
||
|
||
When a file is visited, the file's class is found. A directory
|
||
may be assigned a class using `dir-locals-set-directory-class'.
|
||
Then variables are set in the file's buffer according to the
|
||
VARIABLES list of the class. The list is processed in order.
|
||
|
||
* If the element is of the form (MAJOR-MODE . ALIST), and the
|
||
buffer's major mode is derived from MAJOR-MODE (as determined
|
||
by `derived-mode-p'), then all the variables in ALIST are
|
||
applied. A MAJOR-MODE of nil may be used to match any buffer.
|
||
`make-local-variable' is called for each variable before it is
|
||
set.
|
||
|
||
* If the element is of the form (DIRECTORY . LIST), and DIRECTORY
|
||
is an initial substring of the file's directory, then LIST is
|
||
applied by recursively following these rules."
|
||
(setf (alist-get class dir-locals-class-alist) variables))
|
||
|
||
(defconst dir-locals-file ".dir-locals.el"
|
||
"File that contains directory-local variables.
|
||
It has to be constant to enforce uniform values across different
|
||
environments and users.
|
||
|
||
A second dir-locals file can be used by a user to specify their
|
||
personal dir-local variables even if the current directory
|
||
already has a `dir-locals-file' that is shared with other
|
||
users (such as in a git repository). The name of this second
|
||
file is derived by appending \"-2\" to the base name of
|
||
`dir-locals-file'. With the default value of `dir-locals-file',
|
||
a \".dir-locals-2.el\" file in the same directory will override
|
||
the \".dir-locals.el\".
|
||
|
||
See Info node `(elisp)Directory Local Variables' for details.")
|
||
|
||
(defun dir-locals--all-files (directory)
|
||
"Return a list of all readable dir-locals files in DIRECTORY.
|
||
The returned list is sorted by increasing priority. That is,
|
||
values specified in the last file should take precedence over
|
||
those in the first."
|
||
(when (file-readable-p directory)
|
||
(let* ((file-1 (expand-file-name (if (eq system-type 'ms-dos)
|
||
(dosified-file-name dir-locals-file)
|
||
dir-locals-file)
|
||
directory))
|
||
(file-2 (when (string-match "\\.el\\'" file-1)
|
||
(replace-match "-2.el" t nil file-1)))
|
||
(out nil))
|
||
;; The order here is important.
|
||
(dolist (f (list file-2 file-1))
|
||
(when (and f
|
||
(file-readable-p f)
|
||
;; FIXME: Aren't file-regular-p and
|
||
;; file-directory-p mutually exclusive?
|
||
(file-regular-p f)
|
||
(not (file-directory-p f)))
|
||
(push f out)))
|
||
out)))
|
||
|
||
(defun dir-locals-find-file (file)
|
||
"Find the directory-local variables for FILE.
|
||
This searches upward in the directory tree from FILE.
|
||
It stops at the first directory that has been registered in
|
||
`dir-locals-directory-cache' or contains a `dir-locals-file'.
|
||
If it finds an entry in the cache, it checks that it is valid.
|
||
A cache entry with no modification time element (normally, one that
|
||
has been assigned directly using `dir-locals-set-directory-class', not
|
||
set from a file) is always valid.
|
||
A cache entry based on a `dir-locals-file' is valid if the modification
|
||
time stored in the cache matches the current file modification time.
|
||
If not, the cache entry is cleared so that the file will be re-read.
|
||
|
||
This function returns either:
|
||
- nil (no directory local variables found),
|
||
- the matching entry from `dir-locals-directory-cache' (a list),
|
||
- or the full path to the directory (a string) containing at
|
||
least one `dir-locals-file' in the case of no valid cache
|
||
entry."
|
||
(setq file (expand-file-name file))
|
||
(let* ((locals-dir (locate-dominating-file (file-name-directory file)
|
||
#'dir-locals--all-files))
|
||
dir-elt)
|
||
;; `locate-dominating-file' may have abbreviated the name.
|
||
(when locals-dir
|
||
(setq locals-dir (expand-file-name locals-dir)))
|
||
;; Find the best cached value in `dir-locals-directory-cache'.
|
||
(dolist (elt dir-locals-directory-cache)
|
||
(when (and (string-prefix-p (car elt) file
|
||
(memq system-type
|
||
'(windows-nt cygwin ms-dos)))
|
||
(> (length (car elt)) (length (car dir-elt))))
|
||
(setq dir-elt elt)))
|
||
(if (and dir-elt
|
||
(or (null locals-dir)
|
||
(<= (length locals-dir)
|
||
(length (car dir-elt)))))
|
||
;; Found a potential cache entry. Check validity.
|
||
;; A cache entry with no MTIME is assumed to always be valid
|
||
;; (ie, set directly, not from a dir-locals file).
|
||
;; Note, we don't bother to check that there is a matching class
|
||
;; element in dir-locals-class-alist, since that's done by
|
||
;; dir-locals-set-directory-class.
|
||
(if (or (null (nth 2 dir-elt))
|
||
(let ((cached-files (dir-locals--all-files (car dir-elt))))
|
||
;; The entry MTIME should match the most recent
|
||
;; MTIME among matching files.
|
||
(and cached-files
|
||
(time-equal-p
|
||
(nth 2 dir-elt)
|
||
(let ((latest 0))
|
||
(dolist (f cached-files latest)
|
||
(let ((f-time
|
||
(file-attribute-modification-time
|
||
(file-attributes f))))
|
||
(if (time-less-p latest f-time)
|
||
(setq latest f-time)))))))))
|
||
;; This cache entry is OK.
|
||
dir-elt
|
||
;; This cache entry is invalid; clear it.
|
||
(setq dir-locals-directory-cache
|
||
(delq dir-elt dir-locals-directory-cache))
|
||
;; Return the first existing dir-locals file. Might be the same
|
||
;; as dir-elt's, might not (eg latter might have been deleted).
|
||
locals-dir)
|
||
;; No cache entry.
|
||
locals-dir)))
|
||
|
||
(declare-function map-merge-with "map" (type function &rest maps))
|
||
(declare-function map-merge "map" (type &rest maps))
|
||
|
||
(defun dir-locals--get-sort-score (node)
|
||
"Return a number used for sorting the definitions of dir locals.
|
||
NODE is assumed to be a cons cell where the car is either a
|
||
string or a symbol representing a mode name.
|
||
|
||
If it is a mode then the depth of the mode (ie, how many parents
|
||
that mode has) will be returned.
|
||
|
||
If it is a string then the length of the string plus 1000 will be
|
||
returned.
|
||
|
||
Otherwise it returns -1.
|
||
|
||
That way the value can be used to sort the list such that deeper
|
||
modes will be after the other modes. This will be followed by
|
||
directory entries in order of length. If the entries are all
|
||
applied in order then that means the more specific modes will
|
||
override the values specified by the earlier modes and directory
|
||
variables will override modes."
|
||
(let ((key (car node)))
|
||
(cond ((null key) -1)
|
||
((symbolp key) (length (derived-mode-all-parents key)))
|
||
((stringp key)
|
||
(+ 1000 (length key)))
|
||
(t -2))))
|
||
|
||
(defun dir-locals--sort-variables (variables)
|
||
"Sort VARIABLES so that applying them in order has the right effect.
|
||
The variables are compared by `dir-locals--get-sort-score'.
|
||
Directory entries are then recursively sorted using the same
|
||
criteria."
|
||
(setq variables (sort variables
|
||
(lambda (a b)
|
||
(< (dir-locals--get-sort-score a)
|
||
(dir-locals--get-sort-score b)))))
|
||
(dolist (n variables)
|
||
(when (stringp (car n))
|
||
(setcdr n (dir-locals--sort-variables (cdr n)))))
|
||
|
||
variables)
|
||
|
||
(defun dir-locals-read-from-dir (dir)
|
||
"Load all variables files in DIR and register a new class and instance.
|
||
DIR is the absolute name of a directory, which must contain at
|
||
least one dir-local file (which is a file holding variables to
|
||
apply).
|
||
Return the new class name, which is a symbol named DIR."
|
||
(let* ((class-name (intern dir))
|
||
(files (dir-locals--all-files dir))
|
||
;; If there was a problem, use the values we could get but
|
||
;; don't let the cache prevent future reads.
|
||
(latest 0) (success 0)
|
||
(variables))
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Error reading dir-locals: %S"
|
||
(dolist (file files)
|
||
(let ((file-time (file-attribute-modification-time
|
||
(file-attributes (file-chase-links file)))))
|
||
(if (time-less-p latest file-time)
|
||
(setq latest file-time)))
|
||
(with-temp-buffer
|
||
(insert-file-contents file)
|
||
(let ((newvars
|
||
(condition-case-unless-debug nil
|
||
;; As a defensive measure, we do not allow
|
||
;; circular data in the file/dir-local data.
|
||
(let ((read-circle nil))
|
||
(read (current-buffer)))
|
||
(end-of-file nil))))
|
||
(unless (listp newvars)
|
||
(message "Invalid data in %s: %s" file newvars)
|
||
(setq newvars nil))
|
||
(setq variables
|
||
;; Try and avoid loading `map' since that also loads cl-lib
|
||
;; which then might hamper bytecomp warnings (bug#30635).
|
||
(if (not (and newvars variables))
|
||
(or newvars variables)
|
||
(require 'map)
|
||
;; We want to make the variable setting from
|
||
;; newvars (the second .dir-locals file) take
|
||
;; presedence over the old variables, but we also
|
||
;; want to preserve all `eval' elements as is from
|
||
;; both lists.
|
||
(map-merge-with
|
||
'list
|
||
(lambda (a b)
|
||
(let ((ag
|
||
(seq-group-by
|
||
(lambda (e) (eq (car e) 'eval)) a))
|
||
(bg
|
||
(seq-group-by
|
||
(lambda (e) (eq (car e) 'eval)) b)))
|
||
(append (map-merge 'list
|
||
(assoc-default nil ag)
|
||
(assoc-default nil bg))
|
||
(assoc-default t ag)
|
||
(assoc-default t bg))))
|
||
variables
|
||
newvars))))))
|
||
(setq success latest))
|
||
(setq variables (dir-locals--sort-variables variables))
|
||
(dir-locals-set-class-variables class-name variables)
|
||
(dir-locals-set-directory-class dir class-name success)
|
||
class-name))
|
||
|
||
(define-obsolete-function-alias 'dir-locals-read-from-file
|
||
'dir-locals-read-from-dir "25.1")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom enable-remote-dir-locals nil
|
||
"Non-nil means dir-local variables will be applied to remote files."
|
||
:version "24.3"
|
||
:type 'boolean
|
||
:group 'find-file)
|
||
|
||
(defvar hack-dir-local-variables--warned-coding nil)
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-dir-local--get-variables (predicate)
|
||
"Read per-directory local variables for the current buffer.
|
||
Return a cons of the form (DIR . ALIST), where DIR is the
|
||
directory name (maybe nil) and ALIST is an alist of all variables
|
||
that might apply. These will be filtered according to the
|
||
buffer's directory, but not according to its mode.
|
||
PREDICATE is passed to `dir-locals-collect-variables'."
|
||
(when (and enable-local-variables
|
||
enable-dir-local-variables
|
||
(or enable-remote-dir-locals
|
||
(not (file-remote-p (or (buffer-file-name)
|
||
default-directory)))))
|
||
;; Find the variables file.
|
||
(let ((dir-or-cache (dir-locals-find-file
|
||
(or (buffer-file-name) default-directory)))
|
||
(class nil)
|
||
(dir-name nil))
|
||
(cond
|
||
((stringp dir-or-cache)
|
||
(setq dir-name dir-or-cache
|
||
class (dir-locals-read-from-dir dir-or-cache)))
|
||
((consp dir-or-cache)
|
||
(setq dir-name (nth 0 dir-or-cache))
|
||
(setq class (nth 1 dir-or-cache))))
|
||
(when class
|
||
(cons dir-name
|
||
(dir-locals-collect-variables
|
||
(dir-locals-get-class-variables class)
|
||
dir-name nil predicate))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-dir-local-variables ()
|
||
"Read per-directory local variables for the current buffer.
|
||
Store the directory-local variables in `dir-local-variables-alist'
|
||
and `file-local-variables-alist', without applying them.
|
||
|
||
This does nothing if either `enable-local-variables' or
|
||
`enable-dir-local-variables' are nil."
|
||
(let* ((items (hack-dir-local--get-variables nil))
|
||
(dir-name (car items))
|
||
(variables (cdr items)))
|
||
(when variables
|
||
(dolist (elt variables)
|
||
(if (eq (car elt) 'coding)
|
||
(unless hack-dir-local-variables--warned-coding
|
||
(setq hack-dir-local-variables--warned-coding t)
|
||
(display-warning 'files
|
||
"Coding cannot be specified by dir-locals"))
|
||
(unless (memq (car elt) '(eval mode))
|
||
(setq dir-local-variables-alist
|
||
(assq-delete-all (car elt) dir-local-variables-alist)))
|
||
(push elt dir-local-variables-alist)))
|
||
(hack-local-variables-filter variables dir-name))))
|
||
|
||
(defun hack-dir-local-variables-non-file-buffer ()
|
||
"Apply directory-local variables to a non-file buffer.
|
||
For non-file buffers, such as Dired buffers, directory-local
|
||
variables are looked for in `default-directory' and its parent
|
||
directories."
|
||
(hack-dir-local-variables)
|
||
(hack-local-variables-apply))
|
||
|
||
|
||
(defcustom change-major-mode-with-file-name t
|
||
"Non-nil means \\[write-file] should set the major mode from the file name.
|
||
However, the mode will not be changed if
|
||
\(1) a local variables list or the `-*-' line specifies a major mode, or
|
||
\(2) the current major mode is a \"special\" mode,
|
||
not suitable for ordinary files, or
|
||
\(3) the new file name does not particularly specify any mode."
|
||
:type 'boolean
|
||
:group 'editing-basics)
|
||
|
||
(defvar after-set-visited-file-name-hook nil
|
||
"Normal hook run just after setting visited file name of current buffer.")
|
||
|
||
(defun set-visited-file-name (filename &optional no-query along-with-file)
|
||
"Change name of file visited in current buffer to FILENAME.
|
||
This also renames the buffer to correspond to the new file.
|
||
The next time the buffer is saved it will go in the newly specified file.
|
||
FILENAME nil or an empty string means mark buffer as not visiting any file.
|
||
Remember to delete the initial contents of the minibuffer
|
||
if you wish to pass an empty string as the argument.
|
||
|
||
The optional second argument NO-QUERY, if non-nil, inhibits asking for
|
||
confirmation in the case where another buffer is already visiting FILENAME.
|
||
|
||
The optional third argument ALONG-WITH-FILE, if non-nil, means that
|
||
the old visited file has been renamed to the new name FILENAME."
|
||
(interactive "FSet visited file name: ")
|
||
(if (buffer-base-buffer)
|
||
(error "An indirect buffer cannot visit a file"))
|
||
(let (truename old-try-locals)
|
||
(if filename
|
||
(setq filename
|
||
(if (string-equal filename "")
|
||
nil
|
||
(expand-file-name filename))))
|
||
(if filename
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq truename (file-truename filename))
|
||
(if find-file-visit-truename
|
||
(setq filename truename))))
|
||
(if filename
|
||
(let ((new-name (file-name-nondirectory filename)))
|
||
(if (string= new-name "")
|
||
(error "Empty file name"))))
|
||
(let ((buffer (and filename (find-buffer-visiting filename))))
|
||
(and buffer (not (eq buffer (current-buffer)))
|
||
(not no-query)
|
||
(not (y-or-n-p (format "A buffer is visiting %s; proceed? "
|
||
filename)))
|
||
(user-error "Aborted")))
|
||
(or (equal filename buffer-file-name)
|
||
(progn
|
||
(and filename (lock-buffer filename))
|
||
(unlock-buffer)))
|
||
(setq old-try-locals (not (inhibit-local-variables-p))
|
||
buffer-file-name filename)
|
||
(if filename ; make buffer name reflect filename.
|
||
(let ((new-name (file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name)))
|
||
(setq default-directory (file-name-directory buffer-file-name))
|
||
;; If new-name == old-name, renaming would add a spurious <2>
|
||
;; and it's considered as a feature in rename-buffer.
|
||
(or (string= new-name (buffer-name))
|
||
(rename-buffer new-name t))))
|
||
(setq buffer-backed-up nil)
|
||
(or along-with-file
|
||
(clear-visited-file-modtime))
|
||
;; Abbreviate the file names of the buffer.
|
||
(if truename
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq buffer-file-truename (abbreviate-file-name truename))
|
||
(if find-file-visit-truename
|
||
(setq buffer-file-name truename))))
|
||
(setq buffer-file-number
|
||
(if filename
|
||
(file-attribute-file-identifier (file-attributes buffer-file-name))
|
||
nil))
|
||
;; write-file-functions is normally used for things like ftp-find-file
|
||
;; that visit things that are not local files as if they were files.
|
||
;; Changing to visit an ordinary local file instead should flush the hook.
|
||
(kill-local-variable 'write-file-functions)
|
||
(kill-local-variable 'local-write-file-hooks)
|
||
(kill-local-variable 'revert-buffer-function)
|
||
(kill-local-variable 'backup-inhibited)
|
||
;; If buffer was read-only because of version control,
|
||
;; that reason is gone now, so make it writable.
|
||
(if vc-mode
|
||
(setq buffer-read-only nil))
|
||
(kill-local-variable 'vc-mode)
|
||
;; Turn off backup files for certain file names.
|
||
;; Since this is a permanent local, the major mode won't eliminate it.
|
||
(and buffer-file-name
|
||
backup-enable-predicate
|
||
(not (funcall backup-enable-predicate buffer-file-name))
|
||
(setq-local backup-inhibited t))
|
||
(let ((oauto buffer-auto-save-file-name))
|
||
(cond ((null filename)
|
||
(setq buffer-auto-save-file-name nil))
|
||
((not buffer-auto-save-file-name)
|
||
;; If auto-save was not already on, turn it on if appropriate.
|
||
(and buffer-file-name auto-save-default (auto-save-mode t)))
|
||
(t
|
||
;; If auto save is on, start using a new name. We
|
||
;; deliberately don't rename or delete the old auto save
|
||
;; for the old visited file name. This is because
|
||
;; perhaps the user wants to save the new state and then
|
||
;; compare with the previous state from the auto save
|
||
;; file.
|
||
(setq buffer-auto-save-file-name (make-auto-save-file-name))))
|
||
;; Rename the old auto save file if any.
|
||
(and oauto buffer-auto-save-file-name
|
||
(file-exists-p oauto)
|
||
(rename-file oauto buffer-auto-save-file-name t)))
|
||
(and buffer-file-name
|
||
(not along-with-file)
|
||
(set-buffer-modified-p t))
|
||
;; Update the major mode, if the file name determines it.
|
||
(condition-case nil
|
||
;; Don't change the mode if it is special.
|
||
(or (not change-major-mode-with-file-name)
|
||
(get major-mode 'mode-class)
|
||
;; Don't change the mode if the local variable list specifies it.
|
||
;; The file name can influence whether the local variables apply.
|
||
(and old-try-locals
|
||
;; h-l-v also checks it, but might as well be explicit.
|
||
(not (inhibit-local-variables-p))
|
||
(hack-local-variables t))
|
||
;; TODO consider making normal-mode handle this case.
|
||
(let ((old major-mode))
|
||
(set-auto-mode t)
|
||
(or (eq old major-mode)
|
||
(hack-local-variables))))
|
||
(error nil))
|
||
(run-hooks 'after-set-visited-file-name-hook)))
|
||
|
||
(defun write-file (filename &optional confirm)
|
||
"Write current buffer into file FILENAME.
|
||
This makes the buffer visit that file, and marks it as not modified.
|
||
|
||
Interactively, prompt for FILENAME.
|
||
If you specify just a directory name as FILENAME, that means to write
|
||
to a file in that directory. In this case, the base name of the file
|
||
is the same as that of the file visited in the buffer, or the buffer
|
||
name sans leading directories, if any, if the buffer is not already
|
||
visiting a file.
|
||
|
||
You can also yank the file name into the minibuffer to edit it,
|
||
using \\<minibuffer-local-map>\\[next-history-element].
|
||
|
||
If optional second arg CONFIRM is non-nil, this function
|
||
asks for confirmation before overwriting an existing file.
|
||
Interactively, confirmation is required unless you supply a prefix argument."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(list (if buffer-file-name
|
||
(read-file-name "Write file: "
|
||
nil nil nil nil)
|
||
(read-file-name "Write file: " default-directory
|
||
(expand-file-name
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory (buffer-name))
|
||
default-directory)
|
||
nil nil))
|
||
(not current-prefix-arg)))
|
||
(let ((old-modes
|
||
(and buffer-file-name
|
||
;; File may have gone away; ignore errors in that case.
|
||
(ignore-errors (file-modes buffer-file-name)))))
|
||
(or (null filename) (string-equal filename "")
|
||
(progn
|
||
;; If arg is a directory name,
|
||
;; use the default file name, but in that directory.
|
||
(if (directory-name-p filename)
|
||
(setq filename (concat filename
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory
|
||
(or buffer-file-name (buffer-name))))))
|
||
(and confirm
|
||
(file-exists-p filename)
|
||
;; NS does its own confirm dialog.
|
||
(not (and (eq (framep-on-display) 'ns)
|
||
(listp last-nonmenu-event)
|
||
use-dialog-box))
|
||
(or (y-or-n-p (format-message
|
||
"File `%s' exists; overwrite? " filename))
|
||
(user-error "Canceled")))
|
||
(set-visited-file-name filename (not confirm))))
|
||
(set-buffer-modified-p t)
|
||
;; Make buffer writable if file is writable.
|
||
(and buffer-file-name
|
||
(file-writable-p buffer-file-name)
|
||
(setq buffer-read-only nil))
|
||
(save-buffer)
|
||
;; If the old file was executable, then make the new file
|
||
;; executable, too.
|
||
(when (and old-modes
|
||
(not (zerop (logand #o111 old-modes))))
|
||
(set-file-modes buffer-file-name
|
||
(logior (logand #o111 old-modes)
|
||
(file-modes buffer-file-name))))
|
||
;; It's likely that the VC status at the new location is different from
|
||
;; the one at the old location.
|
||
(vc-refresh-state)))
|
||
|
||
(defun rename-visited-file (new-location)
|
||
"Rename the file visited by the current buffer to NEW-LOCATION.
|
||
This command also sets the visited file name. If the buffer
|
||
isn't visiting any file, that's all it does.
|
||
|
||
Interactively, this prompts for NEW-LOCATION."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(list (if buffer-file-name
|
||
(read-file-name "Rename visited file to: ")
|
||
(read-file-name "Set visited file name: "
|
||
default-directory
|
||
(expand-file-name
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory (buffer-name))
|
||
default-directory)))))
|
||
;; If the user has given a directory name, the file should be moved
|
||
;; there (under the same file name).
|
||
(when (file-directory-p new-location)
|
||
(unless buffer-file-name
|
||
(user-error "Can't rename buffer to a directory file name"))
|
||
(setq new-location (expand-file-name
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name)
|
||
new-location)))
|
||
(when (and buffer-file-name
|
||
(file-exists-p buffer-file-name))
|
||
(rename-file buffer-file-name new-location))
|
||
(set-visited-file-name new-location nil t))
|
||
|
||
|
||
(defun file-extended-attributes (filename)
|
||
"Return an alist of extended attributes of file FILENAME.
|
||
|
||
Extended attributes are platform-specific metadata about the file,
|
||
such as SELinux context, list of ACL entries, etc."
|
||
`((acl . ,(file-acl filename))
|
||
(selinux-context . ,(file-selinux-context filename))))
|
||
|
||
(defun set-file-extended-attributes (filename attributes)
|
||
"Set extended attributes of file FILENAME to ATTRIBUTES.
|
||
|
||
ATTRIBUTES must be an alist of file attributes as returned by
|
||
`file-extended-attributes'.
|
||
Value is t if the function succeeds in setting the attributes."
|
||
(let (result rv)
|
||
(dolist (elt attributes)
|
||
(let ((attr (car elt))
|
||
(val (cdr elt)))
|
||
(cond ((eq attr 'acl)
|
||
(setq rv (set-file-acl filename val)))
|
||
((eq attr 'selinux-context)
|
||
(setq rv (set-file-selinux-context filename val))))
|
||
(setq result (or result rv))))
|
||
|
||
result))
|
||
|
||
(defun backup-buffer ()
|
||
"Make a backup of the disk file visited by the current buffer, if appropriate.
|
||
This is normally done before saving the buffer the first time.
|
||
|
||
A backup may be done by renaming or by copying; see documentation of
|
||
variable `make-backup-files'. If it's done by renaming, then the file is
|
||
no longer accessible under its old name.
|
||
|
||
The value is non-nil after a backup was made by renaming.
|
||
It has the form (MODES EXTENDED-ATTRIBUTES BACKUPNAME).
|
||
MODES is the result of `file-modes' on the original
|
||
file; this means that the caller, after saving the buffer, should change
|
||
the modes of the new file to agree with the old modes.
|
||
EXTENDED-ATTRIBUTES is the result of `file-extended-attributes'
|
||
on the original file; this means that the caller, after saving
|
||
the buffer, should change the extended attributes of the new file
|
||
to agree with the old attributes.
|
||
BACKUPNAME is the backup file name, which is the old file renamed."
|
||
(when (and make-backup-files (not backup-inhibited) (not buffer-backed-up))
|
||
(let ((attributes (file-attributes buffer-file-name)))
|
||
(when (and attributes (memq (aref (elt attributes 8) 0) '(?- ?l)))
|
||
;; If specified name is a symbolic link, chase it to the target.
|
||
;; This makes backups in the directory where the real file is.
|
||
(let* ((real-file-name (file-chase-links buffer-file-name))
|
||
(backup-info (find-backup-file-name real-file-name)))
|
||
(when backup-info
|
||
(let* ((backupname (car backup-info))
|
||
(targets (cdr backup-info))
|
||
(old-versions
|
||
;; If have old versions to maybe delete,
|
||
;; ask the user to confirm now, before doing anything.
|
||
;; But don't actually delete til later.
|
||
(and targets
|
||
(booleanp delete-old-versions)
|
||
(or delete-old-versions
|
||
(y-or-n-p
|
||
(format "Delete excess backup versions of %s? "
|
||
real-file-name)))
|
||
targets))
|
||
(modes (file-modes buffer-file-name))
|
||
(extended-attributes
|
||
(file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name))
|
||
(copy-when-priv-mismatch
|
||
backup-by-copying-when-privileged-mismatch)
|
||
(make-copy
|
||
(or file-precious-flag backup-by-copying
|
||
;; Don't rename a suid or sgid file.
|
||
(and modes (< 0 (logand modes #o6000)))
|
||
(not (file-writable-p
|
||
(file-name-directory real-file-name)))
|
||
(and backup-by-copying-when-linked
|
||
(< 1 (file-nlinks real-file-name)))
|
||
(and (or backup-by-copying-when-mismatch
|
||
(and (integerp copy-when-priv-mismatch)
|
||
(let ((attr (file-attributes
|
||
real-file-name
|
||
'integer)))
|
||
(or (<= (file-attribute-user-id attr)
|
||
copy-when-priv-mismatch)
|
||
(<= (file-attribute-group-id attr)
|
||
copy-when-priv-mismatch)))))
|
||
(not (file-ownership-preserved-p real-file-name
|
||
t)))))
|
||
setmodes)
|
||
(condition-case ()
|
||
(progn
|
||
;; Actually make the backup file.
|
||
(if make-copy
|
||
(backup-buffer-copy real-file-name backupname
|
||
modes extended-attributes)
|
||
;; rename-file should delete old backup.
|
||
(rename-file real-file-name backupname t)
|
||
(setq setmodes (list modes extended-attributes
|
||
backupname)))
|
||
(setq buffer-backed-up t)
|
||
;; Now delete the old versions, if desired.
|
||
(dolist (old-version old-versions)
|
||
(delete-file old-version)))
|
||
(file-error nil))
|
||
;; If trouble writing the backup, write it in .emacs.d/%backup%.
|
||
(when (not buffer-backed-up)
|
||
(setq backupname (locate-user-emacs-file "%backup%~"))
|
||
(message "Cannot write backup file; backing up in %s"
|
||
backupname)
|
||
(sleep-for 1)
|
||
(backup-buffer-copy real-file-name backupname
|
||
modes extended-attributes)
|
||
(setq buffer-backed-up t))
|
||
setmodes)))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun backup-buffer-copy (from-name to-name modes extended-attributes)
|
||
;; Create temp files with strict access rights. It's easy to
|
||
;; loosen them later, whereas it's impossible to close the
|
||
;; time-window of loose permissions otherwise.
|
||
(let (nofollow-flag)
|
||
(with-file-modes ?\700
|
||
(when (condition-case nil
|
||
;; Try to overwrite old backup first.
|
||
(copy-file from-name to-name t t t)
|
||
(error t))
|
||
(while (condition-case nil
|
||
(progn
|
||
(when (file-exists-p to-name)
|
||
(delete-file to-name))
|
||
(copy-file from-name to-name nil t t)
|
||
(setq nofollow-flag 'nofollow)
|
||
nil)
|
||
(file-already-exists t))
|
||
;; The file was somehow created by someone else between
|
||
;; `delete-file' and `copy-file', so let's try again.
|
||
;; rms says "I think there is also a possible race
|
||
;; condition for making backup files" (emacs-devel 20070821).
|
||
nil)))
|
||
;; If set-file-extended-attributes fails, fall back on set-file-modes.
|
||
(unless (and extended-attributes
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Error setting attributes: %S"
|
||
(set-file-extended-attributes to-name extended-attributes)))
|
||
(and modes
|
||
(set-file-modes to-name (logand modes #o1777) nofollow-flag)))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar file-name-version-regexp
|
||
"\\(?:~\\|\\.~[-[:alnum:]:#@^._]+\\(?:~[[:digit:]]+\\)?~\\)"
|
||
;; The last ~[[:digit]]+ matches relative versions in git,
|
||
;; e.g. `foo.js.~HEAD~1~'.
|
||
"Regular expression matching the backup/version part of a file name.
|
||
Used by `file-name-sans-versions'.")
|
||
|
||
(defun file-name-sans-versions (name &optional keep-backup-version)
|
||
"Return file NAME sans backup versions or strings.
|
||
This is a separate procedure so your site-init or startup file can
|
||
redefine it.
|
||
If the optional argument KEEP-BACKUP-VERSION is non-nil,
|
||
we do not remove backup version numbers, only true file version numbers.
|
||
See `file-name-version-regexp' for what constitutes backup versions
|
||
and version strings."
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler name 'file-name-sans-versions)))
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'file-name-sans-versions name keep-backup-version)
|
||
(substring name 0
|
||
(unless keep-backup-version
|
||
(string-match (concat file-name-version-regexp "\\'")
|
||
name))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-ownership-preserved-p (file &optional group)
|
||
"Return t if deleting FILE and rewriting it would preserve the owner.
|
||
Return also t if FILE does not exist. If GROUP is non-nil, check whether
|
||
the group would be preserved too."
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler file 'file-ownership-preserved-p)))
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'file-ownership-preserved-p file group)
|
||
(let ((attributes (file-attributes file 'integer)))
|
||
;; Return t if the file doesn't exist, since it's true that no
|
||
;; information would be lost by an (attempted) delete and create.
|
||
(or (null attributes)
|
||
(and (or (= (file-attribute-user-id attributes) (user-uid))
|
||
;; Files created on Windows by Administrator (RID=500)
|
||
;; have the Administrators group (RID=544) recorded as
|
||
;; their owner. Rewriting them will still preserve the
|
||
;; owner.
|
||
(and (eq system-type 'windows-nt)
|
||
(= (user-uid) 500)
|
||
(= (file-attribute-user-id attributes) 544)))
|
||
(or (not group)
|
||
;; On BSD-derived systems files always inherit the parent
|
||
;; directory's group, so skip the group-gid test.
|
||
(memq system-type '(berkeley-unix darwin gnu/kfreebsd))
|
||
(= (file-attribute-group-id attributes) (group-gid)))
|
||
(let* ((parent (or (file-name-directory file) "."))
|
||
(parent-attributes (file-attributes parent 'integer)))
|
||
(and parent-attributes
|
||
;; On some systems, a file created in a setuid directory
|
||
;; inherits that directory's owner.
|
||
(or
|
||
(= (file-attribute-user-id parent-attributes)
|
||
(user-uid))
|
||
(string-match
|
||
"^...[^sS]"
|
||
(file-attribute-modes parent-attributes)))
|
||
;; On many systems, a file created in a setgid directory
|
||
;; inherits that directory's group. On some systems
|
||
;; this happens even if the setgid bit is not set.
|
||
(or (not group)
|
||
(= (file-attribute-group-id parent-attributes)
|
||
(file-attribute-group-id attributes)))))))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-name-sans-extension (filename)
|
||
"Return FILENAME sans final \"extension\" and any backup version strings.
|
||
The extension, in a file name, is the part that begins with the last `.',
|
||
except that a leading `.' of the file name, if there is one, doesn't count.
|
||
Any extensions that indicate backup versions and version strings are
|
||
removed by calling `file-name-sans-versions', which see, before looking
|
||
for the \"real\" file extension."
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(let ((file (file-name-sans-versions (file-name-nondirectory filename)))
|
||
directory)
|
||
(if (and (string-match "\\.[^.]*\\'" file)
|
||
(not (eq 0 (match-beginning 0))))
|
||
(if (setq directory (file-name-directory filename))
|
||
;; Don't use expand-file-name here; if DIRECTORY is relative,
|
||
;; we don't want to expand it.
|
||
(concat directory (substring file 0 (match-beginning 0)))
|
||
(substring file 0 (match-beginning 0)))
|
||
filename))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-name-extension (filename &optional period)
|
||
"Return FILENAME's final \"extension\" sans any backup version strings.
|
||
The extension, in a file name, is the part that begins with the last `.',
|
||
except that a leading `.' of the file name, if there is one, doesn't count.
|
||
This function calls `file-name-sans-versions', which see, to remove from
|
||
the extension it returns any parts that indicate backup versions and
|
||
version strings.
|
||
Return nil for extensionless file names such as `foo'.
|
||
Return the empty string for file names such as `foo.' that end in a period.
|
||
|
||
By default, the returned value excludes the period that starts the
|
||
extension, but if the optional argument PERIOD is non-nil, the period
|
||
is included in the value, and in that case, if FILENAME has no
|
||
extension, the value is \"\"."
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(let ((file (file-name-sans-versions (file-name-nondirectory filename))))
|
||
(if (and (string-match "\\.[^.]*\\'" file)
|
||
(not (eq 0 (match-beginning 0))))
|
||
(substring file (+ (match-beginning 0) (if period 0 1)))
|
||
(if period
|
||
"")))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-name-with-extension (filename extension)
|
||
"Return FILENAME modified to have the specified EXTENSION.
|
||
The extension (in a file name) is the part that begins with the last \".\".
|
||
This function removes any existing extension from FILENAME, and then
|
||
appends EXTENSION to it.
|
||
|
||
EXTENSION may include the leading dot; if it doesn't, this function
|
||
will provide it.
|
||
|
||
It is an error if FILENAME or EXTENSION is empty, or if FILENAME
|
||
is in the form of a directory name according to `directory-name-p'.
|
||
|
||
See also `file-name-sans-extension'."
|
||
(let ((extn (string-trim-left extension "[.]")))
|
||
(cond ((string-empty-p filename)
|
||
(error "Empty filename"))
|
||
((string-empty-p extn)
|
||
(error "Malformed extension: %s" extension))
|
||
((directory-name-p filename)
|
||
(error "Filename is a directory: %s" filename))
|
||
(t
|
||
(concat (file-name-sans-extension filename) "." extn)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-name-base (&optional filename)
|
||
"Return the base name of the FILENAME: no directory, no extension."
|
||
(declare (advertised-calling-convention (filename) "27.1"))
|
||
(file-name-sans-extension
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory (or filename (buffer-file-name)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-name-split (filename)
|
||
"Return a list of all the components of FILENAME.
|
||
On most systems, this will be true:
|
||
|
||
(equal (string-join (file-name-split filename) \"/\") filename)"
|
||
(let ((components nil))
|
||
;; If this is a directory file name, then we have a null file name
|
||
;; at the end.
|
||
(when (directory-name-p filename)
|
||
(push "" components)
|
||
(setq filename (directory-file-name filename)))
|
||
;; Loop, chopping off components.
|
||
(while (length> filename 0)
|
||
(push (file-name-nondirectory filename) components)
|
||
(let ((dir (file-name-directory filename)))
|
||
(setq filename (and dir (directory-file-name dir)))
|
||
;; If there's nothing left to peel off, we're at the root and
|
||
;; we can stop.
|
||
(when (and dir (equal dir filename))
|
||
(push (if (equal dir "") ""
|
||
;; On Windows, the first component might be "c:" or
|
||
;; the like.
|
||
(substring dir 0 -1))
|
||
components)
|
||
(setq filename nil))))
|
||
components))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-name-parent-directory (filename)
|
||
"Return the directory name of the parent directory of FILENAME.
|
||
If FILENAME is at the root of the filesystem, return nil.
|
||
If FILENAME is relative, it is interpreted to be relative
|
||
to `default-directory', and the result will also be relative."
|
||
(let* ((expanded-filename (expand-file-name filename))
|
||
(parent (file-name-directory (directory-file-name expanded-filename))))
|
||
(cond
|
||
;; filename is at top-level, therefore no parent
|
||
((or (null parent)
|
||
;; `equal' is enough, we don't need to resolve symlinks here
|
||
;; with `file-equal-p', also for performance
|
||
(equal parent expanded-filename))
|
||
nil)
|
||
;; filename is relative, return relative parent
|
||
((not (file-name-absolute-p filename))
|
||
(file-relative-name parent))
|
||
(t
|
||
parent))))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom make-backup-file-name-function
|
||
#'make-backup-file-name--default-function
|
||
"A function that `make-backup-file-name' uses to create backup file names.
|
||
The function receives a single argument, the original file name.
|
||
|
||
If you change this, you may need to change `backup-file-name-p' and
|
||
`file-name-sans-versions' too.
|
||
|
||
You could make this buffer-local to do something special for specific files.
|
||
|
||
For historical reasons, a value of nil means to use the default function.
|
||
This should not be relied upon.
|
||
|
||
See also `backup-directory-alist'."
|
||
:version "24.4" ; nil -> make-backup-file-name--default-function
|
||
:group 'backup
|
||
:type '(choice (const :tag "Deprecated way to get the default function" nil)
|
||
(function :tag "Function")))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom backup-directory-alist nil
|
||
"Alist of file name patterns and backup directory names.
|
||
Each element looks like (REGEXP . DIRECTORY). Backups of files with
|
||
names matching REGEXP will be made in DIRECTORY. DIRECTORY may be
|
||
relative or absolute. If it is absolute, so that all matching files
|
||
are backed up into the same directory, the file names in this
|
||
directory will be the full name of the file backed up with all
|
||
directory separators changed to `!' to prevent clashes. This will not
|
||
work correctly if your filesystem truncates the resulting name.
|
||
|
||
For the common case of all backups going into one directory, the alist
|
||
should contain a single element pairing \".\" with the appropriate
|
||
directory name.
|
||
|
||
If this variable is nil, or it fails to match a file name, the backup
|
||
is made in the original file's directory.
|
||
|
||
On MS-DOS filesystems without long names this variable is always
|
||
ignored."
|
||
:group 'backup
|
||
:type '(repeat (cons (regexp :tag "Regexp matching filename")
|
||
(directory :tag "Backup directory name"))))
|
||
|
||
(defun normal-backup-enable-predicate (name)
|
||
"Default `backup-enable-predicate' function.
|
||
Checks for files in `temporary-file-directory',
|
||
`small-temporary-file-directory', and \"/tmp\"."
|
||
(let ((temporary-file-directory temporary-file-directory)
|
||
caseless)
|
||
;; On MS-Windows, file-truename will convert short 8+3 aliases to
|
||
;; their long file-name equivalents, so compare-strings does TRT.
|
||
(if (memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt))
|
||
(setq temporary-file-directory (file-truename temporary-file-directory)
|
||
name (file-truename name)
|
||
caseless t))
|
||
(not (or (let ((comp (compare-strings temporary-file-directory 0 nil
|
||
name 0 nil caseless)))
|
||
;; Directory is under temporary-file-directory.
|
||
(and (not (eq comp t))
|
||
(< comp (- (length temporary-file-directory)))))
|
||
(let ((comp (compare-strings "/tmp" 0 nil
|
||
name 0 nil)))
|
||
;; Directory is under /tmp.
|
||
(and (not (eq comp t))
|
||
(< comp (- (length "/tmp")))))
|
||
(if small-temporary-file-directory
|
||
(let ((comp (compare-strings small-temporary-file-directory
|
||
0 nil
|
||
name 0 nil caseless)))
|
||
;; Directory is under small-temporary-file-directory.
|
||
(and (not (eq comp t))
|
||
(< comp (- (length small-temporary-file-directory))))))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun make-backup-file-name (file)
|
||
"Create the non-numeric backup file name for FILE.
|
||
This calls the function that `make-backup-file-name-function' specifies,
|
||
with a single argument FILE."
|
||
(funcall (or make-backup-file-name-function
|
||
#'make-backup-file-name--default-function)
|
||
file))
|
||
|
||
(defun make-backup-file-name--default-function (file)
|
||
"Default function for `make-backup-file-name'.
|
||
Normally this just returns FILE's name with `~' appended.
|
||
It searches for a match for FILE in `backup-directory-alist'.
|
||
If the directory for the backup doesn't exist, it is created."
|
||
(if (and (eq system-type 'ms-dos)
|
||
(not (msdos-long-file-names)))
|
||
(let ((fn (file-name-nondirectory file)))
|
||
(concat (file-name-directory file)
|
||
(or (and (string-match "\\`[^.]+\\'" fn)
|
||
(concat (match-string 0 fn) ".~"))
|
||
(and (string-match "\\`[^.]+\\.\\(..?\\)?" fn)
|
||
(concat (match-string 0 fn) "~")))))
|
||
(concat (make-backup-file-name-1 file) "~")))
|
||
|
||
(defun make-backup-file-name-1 (file)
|
||
"Subroutine of `make-backup-file-name--default-function'.
|
||
The function `find-backup-file-name' also uses this."
|
||
(let ((alist backup-directory-alist)
|
||
elt backup-directory abs-backup-directory)
|
||
(while alist
|
||
(setq elt (pop alist))
|
||
(if (string-match (car elt) file)
|
||
(setq backup-directory (cdr elt)
|
||
alist nil)))
|
||
;; If backup-directory is relative, it should be relative to the
|
||
;; file's directory. By expanding explicitly here, we avoid
|
||
;; depending on default-directory.
|
||
(if backup-directory
|
||
(setq abs-backup-directory
|
||
(expand-file-name backup-directory
|
||
(file-name-directory file))))
|
||
(if (and abs-backup-directory (not (file-exists-p abs-backup-directory)))
|
||
(condition-case nil
|
||
(make-directory abs-backup-directory 'parents)
|
||
(file-error (setq backup-directory nil
|
||
abs-backup-directory nil))))
|
||
(if (null backup-directory)
|
||
file
|
||
(if (file-name-absolute-p backup-directory)
|
||
(progn
|
||
(when (memq system-type '(windows-nt ms-dos cygwin))
|
||
;; Normalize DOSish file names: downcase the drive
|
||
;; letter, if any, and replace the leading "x:" with
|
||
;; "/drive_x".
|
||
(or (file-name-absolute-p file)
|
||
(setq file (expand-file-name file))) ; make defaults explicit
|
||
(cond
|
||
((file-remote-p file)
|
||
;; Remove the leading slash, if any, to prevent
|
||
;; convert-standard-filename from converting that to a
|
||
;; backslash.
|
||
(and (memq (aref file 0) '(?/ ?\\))
|
||
(setq file (substring file 1)))
|
||
;; Replace any invalid file-name characters, then
|
||
;; prepend the leading slash back.
|
||
(setq file (concat "/" (convert-standard-filename file))))
|
||
(t
|
||
;; Replace any invalid file-name characters.
|
||
(setq file (expand-file-name (convert-standard-filename file)))
|
||
(if (eq (aref file 1) ?:)
|
||
(setq file (concat "/"
|
||
"drive_"
|
||
(char-to-string (downcase (aref file 0)))
|
||
(if (eq (aref file 2) ?/)
|
||
""
|
||
"/")
|
||
(substring file 2)))))))
|
||
;; Make the name unique by substituting directory
|
||
;; separators. It may not really be worth bothering about
|
||
;; doubling `!'s in the original name...
|
||
(expand-file-name
|
||
(subst-char-in-string
|
||
?/ ?!
|
||
(string-replace "!" "!!" file))
|
||
backup-directory))
|
||
(expand-file-name (file-name-nondirectory file)
|
||
(file-name-as-directory abs-backup-directory))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun backup-file-name-p (file)
|
||
"Return non-nil if FILE is a backup file name (numeric or not).
|
||
This is a separate function so you can redefine it for customization.
|
||
You may need to redefine `file-name-sans-versions' as well."
|
||
(string-match "~\\'" file))
|
||
|
||
(defvar backup-extract-version-start)
|
||
|
||
;; This is used in various files.
|
||
;; The usage of backup-extract-version-start is not very clean,
|
||
;; but I can't see a good alternative, so as of now I am leaving it alone.
|
||
(defun backup-extract-version (fn)
|
||
"Given the name of a numeric backup file, FN, return the backup number.
|
||
Uses the free variable `backup-extract-version-start', whose value should be
|
||
the index in the name where the version number begins."
|
||
(if (and (string-match "[0-9]+~/?$" fn backup-extract-version-start)
|
||
(= (match-beginning 0) backup-extract-version-start))
|
||
(string-to-number (substring fn backup-extract-version-start -1))
|
||
0))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-backup-file-name (fn)
|
||
"Find a file name for a backup file FN, and suggestions for deletions.
|
||
Value is a list whose car is the name for the backup file
|
||
and whose cdr is a list of old versions to consider deleting now.
|
||
If the value is nil, don't make a backup.
|
||
Uses `backup-directory-alist' in the same way as
|
||
`make-backup-file-name--default-function' does."
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler fn 'find-backup-file-name)))
|
||
;; Run a handler for this function so that ange-ftp can refuse to do it.
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'find-backup-file-name fn)
|
||
(if (or (eq version-control 'never)
|
||
;; We don't support numbered backups on plain MS-DOS
|
||
;; when long file names are unavailable.
|
||
(and (eq system-type 'ms-dos)
|
||
(not (msdos-long-file-names))))
|
||
(list (make-backup-file-name fn))
|
||
(let* ((basic-name (make-backup-file-name-1 fn))
|
||
(base-versions (concat (file-name-nondirectory basic-name)
|
||
".~"))
|
||
(backup-extract-version-start (length base-versions))
|
||
(high-water-mark 0)
|
||
(number-to-delete 0)
|
||
possibilities deserve-versions-p versions)
|
||
(condition-case ()
|
||
(setq possibilities (file-name-all-completions
|
||
base-versions
|
||
(file-name-directory basic-name))
|
||
versions (sort (mapcar #'backup-extract-version
|
||
possibilities)
|
||
#'<)
|
||
high-water-mark (apply 'max 0 versions)
|
||
deserve-versions-p (or version-control
|
||
(> high-water-mark 0))
|
||
number-to-delete (- (length versions)
|
||
kept-old-versions
|
||
kept-new-versions
|
||
-1))
|
||
(file-error (setq possibilities nil)))
|
||
(if (not deserve-versions-p)
|
||
(list (make-backup-file-name fn))
|
||
(cons (format "%s.~%d~" basic-name (1+ high-water-mark))
|
||
(if (and (> number-to-delete 0)
|
||
;; Delete nothing if kept-new-versions and
|
||
;; kept-old-versions combine to an outlandish value.
|
||
(>= (+ kept-new-versions kept-old-versions -1) 0))
|
||
(mapcar (lambda (n)
|
||
(format "%s.~%d~" basic-name n))
|
||
(let ((v (nthcdr kept-old-versions versions)))
|
||
(rplacd (nthcdr (1- number-to-delete) v) ())
|
||
v))))))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-nlinks (filename)
|
||
"Return number of names file FILENAME has."
|
||
(car (cdr (file-attributes filename))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-relative-name (filename &optional directory)
|
||
"Convert FILENAME to be relative to DIRECTORY (default: `default-directory').
|
||
This function returns a relative file name that is equivalent to FILENAME
|
||
when used with that default directory as the default.
|
||
If FILENAME is a relative file name, it will be interpreted as existing in
|
||
`default-directory'.
|
||
If FILENAME and DIRECTORY lie on different machines or on different drives
|
||
on a DOS/Windows machine, it returns FILENAME in expanded form."
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(setq directory
|
||
(file-name-as-directory (expand-file-name (or directory
|
||
default-directory))))
|
||
(setq filename (expand-file-name filename))
|
||
(let ((fremote (file-remote-p filename))
|
||
(dremote (file-remote-p directory))
|
||
(fold-case (or (file-name-case-insensitive-p filename)
|
||
;; During bootstrap, it can happen that
|
||
;; `read-file-name-completion-ignore-case' is
|
||
;; not defined yet.
|
||
;; FIXME: `read-file-name-completion-ignore-case' is
|
||
;; a user-config which we shouldn't trust to reflect
|
||
;; the actual file system's semantics.
|
||
(and (boundp 'read-file-name-completion-ignore-case)
|
||
read-file-name-completion-ignore-case))))
|
||
(if ;; Conditions for separate trees
|
||
(or
|
||
;; Test for different filesystems on DOS/Windows
|
||
(and
|
||
;; Should `cygwin' really be included here? --stef
|
||
(memq system-type '(ms-dos cygwin windows-nt))
|
||
(or
|
||
;; Test for different drive letters
|
||
(not (eq t (compare-strings filename 0 2 directory 0 2 fold-case)))
|
||
;; Test for UNCs on different servers
|
||
(not (string-equal-ignore-case
|
||
(if (string-match "\\`//\\([^:/]+\\)/" filename)
|
||
(match-string 1 filename)
|
||
;; Windows file names cannot have ? in
|
||
;; them, so use that to detect when
|
||
;; neither FILENAME nor DIRECTORY is a
|
||
;; UNC.
|
||
"?")
|
||
(if (string-match "\\`//\\([^:/]+\\)/" directory)
|
||
(match-string 1 directory)
|
||
"?")))))
|
||
;; Test for different remote file system identification
|
||
(not (equal fremote dremote)))
|
||
filename
|
||
(let ((ancestor ".")
|
||
(filename-dir (file-name-as-directory filename)))
|
||
(while (not
|
||
(or (string-prefix-p directory filename-dir fold-case)
|
||
(string-prefix-p directory filename fold-case)))
|
||
(setq directory (file-name-directory (substring directory 0 -1))
|
||
ancestor (if (equal ancestor ".")
|
||
".."
|
||
(concat "../" ancestor))))
|
||
;; Now ancestor is empty, or .., or ../.., etc.
|
||
(if (string-prefix-p directory filename fold-case)
|
||
;; We matched within FILENAME's directory part.
|
||
;; Add the rest of FILENAME onto ANCESTOR.
|
||
(let ((rest (substring filename (length directory))))
|
||
(if (and (equal ancestor ".") (not (equal rest "")))
|
||
;; But don't bother with ANCESTOR if it would give us `./'.
|
||
rest
|
||
(concat (file-name-as-directory ancestor) rest)))
|
||
;; We matched FILENAME's directory equivalent.
|
||
ancestor))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun save-buffer (&optional arg)
|
||
"Save current buffer in visited file if modified.
|
||
Variations are described below.
|
||
|
||
By default, makes the previous version into a backup file
|
||
if previously requested or if this is the first save.
|
||
Prefixed with one \\[universal-argument], marks this version
|
||
to become a backup when the next save is done.
|
||
Prefixed with two \\[universal-argument]'s,
|
||
makes the previous version into a backup file.
|
||
Prefixed with three \\[universal-argument]'s, marks this version
|
||
to become a backup when the next save is done,
|
||
and makes the previous version into a backup file.
|
||
|
||
With a numeric prefix argument of 0, never make the previous version
|
||
into a backup file.
|
||
|
||
Note that the various variables that control backups, such
|
||
as `version-control', `backup-enable-predicate', `vc-make-backup-files',
|
||
and `backup-inhibited', to name just the more popular ones, still
|
||
control whether a backup will actually be produced, even when you
|
||
invoke this command prefixed with two or three \\[universal-argument]'s.
|
||
|
||
If a file's name is FOO, the names of its numbered backup versions are
|
||
FOO.~i~ for various integers i. A non-numbered backup file is called FOO~.
|
||
Numeric backups (rather than FOO~) will be made if value of
|
||
`version-control' is not the atom `never' and either there are already
|
||
numeric versions of the file being backed up, or `version-control' is
|
||
non-nil.
|
||
We don't want excessive versions piling up, so there are variables
|
||
`kept-old-versions', which tells Emacs how many oldest versions to keep,
|
||
and `kept-new-versions', which tells how many newest versions to keep.
|
||
Defaults are 2 old versions and 2 new.
|
||
`dired-kept-versions' controls dired's clean-directory (.) command.
|
||
If `delete-old-versions' is nil, system will query user
|
||
before trimming versions. Otherwise it does it silently.
|
||
|
||
If `vc-make-backup-files' is nil, which is the default,
|
||
no backup files are made for files managed by version control.
|
||
(This is because the version control system itself records previous versions.)
|
||
|
||
See the subroutine `basic-save-buffer' for more information."
|
||
(interactive "p")
|
||
(let ((modp (buffer-modified-p))
|
||
(make-backup-files (or (and make-backup-files (not (eq arg 0)))
|
||
(memq arg '(16 64)))))
|
||
(and modp (memq arg '(16 64)) (setq buffer-backed-up nil))
|
||
;; We used to display the message below only for files > 50KB, but
|
||
;; then Rmail-mbox never displays it due to buffer swapping. If
|
||
;; the test is ever re-introduced, be sure to handle saving of
|
||
;; Rmail files.
|
||
(if (and modp
|
||
(buffer-file-name)
|
||
(not noninteractive)
|
||
(not save-silently))
|
||
(message "Saving file %s..." (buffer-file-name)))
|
||
(basic-save-buffer (called-interactively-p 'any))
|
||
(and modp (memq arg '(4 64)) (setq buffer-backed-up nil))))
|
||
|
||
(defun delete-auto-save-file-if-necessary (&optional force)
|
||
"Delete auto-save file for current buffer if `delete-auto-save-files' is t.
|
||
Normally delete only if the file was written by this Emacs since
|
||
the last real save, but optional arg FORCE non-nil means delete anyway."
|
||
(and buffer-auto-save-file-name delete-auto-save-files
|
||
(not (string= buffer-file-name buffer-auto-save-file-name))
|
||
(or force (recent-auto-save-p))
|
||
(progn
|
||
(condition-case ()
|
||
(delete-file buffer-auto-save-file-name)
|
||
(file-error nil))
|
||
(set-buffer-auto-saved))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar auto-save-hook nil
|
||
"Normal hook run just before auto-saving.")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom before-save-hook nil
|
||
"Normal hook that is run before a buffer is saved to its file.
|
||
Used only by `save-buffer'."
|
||
:options '(copyright-update time-stamp)
|
||
:type 'hook
|
||
:group 'files)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom after-save-hook nil
|
||
"Normal hook that is run after a buffer is saved to its file.
|
||
Used only by `save-buffer'."
|
||
:options '(executable-make-buffer-file-executable-if-script-p)
|
||
:type 'hook
|
||
:group 'files)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom copy-directory-create-symlink nil
|
||
"This option influences the handling of symbolic links in `copy-directory'.
|
||
If non-nil, `copy-directory' will create a symbolic link if the
|
||
source directory is a symbolic link. If nil, it'll follow the
|
||
symbolic link and copy the contents instead."
|
||
:type 'boolean
|
||
:version "28.1"
|
||
:group 'files)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom file-preserve-symlinks-on-save nil
|
||
"If non-nil, saving a buffer visited via a symlink won't overwrite the symlink.
|
||
This is only relevant if `file-precious-flag' is non-nil -- if
|
||
this is nil, Emacs will preserve the symlinks anyway."
|
||
:type 'boolean
|
||
:version "28.1"
|
||
:group 'files)
|
||
|
||
(defvar-local save-buffer-coding-system nil
|
||
"If non-nil, use this coding system for saving the buffer.
|
||
More precisely, use this coding system in place of the
|
||
value of `buffer-file-coding-system', when saving the buffer.
|
||
Calling `write-region' for any purpose other than saving the buffer
|
||
will still use `buffer-file-coding-system'; this variable has no effect
|
||
in such cases.")
|
||
|
||
(put 'save-buffer-coding-system 'permanent-local t)
|
||
|
||
(defun basic-save-buffer (&optional called-interactively)
|
||
"Save the current buffer in its visited file, if it has been modified.
|
||
|
||
The hooks `write-contents-functions', `local-write-file-hooks'
|
||
and `write-file-functions' get a chance to do the job of saving;
|
||
if they do not, then the buffer is saved in the visited file in
|
||
the usual way.
|
||
|
||
Before and after saving the buffer, this function runs
|
||
`before-save-hook' and `after-save-hook', respectively."
|
||
(interactive '(called-interactively))
|
||
(save-current-buffer
|
||
;; In an indirect buffer, save its base buffer instead.
|
||
(if (buffer-base-buffer)
|
||
(set-buffer (buffer-base-buffer)))
|
||
(if (or (buffer-modified-p)
|
||
;; Handle the case when no modification has been made but
|
||
;; the file disappeared since visited.
|
||
(and buffer-file-name
|
||
(not (file-exists-p buffer-file-name))))
|
||
(let ((recent-save (recent-auto-save-p))
|
||
setmodes)
|
||
(or (null buffer-file-name)
|
||
(verify-visited-file-modtime (current-buffer))
|
||
(not (file-exists-p buffer-file-name))
|
||
(yes-or-no-p
|
||
(format
|
||
"%s has changed since visited or saved. Save anyway? "
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name)))
|
||
(user-error "Save not confirmed"))
|
||
(save-restriction
|
||
(widen)
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(and (> (point-max) (point-min))
|
||
(not find-file-literally)
|
||
(null buffer-read-only)
|
||
(/= (char-after (1- (point-max))) ?\n)
|
||
(not (and (eq selective-display t)
|
||
(= (char-after (1- (point-max))) ?\r)))
|
||
(or (eq require-final-newline t)
|
||
(eq require-final-newline 'visit-save)
|
||
(and require-final-newline
|
||
(y-or-n-p
|
||
(format "Buffer %s does not end in newline. Add one? "
|
||
(buffer-name)))))
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(goto-char (point-max))
|
||
(insert ?\n))))
|
||
;; Don't let errors prevent saving the buffer.
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Before-save hook error: %S"
|
||
(run-hooks 'before-save-hook))
|
||
;; Give `write-contents-functions' a chance to
|
||
;; short-circuit the whole process.
|
||
(unless (run-hook-with-args-until-success 'write-contents-functions)
|
||
;; If buffer has no file name, ask user for one.
|
||
(or buffer-file-name
|
||
(let ((filename
|
||
(expand-file-name
|
||
(read-file-name "File to save in: "
|
||
nil (expand-file-name (buffer-name))))))
|
||
(if (file-exists-p filename)
|
||
(if (file-directory-p filename)
|
||
;; Signal an error if the user specified the name of an
|
||
;; existing directory.
|
||
(error "%s is a directory" filename)
|
||
(unless (y-or-n-p (format-message
|
||
"File `%s' exists; overwrite? "
|
||
filename))
|
||
(error "Canceled"))))
|
||
(set-visited-file-name filename)))
|
||
;; Support VC version backups.
|
||
(vc-before-save)
|
||
(or (run-hook-with-args-until-success 'local-write-file-hooks)
|
||
(run-hook-with-args-until-success 'write-file-functions)
|
||
;; If a hook returned t, file is already "written".
|
||
;; Otherwise, write it the usual way now.
|
||
(let ((file (buffer-file-name))
|
||
(dir (file-name-directory
|
||
(expand-file-name buffer-file-name))))
|
||
;; Some systems have directories (like /content on
|
||
;; Android) in which files can exist without a
|
||
;; corresponding parent directory.
|
||
(unless (or (file-exists-p file)
|
||
(file-exists-p dir))
|
||
(if (y-or-n-p
|
||
(format-message
|
||
"Directory `%s' does not exist; create? " dir))
|
||
(make-directory dir t)
|
||
(error "Canceled")))
|
||
(setq setmodes (basic-save-buffer-1)))))
|
||
;; Now we have saved the current buffer. Let's make sure
|
||
;; that buffer-file-coding-system is fixed to what
|
||
;; actually used for saving by binding it locally.
|
||
(when buffer-file-name
|
||
(if save-buffer-coding-system
|
||
(setq save-buffer-coding-system last-coding-system-used)
|
||
(setq buffer-file-coding-system last-coding-system-used))
|
||
(setq buffer-file-number
|
||
(file-attribute-file-identifier
|
||
(file-attributes buffer-file-name)))
|
||
(if setmodes
|
||
(condition-case ()
|
||
(progn
|
||
(unless
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Error setting file modes: %S"
|
||
(set-file-modes buffer-file-name (car setmodes)))
|
||
(set-file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name
|
||
(nth 1 setmodes))))
|
||
(error nil)))
|
||
;; Support VC `implicit' locking.
|
||
(vc-after-save))
|
||
;; If the auto-save file was recent before this command,
|
||
;; delete it now.
|
||
(delete-auto-save-file-if-necessary recent-save))
|
||
(run-hooks 'after-save-hook))
|
||
(or noninteractive
|
||
(not called-interactively)
|
||
(files--message "(No changes need to be saved)")))))
|
||
|
||
;; This does the "real job" of writing a buffer into its visited file
|
||
;; and making a backup file. This is what is normally done
|
||
;; but inhibited if one of write-file-functions returns non-nil.
|
||
;; It returns a value (MODES EXTENDED-ATTRIBUTES BACKUPNAME), like
|
||
;; backup-buffer.
|
||
(defun basic-save-buffer-1 ()
|
||
(prog1
|
||
(if save-buffer-coding-system
|
||
(let ((coding-system-for-write save-buffer-coding-system))
|
||
(basic-save-buffer-2))
|
||
(basic-save-buffer-2))
|
||
(if buffer-file-coding-system-explicit
|
||
(setcar buffer-file-coding-system-explicit last-coding-system-used))))
|
||
|
||
;; This returns a value (MODES EXTENDED-ATTRIBUTES BACKUPNAME), like
|
||
;; backup-buffer.
|
||
(defun basic-save-buffer-2 ()
|
||
(let (tempsetmodes setmodes)
|
||
(if (not (file-writable-p buffer-file-name))
|
||
(let ((dir (file-name-directory buffer-file-name)))
|
||
(if (not (file-directory-p dir))
|
||
(if (file-exists-p dir)
|
||
(error "%s is not a directory" dir)
|
||
(error "%s: No such directory" dir))
|
||
(if (not (file-exists-p buffer-file-name))
|
||
(error "Directory %s write-protected" dir)
|
||
(if (yes-or-no-p
|
||
(format
|
||
"File %s is write-protected; try to save anyway? "
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory
|
||
buffer-file-name)))
|
||
(setq tempsetmodes t)
|
||
(error "Attempt to save to a file that you aren't allowed to write"))))))
|
||
(with-demoted-errors
|
||
"Backing up buffer: %s"
|
||
(or buffer-backed-up
|
||
(setq setmodes (backup-buffer))))
|
||
(let* ((dir (file-name-directory buffer-file-name))
|
||
(dir-writable (file-writable-p dir)))
|
||
(if (or (and file-precious-flag dir-writable)
|
||
(and break-hardlink-on-save
|
||
(file-exists-p buffer-file-name)
|
||
(> (file-nlinks buffer-file-name) 1)
|
||
(or dir-writable
|
||
(error (concat "Directory %s write-protected; "
|
||
"cannot break hardlink when saving")
|
||
dir))))
|
||
;; Write temp name, then rename it.
|
||
;; This requires write access to the containing dir,
|
||
;; which is why we don't try it if we don't have that access.
|
||
(let ((realname buffer-file-name)
|
||
tempname
|
||
(old-modtime (visited-file-modtime)))
|
||
;; Create temp files with strict access rights. It's easy to
|
||
;; loosen them later, whereas it's impossible to close the
|
||
;; time-window of loose permissions otherwise.
|
||
(condition-case err
|
||
(progn
|
||
(clear-visited-file-modtime)
|
||
;; Call write-region in the appropriate way
|
||
;; for saving the buffer.
|
||
(setq tempname
|
||
(make-temp-file
|
||
(expand-file-name "tmp" dir)))
|
||
;; Pass in nil&nil rather than point-min&max
|
||
;; cause we're saving the whole buffer.
|
||
;; write-region-annotate-functions may use it.
|
||
(write-region nil nil tempname nil realname
|
||
buffer-file-truename)
|
||
(when save-silently (message nil)))
|
||
;; If we failed, restore the buffer's modtime.
|
||
(error (set-visited-file-modtime old-modtime)
|
||
(signal (car err) (cdr err))))
|
||
;; Since we have created an entirely new file,
|
||
;; make sure it gets the right permission bits set.
|
||
(setq setmodes
|
||
(or setmodes
|
||
(list (or (file-modes buffer-file-name)
|
||
(logand ?\666 (default-file-modes)))
|
||
(with-demoted-errors
|
||
"Error getting extended attributes: %s"
|
||
(file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name))
|
||
buffer-file-name)))
|
||
;; We succeeded in writing the temp file,
|
||
;; so rename it.
|
||
(rename-file tempname
|
||
(if (and file-preserve-symlinks-on-save
|
||
(file-symlink-p buffer-file-name))
|
||
;; Write to the file that the symlink
|
||
;; points to.
|
||
(file-chase-links buffer-file-name)
|
||
buffer-file-name)
|
||
t))
|
||
;; If file not writable, see if we can make it writable
|
||
;; temporarily while we write it (its original modes will be
|
||
;; restored in 'basic-save-buffer' or, in case of an error, in
|
||
;; the `unwind-protect' below). But no need to do so if we
|
||
;; have just backed it up (setmodes is set) because that says
|
||
;; we're superseding.
|
||
(cond ((and tempsetmodes (not setmodes))
|
||
;; Change the mode back, after writing.
|
||
(setq setmodes
|
||
(list (file-modes buffer-file-name)
|
||
(with-demoted-errors
|
||
"Error getting extended attributes: %s"
|
||
(file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name))
|
||
buffer-file-name))
|
||
;; If set-file-extended-attributes fails to make the
|
||
;; file writable, fall back on set-file-modes. Calling
|
||
;; set-file-extended-attributes here may or may not be
|
||
;; actually necessary. However, since its exact
|
||
;; behavior is highly port-specific, since calling it
|
||
;; does not do any harm, and since the call has a long
|
||
;; history, we decided to leave it in (bug#66546).
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Error setting attributes: %s"
|
||
(set-file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name
|
||
(nth 1 setmodes)))
|
||
(unless (file-writable-p buffer-file-name)
|
||
(set-file-modes buffer-file-name
|
||
(logior (car setmodes) 128)))))
|
||
(let (success)
|
||
(unwind-protect
|
||
(progn
|
||
;; Pass in nil&nil rather than point-min&max to indicate
|
||
;; we're saving the buffer rather than just a region.
|
||
;; write-region-annotate-functions may make use of it.
|
||
(write-region nil nil
|
||
buffer-file-name nil t buffer-file-truename)
|
||
(when save-silently (message nil))
|
||
(setq success t))
|
||
(cond
|
||
;; If we get an error writing the file, and there is no
|
||
;; backup file, then we (most likely) made that file
|
||
;; writable above. Attempt to undo the write-access.
|
||
((and setmodes (not success)
|
||
(equal (nth 2 setmodes) buffer-file-name))
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Error setting file modes: %S"
|
||
(set-file-modes buffer-file-name (car setmodes)))
|
||
(with-demoted-errors "Error setting attributes: %s"
|
||
(set-file-extended-attributes buffer-file-name
|
||
(nth 1 setmodes))))
|
||
;; If we get an error writing the new file, and we made
|
||
;; the backup by renaming, undo the backing-up.
|
||
((and setmodes (not success))
|
||
(rename-file (nth 2 setmodes) buffer-file-name t)
|
||
(setq buffer-backed-up nil)))))))
|
||
setmodes))
|
||
|
||
(declare-function diff-no-select "diff"
|
||
(old new &optional switches no-async buf))
|
||
|
||
(defvar save-some-buffers--switch-window-callback nil)
|
||
|
||
(defvar save-some-buffers-action-alist
|
||
`((?\C-r
|
||
,(lambda (buf)
|
||
(if (not enable-recursive-minibuffers)
|
||
(progn (display-buffer buf)
|
||
(setq other-window-scroll-buffer buf))
|
||
(view-buffer buf (lambda (_) (exit-recursive-edit)))
|
||
(recursive-edit))
|
||
;; Return nil to ask about BUF again.
|
||
nil)
|
||
,(purecopy "view this buffer"))
|
||
(?\C-f
|
||
,(lambda (buf)
|
||
(funcall save-some-buffers--switch-window-callback buf)
|
||
(setq quit-flag t))
|
||
,(purecopy "view this buffer and quit"))
|
||
(?d ,(lambda (buf)
|
||
(if (null (buffer-file-name buf))
|
||
(message "Not applicable: no file")
|
||
(require 'diff) ;for diff-no-select.
|
||
(let ((diffbuf (diff-no-select (buffer-file-name buf) buf
|
||
nil 'noasync)))
|
||
(if (not enable-recursive-minibuffers)
|
||
(progn (display-buffer diffbuf)
|
||
(setq other-window-scroll-buffer diffbuf))
|
||
(view-buffer diffbuf (lambda (_) (exit-recursive-edit)))
|
||
(recursive-edit))))
|
||
;; Return nil to ask about BUF again.
|
||
nil)
|
||
,(purecopy "view changes in this buffer")))
|
||
"ACTION-ALIST argument used in call to `map-y-or-n-p'.")
|
||
(put 'save-some-buffers-action-alist 'risky-local-variable t)
|
||
|
||
(defvar-local buffer-save-without-query nil
|
||
"Non-nil means `save-some-buffers' should save this buffer without asking.")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom save-some-buffers-default-predicate nil
|
||
"Default predicate for `save-some-buffers'.
|
||
|
||
This allows you to stop `save-some-buffers' from asking
|
||
about certain files that you'd usually rather not save.
|
||
|
||
This function is called (with no parameters) from the buffer to
|
||
be saved. When the function's symbol has the property
|
||
`save-some-buffers-function', the higher-order function is supposed
|
||
to return a predicate used to check buffers."
|
||
:group 'auto-save
|
||
;; FIXME nil should not be a valid option, let alone the default,
|
||
;; eg so that add-function can be used.
|
||
:type '(choice (const :tag "Default" nil)
|
||
(function :tag "Only in subdirs of current project"
|
||
save-some-buffers-root)
|
||
(function :tag "Custom function"))
|
||
:version "26.1")
|
||
|
||
(defun save-some-buffers-root ()
|
||
"A predicate to check whether the buffer is under the project root directory.
|
||
Can be used as a value of `save-some-buffers-default-predicate'
|
||
to save buffers only under the project root or in subdirectories
|
||
of the directory that was default during command invocation."
|
||
(let ((root (or (and (featurep 'project) (project-current)
|
||
(fboundp 'project-root)
|
||
(project-root (project-current)))
|
||
default-directory)))
|
||
(lambda () (file-in-directory-p default-directory root))))
|
||
(put 'save-some-buffers-root 'save-some-buffers-function t)
|
||
|
||
(defun files--buffers-needing-to-be-saved (pred)
|
||
"Return a list of buffers to save according to PRED.
|
||
See `save-some-buffers' for PRED values."
|
||
(let ((buffers
|
||
(mapcar (lambda (buffer)
|
||
(if
|
||
;; Note that killing some buffers may kill others via
|
||
;; hooks (e.g. Rmail and its viewing buffer).
|
||
(and (buffer-live-p buffer)
|
||
(buffer-modified-p buffer)
|
||
(not (buffer-base-buffer buffer))
|
||
(or
|
||
(buffer-file-name buffer)
|
||
(with-current-buffer buffer
|
||
(or (eq buffer-offer-save 'always)
|
||
(and pred buffer-offer-save
|
||
(> (buffer-size) 0)))))
|
||
(or (not (functionp pred))
|
||
(with-current-buffer buffer
|
||
(funcall pred))))
|
||
buffer))
|
||
(buffer-list))))
|
||
(delq nil buffers)))
|
||
|
||
(defvar save-some-buffers-functions nil
|
||
"Functions to be run by `save-some-buffers' after saving the buffers.
|
||
These functions should accept one mandatory and one optional
|
||
argument, and they can be called in two \"modes\", depending on
|
||
the first argument. If the first argument is `query', then the
|
||
function should return non-nil if there is something to be
|
||
saved (but it should not actually save anything).
|
||
|
||
If the first argument is something else, then the function should
|
||
save according to the value of the second argument, which is the
|
||
ARG argument with which `save-some-buffers' was called.
|
||
|
||
The main purpose of these functions is to save stuff that is kept
|
||
in variables (rather than in buffers).")
|
||
|
||
(defun save-some-buffers (&optional arg pred)
|
||
"Save some modified file-visiting buffers. Asks user about each one.
|
||
You can answer \\`y' or \\`SPC' to save, \\`n' or \\`DEL' not to save, \\`C-r'
|
||
to look at the buffer in question with `view-buffer' before
|
||
deciding, \\`d' to view the differences using
|
||
`diff-buffer-with-file', \\`!' to save the buffer and all remaining
|
||
buffers without any further querying, \\`.' to save only the
|
||
current buffer and skip the remaining ones and \\`q' or \\`RET' to exit
|
||
the function without saving any more buffers. \\`C-h' displays a
|
||
help message describing these options.
|
||
|
||
This command first saves any buffers where `buffer-save-without-query' is
|
||
non-nil, without asking.
|
||
|
||
Optional argument ARG (interactively, prefix argument) non-nil means save
|
||
all with no questions.
|
||
Optional second argument PRED determines which buffers are considered:
|
||
If PRED is nil, all the file-visiting buffers are considered.
|
||
If PRED is t, then certain non-file buffers will also be considered.
|
||
If PRED is a function, it is called with no argument in each buffer and
|
||
should return non-nil if that buffer should be considered.
|
||
PRED defaults to the value of `save-some-buffers-default-predicate'.
|
||
|
||
See `save-some-buffers-action-alist' if you want to
|
||
change the additional actions you can take on files.
|
||
|
||
The functions in `save-some-buffers-functions' will be called
|
||
after saving the buffers."
|
||
(interactive "P")
|
||
(unless pred
|
||
(setq pred
|
||
;; Allow `pred' to be a function that returns a predicate
|
||
;; with lexical bindings in its original environment (bug#46374).
|
||
(if (and (symbolp save-some-buffers-default-predicate)
|
||
(get save-some-buffers-default-predicate
|
||
'save-some-buffers-function))
|
||
(funcall save-some-buffers-default-predicate)
|
||
save-some-buffers-default-predicate)))
|
||
(let* ((switched-buffer nil)
|
||
(save-some-buffers--switch-window-callback
|
||
(lambda (buffer)
|
||
(setq switched-buffer buffer)))
|
||
queried autosaved-buffers
|
||
files-done inhibit-message)
|
||
(unwind-protect
|
||
(save-window-excursion
|
||
(dolist (buffer (buffer-list))
|
||
;; First save any buffers that we're supposed to save
|
||
;; unconditionally. That way the following code won't ask
|
||
;; about them.
|
||
(with-current-buffer buffer
|
||
(when (and buffer-save-without-query (buffer-modified-p))
|
||
(push (buffer-name) autosaved-buffers)
|
||
(save-buffer))))
|
||
;; Ask about those buffers that merit it,
|
||
;; and record the number thus saved.
|
||
(setq files-done
|
||
(map-y-or-n-p
|
||
(lambda (buffer)
|
||
(if arg
|
||
t
|
||
(setq queried t)
|
||
(if (buffer-file-name buffer)
|
||
(if (or
|
||
(equal (buffer-name buffer)
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory
|
||
(buffer-file-name buffer)))
|
||
(string-match
|
||
(concat "\\<"
|
||
(regexp-quote
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory
|
||
(buffer-file-name buffer)))
|
||
"<[^>]*>\\'")
|
||
(buffer-name buffer)))
|
||
;; The buffer name is similar to the file
|
||
;; name.
|
||
(format "Save file %s? "
|
||
(buffer-file-name buffer))
|
||
;; The buffer and file names are dissimilar;
|
||
;; display both.
|
||
(format "Save file %s (buffer %s)? "
|
||
(buffer-file-name buffer)
|
||
(buffer-name buffer)))
|
||
;; No file name.
|
||
(format "Save buffer %s? " (buffer-name buffer)))))
|
||
(lambda (buffer)
|
||
(with-current-buffer buffer
|
||
(save-buffer)))
|
||
(files--buffers-needing-to-be-saved pred)
|
||
'("buffer" "buffers" "save")
|
||
save-some-buffers-action-alist))
|
||
;; Allow other things to be saved at this time, like abbrevs.
|
||
(dolist (func save-some-buffers-functions)
|
||
(setq inhibit-message (or (funcall func nil arg) inhibit-message)))
|
||
(or queried (> files-done 0) inhibit-message
|
||
(cond
|
||
((null autosaved-buffers)
|
||
(when (called-interactively-p 'any)
|
||
(files--message "(No files need saving)")))
|
||
((= (length autosaved-buffers) 1)
|
||
(files--message "(Saved %s)" (car autosaved-buffers)))
|
||
(t
|
||
(files--message
|
||
"(Saved %d files: %s)" (length autosaved-buffers)
|
||
(mapconcat 'identity autosaved-buffers ", "))))))
|
||
(when switched-buffer
|
||
(pop-to-buffer-same-window switched-buffer)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun clear-visited-file-modtime ()
|
||
"Clear out records of last mod time of visited file.
|
||
Next attempt to save will not complain of a discrepancy."
|
||
(set-visited-file-modtime 0))
|
||
|
||
(defun not-modified (&optional arg)
|
||
"Mark current buffer as unmodified, not needing to be saved.
|
||
With prefix ARG, mark buffer as modified, so \\[save-buffer] will save.
|
||
|
||
It is not a good idea to use this function in Lisp programs, because it
|
||
prints a message in the minibuffer. Instead, use `set-buffer-modified-p'."
|
||
(declare (interactive-only set-buffer-modified-p))
|
||
(interactive "P")
|
||
(files--message (if arg "Modification-flag set"
|
||
"Modification-flag cleared"))
|
||
(set-buffer-modified-p arg))
|
||
|
||
(defun insert-file (filename)
|
||
"Insert contents of file FILENAME into buffer after point.
|
||
Set mark after the inserted text.
|
||
|
||
This function is meant for the user to run interactively.
|
||
Don't call it from programs! Use `insert-file-contents' instead.
|
||
\(Its calling sequence is different; see its documentation)."
|
||
(declare (interactive-only insert-file-contents))
|
||
(interactive "*fInsert file: ")
|
||
(insert-file-1 filename #'insert-file-contents))
|
||
|
||
(defun append-to-file (start end filename)
|
||
"Append the contents of the region to the end of file FILENAME.
|
||
When called from a function, expects three arguments,
|
||
START, END and FILENAME. START and END are normally buffer positions
|
||
specifying the part of the buffer to write.
|
||
If START is nil, that means to use the entire buffer contents.
|
||
If START is a string, then output that string to the file
|
||
instead of any buffer contents; END is ignored.
|
||
|
||
This does character code conversion and applies annotations
|
||
like `write-region' does."
|
||
(interactive "r\nFAppend to file: ")
|
||
(prog1 (write-region start end filename t)
|
||
(when save-silently (message nil))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-newest-backup (filename)
|
||
"Return most recent backup file for FILENAME or nil if no backups exist."
|
||
(car (file-backup-file-names filename)))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-backup-file-names (filename)
|
||
"Return a list of backup files for FILENAME.
|
||
The list will be sorted by modification time so that the most
|
||
recent files are first."
|
||
;; `make-backup-file-name' will get us the right directory for
|
||
;; ordinary or numeric backups. It might create a directory for
|
||
;; backups as a side-effect, according to `backup-directory-alist'.
|
||
(let* ((filename (file-name-sans-versions
|
||
(make-backup-file-name (expand-file-name filename))))
|
||
(dir (file-name-directory filename)))
|
||
(when (file-directory-p dir)
|
||
(sort
|
||
(seq-filter
|
||
(lambda (candidate)
|
||
(and (backup-file-name-p candidate)
|
||
(string= (file-name-sans-versions candidate) filename)))
|
||
(mapcar
|
||
(lambda (file)
|
||
(concat dir file))
|
||
(file-name-all-completions (file-name-nondirectory filename) dir)))
|
||
#'file-newer-than-file-p))))
|
||
|
||
(defun rename-uniquely ()
|
||
"Rename current buffer to a similar name not already taken.
|
||
This function is useful for creating multiple shell process buffers
|
||
or multiple mail buffers, etc.
|
||
|
||
Note that some commands, in particular those based on `compilation-mode'
|
||
\(`compile', `grep', etc.) will reuse the current buffer if it has the
|
||
appropriate mode even if it has been renamed. So as well as renaming
|
||
the buffer, you also need to switch buffers before running another
|
||
instance of such commands."
|
||
(interactive)
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(let ((base-name (buffer-name)))
|
||
(and (string-match "<[0-9]+>\\'" base-name)
|
||
(not (and buffer-file-name
|
||
(string= base-name
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name))))
|
||
;; If the existing buffer name has a <NNN>,
|
||
;; which isn't part of the file name (if any),
|
||
;; then get rid of that.
|
||
(setq base-name (substring base-name 0 (match-beginning 0))))
|
||
(rename-buffer (generate-new-buffer-name base-name))
|
||
(force-mode-line-update))))
|
||
|
||
(defun files--ensure-directory (dir)
|
||
"Make directory DIR if it is not already a directory.
|
||
Return non-nil if DIR is already a directory."
|
||
(condition-case err
|
||
(make-directory-internal dir)
|
||
(error
|
||
(or (file-directory-p dir)
|
||
(signal (car err) (cdr err))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun make-directory (dir &optional parents)
|
||
"Create the directory DIR and optionally any nonexistent parent dirs.
|
||
|
||
Interactively, the default choice of directory to create is the
|
||
current buffer's default directory. That is useful when you have
|
||
visited a file in a nonexistent directory.
|
||
|
||
Noninteractively, the second (optional) argument PARENTS, if
|
||
non-nil, says whether to create parent directories that don't
|
||
exist. Interactively, this happens by default.
|
||
|
||
Return non-nil if PARENTS is non-nil and DIR already exists as a
|
||
directory, and nil if DIR did not already exist but was created.
|
||
Signal an error if unsuccessful."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(list (read-file-name "Make directory: " default-directory default-directory
|
||
nil nil)
|
||
t))
|
||
;; If default-directory is a remote directory,
|
||
;; make sure we find its make-directory handler.
|
||
(setq dir (expand-file-name dir))
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler dir 'make-directory)))
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'make-directory dir parents)
|
||
(if (not parents)
|
||
(make-directory-internal dir)
|
||
(let ((dir (directory-file-name (expand-file-name dir)))
|
||
already-dir create-list parent)
|
||
(while (progn
|
||
(setq parent (directory-file-name
|
||
(file-name-directory dir)))
|
||
(condition-case ()
|
||
(ignore (setq already-dir
|
||
(files--ensure-directory dir)))
|
||
(error
|
||
;; Do not loop if root does not exist (Bug#2309).
|
||
(not (string= dir parent)))))
|
||
(setq create-list (cons dir create-list)
|
||
dir parent))
|
||
(dolist (dir create-list)
|
||
(setq already-dir (files--ensure-directory dir)))
|
||
already-dir)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun make-empty-file (filename &optional parents)
|
||
"Create an empty file FILENAME.
|
||
Optional arg PARENTS, if non-nil then creates parent dirs as needed.
|
||
|
||
If called interactively, then PARENTS is non-nil."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(let ((filename (read-file-name "Create empty file: ")))
|
||
(list filename t)))
|
||
(when (and (file-exists-p filename) (null parents))
|
||
(signal 'file-already-exists `("File exists" ,filename)))
|
||
(let ((paren-dir (file-name-directory filename)))
|
||
(when (and paren-dir (not (file-exists-p paren-dir)))
|
||
(make-directory paren-dir parents)))
|
||
(write-region "" nil filename nil 0))
|
||
|
||
(defconst directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp
|
||
"[^.]\\|\\.\\.\\."
|
||
"Regexp matching any file name except \".\" and \"..\".
|
||
More precisely, it matches parts of any nonempty string except those two.
|
||
It is useful as the regexp argument to `directory-files' and
|
||
`directory-files-and-attributes'.")
|
||
|
||
(defun files--force (no-such fn &rest args)
|
||
"Use NO-SUCH to affect behavior of function FN applied to list ARGS.
|
||
This acts like (apply FN ARGS) except it returns NO-SUCH if it is
|
||
non-nil and if FN fails due to a missing file or directory."
|
||
(condition-case err
|
||
(apply fn args)
|
||
(file-missing (or no-such (signal (car err) (cdr err))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun delete-file (filename &optional trash)
|
||
"Delete file named FILENAME. If it is a symlink, remove the symlink.
|
||
If file has multiple names, it continues to exist with the other names.
|
||
TRASH non-nil means to trash the file instead of deleting, provided
|
||
`delete-by-moving-to-trash' is non-nil.
|
||
|
||
When called interactively, TRASH is t if no prefix argument is given.
|
||
With a prefix argument, TRASH is nil."
|
||
(interactive (list (read-file-name
|
||
(if (and delete-by-moving-to-trash (null current-prefix-arg))
|
||
"Move file to trash: " "Delete file: ")
|
||
nil default-directory (confirm-nonexistent-file-or-buffer))
|
||
(null current-prefix-arg)))
|
||
(if (and (file-directory-p filename) (not (file-symlink-p filename)))
|
||
(signal 'file-error (list "Removing old name: is a directory" filename)))
|
||
(let* ((filename (expand-file-name filename))
|
||
(handler (find-file-name-handler filename 'delete-file)))
|
||
(cond (handler (funcall handler 'delete-file filename trash))
|
||
((and delete-by-moving-to-trash trash) (move-file-to-trash filename))
|
||
(t (delete-file-internal filename)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun delete-directory (directory &optional recursive trash)
|
||
"Delete the directory named DIRECTORY. Does not follow symlinks.
|
||
If RECURSIVE is non-nil, delete files in DIRECTORY as well, with
|
||
no error if something else is simultaneously deleting them.
|
||
TRASH non-nil means to trash the directory instead, provided
|
||
`delete-by-moving-to-trash' is non-nil.
|
||
|
||
When called interactively, TRASH is nil if and only if a prefix
|
||
argument is given, and a further prompt asks the user for
|
||
RECURSIVE if DIRECTORY is nonempty."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(let* ((trashing (and delete-by-moving-to-trash
|
||
(null current-prefix-arg)))
|
||
(dir (expand-file-name
|
||
(read-directory-name
|
||
(if trashing
|
||
"Move directory to trash: "
|
||
"Delete directory: ")
|
||
default-directory default-directory nil nil))))
|
||
(list dir
|
||
(if (directory-files dir nil directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp)
|
||
(y-or-n-p
|
||
(format-message "Directory `%s' is not empty, really %s? "
|
||
dir (if trashing "trash" "delete")))
|
||
nil)
|
||
(null current-prefix-arg))))
|
||
;; If default-directory is a remote directory, make sure we find its
|
||
;; delete-directory handler.
|
||
(setq directory (directory-file-name (expand-file-name directory)))
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler directory 'delete-directory)))
|
||
(cond
|
||
(handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'delete-directory directory recursive trash))
|
||
((and delete-by-moving-to-trash trash)
|
||
;; Move non-empty dir to trash only if recursive deletion was
|
||
;; requested. This mimics the non-`delete-by-moving-to-trash'
|
||
;; case, where the operation fails in delete-directory-internal.
|
||
;; As `move-file-to-trash' trashes directories (empty or
|
||
;; otherwise) as a unit, we do not need to recurse here.
|
||
(if (not (or recursive (directory-empty-p directory)))
|
||
(error "Directory is not empty, not moving to trash")
|
||
(move-file-to-trash directory)))
|
||
;; Otherwise, call ourselves recursively if needed.
|
||
(t
|
||
(when (or (not recursive) (file-symlink-p directory)
|
||
(let* ((files
|
||
(files--force t #'directory-files directory 'full
|
||
directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp))
|
||
(directory-exists (listp files)))
|
||
(when directory-exists
|
||
(mapc (lambda (file)
|
||
;; This test is equivalent to but more efficient
|
||
;; than (and (file-directory-p fn)
|
||
;; (not (file-symlink-p fn))).
|
||
(if (eq t (car (file-attributes file)))
|
||
(delete-directory file recursive)
|
||
(files--force t #'delete-file file)))
|
||
files))
|
||
directory-exists))
|
||
(files--force recursive #'delete-directory-internal directory))))))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom remote-file-name-inhibit-delete-by-moving-to-trash nil
|
||
"Whether remote files shall be moved to the Trash.
|
||
This overrules any setting of `delete-by-moving-to-trash'."
|
||
:version "30.1"
|
||
:group 'files
|
||
:group 'tramp
|
||
:type 'boolean)
|
||
|
||
(defun file-equal-p (file1 file2)
|
||
"Return non-nil if files FILE1 and FILE2 name the same file.
|
||
If FILE1 or FILE2 does not exist, the return value is unspecified."
|
||
(let ((handler (or (find-file-name-handler file1 'file-equal-p)
|
||
(find-file-name-handler file2 'file-equal-p))))
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'file-equal-p file1 file2)
|
||
(let (f1-attr f2-attr)
|
||
(and (setq f1-attr (file-attributes (file-truename file1)))
|
||
(setq f2-attr (file-attributes (file-truename file2)))
|
||
(progn
|
||
;; Haiku systems change the file's last access timestamp
|
||
;; every time `stat' is called. Make sure to not compare
|
||
;; the timestamps in that case.
|
||
(or (equal f1-attr f2-attr)
|
||
(when (and (eq system-type 'haiku)
|
||
(consp (nthcdr 4 f1-attr))
|
||
(consp (nthcdr 4 f2-attr)))
|
||
(ignore-errors
|
||
(setcar (nthcdr 4 f1-attr) nil)
|
||
(setcar (nthcdr 4 f2-attr) nil))
|
||
(equal f1-attr f2-attr)))))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-in-directory-p (file dir)
|
||
"Return non-nil if DIR is a parent directory of FILE.
|
||
Value is non-nil if FILE is inside DIR or inside a subdirectory of DIR.
|
||
A directory is considered to be a \"parent\" of itself.
|
||
DIR must be an existing directory, otherwise the function returns nil."
|
||
(let ((handler (or (find-file-name-handler file 'file-in-directory-p)
|
||
(find-file-name-handler dir 'file-in-directory-p))))
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'file-in-directory-p file dir)
|
||
(when (file-directory-p dir) ; DIR must exist.
|
||
(setq file (file-truename file)
|
||
dir (file-truename dir))
|
||
(let ((ls1 (split-string file "/" t))
|
||
(ls2 (split-string dir "/" t))
|
||
(root
|
||
(cond
|
||
;; A UNC on Windows systems, or a "super-root" on Apollo.
|
||
((string-match "\\`//" file) "//")
|
||
((string-match "\\`/" file) "/")
|
||
(t "")))
|
||
(mismatch nil))
|
||
(while (and ls1 ls2 (not mismatch))
|
||
(if (string-equal (car ls1) (car ls2))
|
||
(setq root (concat root (car ls1) "/"))
|
||
(setq mismatch t))
|
||
(setq ls1 (cdr ls1)
|
||
ls2 (cdr ls2)))
|
||
(unless mismatch
|
||
(file-equal-p root dir)))))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar file-has-changed-p--hash-table (make-hash-table :test #'equal)
|
||
"Internal variable used by `file-has-changed-p'.")
|
||
|
||
(defun file-has-changed-p (file &optional tag)
|
||
"Return non-nil if FILE has changed.
|
||
The size and modification time of FILE are compared to the size
|
||
and modification time of the same FILE during a previous
|
||
invocation of `file-has-changed-p'. Thus, the first invocation
|
||
of `file-has-changed-p' always returns non-nil when FILE exists.
|
||
The optional argument TAG, which must be a symbol, can be used to
|
||
limit the comparison to invocations with identical tags; it can be
|
||
the symbol of the calling function, for example."
|
||
(let* ((file (directory-file-name (expand-file-name file)))
|
||
(remote-file-name-inhibit-cache t)
|
||
(fileattr (file-attributes file 'integer))
|
||
(attr (and fileattr
|
||
(cons (file-attribute-size fileattr)
|
||
(file-attribute-modification-time fileattr))))
|
||
(sym (concat (symbol-name tag) "@" file))
|
||
(cachedattr (gethash sym file-has-changed-p--hash-table)))
|
||
(when (not (equal attr cachedattr))
|
||
(puthash sym attr file-has-changed-p--hash-table))))
|
||
|
||
(defun copy-directory (directory newname &optional keep-time parents copy-contents)
|
||
"Copy DIRECTORY to NEWNAME. Both args must be strings.
|
||
This function always sets the file modes of the output files to match
|
||
the corresponding input file.
|
||
|
||
The third arg KEEP-TIME non-nil means give the output files the same
|
||
last-modified time as the old ones. (This works on only some systems.)
|
||
|
||
A prefix arg makes KEEP-TIME non-nil.
|
||
|
||
Noninteractively, the PARENTS argument says whether to create
|
||
parent directories if they don't exist. Interactively, this
|
||
happens by default.
|
||
|
||
If DIRECTORY is a symlink and `copy-directory-create-symlink' is
|
||
non-nil, create a symlink with the same target as DIRECTORY.
|
||
|
||
If NEWNAME is a directory name, copy DIRECTORY as a subdirectory
|
||
there. However, if called from Lisp with a non-nil optional
|
||
argument COPY-CONTENTS, copy the contents of DIRECTORY directly
|
||
into NEWNAME instead."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(let ((dir (read-directory-name
|
||
"Copy directory: " default-directory default-directory t nil)))
|
||
(list dir
|
||
(read-directory-name
|
||
(format "Copy directory %s to: " dir)
|
||
default-directory default-directory nil nil)
|
||
current-prefix-arg t nil)))
|
||
(when (file-in-directory-p newname directory)
|
||
(error "Cannot copy `%s' into its subdirectory `%s'"
|
||
directory newname))
|
||
;; If default-directory is a remote directory, make sure we find its
|
||
;; copy-directory handler.
|
||
(let ((handler (or (find-file-name-handler directory 'copy-directory)
|
||
(find-file-name-handler newname 'copy-directory)))
|
||
follow)
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'copy-directory directory
|
||
newname keep-time parents copy-contents)
|
||
|
||
;; Compute target name.
|
||
(setq directory (directory-file-name (expand-file-name directory))
|
||
newname (expand-file-name newname))
|
||
|
||
;; If DIRECTORY is a symlink, create a symlink with the same target.
|
||
(if (and (file-symlink-p directory)
|
||
copy-directory-create-symlink)
|
||
(let ((target (car (file-attributes directory))))
|
||
(if (directory-name-p newname)
|
||
(make-symbolic-link target
|
||
(concat newname
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory directory))
|
||
t)
|
||
(make-symbolic-link target newname t)))
|
||
;; Else proceed to copy as a regular directory
|
||
;; first by creating the destination directory if needed,
|
||
;; preparing to follow any symlink to a directory we did not create.
|
||
(setq follow
|
||
(if (not (directory-name-p newname))
|
||
;; If NEWNAME is not a directory name, create it;
|
||
;; that is where we will copy the files of DIRECTORY.
|
||
(make-directory newname parents)
|
||
;; NEWNAME is a directory name. If COPY-CONTENTS is non-nil,
|
||
;; create NEWNAME if it is not already a directory;
|
||
;; otherwise, create NEWNAME/[DIRECTORY-BASENAME].
|
||
(unless copy-contents
|
||
(setq newname (concat newname
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory directory))))
|
||
(condition-case err
|
||
(make-directory (directory-file-name newname) parents)
|
||
(error
|
||
(or (file-directory-p newname)
|
||
(signal (car err) (cdr err)))))))
|
||
|
||
;; Copy recursively.
|
||
(dolist (file
|
||
;; We do not want to copy "." and "..".
|
||
(directory-files directory 'full
|
||
directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp))
|
||
(let ((target (concat (file-name-as-directory newname)
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory file)))
|
||
(filetype (car (file-attributes file))))
|
||
(cond
|
||
((eq filetype t) ; Directory but not a symlink.
|
||
(copy-directory file target keep-time parents t))
|
||
((stringp filetype) ; Symbolic link
|
||
(make-symbolic-link filetype target t))
|
||
((copy-file file target t keep-time)))))
|
||
|
||
;; Set directory attributes.
|
||
(let ((modes (file-modes directory))
|
||
(times (and keep-time (file-attribute-modification-time
|
||
(file-attributes directory))))
|
||
(follow-flag (unless follow 'nofollow)))
|
||
(if modes (set-file-modes newname modes follow-flag))
|
||
(when times
|
||
;; When built for an Android GUI build, don't attempt to
|
||
;; set file times for a file within /content, as the
|
||
;; Android VFS layer does not provide means to change file
|
||
;; timestamps.
|
||
(when (or (not (and (eq system-type 'android)
|
||
(featurep 'android)))
|
||
(not (string-prefix-p "/content/" newname)))
|
||
(set-file-times newname times follow-flag))))))))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;; At time of writing, only info uses this.
|
||
(defun prune-directory-list (dirs &optional keep reject)
|
||
"Return a copy of DIRS with all non-existent directories removed.
|
||
The optional argument KEEP is a list of directories to retain even if
|
||
they don't exist, and REJECT is a list of directories to remove from
|
||
DIRS, even if they exist; REJECT takes precedence over KEEP.
|
||
|
||
Note that membership in REJECT and KEEP is checked using simple string
|
||
comparison."
|
||
(apply #'nconc
|
||
(mapcar (lambda (dir)
|
||
(and (not (member dir reject))
|
||
(or (member dir keep) (file-directory-p dir))
|
||
(list dir)))
|
||
dirs)))
|
||
|
||
|
||
(put 'revert-buffer-function 'permanent-local t)
|
||
(defvar revert-buffer-function #'revert-buffer--default
|
||
"Function to use to revert this buffer.
|
||
The function receives two arguments IGNORE-AUTO and NOCONFIRM,
|
||
which are the arguments that `revert-buffer' received.
|
||
It also has access to the `preserve-modes' argument of `revert-buffer'
|
||
via the `revert-buffer-preserve-modes' dynamic variable.
|
||
|
||
For historical reasons, a value of nil means to use the default function.
|
||
This should not be relied upon.")
|
||
|
||
(put 'revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function 'permanent-local t)
|
||
(defvar revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function
|
||
#'revert-buffer-insert-file-contents--default-function
|
||
"Function to use to insert contents when reverting this buffer.
|
||
The function receives two arguments: the first the nominal file name to use;
|
||
the second is t if reading the auto-save file.
|
||
|
||
The function is responsible for updating (or preserving) point.
|
||
|
||
For historical reasons, a value of nil means to use the default function.
|
||
This should not be relied upon.")
|
||
|
||
(defun buffer-stale--default-function (&optional _noconfirm)
|
||
"Default function to use for `buffer-stale-function'.
|
||
This function ignores its argument.
|
||
This returns non-nil if the current buffer is visiting a readable file
|
||
whose modification time does not match that of the buffer.
|
||
|
||
This function handles only buffers that are visiting files.
|
||
Non-file buffers need a custom function."
|
||
(and buffer-file-name
|
||
(file-readable-p buffer-file-name)
|
||
(not (buffer-modified-p (current-buffer)))
|
||
(not (verify-visited-file-modtime (current-buffer)))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar buffer-stale-function #'buffer-stale--default-function
|
||
"Function to check whether a buffer needs reverting.
|
||
This should be a function with one optional argument NOCONFIRM.
|
||
Auto Revert Mode passes t for NOCONFIRM. The function should return
|
||
non-nil if the buffer should be reverted. A return value of
|
||
`fast' means that the need for reverting was not checked, but
|
||
that reverting the buffer is fast. The buffer is current when
|
||
this function is called.
|
||
|
||
The idea behind the NOCONFIRM argument is that it should be
|
||
non-nil if the buffer is going to be reverted without asking the
|
||
user. In such situations, one has to be careful with potentially
|
||
time consuming operations.
|
||
|
||
For historical reasons, a value of nil means to use the default function.
|
||
This should not be relied upon.
|
||
|
||
For more information on how this variable is used by Auto Revert mode,
|
||
see Info node `(emacs)Supporting additional buffers'.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar-local buffer-auto-revert-by-notification nil
|
||
"Whether a buffer can rely on notification in Auto-Revert mode.
|
||
If non-nil, monitoring changes to the directory of the current
|
||
buffer is sufficient for knowing when that buffer needs to be
|
||
updated in Auto Revert Mode. Such notification does not include
|
||
changes to files in that directory, only to the directory itself.
|
||
|
||
This variable applies only to buffers where `buffer-file-name' is
|
||
nil; other buffers are tracked by their files.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar before-revert-hook nil
|
||
"Normal hook for `revert-buffer' to run before reverting.
|
||
The function `revert-buffer--default' runs this.
|
||
A customized `revert-buffer-function' need not run this hook.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar after-revert-hook nil
|
||
"Normal hook for `revert-buffer' to run after reverting.
|
||
Note that the hook value that it runs is the value that was in effect
|
||
before reverting; that makes a difference if you have buffer-local
|
||
hook functions.
|
||
|
||
The function `revert-buffer--default' runs this.
|
||
A customized `revert-buffer-function' need not run this hook.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar revert-buffer-in-progress-p nil
|
||
"Non-nil if a `revert-buffer' operation is in progress, nil otherwise.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar revert-buffer-internal-hook)
|
||
|
||
;; `revert-buffer-function' was defined long ago to be a function of only
|
||
;; 2 arguments, so we have to use a dynbind variable to pass the
|
||
;; `preserve-modes' argument of `revert-buffer'.
|
||
(defvar revert-buffer-preserve-modes)
|
||
|
||
(defun revert-buffer (&optional ignore-auto noconfirm preserve-modes)
|
||
"Replace current buffer text with the text of the visited file on disk.
|
||
This undoes all changes since the file was visited or saved.
|
||
With a prefix argument, offer to revert from latest auto-save file, if
|
||
that is more recent than the visited file.
|
||
|
||
This command also implements an interface for special buffers
|
||
that contain text that doesn't come from a file, but reflects
|
||
some other data instead (e.g. Dired buffers, `buffer-list'
|
||
buffers). This is done via the variable `revert-buffer-function'.
|
||
In these cases, it should reconstruct the buffer contents from the
|
||
appropriate data.
|
||
|
||
When called from Lisp, the first argument is IGNORE-AUTO; offer to
|
||
revert from the auto-save file only when this is nil. Note that the
|
||
sense of this argument is the reverse of the prefix argument, for the
|
||
sake of backward compatibility. IGNORE-AUTO is optional, defaulting
|
||
to nil.
|
||
|
||
Optional second argument NOCONFIRM means don't ask for confirmation
|
||
at all. (The variable `revert-without-query' offers another way to
|
||
revert buffers without querying for confirmation.)
|
||
|
||
Optional third argument PRESERVE-MODES non-nil means don't alter
|
||
the files modes. Normally we reinitialize them using `normal-mode'.
|
||
|
||
This function binds `revert-buffer-in-progress-p' non-nil while it operates.
|
||
|
||
This function calls the function that `revert-buffer-function' specifies
|
||
to do the work, with arguments IGNORE-AUTO and NOCONFIRM.
|
||
The default function runs the hooks `before-revert-hook' and
|
||
`after-revert-hook'.
|
||
Return value is whatever `revert-buffer-function' returns. For historical
|
||
reasons, that return value is non-nil when `revert-buffer-function'
|
||
succeeds in its job and returns non-nil.
|
||
|
||
Reverting a buffer will try to preserve markers in the buffer,
|
||
but it cannot always preserve all of them. For better results,
|
||
use `revert-buffer-with-fine-grain', which tries harder to
|
||
preserve markers and overlays, at the price of being slower."
|
||
;; I admit it's odd to reverse the sense of the prefix argument, but
|
||
;; there is a lot of code out there that assumes that the first
|
||
;; argument should be t to avoid consulting the auto-save file, and
|
||
;; there's no straightforward way to encourage authors to notice a
|
||
;; reversal of the argument sense. So I'm just changing the user
|
||
;; interface, but leaving the programmatic interface the same.
|
||
(interactive (list (not current-prefix-arg)))
|
||
(let ((revert-buffer-in-progress-p t)
|
||
(revert-buffer-preserve-modes preserve-modes)
|
||
(state (and (boundp 'read-only-mode--state)
|
||
(list read-only-mode--state))))
|
||
;; Return whatever 'revert-buffer-function' returns.
|
||
(prog1 (funcall (or revert-buffer-function #'revert-buffer--default)
|
||
ignore-auto noconfirm)
|
||
(when state
|
||
(setq buffer-read-only (car state))
|
||
(setq-local read-only-mode--state (car state))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun revert-buffer--default (ignore-auto noconfirm)
|
||
"Default function for `revert-buffer'.
|
||
The arguments IGNORE-AUTO and NOCONFIRM are as described for `revert-buffer'.
|
||
Runs the hooks `before-revert-hook' and `after-revert-hook' at the
|
||
start and end.
|
||
The function returns non-nil if it reverts the buffer; signals
|
||
an error if the buffer is not associated with a file.
|
||
|
||
Calls `revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function' to reread the
|
||
contents of the visited file, with two arguments: the first is the file
|
||
name, the second is non-nil if reading an auto-save file.
|
||
|
||
This function handles only buffers that are visiting files.
|
||
Non-file buffers need a custom function."
|
||
(with-current-buffer (or (buffer-base-buffer (current-buffer))
|
||
(current-buffer))
|
||
(let* ((auto-save-p (and (not ignore-auto)
|
||
(recent-auto-save-p)
|
||
buffer-auto-save-file-name
|
||
(file-readable-p buffer-auto-save-file-name)
|
||
(y-or-n-p
|
||
"Buffer has been auto-saved recently. Revert from auto-save file? ")))
|
||
(file-name (if auto-save-p
|
||
buffer-auto-save-file-name
|
||
buffer-file-name)))
|
||
(cond ((null file-name)
|
||
(error "Buffer does not seem to be associated with any file"))
|
||
((or noconfirm
|
||
(and (not (buffer-modified-p))
|
||
(catch 'found
|
||
(dolist (regexp revert-without-query)
|
||
(when (string-match regexp file-name)
|
||
(throw 'found t)))))
|
||
(yes-or-no-p
|
||
(format (if (buffer-modified-p)
|
||
"Discard edits and reread from %s? "
|
||
"Revert buffer from file %s? ")
|
||
file-name)))
|
||
(run-hooks 'before-revert-hook)
|
||
;; If file was backed up but has changed since,
|
||
;; we should make another backup.
|
||
(and (not auto-save-p)
|
||
(not (verify-visited-file-modtime (current-buffer)))
|
||
(setq buffer-backed-up nil))
|
||
;; Effectively copy the after-revert-hook status,
|
||
;; since after-find-file will clobber it.
|
||
(let ((global-hook (default-value 'after-revert-hook))
|
||
(local-hook (when (local-variable-p 'after-revert-hook)
|
||
after-revert-hook))
|
||
(inhibit-read-only t))
|
||
;; FIXME: Throw away undo-log when preserve-modes is nil?
|
||
(funcall
|
||
(or revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function
|
||
#'revert-buffer-insert-file-contents--default-function)
|
||
file-name auto-save-p)
|
||
;; Recompute the truename in case changes in symlinks
|
||
;; have changed the truename.
|
||
(setq buffer-file-truename
|
||
(abbreviate-file-name (file-truename buffer-file-name)))
|
||
(after-find-file nil nil t nil revert-buffer-preserve-modes)
|
||
;; Run after-revert-hook as it was before we reverted.
|
||
(setq-default revert-buffer-internal-hook global-hook)
|
||
(if local-hook
|
||
(setq-local revert-buffer-internal-hook
|
||
local-hook)
|
||
(kill-local-variable 'revert-buffer-internal-hook))
|
||
(run-hooks 'revert-buffer-internal-hook))
|
||
t)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun revert-buffer-insert-file-contents--default-function (file-name auto-save-p)
|
||
"Default function for `revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function'.
|
||
The function `revert-buffer--default' calls this.
|
||
FILE-NAME is the name of the file. AUTO-SAVE-P is non-nil if this is
|
||
an auto-save file."
|
||
(cond
|
||
((not (file-exists-p file-name))
|
||
(error (if buffer-file-number
|
||
"File %s no longer exists!"
|
||
"Cannot revert nonexistent file %s")
|
||
file-name))
|
||
((not (file-readable-p file-name))
|
||
(error (if buffer-file-number
|
||
"File %s no longer readable!"
|
||
"Cannot revert unreadable file %s")
|
||
file-name))
|
||
(t
|
||
(widen)
|
||
(let ((coding-system-for-read
|
||
;; Auto-saved file should be read by Emacs's
|
||
;; internal coding.
|
||
(if auto-save-p 'auto-save-coding
|
||
(or coding-system-for-read
|
||
(and
|
||
buffer-file-coding-system-explicit
|
||
(car buffer-file-coding-system-explicit))))))
|
||
(if (and (not enable-multibyte-characters)
|
||
coding-system-for-read
|
||
(not (memq (coding-system-base
|
||
coding-system-for-read)
|
||
'(no-conversion raw-text))))
|
||
;; As a coding system suitable for multibyte
|
||
;; buffer is specified, make the current
|
||
;; buffer multibyte.
|
||
(set-buffer-multibyte t))
|
||
|
||
;; This force after-insert-file-set-coding
|
||
;; (called from insert-file-contents) to set
|
||
;; buffer-file-coding-system to a proper value.
|
||
(kill-local-variable 'buffer-file-coding-system)
|
||
|
||
;; Note that this preserves point in an intelligent way.
|
||
(if revert-buffer-preserve-modes
|
||
(let ((buffer-file-format buffer-file-format))
|
||
(insert-file-contents file-name (not auto-save-p)
|
||
nil nil 'if-regular))
|
||
(insert-file-contents file-name (not auto-save-p)
|
||
nil nil 'if-regular))))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar revert-buffer-with-fine-grain-max-seconds 2.0
|
||
"Maximum time that `revert-buffer-with-fine-grain' should use.
|
||
The command tries to preserve markers, properties and overlays.
|
||
If the operation takes more than this time, a single
|
||
delete+insert is performed. Actually, this value is passed as
|
||
the MAX-SECS argument to the function `replace-buffer-contents',
|
||
so it is not ensured that the whole execution won't take longer.
|
||
See `replace-buffer-contents' for more details.")
|
||
|
||
(defun revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-delicately (file-name _auto-save-p)
|
||
"Optional function for `revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function'.
|
||
The function `revert-buffer-with-fine-grain' uses this function by binding
|
||
`revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function' to it.
|
||
|
||
As with `revert-buffer-insert-file-contents--default-function', FILE-NAME is
|
||
the name of the file and AUTO-SAVE-P is non-nil if this is an auto-save file.
|
||
Since calling `replace-buffer-contents' can take a long time, depending of
|
||
the number of changes made to the buffer, it uses the value of the variable
|
||
`revert-buffer-with-fine-grain-max-seconds' as a maximum time to try delicately
|
||
reverting the buffer. If it fails, it does a delete+insert. For more details,
|
||
see `replace-buffer-contents'."
|
||
(cond
|
||
((not (file-exists-p file-name))
|
||
(error (if buffer-file-number
|
||
"File %s no longer exists"
|
||
"Cannot revert nonexistent file %s")
|
||
file-name))
|
||
((not (file-readable-p file-name))
|
||
(error (if buffer-file-number
|
||
"File %s no longer readable"
|
||
"Cannot revert unreadable file %s")
|
||
file-name))
|
||
(t
|
||
(let* ((buf (current-buffer)) ; current-buffer is the buffer to revert.
|
||
(success
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(save-restriction
|
||
(widen)
|
||
(with-temp-buffer
|
||
(insert-file-contents file-name)
|
||
(let ((temp-buf (current-buffer)))
|
||
(set-buffer buf)
|
||
(let ((buffer-file-name nil))
|
||
(replace-buffer-contents
|
||
temp-buf
|
||
revert-buffer-with-fine-grain-max-seconds))))))))
|
||
;; See comments in revert-buffer-with-fine-grain for an explanation.
|
||
(defun revert-buffer-with-fine-grain-success-p ()
|
||
success))
|
||
(set-buffer-modified-p nil)
|
||
(set-visited-file-modtime))))
|
||
|
||
(defun revert-buffer-with-fine-grain (&optional ignore-auto noconfirm)
|
||
"Revert buffer preserving markers, overlays, etc.
|
||
This command is an alternative to `revert-buffer' because it tries to be as
|
||
non-destructive as possible, preserving markers, properties and overlays.
|
||
Binds `revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function' to the function
|
||
`revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-delicately'.
|
||
|
||
With a prefix argument, offer to revert from latest auto-save file. For more
|
||
details on the arguments, see `revert-buffer'."
|
||
;; See revert-buffer for an explanation of this.
|
||
(interactive (list (not current-prefix-arg)))
|
||
;; Simply bind revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function to the specialized
|
||
;; function, and call revert-buffer.
|
||
(let ((revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function
|
||
#'revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-delicately))
|
||
(revert-buffer ignore-auto noconfirm t)
|
||
;; This closure is defined in revert-buffer-insert-file-contents-function.
|
||
;; It is needed because revert-buffer--default always returns t after
|
||
;; reverting, and it might be needed to report the success/failure of
|
||
;; reverting delicately.
|
||
(when (fboundp 'revert-buffer-with-fine-grain-success-p)
|
||
(prog1
|
||
(revert-buffer-with-fine-grain-success-p)
|
||
(fmakunbound 'revert-buffer-with-fine-grain-success-p)))))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom revert-buffer-quick-short-answers nil
|
||
"How much confirmation to be done by the `revert-buffer-quick' command.
|
||
If non-nil, use `y-or-n-p' instead of `yes-or-no-p'."
|
||
:version "28.1"
|
||
:type 'boolean)
|
||
|
||
(defun revert-buffer-quick (&optional auto-save)
|
||
"Like `revert-buffer', but asks for less confirmation.
|
||
If the current buffer is visiting a file, and the buffer is not
|
||
modified, no confirmation is required.
|
||
|
||
This command heeds the `revert-buffer-quick-short-answers' user option.
|
||
|
||
If AUTO-SAVE (the prefix argument), offer to revert from latest
|
||
auto-save file, if that is more recent than the visited file."
|
||
(interactive "P")
|
||
(cond
|
||
;; If we've visiting a file, and we have no changes, don't ask for
|
||
;; confirmation.
|
||
((and buffer-file-name
|
||
(not (buffer-modified-p)))
|
||
(revert-buffer (not auto-save) t)
|
||
(message "Reverted buffer"))
|
||
;; Heed `revert-buffer-quick-short-answers'.
|
||
(revert-buffer-quick-short-answers
|
||
(let ((use-short-answers t))
|
||
(revert-buffer (not auto-save))))
|
||
;; Call `revert-buffer' normally.
|
||
(t
|
||
(revert-buffer (not auto-save)))))
|
||
|
||
|
||
(defun recover-this-file ()
|
||
"Recover the visited file--get contents from its last auto-save file."
|
||
(interactive)
|
||
(or buffer-file-name
|
||
(user-error "This buffer is not visiting a file"))
|
||
(recover-file buffer-file-name))
|
||
|
||
(defun recover-file (file)
|
||
"Visit file FILE, but get contents from its last auto-save file."
|
||
;; Actually putting the file name in the minibuffer should be used
|
||
;; only rarely.
|
||
;; Not just because users often use the default.
|
||
(interactive "FRecover file: ")
|
||
(setq file (expand-file-name file))
|
||
(if (auto-save-file-name-p (file-name-nondirectory file))
|
||
(user-error "%s is an auto-save file" (abbreviate-file-name file)))
|
||
(let ((file-name (let ((buffer-file-name file))
|
||
(make-auto-save-file-name))))
|
||
(cond ((and (file-exists-p file)
|
||
(not (file-exists-p file-name)))
|
||
(error "Auto save file %s does not exist"
|
||
(abbreviate-file-name file-name)))
|
||
((if (file-exists-p file)
|
||
(not (file-newer-than-file-p file-name file))
|
||
(not (file-exists-p file-name)))
|
||
(user-error "Auto-save file %s not current"
|
||
(abbreviate-file-name file-name)))
|
||
((with-temp-buffer-window
|
||
"*Directory*" nil
|
||
#'(lambda (window _value)
|
||
(with-selected-window window
|
||
(unwind-protect
|
||
(let ((prompt (format "Recover auto save file %s? " file-name))
|
||
(choices
|
||
'(("yes" ?y "recover auto save file")
|
||
("no" ?n "don't recover auto save file")
|
||
("diff" ?= "show changes between auto save file and current file")))
|
||
ans)
|
||
(while (equal "diff" (setq ans (read-answer prompt choices)))
|
||
(diff file file-name))
|
||
(equal ans "yes"))
|
||
(when (window-live-p window)
|
||
(quit-restore-window window 'kill)))))
|
||
(with-current-buffer standard-output
|
||
(let ((switches (connection-local-value dired-listing-switches)))
|
||
(if (file-symlink-p file)
|
||
(setq switches (concat switches " -L")))
|
||
;; Use insert-directory-safely, not insert-directory,
|
||
;; because these files might not exist. In particular,
|
||
;; FILE might not exist if the auto-save file was for
|
||
;; a buffer that didn't visit a file, such as "*mail*".
|
||
;; The code in v20.x called `ls' directly, so we need
|
||
;; to emulate what `ls' did in that case.
|
||
(insert-directory-safely file switches)
|
||
(insert-directory-safely file-name switches))))
|
||
(switch-to-buffer (find-file-noselect file t))
|
||
(let ((inhibit-read-only t)
|
||
;; Keep the current buffer-file-coding-system.
|
||
(coding-system buffer-file-coding-system)
|
||
;; Auto-saved file should be read with special coding.
|
||
(coding-system-for-read 'auto-save-coding))
|
||
(erase-buffer)
|
||
(insert-file-contents file-name nil)
|
||
(set-buffer-file-coding-system coding-system)
|
||
(set-buffer-auto-saved))
|
||
(after-find-file nil nil t))
|
||
(t (user-error "Recover-file canceled")))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar dired-mode-hook)
|
||
|
||
(defun recover-session ()
|
||
"Recover auto save files from a previous Emacs session.
|
||
This command first displays a Dired buffer showing you the
|
||
previous sessions that you could recover from.
|
||
To choose one, move point to the proper line and then type C-c C-c.
|
||
Then you'll be asked about a number of files to recover."
|
||
(interactive)
|
||
(if (null auto-save-list-file-prefix)
|
||
(error "You set `auto-save-list-file-prefix' to disable making session files"))
|
||
(let ((dir (file-name-directory auto-save-list-file-prefix))
|
||
(nd (file-name-nondirectory auto-save-list-file-prefix)))
|
||
(unless (file-directory-p dir)
|
||
(make-directory dir t))
|
||
(unless (directory-files dir nil
|
||
(if (string= "" nd)
|
||
directory-files-no-dot-files-regexp
|
||
(concat "\\`" (regexp-quote nd)))
|
||
t)
|
||
(error "No previous sessions to recover")))
|
||
(require 'dired)
|
||
(let ((ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards t)
|
||
;; Ensure that we don't omit the session files as the user may
|
||
;; have (as suggested by the manual) `dired-omit-mode' in the
|
||
;; hook.
|
||
(dired-mode-hook (delete 'dired-omit-mode dired-mode-hook)))
|
||
(dired (concat auto-save-list-file-prefix "*")
|
||
(concat (connection-local-value dired-listing-switches) " -t")))
|
||
(use-local-map (nconc (make-sparse-keymap) (current-local-map)))
|
||
(define-key (current-local-map) "\C-c\C-c" 'recover-session-finish)
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||
(or (looking-at " Move to the session you want to recover,")
|
||
(let ((inhibit-read-only t))
|
||
;; Each line starts with a space
|
||
;; so that Font Lock mode won't highlight the first character.
|
||
(insert " To recover a session, move to it and type C-c C-c.\n"
|
||
(substitute-command-keys
|
||
" To delete a session file, type \
|
||
\\[dired-flag-file-deletion] on its line to flag
|
||
the file for deletion, then \\[dired-do-flagged-delete] to \
|
||
delete flagged files.\n\n"))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun recover-session-finish ()
|
||
"Choose one saved session to recover auto-save files from.
|
||
This command is used in the special Dired buffer created by
|
||
\\[recover-session]."
|
||
(interactive)
|
||
;; Get the name of the session file to recover from.
|
||
(let ((file (dired-get-filename))
|
||
files
|
||
(buffer (get-buffer-create " *recover*")))
|
||
(dired-unmark 1)
|
||
(dired-do-flagged-delete t)
|
||
(unwind-protect
|
||
(with-current-buffer buffer
|
||
;; Read in the auto-save-list file.
|
||
(erase-buffer)
|
||
(insert-file-contents file)
|
||
;; Loop thru the text of that file
|
||
;; and get out the names of the files to recover.
|
||
(while (not (eobp))
|
||
(let (thisfile autofile)
|
||
(if (eolp)
|
||
;; This is a pair of lines for a non-file-visiting buffer.
|
||
;; Get the auto-save file name and manufacture
|
||
;; a "visited file name" from that.
|
||
(progn
|
||
(forward-line 1)
|
||
;; If there is no auto-save file name, the
|
||
;; auto-save-list file is probably corrupted.
|
||
(unless (eolp)
|
||
(setq autofile
|
||
(buffer-substring-no-properties
|
||
(point)
|
||
(line-end-position)))
|
||
(setq thisfile
|
||
(expand-file-name
|
||
(substring
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory autofile)
|
||
1 -1)
|
||
(file-name-directory autofile))))
|
||
(forward-line 1))
|
||
;; This pair of lines is a file-visiting
|
||
;; buffer. Use the visited file name.
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq thisfile
|
||
(buffer-substring-no-properties
|
||
(point) (progn (end-of-line) (point))))
|
||
(forward-line 1)
|
||
(setq autofile
|
||
(buffer-substring-no-properties
|
||
(point) (progn (end-of-line) (point))))
|
||
(forward-line 1)))
|
||
;; Ignore a file if its auto-save file does not exist now.
|
||
(if (and autofile (file-exists-p autofile))
|
||
(setq files (cons thisfile files)))))
|
||
(setq files (nreverse files))
|
||
;; The file contains a pair of line for each auto-saved buffer.
|
||
;; The first line of the pair contains the visited file name
|
||
;; or is empty if the buffer was not visiting a file.
|
||
;; The second line is the auto-save file name.
|
||
(if files
|
||
(map-y-or-n-p "Recover %s? "
|
||
(lambda (file)
|
||
(condition-case nil
|
||
(save-excursion (recover-file file))
|
||
(error
|
||
"Failed to recover `%s'" file)))
|
||
files
|
||
'("file" "files" "recover"))
|
||
(message "No files can be recovered from this session now")))
|
||
(kill-buffer buffer))))
|
||
|
||
|
||
(defun kill-buffer-ask (buffer)
|
||
"Kill BUFFER if confirmed."
|
||
(when (yes-or-no-p (format "Buffer %s %s. Kill? "
|
||
(buffer-name buffer)
|
||
(if (buffer-modified-p buffer)
|
||
"HAS BEEN EDITED" "is unmodified")))
|
||
(kill-buffer buffer)))
|
||
|
||
(defun kill-some-buffers (&optional list)
|
||
"Kill some buffers. Asks the user whether to kill each one of them.
|
||
Non-interactively, if optional argument LIST is non-nil, it
|
||
specifies the list of buffers to kill, asking for approval for each one."
|
||
(interactive)
|
||
(if (null list)
|
||
(setq list (buffer-list)))
|
||
(while list
|
||
(let* ((buffer (car list))
|
||
(name (buffer-name buffer)))
|
||
(and name ; Can be nil for an indirect buffer
|
||
; if we killed the base buffer.
|
||
(not (string-equal name ""))
|
||
(/= (aref name 0) ?\s)
|
||
(kill-buffer-ask buffer)))
|
||
(setq list (cdr list))))
|
||
|
||
(defun kill-matching-buffers (regexp &optional internal-too no-ask)
|
||
"Kill buffers whose names match the regular expression REGEXP.
|
||
Interactively, prompt for REGEXP.
|
||
Ignores buffers whose names start with a space, unless optional
|
||
prefix argument INTERNAL-TOO(interactively, the prefix argument)
|
||
is non-nil. Asks before killing each buffer, unless NO-ASK is non-nil."
|
||
(interactive "sKill buffers matching this regular expression: \nP")
|
||
(dolist (buffer (buffer-list))
|
||
(let ((name (buffer-name buffer)))
|
||
(when (and name (not (string-equal name ""))
|
||
(or internal-too (/= (aref name 0) ?\s))
|
||
(string-match regexp name))
|
||
(funcall (if no-ask 'kill-buffer 'kill-buffer-ask) buffer)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun kill-matching-buffers-no-ask (regexp &optional internal-too)
|
||
"Kill buffers whose names match the regular expression REGEXP.
|
||
Interactively, prompt for REGEXP.
|
||
Like `kill-matching-buffers', but doesn't ask for confirmation
|
||
before killing each buffer.
|
||
Ignores buffers whose names start with a space, unless the
|
||
optional argument INTERNAL-TOO (interactively, the prefix argument)
|
||
is non-nil."
|
||
(interactive "sKill buffers matching this regular expression: \nP")
|
||
(kill-matching-buffers regexp internal-too t))
|
||
|
||
|
||
(defun rename-auto-save-file ()
|
||
"Adjust current buffer's auto save file name for current conditions.
|
||
Also rename any existing auto save file, if it was made in this session."
|
||
(let ((osave buffer-auto-save-file-name))
|
||
(setq buffer-auto-save-file-name
|
||
(make-auto-save-file-name))
|
||
(if (and osave buffer-auto-save-file-name
|
||
(not (string= buffer-auto-save-file-name buffer-file-name))
|
||
(not (string= buffer-auto-save-file-name osave))
|
||
(file-exists-p osave)
|
||
(recent-auto-save-p))
|
||
(rename-file osave buffer-auto-save-file-name t))))
|
||
|
||
(defun make-auto-save-file-name ()
|
||
"Return file name to use for auto-saves of current buffer.
|
||
Does not consider `auto-save-visited-file-name' as that variable is checked
|
||
before calling this function.
|
||
See also `auto-save-file-name-p'."
|
||
(if buffer-file-name
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler
|
||
buffer-file-name 'make-auto-save-file-name)))
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'make-auto-save-file-name)
|
||
(files--transform-file-name
|
||
buffer-file-name auto-save-file-name-transforms
|
||
"#" "#")))
|
||
;; Deal with buffers that don't have any associated files. (Mail
|
||
;; mode tends to create a good number of these.)
|
||
(let ((buffer-name (buffer-name))
|
||
(limit 0)
|
||
file-name)
|
||
;; Restrict the characters used in the file name to those that
|
||
;; are known to be safe on all filesystems, url-encoding the
|
||
;; rest.
|
||
;; We do this on all platforms, because even if we are not
|
||
;; running on DOS/Windows, the current directory may be on a
|
||
;; mounted VFAT filesystem, such as a USB memory stick.
|
||
(while (string-match "[^A-Za-z0-9_.~#+-]" buffer-name limit)
|
||
(let* ((character (aref buffer-name (match-beginning 0)))
|
||
(replacement
|
||
;; For multibyte characters, this will produce more than
|
||
;; 2 hex digits, so is not true URL encoding.
|
||
(format "%%%02X" character)))
|
||
(setq buffer-name (replace-match replacement t t buffer-name))
|
||
(setq limit (1+ (match-end 0)))))
|
||
;; Generate the file name.
|
||
(setq file-name
|
||
(make-temp-file
|
||
(let ((fname
|
||
(expand-file-name
|
||
(format "#%s#" buffer-name)
|
||
;; Try a few alternative directories, to get one we can
|
||
;; write it.
|
||
(cond
|
||
((file-writable-p default-directory) default-directory)
|
||
((file-writable-p "/var/tmp/") "/var/tmp/")
|
||
("~/")))))
|
||
(if (and (memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin))
|
||
;; Don't modify remote filenames
|
||
(not (file-remote-p fname)))
|
||
;; The call to convert-standard-filename is in case
|
||
;; buffer-name includes characters not allowed by the
|
||
;; DOS/Windows filesystems. make-temp-file writes to the
|
||
;; file it creates, so we must fix the file name _before_
|
||
;; make-temp-file is called.
|
||
(convert-standard-filename fname)
|
||
fname))
|
||
nil "#"))
|
||
;; make-temp-file creates the file,
|
||
;; but we don't want it to exist until we do an auto-save.
|
||
(condition-case ()
|
||
(delete-file file-name)
|
||
(file-error nil))
|
||
file-name)))
|
||
|
||
(defun files--transform-file-name (filename transforms prefix suffix)
|
||
"Transform FILENAME according to TRANSFORMS.
|
||
See `auto-save-file-name-transforms' for the format of
|
||
TRANSFORMS. PREFIX is prepended to the non-directory portion of
|
||
the resulting file name, and SUFFIX is appended."
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(let (result uniq)
|
||
;; Apply user-specified translations to the file name.
|
||
(while (and transforms (not result))
|
||
(if (string-match (car (car transforms)) filename)
|
||
(setq result (replace-match (cadr (car transforms)) t nil
|
||
filename)
|
||
uniq (car (cddr (car transforms)))))
|
||
(setq transforms (cdr transforms)))
|
||
(when result
|
||
(setq filename
|
||
(cond
|
||
((memq uniq (secure-hash-algorithms))
|
||
(concat
|
||
(file-name-directory result)
|
||
(secure-hash uniq filename)))
|
||
(uniq
|
||
(concat
|
||
(file-name-directory result)
|
||
(subst-char-in-string
|
||
?/ ?!
|
||
(string-replace
|
||
"!" "!!" filename))))
|
||
(t result))))
|
||
(setq result
|
||
(if (and (eq system-type 'ms-dos)
|
||
(not (msdos-long-file-names)))
|
||
;; We truncate the file name to DOS 8+3 limits before
|
||
;; doing anything else, because the regexp passed to
|
||
;; string-match below cannot handle extensions longer
|
||
;; than 3 characters, multiple dots, and other
|
||
;; atrocities.
|
||
(let ((fn (dos-8+3-filename
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name))))
|
||
(string-match
|
||
"\\`\\([^.]+\\)\\(\\.\\(..?\\)?.?\\|\\)\\'"
|
||
fn)
|
||
(concat (file-name-directory buffer-file-name)
|
||
prefix (match-string 1 fn)
|
||
"." (match-string 3 fn) suffix))
|
||
(concat (file-name-directory filename)
|
||
prefix
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory filename)
|
||
suffix)))
|
||
;; Make sure auto-save file names don't contain characters
|
||
;; invalid for the underlying filesystem.
|
||
(expand-file-name
|
||
(if (and (memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin))
|
||
;; Don't modify remote filenames
|
||
(not (file-remote-p result)))
|
||
(convert-standard-filename result)
|
||
result)))))
|
||
|
||
(defun make-lock-file-name (filename)
|
||
"Make a lock file name for FILENAME.
|
||
By default, this just prepends \".#\" to the non-directory part
|
||
of FILENAME, but the transforms in `lock-file-name-transforms'
|
||
are done first."
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler filename 'make-lock-file-name)))
|
||
(if handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'make-lock-file-name filename)
|
||
(files--transform-file-name filename lock-file-name-transforms ".#" ""))))
|
||
|
||
(defun auto-save-file-name-p (filename)
|
||
"Return non-nil if FILENAME can be yielded by `make-auto-save-file-name'.
|
||
FILENAME should lack slashes.
|
||
See also `make-auto-save-file-name'."
|
||
(string-match "\\`#.*#\\'" filename))
|
||
|
||
(defun wildcard-to-regexp (wildcard)
|
||
"Given a shell file name pattern WILDCARD, return an equivalent regexp.
|
||
The generated regexp will match a file name only if the file name
|
||
matches that wildcard according to shell rules. Only wildcards known
|
||
by `sh' are supported."
|
||
(let* ((i (string-match "[[.*+\\^$?]" wildcard))
|
||
;; Copy the initial run of non-special characters.
|
||
(result (substring wildcard 0 i))
|
||
(len (length wildcard)))
|
||
;; If no special characters, we're almost done.
|
||
(if i
|
||
(while (< i len)
|
||
(let ((ch (aref wildcard i))
|
||
j)
|
||
(setq
|
||
result
|
||
(concat result
|
||
(cond
|
||
((and (eq ch ?\[)
|
||
(< (1+ i) len)
|
||
(eq (aref wildcard (1+ i)) ?\]))
|
||
"\\[")
|
||
((eq ch ?\[) ; [...] maps to regexp char class
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq i (1+ i))
|
||
(concat
|
||
(cond
|
||
((eq (aref wildcard i) ?!) ; [!...] -> [^...]
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq i (1+ i))
|
||
(if (eq (aref wildcard i) ?\])
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq i (1+ i))
|
||
"[^]")
|
||
"[^")))
|
||
((eq (aref wildcard i) ?^)
|
||
;; Found "[^". Insert a `\0' character
|
||
;; (which cannot happen in a filename)
|
||
;; into the character class, so that `^'
|
||
;; is not the first character after `[',
|
||
;; and thus non-special in a regexp.
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq i (1+ i))
|
||
"[\000^"))
|
||
((eq (aref wildcard i) ?\])
|
||
;; I don't think `]' can appear in a
|
||
;; character class in a wildcard, but
|
||
;; let's be general here.
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq i (1+ i))
|
||
"[]"))
|
||
(t "["))
|
||
(prog1 ; copy everything up to next `]'.
|
||
(substring wildcard
|
||
i
|
||
(setq j (string-search
|
||
"]" wildcard i)))
|
||
(setq i (if j (1- j) (1- len)))))))
|
||
((eq ch ?.) "\\.")
|
||
((eq ch ?*) "[^\000]*")
|
||
((eq ch ?+) "\\+")
|
||
((eq ch ?^) "\\^")
|
||
((eq ch ?$) "\\$")
|
||
((eq ch ?\\) "\\\\") ; probably cannot happen...
|
||
((eq ch ??) "[^\000]")
|
||
(t (char-to-string ch)))))
|
||
(setq i (1+ i)))))
|
||
;; Shell wildcards should match the entire filename,
|
||
;; not its part. Make the regexp say so.
|
||
(concat "\\`" result "\\'")))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom list-directory-brief-switches
|
||
(purecopy "-CF")
|
||
"Switches for `list-directory' to pass to `ls' for brief listing."
|
||
:type 'string
|
||
:group 'dired)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom list-directory-verbose-switches
|
||
(purecopy "-l")
|
||
"Switches for `list-directory' to pass to `ls' for verbose listing."
|
||
:type 'string
|
||
:group 'dired)
|
||
|
||
(defun file-expand-wildcards (pattern &optional full regexp)
|
||
"Expand (a.k.a. \"glob\") file-name wildcard pattern PATTERN.
|
||
This returns a list of file names that match PATTERN.
|
||
The returned list of file names is sorted in the `string<' order.
|
||
|
||
PATTERN is, by default, a \"glob\"/wildcard string, e.g.,
|
||
\"/tmp/*.png\" or \"/*/*/foo.png\", but can also be a regular
|
||
expression if the optional REGEXP parameter is non-nil. In any
|
||
case, the matches are applied per sub-directory, so a match can't
|
||
span a parent/sub directory, which means that a regexp bit can't
|
||
contain the \"/\" character.
|
||
|
||
The returned list of file names is sorted in the `string<' order.
|
||
|
||
If PATTERN is written as an absolute file name, the expansions in
|
||
the returned list are also absolute.
|
||
|
||
If PATTERN is written as a relative file name, it is interpreted
|
||
relative to the current `default-directory'.
|
||
The file names returned are normally also relative to the current
|
||
default directory. However, if FULL is non-nil, they are absolute."
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(let* ((nondir (file-name-nondirectory pattern))
|
||
(dirpart (file-name-directory pattern))
|
||
;; A list of all dirs that DIRPART specifies.
|
||
;; This can be more than one dir
|
||
;; if DIRPART contains wildcards.
|
||
(dirs (if (and dirpart
|
||
(string-match "[[*?]" (file-local-name dirpart)))
|
||
(mapcar #'file-name-as-directory
|
||
(file-expand-wildcards
|
||
(directory-file-name dirpart) nil regexp))
|
||
(list dirpart)))
|
||
contents)
|
||
(dolist (dir (nreverse dirs))
|
||
(when (or (null dir) ; Possible if DIRPART is not wild.
|
||
(file-accessible-directory-p dir))
|
||
(if (equal "" nondir)
|
||
;; `nondir' is "" when the pattern ends in "/". Basically ""
|
||
;; refers to the directory itself, like ".", but it's not
|
||
;; among the names returned by `directory-files', so we have
|
||
;; to special-case it.
|
||
(push (or dir nondir) contents)
|
||
(let ((this-dir-contents
|
||
;; Filter out "." and ".."
|
||
(delq nil
|
||
(mapcar (lambda (name)
|
||
(unless (string-match "\\`\\.\\.?\\'"
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory
|
||
name))
|
||
name))
|
||
(directory-files
|
||
(or dir ".") full
|
||
(if regexp
|
||
;; We're matching each file name
|
||
;; element separately.
|
||
(concat "\\`" nondir "\\'")
|
||
(wildcard-to-regexp nondir)))))))
|
||
(setq contents
|
||
(nconc
|
||
(if (and dir (not full))
|
||
(mapcar (lambda (name) (concat dir name))
|
||
this-dir-contents)
|
||
this-dir-contents)
|
||
contents))))))
|
||
contents)))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom find-sibling-rules nil
|
||
"Rules for finding \"sibling\" files.
|
||
This is used by the `find-sibling-file' command.
|
||
|
||
This variable is a list of (MATCH EXPANSION...) elements.
|
||
|
||
MATCH is a regular expression that should match a file name that
|
||
has a sibling. It can contain sub-expressions that will be used
|
||
in EXPANSIONS.
|
||
|
||
EXPANSION is a string that matches file names. For instance, to
|
||
define \".h\" files as siblings of any \".c\", you could say:
|
||
|
||
(\"\\\\([^/]+\\\\)\\\\.c\\\\\\='\" \"\\\\1.h\")
|
||
|
||
MATCH and EXPANSION can also be fuller paths. For instance, if
|
||
you want to define other versions of a project as being sibling
|
||
files, you could say something like:
|
||
|
||
(\"src/emacs/[^/]+/\\\\(.*\\\\)\\\\\\='\" \"src/emacs/.*/\\\\1\\\\\\='\")
|
||
|
||
In this example, if you're in \"src/emacs/emacs-27/lisp/abbrev.el\",
|
||
and a \"src/emacs/emacs-28/lisp/abbrev.el\" file exists, it's now
|
||
defined as a sibling."
|
||
:type '(alist :key-type (regexp :tag "Match")
|
||
:value-type (repeat (string :tag "Expansion")))
|
||
:version "29.1")
|
||
|
||
(defun find-sibling-file (file)
|
||
"Visit a \"sibling\" file of FILE.
|
||
When called interactively, FILE is the currently visited file.
|
||
|
||
The \"sibling\" file is defined by the `find-sibling-rules' variable."
|
||
(interactive (progn
|
||
(unless buffer-file-name
|
||
(user-error "Not visiting a file"))
|
||
(list buffer-file-name)))
|
||
(unless find-sibling-rules
|
||
(user-error "The `find-sibling-rules' variable has not been configured"))
|
||
(let ((siblings (find-sibling-file-search (expand-file-name file)
|
||
find-sibling-rules)))
|
||
(cond
|
||
((null siblings)
|
||
(user-error "Couldn't find any sibling files"))
|
||
((length= siblings 1)
|
||
(find-file (car siblings)))
|
||
(t
|
||
(let ((relatives (mapcar (lambda (sibling)
|
||
(file-relative-name
|
||
sibling (file-name-directory file)))
|
||
siblings)))
|
||
(find-file
|
||
(completing-read (format-prompt "Find file" (car relatives))
|
||
relatives nil t nil nil (car relatives))))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun find-sibling-file-search (file &optional rules)
|
||
"Return a list of FILE's \"siblings\".
|
||
RULES should be a list on the form defined by `find-sibling-rules' (which
|
||
see), and if nil, defaults to `find-sibling-rules'."
|
||
(let ((results nil))
|
||
(pcase-dolist (`(,match . ,expansions) (or rules find-sibling-rules))
|
||
;; Go through the list and find matches.
|
||
(when (string-match match file)
|
||
(let ((match-data (match-data)))
|
||
(dolist (expansion expansions)
|
||
(let ((start 0))
|
||
;; Expand \\1 forms in the expansions.
|
||
(while (string-match "\\\\\\([&0-9]+\\)" expansion start)
|
||
(let ((index (string-to-number (match-string 1 expansion))))
|
||
(setq start (match-end 0)
|
||
expansion
|
||
(replace-match
|
||
(substring file
|
||
(elt match-data (* index 2))
|
||
(elt match-data (1+ (* index 2))))
|
||
t t expansion)))))
|
||
;; Then see which files we have that are matching. (And
|
||
;; expand from the end of the file's match, since we might
|
||
;; be doing a relative match.)
|
||
(let ((default-directory (substring file 0 (car match-data))))
|
||
;; Keep the first matches first.
|
||
(setq results
|
||
(nconc
|
||
results
|
||
(mapcar #'expand-file-name
|
||
(file-expand-wildcards expansion nil t)))))))))
|
||
;; Delete the file itself (in case it matched), and remove
|
||
;; duplicates, in case we have several expansions and some match
|
||
;; the same subsets of files.
|
||
(delete file (delete-dups results))))
|
||
|
||
;; Let Tramp know that `file-expand-wildcards' does not need an advice.
|
||
(provide 'files '(remote-wildcards))
|
||
|
||
(defun list-directory (dirname &optional verbose)
|
||
"Display a list of files in or matching DIRNAME, a la `ls'.
|
||
DIRNAME is globbed by the shell if necessary.
|
||
Prefix arg (second arg if noninteractive) means supply -l switch to `ls'.
|
||
Actions controlled by variables `list-directory-brief-switches'
|
||
and `list-directory-verbose-switches'."
|
||
(interactive
|
||
(let ((pfx current-prefix-arg))
|
||
(list (read-file-name
|
||
(if pfx "List directory (verbose): "
|
||
"List directory (brief): ")
|
||
nil default-directory
|
||
(lambda (file)
|
||
(or (file-directory-p file)
|
||
(insert-directory-wildcard-in-dir-p
|
||
(file-name-as-directory (expand-file-name file))))))
|
||
pfx)))
|
||
(let ((switches (if verbose list-directory-verbose-switches
|
||
list-directory-brief-switches))
|
||
buffer)
|
||
(or dirname (setq dirname default-directory))
|
||
(setq dirname (expand-file-name dirname))
|
||
(with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Directory*"
|
||
(setq buffer standard-output)
|
||
(buffer-disable-undo standard-output)
|
||
(princ "Directory ")
|
||
(princ dirname)
|
||
(terpri)
|
||
(with-current-buffer "*Directory*"
|
||
(let ((wildcard (not (file-directory-p dirname))))
|
||
(insert-directory dirname switches wildcard (not wildcard)))))
|
||
;; Finishing with-output-to-temp-buffer seems to clobber default-directory.
|
||
(with-current-buffer buffer
|
||
(setq default-directory
|
||
(if (file-accessible-directory-p dirname)
|
||
(file-name-as-directory dirname)
|
||
(file-name-directory (directory-file-name dirname)))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun shell-quote-wildcard-pattern (pattern)
|
||
"Quote characters special to the shell in PATTERN, leave wildcards alone.
|
||
|
||
PATTERN is assumed to represent a file-name wildcard suitable for the
|
||
underlying filesystem. For Unix and GNU/Linux, each character from the
|
||
set [ \\t\\n;<>&|()\\=`\\='\"#$] is quoted with a backslash; for DOS/Windows, all
|
||
the parts of the pattern that don't include wildcard characters are
|
||
quoted with double quotes.
|
||
|
||
This function leaves alone existing quote characters (\\ on Unix and \"
|
||
on Windows), so PATTERN can use them to quote wildcard characters that
|
||
need to be passed verbatim to shell commands."
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(cond
|
||
((memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt cygwin))
|
||
;; DOS/Windows don't allow `"' in file names. So if the
|
||
;; argument has quotes, we can safely assume it is already
|
||
;; quoted by the caller.
|
||
(if (or (string-search "\"" pattern)
|
||
;; We quote [&()#$`'] in case their shell is a port of a
|
||
;; Unixy shell. We quote [,=+] because stock DOS and
|
||
;; Windows shells require that in some cases, such as
|
||
;; passing arguments to batch files that use positional
|
||
;; arguments like %1.
|
||
(not (string-match "[ \t;&()#$`',=+]" pattern)))
|
||
pattern
|
||
(let ((result "\"")
|
||
(beg 0)
|
||
end)
|
||
(while (string-match "[*?]+" pattern beg)
|
||
(setq end (match-beginning 0)
|
||
result (concat result (substring pattern beg end)
|
||
"\""
|
||
(substring pattern end (match-end 0))
|
||
"\"")
|
||
beg (match-end 0)))
|
||
(concat result (substring pattern beg) "\""))))
|
||
(t
|
||
(let ((beg 0))
|
||
(while (string-match "[ \t\n;<>&|()`'\"#$]" pattern beg)
|
||
(setq pattern
|
||
(concat (substring pattern 0 (match-beginning 0))
|
||
"\\"
|
||
(substring pattern (match-beginning 0)))
|
||
beg (1+ (match-end 0)))))
|
||
pattern))))
|
||
|
||
|
||
(defcustom insert-directory-program
|
||
(if (and (memq system-type '(berkeley-unix darwin))
|
||
(executable-find "gls"))
|
||
(purecopy "gls")
|
||
(purecopy "ls"))
|
||
"Absolute or relative name of the `ls'-like program.
|
||
This is used by `insert-directory' and `dired-insert-directory'
|
||
\(thus, also by `dired'). For Dired, this should ideally point to
|
||
GNU ls, or another version of ls that supports the \"--dired\"
|
||
flag. See `dired-use-ls-dired'.
|
||
|
||
On GNU/Linux and other capable systems, the default is \"ls\".
|
||
|
||
On *BSD and macOS systems, the default \"ls\" does not support
|
||
the \"--dired\" flag. Therefore, the default is to use the
|
||
\"gls\" executable on such machines, if it exists. This means
|
||
that there should normally be no need to customize this when
|
||
installing GNU coreutils using something like ports or Homebrew."
|
||
:group 'dired
|
||
:type 'string
|
||
:initialize #'custom-initialize-delay
|
||
:version "30.1")
|
||
|
||
(defun files--use-insert-directory-program-p ()
|
||
"Return non-nil if we should use `insert-directory-program'.
|
||
Return nil if we should prefer `ls-lisp' instead."
|
||
;; FIXME: Should we also check `file-accessible-directory-p' so we
|
||
;; automatically redirect to ls-lisp when operating on magic file names?
|
||
(and (if (boundp 'ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program)
|
||
ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program
|
||
t)
|
||
insert-directory-program))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom directory-free-space-program (purecopy "df")
|
||
"Program to get the amount of free space on a file system.
|
||
We assume the output has the format of `df'.
|
||
The value of this variable must be just a command name or file name;
|
||
if you want to specify options, use `directory-free-space-args'.
|
||
|
||
A value of nil disables this feature."
|
||
:type '(choice (string :tag "Program") (const :tag "None" nil))
|
||
:group 'dired)
|
||
(make-obsolete-variable 'directory-free-space-program
|
||
"ignored, as Emacs uses `file-system-info' instead"
|
||
"27.1")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom directory-free-space-args
|
||
(purecopy (if (eq system-type 'darwin) "-k" "-Pk"))
|
||
"Options to use when running `directory-free-space-program'."
|
||
:type 'string
|
||
:group 'dired)
|
||
(make-obsolete-variable 'directory-free-space-args
|
||
"ignored, as Emacs uses `file-system-info' instead"
|
||
"27.1")
|
||
|
||
(defun get-free-disk-space (dir)
|
||
"String describing the amount of free space on DIR's file system.
|
||
If DIR's free space cannot be obtained, this function returns nil."
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(let ((avail (nth 2 (file-system-info dir))))
|
||
(if avail
|
||
(funcall byte-count-to-string-function avail)))))
|
||
|
||
(defvar directory-listing-before-filename-regexp
|
||
(let* ((l "\\([A-Za-z]\\|[^\0-\177]\\)")
|
||
(l-or-quote "\\([A-Za-z']\\|[^\0-\177]\\)")
|
||
;; In some locales, month abbreviations are as short as 2 letters,
|
||
;; and they can be followed by ".".
|
||
;; In Breton, a month name can include a quote character.
|
||
(month (concat l-or-quote l-or-quote "+\\.?"))
|
||
(s " ")
|
||
(yyyy "[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]")
|
||
(dd "[ 0-3][0-9]")
|
||
(HH:MM "[ 0-2][0-9][:.][0-5][0-9]")
|
||
(seconds "[0-6][0-9]\\([.,][0-9]+\\)?")
|
||
(zone "[-+][0-2][0-9][0-5][0-9]")
|
||
(iso-mm-dd "[01][0-9]-[0-3][0-9]")
|
||
(iso-time (concat HH:MM "\\(:" seconds "\\( ?" zone "\\)?\\)?"))
|
||
(iso (concat "\\(\\(" yyyy "-\\)?" iso-mm-dd "[ T]" iso-time
|
||
"\\|" yyyy "-" iso-mm-dd "\\)"))
|
||
(western (concat "\\(" month s "+" dd "\\|" dd "\\.?" s month "\\)"
|
||
s "+"
|
||
"\\(" HH:MM "\\|" yyyy "\\)"))
|
||
(western-comma (concat month s "+" dd "," s "+" yyyy))
|
||
;; This represents the date in strftime(3) format "%e-%b-%Y"
|
||
;; (aka "%v"), as it is the default for many ls incarnations.
|
||
(DD-MMM-YYYY (concat dd "-" month "-" yyyy s HH:MM))
|
||
;; Japanese MS-Windows ls-lisp has one-digit months, and
|
||
;; omits the Kanji characters after month and day-of-month.
|
||
;; On Mac OS X 10.3, the date format in East Asian locales is
|
||
;; day-of-month digits followed by month digits.
|
||
(mm "[ 0-1]?[0-9]")
|
||
(east-asian
|
||
(concat "\\(" mm l "?" s dd l "?" s "+"
|
||
"\\|" dd s mm s "+" "\\)"
|
||
"\\(" HH:MM "\\|" yyyy l "?" "\\)")))
|
||
;; The "[0-9]" below requires the previous column to end in a digit.
|
||
;; This avoids recognizing `1 may 1997' as a date in the line:
|
||
;; -r--r--r-- 1 may 1997 1168 Oct 19 16:49 README
|
||
|
||
;; The "[BkKMGTPEZYRQ]?" below supports "ls -alh" output.
|
||
|
||
;; For non-iso date formats, we add the ".*" in order to find
|
||
;; the last possible match. This avoids recognizing
|
||
;; `jservice 10 1024' as a date in the line:
|
||
;; drwxr-xr-x 3 jservice 10 1024 Jul 2 1997 esg-host
|
||
|
||
;; vc dired listings provide the state or blanks between file
|
||
;; permissions and date. The state is always surrounded by
|
||
;; parentheses:
|
||
;; -rw-r--r-- (modified) 2005-10-22 21:25 files.el
|
||
;; This is not supported yet.
|
||
(purecopy (concat "\\([0-9][BkKMGTPEZYRQ]? " iso
|
||
"\\|.*[0-9][BkKMGTPEZYRQ]? "
|
||
"\\(" western "\\|" western-comma
|
||
"\\|" DD-MMM-YYYY "\\|" east-asian "\\)"
|
||
"\\) +")))
|
||
"Regular expression to match up to the file name in a directory listing.
|
||
The default value is designed to recognize dates and times
|
||
regardless of the language.")
|
||
|
||
(defvar insert-directory-ls-version 'unknown)
|
||
|
||
(defun insert-directory-wildcard-in-dir-p (dir)
|
||
"Return non-nil if DIR contains shell wildcards in its parent directory part.
|
||
The return value is a cons (DIRECTORY . WILDCARD), where DIRECTORY is the
|
||
part of DIR up to and excluding the first component that includes
|
||
wildcard characters, and WILDCARD is the rest of DIR's components. The
|
||
DIRECTORY part of the value includes the trailing slash, to indicate that
|
||
it is a directory.
|
||
|
||
Valid wildcards are `*', `?', `[abc]' and `[a-z]'."
|
||
(let ((wildcards "[?*"))
|
||
(when (and (or (not (featurep 'ls-lisp))
|
||
ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards)
|
||
(string-match (concat "[" wildcards "]") (file-name-directory dir))
|
||
(not (file-exists-p dir))) ; Prefer an existing file to wildcards.
|
||
(let ((regexp (format "\\`\\([^%s]*/\\)\\([^%s]*[%s].*\\)"
|
||
wildcards wildcards wildcards)))
|
||
(string-match regexp dir)
|
||
(cons (match-string 1 dir) (match-string 2 dir))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun insert-directory-clean (beg switches)
|
||
(when (if (stringp switches)
|
||
(string-match "--dired\\>" switches)
|
||
(member "--dired" switches))
|
||
;; The following overshoots by one line for an empty
|
||
;; directory listed with "--dired", but without "-a"
|
||
;; switch, where the ls output contains a
|
||
;; "//DIRED-OPTIONS//" line, but no "//DIRED//" line.
|
||
;; We take care of that case later.
|
||
(forward-line -2)
|
||
(when (looking-at "//SUBDIRED//")
|
||
(delete-region (point) (progn (forward-line 1) (point)))
|
||
(forward-line -1))
|
||
(if (looking-at "//DIRED//")
|
||
(let ((end (line-end-position))
|
||
(linebeg (point))
|
||
error-lines)
|
||
;; Find all the lines that are error messages,
|
||
;; and record the bounds of each one.
|
||
(goto-char beg)
|
||
(while (< (point) linebeg)
|
||
(or (eql (following-char) ?\s)
|
||
(push (list (point) (line-end-position)) error-lines))
|
||
(forward-line 1))
|
||
(setq error-lines (nreverse error-lines))
|
||
;; Now read the numeric positions of file names.
|
||
(goto-char linebeg)
|
||
(forward-word-strictly 1)
|
||
(forward-char 3)
|
||
(while (< (point) end)
|
||
(let ((start (insert-directory-adj-pos
|
||
(+ beg (read (current-buffer)))
|
||
error-lines))
|
||
(end (insert-directory-adj-pos
|
||
(+ beg (read (current-buffer)))
|
||
error-lines)))
|
||
(if (memq (char-after end) '(?\n ?\s))
|
||
;; End is followed by \n or by " -> ".
|
||
(put-text-property start end 'dired-filename t)
|
||
;; It seems that we can't trust ls's output as to
|
||
;; byte positions of filenames.
|
||
(put-text-property beg (point) 'dired-filename nil)
|
||
(end-of-line))))
|
||
(goto-char end)
|
||
(beginning-of-line)
|
||
(delete-region (point) (progn (forward-line 1) (point))))
|
||
;; Take care of the case where the ls output contains a
|
||
;; "//DIRED-OPTIONS//"-line, but no "//DIRED//"-line
|
||
;; and we went one line too far back (see above).
|
||
(forward-line 1))
|
||
(if (looking-at "//DIRED-OPTIONS//")
|
||
(delete-region (point) (progn (forward-line 1) (point))))))
|
||
|
||
;; insert-directory
|
||
;; - must insert _exactly_one_line_ describing FILE if WILDCARD and
|
||
;; FULL-DIRECTORY-P is nil.
|
||
;; The single line of output must display FILE's name as it was
|
||
;; given, namely, an absolute path name.
|
||
;; - must insert exactly one line for each file if WILDCARD or
|
||
;; FULL-DIRECTORY-P is t, plus one optional "total" line
|
||
;; before the file lines, plus optional text after the file lines.
|
||
;; Lines are delimited by "\n", so filenames containing "\n" are not
|
||
;; allowed.
|
||
;; File lines should display the basename.
|
||
;; - must be consistent with
|
||
;; - functions dired-move-to-filename, (these two define what a file line is)
|
||
;; dired-move-to-end-of-filename,
|
||
;; dired-between-files, (shortcut for (not (dired-move-to-filename)))
|
||
;; dired-insert-headerline
|
||
;; dired-after-subdir-garbage (defines what a "total" line is)
|
||
;; - variable dired-subdir-regexp
|
||
;; - may be passed "--dired" as the first argument in SWITCHES.
|
||
;; File name handlers might have to remove this switch if their
|
||
;; "ls" command does not support it.
|
||
(defun insert-directory (file switches &optional wildcard full-directory-p)
|
||
"Insert directory listing for FILE, formatted according to SWITCHES.
|
||
Leaves point after the inserted text.
|
||
SWITCHES may be a string of options, or a list of strings
|
||
representing individual options.
|
||
Optional third arg WILDCARD means treat FILE as shell wildcard.
|
||
Optional fourth arg FULL-DIRECTORY-P means file is a directory and
|
||
switches do not contain `d', so that a full listing is expected.
|
||
|
||
Depending on the value of `ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program'
|
||
this works either using a Lisp emulation of the \"ls\" program
|
||
or by running a directory listing program
|
||
whose name is in the variable `insert-directory-program'
|
||
\(and if WILDCARD, it also runs the shell specified by `shell-file-name').
|
||
|
||
When SWITCHES contains the long `--dired' option, this function
|
||
treats it specially, for the sake of dired. However, the
|
||
normally equivalent short `-D' option is just passed on to
|
||
`insert-directory-program', as any other option."
|
||
;; We need the directory in order to find the right handler.
|
||
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler (expand-file-name file)
|
||
'insert-directory)))
|
||
(cond
|
||
(handler
|
||
(funcall handler 'insert-directory file switches
|
||
wildcard full-directory-p))
|
||
((not (files--use-insert-directory-program-p))
|
||
(require 'ls-lisp)
|
||
(declare-function ls-lisp--insert-directory "ls-lisp")
|
||
(ls-lisp--insert-directory file switches wildcard full-directory-p))
|
||
(t
|
||
(let (result (beg (point)))
|
||
|
||
;; Read the actual directory using `insert-directory-program'.
|
||
;; RESULT gets the status code.
|
||
(let* (;; We at first read by no-conversion, then after
|
||
;; putting text property `dired-filename, decode one
|
||
;; bunch by one to preserve that property.
|
||
(coding-system-for-read 'no-conversion)
|
||
;; This is to control encoding the arguments in call-process.
|
||
(coding-system-for-write
|
||
(and enable-multibyte-characters
|
||
(or file-name-coding-system
|
||
default-file-name-coding-system))))
|
||
(setq result
|
||
(if wildcard
|
||
;; If the wildcard is just in the file part, then run ls in
|
||
;; the directory part of the file pattern using the last
|
||
;; component as argument. Otherwise, run ls in the longest
|
||
;; subdirectory of the directory part free of wildcards; use
|
||
;; the remaining of the file pattern as argument.
|
||
(let* ((dir-wildcard (insert-directory-wildcard-in-dir-p file))
|
||
(default-directory
|
||
(cond (dir-wildcard (car dir-wildcard))
|
||
(t
|
||
(if (file-name-absolute-p file)
|
||
(file-name-directory file)
|
||
(file-name-directory (expand-file-name file))))))
|
||
(pattern (if dir-wildcard (cdr dir-wildcard) (file-name-nondirectory file))))
|
||
;; NB since switches is passed to the shell, be
|
||
;; careful of malicious values, eg "-l;reboot".
|
||
;; See eg dired-safe-switches-p.
|
||
(call-process
|
||
shell-file-name nil t nil
|
||
shell-command-switch
|
||
(concat (if (memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt))
|
||
""
|
||
"\\") ; Disregard Unix shell aliases!
|
||
insert-directory-program
|
||
" -d "
|
||
(if (stringp switches)
|
||
switches
|
||
(mapconcat #'identity switches " "))
|
||
" -- "
|
||
;; Quote some characters that have
|
||
;; special meanings in shells; but
|
||
;; don't quote the wildcards--we want
|
||
;; them to be special. We also
|
||
;; currently don't quote the quoting
|
||
;; characters in case people want to
|
||
;; use them explicitly to quote
|
||
;; wildcard characters.
|
||
(shell-quote-wildcard-pattern pattern))))
|
||
;; SunOS 4.1.3, SVr4 and others need the "." to list the
|
||
;; directory if FILE is a symbolic link.
|
||
(unless full-directory-p
|
||
(setq switches
|
||
(cond
|
||
((stringp switches) (concat switches " -d"))
|
||
((member "-d" switches) switches)
|
||
(t (append switches '("-d"))))))
|
||
(if (string-match "\\`~" file)
|
||
(setq file (expand-file-name file)))
|
||
(apply #'call-process
|
||
insert-directory-program nil t nil
|
||
(append
|
||
(if (listp switches) switches
|
||
(unless (equal switches "")
|
||
;; Split the switches at any spaces so we can
|
||
;; pass separate options as separate args.
|
||
(split-string-and-unquote switches)))
|
||
;; Avoid lossage if FILE starts with `-'.
|
||
'("--")
|
||
(list file))))))
|
||
|
||
;; If we got "//DIRED//" in the output, it means we got a real
|
||
;; directory listing, even if `ls' returned nonzero.
|
||
;; So ignore any errors.
|
||
(when (if (stringp switches)
|
||
(string-match "--dired\\>" switches)
|
||
(member "--dired" switches))
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(forward-line -2)
|
||
(when (looking-at "//SUBDIRED//")
|
||
(forward-line -1))
|
||
(if (looking-at "//DIRED//")
|
||
(setq result 0))))
|
||
|
||
(when (and (not (eq 0 result))
|
||
(eq insert-directory-ls-version 'unknown))
|
||
;; The first time ls returns an error,
|
||
;; find the version numbers of ls,
|
||
;; and set insert-directory-ls-version
|
||
;; to > if it is more than 5.2.1, < if it is less, nil if it
|
||
;; is equal or if the info cannot be obtained.
|
||
;; (That can mean it isn't GNU ls.)
|
||
(let ((version-out
|
||
(with-temp-buffer
|
||
(call-process "ls" nil t nil "--version")
|
||
(buffer-string))))
|
||
(setq insert-directory-ls-version
|
||
(if (string-match "ls (.*utils) \\([0-9.]*\\)$" version-out)
|
||
(let* ((version (match-string 1 version-out))
|
||
(split (split-string version "[.]"))
|
||
(numbers (mapcar #'string-to-number split))
|
||
(min '(5 2 1))
|
||
comparison)
|
||
(while (and (not comparison) (or numbers min))
|
||
(cond ((null min)
|
||
(setq comparison #'>))
|
||
((null numbers)
|
||
(setq comparison #'<))
|
||
((> (car numbers) (car min))
|
||
(setq comparison #'>))
|
||
((< (car numbers) (car min))
|
||
(setq comparison #'<))
|
||
(t
|
||
(setq numbers (cdr numbers)
|
||
min (cdr min)))))
|
||
(or comparison #'=))
|
||
nil))))
|
||
|
||
;; For GNU ls versions 5.2.2 and up, ignore minor errors.
|
||
(when (and (eq 1 result) (eq insert-directory-ls-version #'>))
|
||
(setq result 0))
|
||
|
||
;; If `insert-directory-program' failed, signal an error.
|
||
(unless (eq 0 result)
|
||
;; Delete the error message it may have output.
|
||
(delete-region beg (point))
|
||
;; On non-Posix systems, we cannot open a directory, so
|
||
;; don't even try, because that will always result in
|
||
;; the ubiquitous "Access denied". Instead, show the
|
||
;; command line so the user can try to guess what went wrong.
|
||
(if (and (file-directory-p file)
|
||
(memq system-type '(ms-dos windows-nt)))
|
||
(error
|
||
"Reading directory: \"%s %s -- %s\" exited with status %s"
|
||
insert-directory-program
|
||
(if (listp switches) (concat switches) switches)
|
||
file result)
|
||
;; Unix. Access the file to get a suitable error.
|
||
(access-file file "Reading directory")
|
||
(error "Listing directory failed but `access-file' worked")))
|
||
(insert-directory-clean beg switches)
|
||
;; Now decode what read if necessary.
|
||
(let ((coding (or coding-system-for-read
|
||
file-name-coding-system
|
||
default-file-name-coding-system
|
||
'undecided))
|
||
coding-no-eol
|
||
val pos)
|
||
(when (and enable-multibyte-characters
|
||
(not (memq (coding-system-base coding)
|
||
'(raw-text no-conversion))))
|
||
;; If no coding system is specified or detection is
|
||
;; requested, detect the coding.
|
||
(if (eq (coding-system-base coding) 'undecided)
|
||
(setq coding (detect-coding-region beg (point) t)))
|
||
(if (not (eq (coding-system-base coding) 'undecided))
|
||
(save-restriction
|
||
(setq coding-no-eol
|
||
(coding-system-change-eol-conversion coding 'unix))
|
||
(narrow-to-region beg (point))
|
||
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||
(while (not (eobp))
|
||
(setq pos (point)
|
||
val (get-text-property (point) 'dired-filename))
|
||
(goto-char (next-single-property-change
|
||
(point) 'dired-filename nil (point-max)))
|
||
;; Force no eol conversion on a file name, so
|
||
;; that CR is preserved.
|
||
(decode-coding-region pos (point)
|
||
(if val coding-no-eol coding))
|
||
(if val
|
||
(put-text-property pos (point)
|
||
'dired-filename t))))))))))))
|
||
|
||
(defun insert-directory-adj-pos (pos error-lines)
|
||
"Convert `ls --dired' file name position value POS to a buffer position.
|
||
File name position values returned in ls --dired output
|
||
count only stdout; they don't count the error messages sent to stderr.
|
||
So this function converts to them to real buffer positions.
|
||
ERROR-LINES is a list of buffer positions of error message lines,
|
||
of the form (START END)."
|
||
(while (and error-lines (< (caar error-lines) pos))
|
||
(setq pos (+ pos (- (nth 1 (car error-lines)) (nth 0 (car error-lines)))))
|
||
(pop error-lines))
|
||
pos)
|
||
|
||
(defun insert-directory-safely (file switches
|
||
&optional wildcard full-directory-p)
|
||
"Insert directory listing for FILE, formatted according to SWITCHES.
|
||
|
||
Like `insert-directory', but if FILE does not exist, it inserts a
|
||
message to that effect instead of signaling an error."
|
||
(if (file-exists-p file)
|
||
(insert-directory file switches wildcard full-directory-p)
|
||
;; Simulate the message printed by `ls'.
|
||
(insert (format "%s: No such file or directory\n" file))))
|
||
|
||
(defcustom kill-emacs-query-functions nil
|
||
"Functions to call with no arguments to query about killing Emacs.
|
||
If any of these functions returns nil, killing Emacs is canceled.
|
||
`save-buffers-kill-emacs' calls these functions, but `kill-emacs',
|
||
the low level primitive, does not. See also `kill-emacs-hook'."
|
||
:type 'hook
|
||
:version "26.1"
|
||
:group 'convenience)
|
||
|
||
(defcustom confirm-kill-emacs nil
|
||
"How to ask for confirmation when leaving Emacs.
|
||
If nil, the default, don't ask at all. If the value is non-nil, it should
|
||
be a predicate function; for example `yes-or-no-p'."
|
||
:type '(choice (const :tag "Ask with yes-or-no-p" yes-or-no-p)
|
||
(const :tag "Ask with y-or-n-p" y-or-n-p)
|
||
(const :tag "Don't confirm" nil)
|
||
(function :tag "Predicate function"))
|
||
:group 'convenience
|
||
:version "21.1")
|
||
|
||
(defcustom confirm-kill-processes t
|
||
"Non-nil if Emacs should confirm killing processes on exit.
|
||
If this variable is nil, the value of
|
||
`process-query-on-exit-flag' is ignored. Otherwise, if there are
|
||
processes with a non-nil `process-query-on-exit-flag', Emacs will
|
||
prompt the user before killing them."
|
||
:type 'boolean
|
||
:group 'convenience
|
||
:version "26.1")
|
||
|
||
(defun save-buffers-kill-emacs (&optional arg restart)
|
||
"Offer to save each buffer, then kill this Emacs process.
|
||
With prefix ARG, silently save all file-visiting buffers without asking.
|
||
If there are active processes where `process-query-on-exit-flag'
|
||
returns non-nil and `confirm-kill-processes' is non-nil,
|
||
asks whether processes should be killed.
|
||
|
||
Runs the members of `kill-emacs-query-functions' in turn and stops
|
||
if any returns nil. If `confirm-kill-emacs' is non-nil, calls it.
|
||
|
||
If RESTART, restart Emacs after killing the current Emacs process."
|
||
(interactive "P")
|
||
;; Don't use save-some-buffers-default-predicate, because we want
|
||
;; to ask about all the buffers before killing Emacs.
|
||
(when (or (files--buffers-needing-to-be-saved t)
|
||
(catch 'need-save
|
||
(dolist (func save-some-buffers-functions)
|
||
(when (funcall func 'query)
|
||
(throw 'need-save t)))))
|
||
(if (use-dialog-box-p)
|
||
(pcase (x-popup-dialog
|
||
t `("Unsaved Buffers"
|
||
("Close Without Saving" . no-save)
|
||
("Save All" . save-all)
|
||
("Cancel" . cancel)))
|
||
('cancel (user-error "Exit canceled"))
|
||
('save-all (save-some-buffers t)))
|
||
(save-some-buffers arg t)))
|
||
(let ((confirm confirm-kill-emacs))
|
||
(and
|
||
(or (not (memq t (mapcar (lambda (buf)
|
||
(and (buffer-file-name buf)
|
||
(buffer-modified-p buf)))
|
||
(buffer-list))))
|
||
(progn (setq confirm nil)
|
||
(yes-or-no-p "Modified buffers exist; exit anyway? ")))
|
||
(or (not (fboundp 'process-list))
|
||
;; process-list is not defined on MSDOS.
|
||
(not confirm-kill-processes)
|
||
(let ((processes (process-list))
|
||
active)
|
||
(while processes
|
||
(and (memq (process-status (car processes)) '(run stop open listen))
|
||
(process-query-on-exit-flag (car processes))
|
||
(setq active t))
|
||
(setq processes (cdr processes)))
|
||
(or (not active)
|
||
(with-current-buffer-window
|
||
(get-buffer-create "*Process List*")
|
||
`(display-buffer--maybe-at-bottom
|
||
(dedicated . t)
|
||
(window-height . fit-window-to-buffer)
|
||
(preserve-size . (nil . t))
|
||
(body-function
|
||
. ,#'(lambda (_window)
|
||
(list-processes t))))
|
||
#'(lambda (window _value)
|
||
(with-selected-window window
|
||
(unwind-protect
|
||
(progn
|
||
(setq confirm nil)
|
||
(yes-or-no-p "Active processes exist; kill them and exit anyway? "))
|
||
(when (window-live-p window)
|
||
(quit-restore-window window 'kill)))))))))
|
||
;; Query the user for other things, perhaps.
|
||
(run-hook-with-args-until-failure 'kill-emacs-query-functions)
|
||
(or (null confirm)
|
||
(funcall confirm "Really exit Emacs? "))
|
||
(kill-emacs nil restart))))
|
||
|
||
(defun save-buffers-kill-terminal (&optional arg)
|
||
"Offer to save each buffer, then kill the current connection.
|
||
If the current frame has no client, kill Emacs itself using
|
||
`save-buffers-kill-emacs'.
|
||
|
||
With prefix ARG, silently save all file-visiting buffers, then kill.
|
||
|
||
If emacsclient was started with a list of file names to edit, then
|
||
only these files will be asked to be saved."
|
||
(interactive "P")
|
||
(if (frame-parameter nil 'client)
|
||
(server-save-buffers-kill-terminal arg)
|
||
(save-buffers-kill-emacs arg)))
|
||
|
||
(defun restart-emacs ()
|
||
"Kill the current Emacs process and start a new one.
|
||
This goes through the same shutdown procedure as
|
||
`save-buffers-kill-emacs', but instead of killing Emacs and
|
||
exiting, it re-executes Emacs (using the same command line
|
||
arguments as the running Emacs)."
|
||
(interactive)
|
||
(save-buffers-kill-emacs nil t))
|
||
|
||
|
||
;; We use /: as a prefix to "quote" a file name
|
||
;; so that magic file name handlers will not apply to it.
|
||
|
||
(setq file-name-handler-alist
|
||
(cons (cons (purecopy "\\`/:") 'file-name-non-special)
|
||
file-name-handler-alist))
|
||
|
||
;; We depend on being the last handler on the list,
|
||
;; so that anything else that does need handling
|
||
;; has been handled already.
|
||
;; So it is safe for us to inhibit *all* magic file name handlers for
|
||
;; operations, which return a file name. See Bug#29579.
|
||
|
||
(defun file-name-non-special (operation &rest arguments)
|
||
(let ((inhibit-file-name-handlers
|
||
(cons 'file-name-non-special
|
||
(and (eq inhibit-file-name-operation operation)
|
||
inhibit-file-name-handlers)))
|
||
(inhibit-file-name-operation operation)
|
||
;; Some operations respect file name handlers in
|
||
;; `default-directory'. Because core function like
|
||
;; `call-process' don't care about file name handlers in
|
||
;; `default-directory', we here have to resolve the directory
|
||
;; into a local one. For `process-file',
|
||
;; `start-file-process', and `shell-command', this fixes
|
||
;; Bug#25949.
|
||
(default-directory
|
||
(if (memq operation
|
||
'(insert-directory process-file start-file-process
|
||
make-process shell-command
|
||
temporary-file-directory))
|
||
(directory-file-name
|
||
(expand-file-name
|
||
(unhandled-file-name-directory default-directory)))
|
||
default-directory))
|
||
;; Get a list of the indices of the args that are file names.
|
||
(file-arg-indices
|
||
(cdr (or (assq operation
|
||
'(;; The first seven are special because they
|
||
;; return a file name. We want to include
|
||
;; the /: in the return value. So just
|
||
;; avoid stripping it in the first place.
|
||
(abbreviate-file-name)
|
||
(directory-file-name)
|
||
(file-name-as-directory)
|
||
(file-name-directory)
|
||
(file-name-sans-versions)
|
||
(file-remote-p)
|
||
(find-backup-file-name)
|
||
;; `identity' means just return the first
|
||
;; arg not stripped of its quoting.
|
||
(substitute-in-file-name identity)
|
||
;; `expand-file-name' shall do special case
|
||
;; for the first argument starting with
|
||
;; "/:~". (Bug#65685)
|
||
(expand-file-name expand-file-name)
|
||
;; `add' means add "/:" to the result.
|
||
(file-truename add 0)
|
||
;;`insert-file-contents' needs special handling.
|
||
(insert-file-contents insert-file-contents 0)
|
||
;; `unquote-then-quote' means set buffer-file-name
|
||
;; temporarily to unquoted filename.
|
||
(verify-visited-file-modtime unquote-then-quote)
|
||
;; Unquote `buffer-file-name' temporarily.
|
||
(make-auto-save-file-name buffer-file-name)
|
||
(set-visited-file-modtime buffer-file-name)
|
||
;; Use a temporary local copy.
|
||
(copy-file local-copy)
|
||
(rename-file local-copy)
|
||
(copy-directory local-copy)
|
||
;; List the arguments that are filenames.
|
||
(file-name-completion 0 1)
|
||
(file-name-all-completions 0 1)
|
||
(file-equal-p 0 1)
|
||
(file-newer-than-file-p 0 1)
|
||
(write-region 2 5)
|
||
(file-in-directory-p 0 1)
|
||
(make-symbolic-link 0 1)
|
||
(add-name-to-file 0 1)
|
||
;; These file-notify-* operations take a
|
||
;; descriptor.
|
||
(file-notify-rm-watch)
|
||
(file-notify-valid-p)
|
||
;; `make-process' uses keyword arguments and
|
||
;; doesn't mangle its filenames in any way.
|
||
;; It already strips /: from the binary
|
||
;; filename, so we don't have to do this
|
||
;; here.
|
||
(make-process)))
|
||
;; For all other operations, treat the first
|
||
;; argument only as the file name.
|
||
'(nil 0))))
|
||
method
|
||
;; Copy ARGUMENTS so we can replace elements in it.
|
||
(arguments (copy-sequence arguments)))
|
||
(if (symbolp (car file-arg-indices))
|
||
(setq method (pop file-arg-indices)))
|
||
;; Strip off the /: from the file names that have it.
|
||
(save-match-data ;FIXME: Why?
|
||
(while (consp file-arg-indices)
|
||
(let ((pair (nthcdr (car file-arg-indices) arguments)))
|
||
(when (car pair)
|
||
(setcar pair (file-name-unquote (car pair) t))))
|
||
(setq file-arg-indices (cdr file-arg-indices))))
|
||
;; In general, we don't want any file name handler, see Bug#47625,
|
||
;; Bug#48349. For some few cases, operations with two file name
|
||
;; arguments which might be bound to different file name handlers,
|
||
;; we still need this.
|
||
(let ((tramp-mode (and tramp-mode (eq method 'local-copy))))
|
||
(pcase method
|
||
('identity (car arguments))
|
||
('expand-file-name
|
||
(when (string-prefix-p "/:~" (car arguments))
|
||
(setcar arguments (file-name-unquote (car arguments) t)))
|
||
(apply operation arguments))
|
||
('add (file-name-quote (apply operation arguments) t))
|
||
('buffer-file-name
|
||
(let ((buffer-file-name (file-name-unquote buffer-file-name t)))
|
||
(apply operation arguments)))
|
||
('insert-file-contents
|
||
(let ((visit (nth 1 arguments)))
|
||
(unwind-protect
|
||
(apply operation arguments)
|
||
(when (and visit buffer-file-name)
|
||
(setq buffer-file-name (file-name-quote buffer-file-name t))))))
|
||
('unquote-then-quote
|
||
;; We can't use `cl-letf' with `(buffer-local-value)' here
|
||
;; because it wouldn't work during bootstrapping.
|
||
(let ((buffer (current-buffer)))
|
||
;; `unquote-then-quote' is used only for the
|
||
;; `verify-visited-file-modtime' action, which takes a
|
||
;; buffer as only optional argument.
|
||
(with-current-buffer (or (car arguments) buffer)
|
||
(let ((buffer-file-name (file-name-unquote buffer-file-name t)))
|
||
;; Make sure to hide the temporary buffer change from
|
||
;; the underlying operation.
|
||
(with-current-buffer buffer
|
||
(apply operation arguments))))))
|
||
('local-copy
|
||
(let ((source (car arguments))
|
||
(target (car (cdr arguments)))
|
||
(prefix (expand-file-name
|
||
"file-name-non-special" temporary-file-directory))
|
||
tmpfile)
|
||
(cond
|
||
;; If source is remote, we must create a local copy.
|
||
((file-remote-p source)
|
||
(setq tmpfile (make-temp-name prefix))
|
||
(apply operation source tmpfile (cddr arguments))
|
||
(setq source tmpfile))
|
||
;; If source is quoted, and the unquoted source looks
|
||
;; remote, we must create a local copy.
|
||
((file-name-quoted-p source t)
|
||
(setq source (file-name-unquote source t))
|
||
(when (file-remote-p source)
|
||
(setq tmpfile (make-temp-name prefix))
|
||
(let (file-name-handler-alist)
|
||
(apply operation source tmpfile (cddr arguments)))
|
||
(setq source tmpfile))))
|
||
;; If target is quoted, and the unquoted target looks
|
||
;; remote, we must disable the file name handler.
|
||
(when (file-name-quoted-p target t)
|
||
(setq target (file-name-unquote target t))
|
||
(when (file-remote-p target)
|
||
(setq file-name-handler-alist nil)))
|
||
;; Do it.
|
||
(setcar arguments source)
|
||
(setcar (cdr arguments) target)
|
||
(apply operation arguments)
|
||
;; Cleanup.
|
||
(when (and tmpfile (file-exists-p tmpfile))
|
||
(if (file-directory-p tmpfile)
|
||
(delete-directory tmpfile 'recursive) (delete-file tmpfile)))))
|
||
(_
|
||
(apply operation arguments))))))
|
||
|
||
;;;###autoload
|
||
(defsubst file-name-quoted-p (name &optional top)
|
||
"Whether NAME is quoted with prefix \"/:\".
|
||
If NAME is a remote file name and TOP is nil, check the local part of NAME."
|
||
(let ((file-name-handler-alist (unless top file-name-handler-alist)))
|
||
(string-prefix-p "/:" (file-local-name name))))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-name-quote (name &optional top)
|
||
"Add the quotation prefix \"/:\" to file NAME.
|
||
If NAME is a remote file name and TOP is nil, the local part of
|
||
NAME is quoted. If NAME is already a quoted file name, NAME is
|
||
returned unchanged."
|
||
(let ((file-name-handler-alist (unless top file-name-handler-alist)))
|
||
(if (file-name-quoted-p name top)
|
||
name
|
||
(concat (file-remote-p name) "/:" (file-local-name name)))))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-name-unquote (name &optional top)
|
||
"Remove quotation prefix \"/:\" from file NAME, if any.
|
||
If NAME is a remote file name and TOP is nil, the local part of
|
||
NAME is unquoted."
|
||
(let* ((file-name-handler-alist (unless top file-name-handler-alist))
|
||
(localname (file-local-name name)))
|
||
(when (file-name-quoted-p localname top)
|
||
(setq
|
||
localname (if (= (length localname) 2) "/" (substring localname 2))))
|
||
(concat (file-remote-p name) localname)))
|
||
|
||
;; Symbolic modes and read-file-modes.
|
||
|
||
(defun file-modes-char-to-who (char)
|
||
"Convert CHAR to a numeric bit-mask for extracting mode bits.
|
||
CHAR is in [ugoa] and represents the category of users (Owner, Group,
|
||
Others, or All) for whom to produce the mask.
|
||
The bit-mask that is returned extracts from mode bits the access rights
|
||
for the specified category of users."
|
||
(cond ((eq char ?u) #o4700)
|
||
((eq char ?g) #o2070)
|
||
((eq char ?o) #o1007)
|
||
((eq char ?a) #o7777)
|
||
(t (error "%c: Bad `who' character" char))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-modes-char-to-right (char &optional from)
|
||
"Convert CHAR to a numeric value of mode bits.
|
||
CHAR is in [rwxXstugo] and represents symbolic access permissions.
|
||
If CHAR is in [Xugo], the value is taken from FROM (or 0 if omitted)."
|
||
(or from (setq from 0))
|
||
(cond ((eq char ?r) #o0444)
|
||
((eq char ?w) #o0222)
|
||
((eq char ?x) #o0111)
|
||
((eq char ?s) #o6000)
|
||
((eq char ?t) #o1000)
|
||
;; Rights relative to the previous file modes.
|
||
((eq char ?X) (if (= (logand from #o111) 0) 0 #o0111))
|
||
((eq char ?u) (let ((uright (logand #o4700 from)))
|
||
;; FIXME: These divisions/shifts seem to be right
|
||
;; for the `7' part of the #o4700 mask, but not
|
||
;; for the `4' part. Same below for `g' and `o'.
|
||
(+ uright (/ uright #o10) (/ uright #o100))))
|
||
((eq char ?g) (let ((gright (logand #o2070 from)))
|
||
(+ gright (/ gright #o10) (* gright #o10))))
|
||
((eq char ?o) (let ((oright (logand #o1007 from)))
|
||
(+ oright (* oright #o10) (* oright #o100))))
|
||
(t (error "%c: Bad right character" char))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-modes-rights-to-number (rights who-mask &optional from)
|
||
"Convert a symbolic mode string specification to an equivalent number.
|
||
RIGHTS is the symbolic mode spec, it should match \"([+=-][rwxXstugo]*)+\".
|
||
WHO-MASK is the bit-mask specifying the category of users to which to
|
||
apply the access permissions. See `file-modes-char-to-who'.
|
||
FROM (or 0 if nil) gives the mode bits on which to base permissions if
|
||
RIGHTS request to add, remove, or set permissions based on existing ones,
|
||
as in \"og+rX-w\"."
|
||
(let* ((num-rights (or from 0))
|
||
(list-rights (string-to-list rights))
|
||
(op (pop list-rights)))
|
||
(while (memq op '(?+ ?- ?=))
|
||
(let ((num-right 0)
|
||
char-right)
|
||
(while (memq (setq char-right (pop list-rights))
|
||
'(?r ?w ?x ?X ?s ?t ?u ?g ?o))
|
||
(setq num-right
|
||
(logior num-right
|
||
(file-modes-char-to-right char-right num-rights))))
|
||
(setq num-right (logand who-mask num-right)
|
||
num-rights
|
||
(cond ((= op ?+) (logior num-rights num-right))
|
||
((= op ?-) (logand num-rights (lognot num-right)))
|
||
(t (logior (logand num-rights (lognot who-mask)) num-right)))
|
||
op char-right)))
|
||
num-rights))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-modes-number-to-symbolic (mode &optional filetype)
|
||
"Return a description of a file's MODE as a string of 10 letters and dashes.
|
||
The returned string is like the mode description produced by \"ls -l\".
|
||
For instance, if MODE is #o700, then it produces `-rwx------'.
|
||
Note that this is NOT the same as the \"chmod\" style symbolic description
|
||
accepted by `file-modes-symbolic-to-number'.
|
||
FILETYPE, if provided, should be a character denoting the type of file,
|
||
such as `?d' for a directory, or `?l' for a symbolic link, and will override
|
||
the leading `-' character."
|
||
(string
|
||
(or filetype
|
||
(pcase (ash mode -12)
|
||
;; POSIX specifies that the file type is included in st_mode
|
||
;; and provides names for the file types but values only for
|
||
;; the permissions (e.g., S_IWOTH=2).
|
||
|
||
;; (#o017 ??) ;; #define S_IFMT 00170000
|
||
(#o014 ?s) ;; #define S_IFSOCK 0140000
|
||
(#o012 ?l) ;; #define S_IFLNK 0120000
|
||
;; (8 ??) ;; #define S_IFREG 0100000
|
||
(#o006 ?b) ;; #define S_IFBLK 0060000
|
||
(#o004 ?d) ;; #define S_IFDIR 0040000
|
||
(#o002 ?c) ;; #define S_IFCHR 0020000
|
||
(#o001 ?p) ;; #define S_IFIFO 0010000
|
||
(_ ?-)))
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 256 mode)) ?- ?r)
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 128 mode)) ?- ?w)
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 64 mode))
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 2048 mode)) ?- ?S)
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 2048 mode)) ?x ?s))
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 32 mode)) ?- ?r)
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 16 mode)) ?- ?w)
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 8 mode))
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 1024 mode)) ?- ?S)
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 1024 mode)) ?x ?s))
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 4 mode)) ?- ?r)
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 2 mode)) ?- ?w)
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 512 mode))
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 1 mode)) ?- ?x)
|
||
(if (zerop (logand 1 mode)) ?T ?t))))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-modes-symbolic-to-number (modes &optional from)
|
||
"Convert symbolic file modes to numeric file modes.
|
||
MODES is the string to convert, it should match
|
||
\"[ugoa]*([+=-][rwxXstugo]*)+,...\".
|
||
See Info node `(coreutils)File permissions' for more information on this
|
||
notation.
|
||
FROM (or 0 if nil) gives the mode bits on which to base permissions if
|
||
MODES request to add, remove, or set permissions based on existing ones,
|
||
as in \"og+rX-w\"."
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(let ((case-fold-search nil)
|
||
(num-modes (or from 0)))
|
||
(while (/= (string-to-char modes) 0)
|
||
(if (string-match "^\\([ugoa]*\\)\\([+=-][rwxXstugo]*\\)+\\(,\\|\\)" modes)
|
||
(let ((num-who (apply 'logior 0
|
||
(mapcar 'file-modes-char-to-who
|
||
(match-string 1 modes)))))
|
||
(when (= num-who 0)
|
||
(setq num-who (logior #o7000 (default-file-modes))))
|
||
(setq num-modes
|
||
(file-modes-rights-to-number (substring modes (match-end 1))
|
||
num-who num-modes)
|
||
modes (substring modes (match-end 3))))
|
||
(error "Parse error in modes near `%s'" (substring modes 0))))
|
||
num-modes)))
|
||
|
||
(defun read-file-modes (&optional prompt orig-file)
|
||
"Read file modes in octal or symbolic notation and return its numeric value.
|
||
PROMPT is used as the prompt, default to \"File modes (octal or symbolic): \".
|
||
ORIG-FILE is the name of a file on whose mode bits to base returned
|
||
permissions if what user types requests to add, remove, or set permissions
|
||
based on existing mode bits, as in \"og+rX-w\"."
|
||
(let* ((modes (or (if orig-file (file-modes orig-file) 0)
|
||
(error "File not found")))
|
||
(modestr (and (stringp orig-file)
|
||
(file-attribute-modes (file-attributes orig-file))))
|
||
(default
|
||
(and (stringp modestr)
|
||
(string-match "^.\\(...\\)\\(...\\)\\(...\\)$" modestr)
|
||
(string-replace
|
||
"-" ""
|
||
(format "u=%s,g=%s,o=%s"
|
||
(match-string 1 modestr)
|
||
(match-string 2 modestr)
|
||
(match-string 3 modestr)))))
|
||
(value (read-string (or prompt "File modes (octal or symbolic): ")
|
||
nil nil default)))
|
||
(save-match-data
|
||
(if (string-match "^[0-7]+" value)
|
||
(string-to-number value 8)
|
||
(file-modes-symbolic-to-number value modes)))))
|
||
|
||
(define-obsolete-variable-alias 'cache-long-line-scans
|
||
'cache-long-scans "24.4")
|
||
|
||
|
||
;; Trashcan handling.
|
||
(defcustom trash-directory nil
|
||
"Directory for `move-file-to-trash' to move files and directories to.
|
||
This directory is used only when the function `system-move-file-to-trash'
|
||
is not defined.
|
||
Relative paths are interpreted relative to `default-directory'.
|
||
If the value is nil, Emacs uses a freedesktop.org-style trashcan."
|
||
:type '(choice (const nil) directory)
|
||
:group 'auto-save
|
||
:version "23.2")
|
||
|
||
(defvar trash--hexify-table)
|
||
|
||
(declare-function system-move-file-to-trash "w32fns.c" (filename))
|
||
|
||
(defun move-file-to-trash (filename)
|
||
"Move the file (or directory) named FILENAME to the trash.
|
||
When `delete-by-moving-to-trash' is non-nil, this function is
|
||
called by `delete-file' and `delete-directory' instead of
|
||
deleting files outright.
|
||
|
||
If the function `system-move-file-to-trash' is defined, call it
|
||
with FILENAME as an argument.
|
||
Otherwise, if `trash-directory' is non-nil, move FILENAME to that
|
||
directory.
|
||
Otherwise, trash FILENAME using the freedesktop.org conventions,
|
||
like the GNOME, KDE and XFCE desktop environments. Emacs moves
|
||
files only to \"home trash\", ignoring per-volume trashcans."
|
||
(interactive "fMove file to trash: ")
|
||
;; If `system-move-file-to-trash' is defined, use it.
|
||
(cond ((fboundp 'system-move-file-to-trash)
|
||
(system-move-file-to-trash filename))
|
||
((connection-local-value trash-directory)
|
||
;; If `trash-directory' is non-nil, move the file there.
|
||
(let* ((trash-dir (expand-file-name
|
||
(connection-local-value trash-directory)))
|
||
(fn (directory-file-name (expand-file-name filename)))
|
||
(new-fn (concat (file-name-as-directory trash-dir)
|
||
(file-name-nondirectory fn))))
|
||
;; We can't trash a parent directory of trash-directory.
|
||
(if (string-prefix-p fn trash-dir)
|
||
(error "Trash directory `%s' is a subdirectory of `%s'"
|
||
trash-dir filename))
|
||
(unless (file-directory-p trash-dir)
|
||
(make-directory trash-dir t))
|
||
;; Ensure that the trashed file-name is unique.
|
||
(if (file-attributes new-fn)
|
||
(let ((version-control t)
|
||
(backup-directory-alist nil))
|
||
(setq new-fn (car (find-backup-file-name new-fn)))))
|
||
(let (delete-by-moving-to-trash)
|
||
(rename-file fn new-fn))))
|
||
;; Otherwise, use the freedesktop.org method, as specified at
|
||
;; https://freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/trash-spec
|
||
(t
|
||
(let* ((xdg-data-dir
|
||
(directory-file-name
|
||
(expand-file-name "Trash"
|
||
(or (getenv "XDG_DATA_HOME")
|
||
"~/.local/share"))))
|
||
(trash-files-dir (expand-file-name "files" xdg-data-dir))
|
||
(trash-info-dir (expand-file-name "info" xdg-data-dir))
|
||
(fn (directory-file-name (expand-file-name filename))))
|
||
|
||
;; Check if we have permissions to delete.
|
||
(unless (file-writable-p (directory-file-name
|
||
(file-name-directory fn)))
|
||
(error "Cannot move %s to trash: Permission denied" filename))
|
||
;; The trashed file cannot be the trash dir or its parent.
|
||
(if (string-prefix-p fn trash-files-dir)
|
||
(error "The trash directory %s is a subdirectory of %s"
|
||
trash-files-dir filename))
|
||
(if (string-prefix-p fn trash-info-dir)
|
||
(error "The trash directory %s is a subdirectory of %s"
|
||
trash-info-dir filename))
|
||
|
||
;; Ensure that the trash directory exists; otherwise, create it.
|
||
(with-file-modes #o700
|
||
(unless (file-exists-p trash-files-dir)
|
||
(make-directory trash-files-dir t))
|
||
(unless (file-exists-p trash-info-dir)
|
||
(make-directory trash-info-dir t)))
|
||
|
||
;; Try to move to trash with .trashinfo undo information
|
||
(save-excursion
|
||
(with-temp-buffer
|
||
(set-buffer-file-coding-system 'utf-8-unix)
|
||
(insert "[Trash Info]\nPath=")
|
||
;; Perform url-encoding on FN. For compatibility with
|
||
;; other programs (e.g. XFCE Thunar), allow literal "/"
|
||
;; for path separators.
|
||
(unless (boundp 'trash--hexify-table)
|
||
(setq trash--hexify-table (make-vector 256 nil))
|
||
(let ((unreserved-chars
|
||
(list ?/ ?a ?b ?c ?d ?e ?f ?g ?h ?i ?j ?k ?l ?m
|
||
?n ?o ?p ?q ?r ?s ?t ?u ?v ?w ?x ?y ?z ?A
|
||
?B ?C ?D ?E ?F ?G ?H ?I ?J ?K ?L ?M ?N ?O
|
||
?P ?Q ?R ?S ?T ?U ?V ?W ?X ?Y ?Z ?0 ?1 ?2
|
||
?3 ?4 ?5 ?6 ?7 ?8 ?9 ?- ?_ ?. ?! ?~ ?* ?'
|
||
?\( ?\))))
|
||
(dotimes (byte 256)
|
||
(aset trash--hexify-table byte
|
||
(if (memq byte unreserved-chars)
|
||
(char-to-string byte)
|
||
(format "%%%02x" byte))))))
|
||
(mapc (lambda (byte)
|
||
(insert (aref trash--hexify-table byte)))
|
||
(if (multibyte-string-p fn)
|
||
(encode-coding-string fn 'utf-8)
|
||
fn))
|
||
(insert "\nDeletionDate="
|
||
(format-time-string "%Y-%m-%dT%T")
|
||
"\n")
|
||
|
||
;; Make a .trashinfo file. Use O_EXCL, as per trash-spec 1.0.
|
||
(let* ((files-base (file-name-nondirectory fn))
|
||
(is-directory (and (file-directory-p fn)
|
||
(not (file-symlink-p fn))))
|
||
(overwrite nil)
|
||
info-fn)
|
||
;; We're checking further down whether the info file
|
||
;; exists, but the file name may exist in the trash
|
||
;; directory even if there is no info file for it.
|
||
(when (file-attributes
|
||
(file-name-concat trash-files-dir files-base))
|
||
(setq overwrite t
|
||
files-base (file-name-nondirectory
|
||
(make-temp-file
|
||
(file-name-concat
|
||
trash-files-dir files-base)
|
||
is-directory))))
|
||
(setq info-fn (file-name-concat
|
||
trash-info-dir
|
||
(concat files-base ".trashinfo")))
|
||
;; Re-check the existence (sort of).
|
||
(condition-case nil
|
||
(write-region nil nil info-fn nil 'quiet info-fn 'excl)
|
||
(file-already-exists
|
||
;; Uniquify new-fn. Some file managers do not
|
||
;; like Emacs-style backup file names. E.g.:
|
||
;; https://bugs.kde.org/170956
|
||
(setq info-fn (make-temp-file
|
||
(file-name-concat trash-info-dir files-base)
|
||
nil ".trashinfo"))
|
||
(setq files-base (substring (file-name-nondirectory info-fn)
|
||
0 (- (length ".trashinfo"))))
|
||
(write-region nil nil info-fn nil 'quiet info-fn)))
|
||
;; Finally, try to move the item to the trashcan. If
|
||
;; it's a file, just move it. Things are more
|
||
;; complicated for directories. If the target
|
||
;; directory already exists (due to uniquification)
|
||
;; and the trash directory is in a different
|
||
;; filesystem, rename-file will error out, even when
|
||
;; 'overwrite' is non-nil. Rather than worry about
|
||
;; whether we're crossing filesystems, just check if
|
||
;; we've moving a directory and the target directory
|
||
;; already exists. That handles both the
|
||
;; same-filesystem and cross-filesystem cases.
|
||
(let ((delete-by-moving-to-trash nil)
|
||
(new-fn (file-name-concat trash-files-dir files-base)))
|
||
(if (or (not is-directory)
|
||
(not (file-attributes new-fn)))
|
||
(rename-file fn new-fn overwrite)
|
||
(copy-directory fn
|
||
(file-name-as-directory new-fn)
|
||
t nil t)
|
||
(delete-directory fn t))))))))))
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-type (attributes)
|
||
"The type field in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
The value is either t for directory, string (name linked to) for
|
||
symbolic link, or nil."
|
||
(nth 0 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-link-number (attributes)
|
||
"Return the number of links in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'."
|
||
(nth 1 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-user-id (attributes)
|
||
"The UID field in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
This is either a string or a number. If a string value cannot be
|
||
looked up, a numeric value, either an integer or a float, is
|
||
returned."
|
||
(nth 2 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-group-id (attributes)
|
||
"The GID field in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
This is either a string or a number. If a string value cannot be
|
||
looked up, a numeric value, either an integer or a float, is
|
||
returned."
|
||
(nth 3 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-access-time (attributes)
|
||
"The last access time in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
This a Lisp timestamp in the style of `current-time'."
|
||
(nth 4 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-modification-time (attributes)
|
||
"The modification time in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
This is the time of the last change to the file's contents, and
|
||
is a Lisp timestamp in the style of `current-time'."
|
||
(nth 5 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-status-change-time (attributes)
|
||
"The status modification time in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
This is the time of last change to the file's attributes: owner
|
||
and group, access mode bits, etc., and is a Lisp timestamp in the
|
||
style of `current-time'."
|
||
(nth 6 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-size (attributes)
|
||
"The integer size (in bytes) in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'."
|
||
(nth 7 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-modes (attributes)
|
||
"The file modes in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
This is a string of ten letters or dashes as in ls -l."
|
||
(nth 8 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-inode-number (attributes)
|
||
"The inode number in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
It is a nonnegative integer."
|
||
(nth 10 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-device-number (attributes)
|
||
"The file system device number in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
It is an integer or a cons cell of integers."
|
||
(nth 11 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defsubst file-attribute-file-identifier (attributes)
|
||
"The inode and device numbers in ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
The value is a list of the form (INODENUM DEVICE), where DEVICE could be
|
||
either a single number or a cons cell of two numbers.
|
||
This tuple of numbers uniquely identifies the file."
|
||
(nthcdr 10 attributes))
|
||
|
||
(defun file-attribute-collect (attributes &rest attr-names)
|
||
"Return a sublist of ATTRIBUTES returned by `file-attributes'.
|
||
ATTR-NAMES are symbols with the selected attribute names.
|
||
|
||
Valid attribute names are: type, link-number, user-id, group-id,
|
||
access-time, modification-time, status-change-time, size, modes,
|
||
inode-number, device-number and file-number."
|
||
(let ((all '(type link-number user-id group-id access-time
|
||
modification-time status-change-time
|
||
size modes inode-number device-number file-number))
|
||
result)
|
||
(while attr-names
|
||
(let ((attr (pop attr-names)))
|
||
(if (memq attr all)
|
||
(push (funcall
|
||
(intern (format "file-attribute-%s" (symbol-name attr)))
|
||
attributes)
|
||
result)
|
||
(error "Wrong attribute name '%S'" attr))))
|
||
(nreverse result)))
|
||
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-map "\C-f" 'find-file)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-map "\C-r" 'find-file-read-only)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-map "\C-v" 'find-alternate-file)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-map "\C-s" 'save-buffer)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-map "s" 'save-some-buffers)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-map "\C-w" 'write-file)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-map "i" 'insert-file)
|
||
(define-key esc-map "~" 'not-modified)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-map "\C-d" 'list-directory)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-map "\C-c" 'save-buffers-kill-terminal)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-map "\C-q" 'read-only-mode)
|
||
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-4-map "f" 'find-file-other-window)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-4-map "r" 'find-file-read-only-other-window)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-4-map "\C-f" 'find-file-other-window)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-4-map "b" 'switch-to-buffer-other-window)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-4-map "\C-o" 'display-buffer)
|
||
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-5-map "b" 'switch-to-buffer-other-frame)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-5-map "f" 'find-file-other-frame)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-5-map "\C-f" 'find-file-other-frame)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-5-map "r" 'find-file-read-only-other-frame)
|
||
(define-key ctl-x-5-map "\C-o" 'display-buffer-other-frame)
|
||
|
||
;;; files.el ends here
|