ptx: permuted index generator

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alm 1994-05-06 07:54:54 +00:00
parent e379cb811a
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GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 2, June 1991
Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
Preamble
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Appendix: How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
<one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
Copyright (C) 19yy <name of author>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
when it starts in an interactive mode:
Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) 19yy name of author
Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be
mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program.
You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
`Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
<signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989
Ty Coon, President of Vice
This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
Public License instead of this License.

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Fri Nov 5 23:10:07 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@icule)
* Version 0.3
* check-out: New name for check_out.
* Makefile.in: Change check_out for check-out everywhere.
Reported by Jim Meyering <meyering@comco.com>.
* Makefile.in (realclean): Do not remove .stamp-h.in and
config.h.in. One should not need Autoconf installed.
Reported by Nelson Beebe <beebe@math.utah.edu>.
* ptx.c: Add missing definition of isxdigit.
Reported by Nelson Beebe <beebe@math.utah.edu>.
* ptx.c: Define S_ISREG if not defined, then use it.
Reported by Karl Berry <karl@cs.umb.edu>.
Wed Nov 3 15:53:00 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@icule)
* mkinstalldirs: New, from elsewhere.
* Makefile.in: Use it.
Mon Nov 1 00:48:34 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@lagrande.IRO.UMontreal.CA)
* Makefile.in (clean): Delete ptx, not the obsolete $(PROGS).
Sun Oct 31 15:04:57 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@raptor.IRO.UMontreal.CA)
* ptx.c (alloc_and_compile_regex): Zero out the whole allocated
pattern, not just a few fields.
* ptx.c (alloc_and_compile_regex): Clarify error message.
Thu Oct 28 08:29:29 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@compy.IRO.UMontreal.CA)
* ptx.c (print_copyright): Deleted. Rather use a "copyright"
variable, print to standard output instead of standard error.
* ptx.c: Use error instead of fprintf (stderr, ...).
* ptx.c: Rename fold_lower_to_upper to ignore_case.
Wed Oct 27 18:41:52 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@lagrande.IRO.UMontreal.CA)
* ptx.c: Add option -M for using another macro name than "xx".
Reported by Thorsten Ohl <ohl@physics.harvard.edu>.
* examples/ignore/: New files.
* eign: Linked to examples/ignore/eign.
* Makefile.in: Install and uninstall $(datadir)/eign.
* configure.in: Remove testing of a default ignore file.
Reported by Nelson Beebe <beebe@math.utah.edu>.
* ptx.c (main): Add --help and --version processing.
(print_version): Deleted.
* ptx.c: Use -traditional instead of --no-gnu-extensions,
--ignore-case instead of --fold-letter-case, --format=<format>
instead of --tex-output and --roff-output.
* argmatch.c: New file. Taken from fileutils/lib.
Reported by Karl Berry <karl@cs.umb.edu>.
Tue Oct 26 08:39:14 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@icule)
* ptx.c (usage): New name for usage_and_exit. Accept an exit
status parameter. If zero, print full help on stdout. If
non-zero, print a one-line helper on stderr.
* ptx.c: Remove sizeof_occurs and OCCURS_ALIGNMENT complexity.
The memory savings did not justify the portability headaches.
* ptx.c (copy_unescaped_string): New function.
(main): Use it with options -F, -S and -W.
Reported by Dave Cottingham <dc@haiti.gsfc.nasa.gov>.
* ptx.c (fix_output_parameters): Force edit of '\f', because some
systems does not consider it to be whitespace.
Reported by Stephane Berube <berube@iro.umontreal.ca>.
* ptx.c (fix_output_parameters): For roff output, do not disallow
characters with 8th bit set.
Reported by James Clark <jjc@jclark.com>.
* Makefile.in (dist): Include examples/ in distribution.
Mon Oct 25 15:46:16 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@icule)
* ptx.c: Change --display-width to --width, for consistency with
other GNU programs.
* examples/ajay/: New files.
Reported by Ajay Shah <ajayshah@cmie.ernet.in>.
Reported by Rakesh Chauhan <rk@cmie.ernet.in>.
* examples/luke/: New files.
Reported by Luke Kendall <luke@research.canon.oz.au>.
* examples/latex/: New files.
* ptx.c (find_occurs_in_text): Assign 0 to refererence_length so
GNU C will not warn anymore against its unitialized use.
Reported by Loic Dachary <L.Dachary@cs.ucl.ac.uk>.
* lib/: Move routines in main directory first, then destroy.
* Makefile.in: Merge lib/Makefile.in, clean up.
* configure.in: Do not create lib/Makefile.in.
* acconfig.h: New file.
* .stamp-h.in: Used for timestamping autoheader.
* Makefile.in: Use acconfig.h and .stamp-h.in. Force
autoheader whenever acconfig.h is modified.
Wed Jun 9 15:01:28 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@icule)
* Makefile.in (dist): Replace "echo `pwd`" by a mere "pwd".
Create a gzip file.
Sat May 22 20:18:31 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@icule)
* Makefile.in: Replace $(PROGS) by ptx.
* diacrit.h: Change `c' to `chr', better protect it.
* lib/COPYING.LIB: Deleted.
* lib/Makefile.in: Adjust accordingly.
Sat Feb 6 15:03:13 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@icule)
* Makefile.in, lib/Makefile.in: In dist goals, ensure 777 mode for
directories, so older tar's will restore file modes properly.
Sun Jan 17 15:42:35 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard@icule)
* Makefile.in, lib/Makefile.in: Put $(CFLAGS) after $(CPPFLAGS),
so the installer can override automatically configured choices.
Reported by Karl Berry <karl@cs.umb.edu>.
Tue Jan 12 09:21:22 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* configure.in: Check for setchrclass().
* diacrit.[hc]: New file, extracted from my own ctype.[hc].
* ctype.[hc]: Deleted.
* Makefile.in: Distribute diacrit.[hc], but not ctype.[hc].
* ptx.c: Include "diacrit.h" rather than "ctype.h".
Include <ctype.h> for ANSI C, or else, use our own definitions.
(initialize_regex): Use ctype.h macros for making the folding
table and for making the \w+ fastmap. Previously, was reusing the
regex syntax table or looking at character bit structure.
(main): Execute setchrclass (NULL) if available and ANSI C.
* Spelling fixes in various files.
Reported by Jim Meyering <meyering@cs.utexas.edu>.
Thu Jan 7 20:19:25 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* Makefile.in: Using autoheader, derive config.h.in from
configure.in. Distribute config.h.in.
Use config.status for reconstructing config.h from config.h.in.
Have all $(OBJECTS) depend upon config.h.
Always use -I. calling the C compiler, for config.h to be found.
Remove config.h in distclean-local.
* lib/Makefile.in: Always use -I.. calling the C compiler, for
config.h to be found. Also use $(DEFS).
Have all $(OBJECTS) depend upon ../config.h.
* configure.in: Create config.h from config.h.in.
* ptx.c, ctype.c: Conditionnaly include config.h.
Fri Jan 1 19:52:49 1993 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* Makefile.in, lib/Makefile.in: Reinstate $(CPPFLAGS), use it.
Richard wants it there. Remove $(ALLFLAGS) and reequilibrate.
Sun Dec 27 05:57:55 1992 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* ptx.c (find_occurs_in_text): Introduce word_start and word_end
variables, and use them instead of the word_regs structure. This
takes care of the fact newer regex.h does not allocate the arrays
any more, and these were used even when regexps were not compiled.
* Makefile, lib/Makefile.in: Define CHAR_SET_SIZE for SYNTAX_TABLE
to work correctly.
* configure.in: Replace AC_USG by AC_HAVE_HEADERS(string.h).
Cleanup and reorganize a little.
* ptx.c: Renamed from gptx.c. Add -G (--no-gnu-extensions)
and clarify some long option names by making them more
explicit. Remove all PTX_COMPATIBILITY conditionals.
Introduce gnu_extensions variable initialized to 1. Let -G
give it the value 0, but still allow and process GNU specific
options and long option names. The Ignore file is now the same
whatever the value of gnu_extensions.
* ptx.texinfo: Renamed from gptx.texinfo, adjusted.
* Makefile.in, configure.in: Adjusted accordingly. Now
installs only one program under the name $(binprefix)ptx.
* gptx.c (perror_and_exit): Deleted. Use error() directly.
* gptx.c: Remove unneeded prototypes for system library routines.
* gptx.c (compare_words, compare_occurs): #define first and second
instead of using an intermediate variable.
* configure.in: Use AC_CONST.
* gptx.h: Do not define const.
* Define volatile dependent on __GNUC__, not __STDC__, and define
it to __volatile__.
* gptx.h, version.c: Deleted, integrated into gptx.c.
* Remove src/ and doc/ subdirectories, merging them in main.
* Move lib/bumpalloc.h, lib/ctype.[ch] in main directory.
* Integrate all ChangeLogs in main ChangeLog.
* Integrate all Makefiles in main Makefile and lib/Makefile,
rewriting them all along the way.
Fri Nov 13 00:10:31 1992 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* Makefile.in (dist): chmod a+r before making the tar file.
Tue Oct 6 12:47:00 1992 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* {,doc/,lib/,src/}Makefile.in: Use exec_prefix. Add `uninstall'.
Wed Aug 19 16:02:09 1992 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* ansi2knr.c: New file, from Ghostscript distribution.
* gptx.c: Get rid of many __STDC__ tests.
* version.c: Idem.
Fri Aug 14 22:53:05 1992 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Use HAVE_MCHECK instead of MCHECK_MISSING.
* configure.in: Use AC_HAVE_FUNCS instead of AC_MISSING_FUNCS.
* configure.in: Autoconfigure for mcheck and strerror.
Reported by Bernd Nordhausen <bernd@iss.nus.sg>.
Thu Jun 18 09:15:12 1992 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* configure.in, all Makefile's: Adapt to Autoconf 0.118.
Sun Feb 2 16:23:47 1992 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c (main): Returns int.
Tue Dec 10 09:53:21 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c (usage_and_exit): Print --OPTION instead of +OPTION.
Wed Dec 4 10:31:06 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c (compare_occurs, compare_words): Change parameters to
(void *) to comply with qsort ANSI declaration, and cast the true
type inside the function, each time a parameter is used.
Reported by Byron Rakitzis <byron@archone.tamu.edu>.
Mon Dec 2 10:41:43 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Removed comma at end of enum.
* version.c: Add a few missing `const's.
* gptx.c: Add prototypes for close, fstat, open, perror and read
if __STDC__.
* gptx.c: Remove useless alloca declaration.
Sat Nov 9 20:03:37 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* configure.in, all/Makefile.in: Directory reorganization,
including separate src and doc, in plus of lib. Ensure all
Makefile's can be used independently.
Thu Nov 7 11:20:38 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.texinfo: Renamed from gptx.texi. Now `TeX'able.
* Makefile.in: Ensure distributing texinfo.tex.
Reported by Karl Berry <karl@cs.umb.edu>.
* configure.in: Take care of POSIXish ISC.
Reported by Karl Berry <karl@cs.umb.edu>.
Tue Nov 5 09:42:58 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* configure.in, Makefile.in: Do not absolutize $(srcdir), because
this could create problems with automounters.
* configure.in, Makefile.in: Remove IF_* devices, they were
solving a problem caused only by non timestamping shars, and
gptx is now distributed in tar format.
Mon Oct 28 14:39:36 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* configure.in: New file.
* configure: Automatically generated from file configure.in
and David MacKenzie's autoconf.
Sat Oct 19 20:06:28 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* configure: Use ANSI header files if present, even with non ANSI
compilers.
Reported by David MacKenzie <djm@eng.umd.edu>.
Tue Oct 15 08:43:13 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* Makefile.in: Install gptx and ptx separately. On DEC Ultrix
4.1, install cannot install more than one file at a time.
Reported by Simon Leinen <simon@liasun1.epfl.ch>.
Fri Oct 11 15:19:42 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* Makefile.in: `realclean' did not work, because lib/Makefile was
disappearing at `distclean' time. I tried separate doc and src
directories, but this is not worth the heaviness. Split some
goals instead, using _doc, _lib and _src suffixes.
Fri Oct 10 18:04:21 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* Version 0.2
Wed Oct 9 16:13:42 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* configure, Makefile.in: New files.
* Makefile, GNUmakefile, Depends: Deleted.
* gptx.c: Change -A output from `FILE(NN):' to `FILE:NN:'.
* gptx.c, gptx.h, version.c: Reinstate __STDC__ tests.
Tue Jun 25 11:35:32 1991 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Something is wrong in -r reference allocation, I suspect
casting does not do what I expect. I relax the constraints so to
make it work for now. To be revisited.
* gptx.c: Call initialize_regex sooner, to ensure folded_chars is
properly initialized when -f and -i are simultaneously used.
* gptx.c: Remove -p option and rather compile two separate
programs, one by defining PTX_COMPATIBILITY, to conform a GNU
standard asking to not depend on the program installed name. This
also removes the -p option, so loosing the debatable advantage of
dynamically reverting to ptx compatibility mode.
* gptx.h: Cleanup. Don't duplicate stdlib.h.
Wed Dec 5 18:00:23 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c (usage_and_exit): Change -C explanation.
Sun Oct 28 16:11:36 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.h: Remove the PROTO macros and usage.
* gptx.c: Remove all the #ifdef __STDC__ noise.
* version.c: Remove all the #ifdef __STDC__ noise.
Wed Jul 25 12:20:45 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* ctype.[ch]: Linked from my library.
Wed Jul 11 10:53:13 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* bumpalloc.h: Linked from my library.
Sun Aug 5 13:17:25 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* Version 0.1
* gptx.c: Implement IGNORE and PIGNORE defines.
* gptx.c: Implement special character protection for roff and TeX
output, through the edited_flag array.
Fri Aug 3 12:47:35 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Implement new -R option for automatic referencing, with
the possibility of multiple input files in normal mode. Now,
option -r implies ptx compatibility mode default for -S; exclude
reference from context whenever easy to do, and allow coselection
of both -r and -R.
Wed Aug 1 12:00:07 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.[hc]: Define and use OCCURS_ALIGNMENT, to avoid those
`Bus error's on Sparcs.
Fri Jul 27 12:04:40 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c (initialize_regex): Use only isalpha and "ctype.h" to
initialize Sword syntax, getting rid of any other explicit ISO
8859-1 references. This will make the MS-DOS port easier,
character set wise.
* gptx.c (swallow_file_in_memory): Revised along the lines of
io.c from GNU diff 1.14, so it could handle stin and fifos,
and work faster.
* gptx.c (perror_and_exit): New function, use it where convenient.
Thu Jul 26 13:28:13 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c (swallow_input_text): Remove white space compression even
if not in ptx compatibility mode. This being out of the way, use
swallow_file_in_memory instead of inputting characters one by one.
Wed Jul 25 12:20:45 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c (find_occurs_in_text): Include the sentence separator as
part of the right context, except for separator's suffix white
space. Formerly, it was excluded from all contexts.
* gptx.h: Check STDLIB_PROTO_ALREADY to conditionalize prototype
declarations for standard C library routines; check __GNUC__
before using `volatile' on function prototypes.
* gptx.c: (find_occurs_in_text): Maintain the maximum length of
all words read.
(define_all_fields): Optimize scanning longish left contexts by
sometimes doing a backward jump from the keyword instead of always
scanning forward from the left context boundary.
Sun Jul 22 09:18:21 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx (alloc_and_compile_regex): Realloc out all extra allocated
space.
Mon Jul 16 09:07:25 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: In OCCURS structure, modify left, right and reference
pointers and make them displacements, to save some space. Define
DELTA typedef, use it, make all other necessary changes.
* gptx.c: Work on portability. Define const and volatile to
nothing if not __STDC__. On BSD, define str[r]chr to be [r]index.
Avoid writings specific to GNU C.
Sun Jul 15 17:28:39 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Add a word_fastmap array and use it if -W has not been
specified, instead of using default regexps. Finish implementing
the Break files.
Sat Jul 14 10:54:21 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.[ch], version.c: Use prototypes in all header
functions. Add some missing const declarations.
Fri Jul 13 10:16:34 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Enforce ptx compatibility mode by disallowing normal
mode extensions. Disallow -p if extensions are used.
* gptx.c: Finish implementation of Ignore and Only files.
Wed Jul 11 10:53:13 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Revise WORD typedef and use it in OCCURS typedef;
adjust all usages. Add BLOCK and WORD_ARRAY typedefs, revise in
various place to make better usage of these. Use BUMP_ALLOC.
Tue Jul 10 09:02:26 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Add -L option, `latin1_charset' variable and support.
* gptx.c: Remove old generate_roff and generate_tex variables,
replace with output_format which is of enum type.
Mon Jul 9 10:40:41 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c (compare_words): Check word_regex.translate and do not
use the translation table if not computed. Also protect against
possible 8-bit problems.
* gptx.c (alloc_and_compile_regex): New function.
Sun Jul 8 17:52:14 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Make a more systematic use of SKIP_* macros, to get rid
of explicit ' ' references when possible.
* gptx.c: Replace `head' field by `left' in the OCCURS structure,
delay the `before' computation from find_occurs_in_text to
define_all_fields, and make all necessary adjustments. Also
add a `right' field in the OCCURS structure, use it to get rid of
explicit '\n' references when possible.
* gptx.c (initialize_regex): New function. Compute the syntax
table for regex. Get rid of previous break_chars_init variable
and break_chars array, use word_regex and word_regex_string
instead.
* gptx.c: Use re_search to find words and re_match to skip over
them. Add -W option and support. Use re_search to find end of
lines or end of sentences, add -S option and support.
Sat Jul 7 08:50:40 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Change PRINT_SPACES and PRINT_FIELD macros to
print_spaces and print_field routines, respectively.
Fri Jul 6 09:44:39 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c (generate_output): Split into define_all_fields,
generate_all_output, output_one_roff_line, output_one_tex_line,
and output_one_tty_line.
* gptx.c: Move the inline code to reallocate the text buffer into
reallocate_text_buffer. Correct a small bug in this area.
* gptx.c: Modify -F to accept a STRING argument, modify output
routines to handle truncation marks having more than one
character.
Thu Jul 5 11:08:59 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Add -F option and logic.
* gptx.c: Select ptx compatibility mode if program is
installed under the name `ptx'. Install both gptx and ptx.
Thu Jun 7 17:21:25 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* gptx.c: Make each OCCURS a variable size thing, depending on
various options; mark occurs_found table size with an integer
counter instead of an end pointer.
Sat Apr 14 20:01:09 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* Version 0.0
* gptx.c: Removed limitations on table sizes: it should now go
until an `Out of memory' error. Use xmalloc. Rename some
variables.
* version.c, gptx.c (usage_and_exit): Add -C option to print
Copyright.
Mon Mar 12 17:59:42 1990 Francois Pinard (pinard at icule)
* ChangeLog initialisation. Previous experiments towards gptx
were done at the defunct site ora.odyssee.qc.ca, which was a
Sun-3/160 running SunOS 3.0. The files have been stocked for
a long time to kovic.iro archives, then imported to icule.
* gptx.c: GCC linted.

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PROG= ptx
SRCS= argmatch.c diacrit.c error.c getopt.c getopt1.c ptx.c regex.c xmalloc.c
MAN1= NOMAN
CFLAGS+= -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -DDEFAULT_IGNORE_FILE=\"/usr/share/dict/eign\"
.include <bsd.prog.mk>

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GNU permuted indexer NEWS - User visible changes.
Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>, 1992.
Version 0.3 - 1993-10-??, by Franc,ois Pinard
* GNU ptx installs as a single program, -G option dynamically reverts
to the System V compatible behaviour, yet being liberal with options.
* It should install more easily on more systems, source code is
unprotoized on the fly for older C compilers.
* A default ignore file is installed along with GNU ptx, ptx uses it.
* Options -F, -S and -W interpret most \-escapes themselves.
* Option -M can be use to change "xx" to another macro name.
* CHRCLASS environment variable is obeyed for systems supporting it.
* Long option names have been cleaned up a little.
* Some examples are given in the example/ directory structure.
Version 0.2 - 1991-10-10, by Franc,ois Pinard
* Reference format (with -A) has been modified slightly to better
comply with GNU standards for line reporting.
* Option -p removed, rather compile two separate programs, one with
GNU extensions, the other being strict on System V compatibility.
Version 0.1 - 1990-08-05, by Franc,ois Pinard
* Add many options: -L for Latin1, -R for automatic referencing, -W
for regular expressions describing words, -S for regular expressions
describing end of lines or sentences. Let -F specify the truncation
strings.
* Implementing Ignore files and Only files.
* Option -p dynamically enforces strict System V compatibility.
* Correct a few bugs and portability problems, have faster input,
faster processing, and use less memory.
Version 0.0 - 1990-04-14, by Franc,ois Pinard
* Initial release.

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This is an beta release of GNU ptx, a permuted index generator. GNU
ptx can handle multiple input files at once, produce TeX compatible
output, or a readable KWIC (keywords in their context) without the
need of nroff. This version does not handle huge input files, that
is, those which do not fit in memory all at once.
The command syntax is not the same as UNIX ptx: all given files are
input files, the results are produced on standard output by default.
GNU ptx manual is provided in Texinfo format. Calling `ptx --help'
prints an option summary. Please note that an overall renaming of all
options is foreseeable: GNU ptx specifications are not frozen yet.
See the file COPYING for copying conditions.
See the file THANKS for a list of contributors.
See the file NEWS for a list of major changes in the current release.
See the file INSTALL for compilation and installation instructions.
Mail suggestions and bug reports (including documentation errors) for
these programs to bug-gnu-utils@prep.ai.mit.edu.

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GNU permuted indexer has originally been written by François Pinard.
Other people contributed to the GNU permuted index by reporting
problems, suggesting various improvements or submitting actual code.
Here is a list of these people. Help me keep it complete and exempt
of errors.
Ajay Shah ajayshah@cmie.ernet.in
Bernd Nordhausen bernd@iss.nus.sg
Byron Rakitzis byron@archone.tamu.edu
Dave Cottingham dc@haiti.gsfc.nasa.gov
David J. MacKenzie djm@eng.umd.edu
Francois Pinard pinard@iro.umontreal.ca
Janne Himanka shem@syy.oulu.fi
James Clark jjc@jclark.com
Jim Meyering meyering@comco.com
Karl Berry karl@cs.umb.edu
Loic Dachary L.Dachary@cs.ucl.ac.uk
Luke Kendall luke@research.canon.oz.au
Nelson Beebe beebe@math.utah.edu
Rakesh Chauhan rk@cmie.ernet.in
Simon Leinen simon@liasun1.epfl.ch
Stephane Berube berube@iro.umontreal.ca
Thorsten Ohl ohl@physics.harvard.edu

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TODO file for GNU ptx - last revised 05 November 1993.
Copyright (C) 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>, 1992.
The following are more or less in decreasing order of priority.
* Use rx instead of regex.
* Correct the infinite loop using -S '$' or -S '^'.
* Use mmap for swallowing files (maybe wrong when memory edited).
* Understand and mimic `-t' option, if I can.
* Sort keywords intelligently for Latin-1 code. See how to interface
this character set with various output formats. Also, introduce
options to inverse-sort and possibly to reverse-sort.
* Improve speed for Ignore and Only tables. Consider hashing instead
of sorting. Consider playing with obstacks to digest them.
* Provide better handling of format effectors obtained from input, and
also attempt white space compression on output which would still
maximize full output width usage.
* See how TeX mode could be made more useful, and if a texinfo mode
would mean something to someone.
* Provide multiple language support
Most of the boosting work should go along the line of fast recognition
of multiple and complex boundaries, which define various `languages'.
Each such language has its own rules for words, sentences, paragraphs,
and reporting requests. This is less difficult than I first thought:
. Recognize language modifiers with each option. At least -b, -i, -o,
-W, -S, and also new language switcher options, will have such
modifiers. Modifiers on language switchers will allow or disallow
language transitions.
. Complete the transformation of underlying variables into arrays in
the code.
. Implement a heap of positions in the input file. There is one entry
in the heap for each compiled regexp; it is initialized by a re_search
after each regexp compile. Regexps reschedule themselves in the heap
when their position passes while scanning input. In this way, looking
simultaneously for a lot of regexps should not be too inefficient,
once the scanning starts. If this works ok, maybe consider accepting
regexps in Only and Ignore tables.
. Merge with language processing boundary processing options, really
integrating -S processing as a special case. Maybe, implement several
level of boundaries. See how to implement a stack of languages, for
handling quotations. See if more sophisticated references could be
handled as another special case of a language.
* Tackle other aspects, in a more long term view
. Add options for statistics, frequency lists, referencing, and all
other prescreening tools and subsidiary tasks of concordance
production.
. Develop an interactive mode. Even better, construct a GNU emacs
interface. I'm looking at Gene Myers <gene@cs.arizona.edu> suffix
arrays as a possible implementation along those ideas.
. Implement hooks so word classification and tagging should be merged
in. See how to effectively hook in lemmatisation or other
morphological features. It is far from being clear by now how to
interface this correctly, so some experimentation is mandatory.
. Profile and speed up the whole thing.
. Make it work on small address space machines. Consider three levels
of hugeness for files, and three corresponding algorithms to make
optimal use of memory. The first case is when all the input files and
all the word references fit in memory: this is the case currently
implemented. The second case is when the files cannot fit all together
in memory, but the word references do. The third case is when even
the word references cannot fit in memory.
. There also are subsidiary developments for in-core incremental sort
routines as well as for external sort packages. The need for more
flexible sort packages comes partly from the fact that linguists use
kinds of keys which compare in unusual and more sophisticated ways.
GNU `sort' and `ptx' could evolve together.
Local Variables:
mode: outline
outline-regexp: " *[-+*.] \\| "
eval: (hide-body)
End:

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/* alloca.c -- allocate automatically reclaimed memory
(Mostly) portable public-domain implementation -- D A Gwyn
This implementation of the PWB library alloca function,
which is used to allocate space off the run-time stack so
that it is automatically reclaimed upon procedure exit,
was inspired by discussions with J. Q. Johnson of Cornell.
J.Otto Tennant <jot@cray.com> contributed the Cray support.
There are some preprocessor constants that can
be defined when compiling for your specific system, for
improved efficiency; however, the defaults should be okay.
The general concept of this implementation is to keep
track of all alloca-allocated blocks, and reclaim any
that are found to be deeper in the stack than the current
invocation. This heuristic does not reclaim storage as
soon as it becomes invalid, but it will do so eventually.
As a special case, alloca(0) reclaims storage without
allocating any. It is a good idea to use alloca(0) in
your main control loop, etc. to force garbage collection. */
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#if defined (emacs) || defined (CONFIG_BROKETS)
#include <config.h>
#else
#include "config.h"
#endif
#endif
/* If compiling with GCC 2, this file's not needed. */
#if !defined (__GNUC__) || __GNUC__ < 2
/* If someone has defined alloca as a macro,
there must be some other way alloca is supposed to work. */
#ifndef alloca
#ifdef emacs
#ifdef static
/* actually, only want this if static is defined as ""
-- this is for usg, in which emacs must undefine static
in order to make unexec workable
*/
#ifndef STACK_DIRECTION
you
lose
-- must know STACK_DIRECTION at compile-time
#endif /* STACK_DIRECTION undefined */
#endif /* static */
#endif /* emacs */
/* If your stack is a linked list of frames, you have to
provide an "address metric" ADDRESS_FUNCTION macro. */
#if defined (CRAY) && defined (CRAY_STACKSEG_END)
long i00afunc ();
#define ADDRESS_FUNCTION(arg) (char *) i00afunc (&(arg))
#else
#define ADDRESS_FUNCTION(arg) &(arg)
#endif
#if __STDC__
typedef void *pointer;
#else
typedef char *pointer;
#endif
#define NULL 0
/* Different portions of Emacs need to call different versions of
malloc. The Emacs executable needs alloca to call xmalloc, because
ordinary malloc isn't protected from input signals. On the other
hand, the utilities in lib-src need alloca to call malloc; some of
them are very simple, and don't have an xmalloc routine.
Non-Emacs programs expect this to call use xmalloc.
Callers below should use malloc. */
#ifndef emacs
#define malloc xmalloc
#endif
extern pointer malloc ();
/* Define STACK_DIRECTION if you know the direction of stack
growth for your system; otherwise it will be automatically
deduced at run-time.
STACK_DIRECTION > 0 => grows toward higher addresses
STACK_DIRECTION < 0 => grows toward lower addresses
STACK_DIRECTION = 0 => direction of growth unknown */
#ifndef STACK_DIRECTION
#define STACK_DIRECTION 0 /* Direction unknown. */
#endif
#if STACK_DIRECTION != 0
#define STACK_DIR STACK_DIRECTION /* Known at compile-time. */
#else /* STACK_DIRECTION == 0; need run-time code. */
static int stack_dir; /* 1 or -1 once known. */
#define STACK_DIR stack_dir
static void
find_stack_direction ()
{
static char *addr = NULL; /* Address of first `dummy', once known. */
auto char dummy; /* To get stack address. */
if (addr == NULL)
{ /* Initial entry. */
addr = ADDRESS_FUNCTION (dummy);
find_stack_direction (); /* Recurse once. */
}
else
{
/* Second entry. */
if (ADDRESS_FUNCTION (dummy) > addr)
stack_dir = 1; /* Stack grew upward. */
else
stack_dir = -1; /* Stack grew downward. */
}
}
#endif /* STACK_DIRECTION == 0 */
/* An "alloca header" is used to:
(a) chain together all alloca'ed blocks;
(b) keep track of stack depth.
It is very important that sizeof(header) agree with malloc
alignment chunk size. The following default should work okay. */
#ifndef ALIGN_SIZE
#define ALIGN_SIZE sizeof(double)
#endif
typedef union hdr
{
char align[ALIGN_SIZE]; /* To force sizeof(header). */
struct
{
union hdr *next; /* For chaining headers. */
char *deep; /* For stack depth measure. */
} h;
} header;
static header *last_alloca_header = NULL; /* -> last alloca header. */
/* Return a pointer to at least SIZE bytes of storage,
which will be automatically reclaimed upon exit from
the procedure that called alloca. Originally, this space
was supposed to be taken from the current stack frame of the
caller, but that method cannot be made to work for some
implementations of C, for example under Gould's UTX/32. */
pointer
alloca (size)
unsigned size;
{
auto char probe; /* Probes stack depth: */
register char *depth = ADDRESS_FUNCTION (probe);
#if STACK_DIRECTION == 0
if (STACK_DIR == 0) /* Unknown growth direction. */
find_stack_direction ();
#endif
/* Reclaim garbage, defined as all alloca'd storage that
was allocated from deeper in the stack than currently. */
{
register header *hp; /* Traverses linked list. */
for (hp = last_alloca_header; hp != NULL;)
if ((STACK_DIR > 0 && hp->h.deep > depth)
|| (STACK_DIR < 0 && hp->h.deep < depth))
{
register header *np = hp->h.next;
free ((pointer) hp); /* Collect garbage. */
hp = np; /* -> next header. */
}
else
break; /* Rest are not deeper. */
last_alloca_header = hp; /* -> last valid storage. */
}
if (size == 0)
return NULL; /* No allocation required. */
/* Allocate combined header + user data storage. */
{
register pointer new = malloc (sizeof (header) + size);
/* Address of header. */
((header *) new)->h.next = last_alloca_header;
((header *) new)->h.deep = depth;
last_alloca_header = (header *) new;
/* User storage begins just after header. */
return (pointer) ((char *) new + sizeof (header));
}
}
#if defined (CRAY) && defined (CRAY_STACKSEG_END)
#ifdef DEBUG_I00AFUNC
#include <stdio.h>
#endif
#ifndef CRAY_STACK
#define CRAY_STACK
#ifndef CRAY2
/* Stack structures for CRAY-1, CRAY X-MP, and CRAY Y-MP */
struct stack_control_header
{
long shgrow:32; /* Number of times stack has grown. */
long shaseg:32; /* Size of increments to stack. */
long shhwm:32; /* High water mark of stack. */
long shsize:32; /* Current size of stack (all segments). */
};
/* The stack segment linkage control information occurs at
the high-address end of a stack segment. (The stack
grows from low addresses to high addresses.) The initial
part of the stack segment linkage control information is
0200 (octal) words. This provides for register storage
for the routine which overflows the stack. */
struct stack_segment_linkage
{
long ss[0200]; /* 0200 overflow words. */
long sssize:32; /* Number of words in this segment. */
long ssbase:32; /* Offset to stack base. */
long:32;
long sspseg:32; /* Offset to linkage control of previous
segment of stack. */
long:32;
long sstcpt:32; /* Pointer to task common address block. */
long sscsnm; /* Private control structure number for
microtasking. */
long ssusr1; /* Reserved for user. */
long ssusr2; /* Reserved for user. */
long sstpid; /* Process ID for pid based multi-tasking. */
long ssgvup; /* Pointer to multitasking thread giveup. */
long sscray[7]; /* Reserved for Cray Research. */
long ssa0;
long ssa1;
long ssa2;
long ssa3;
long ssa4;
long ssa5;
long ssa6;
long ssa7;
long sss0;
long sss1;
long sss2;
long sss3;
long sss4;
long sss5;
long sss6;
long sss7;
};
#else /* CRAY2 */
/* The following structure defines the vector of words
returned by the STKSTAT library routine. */
struct stk_stat
{
long now; /* Current total stack size. */
long maxc; /* Amount of contiguous space which would
be required to satisfy the maximum
stack demand to date. */
long high_water; /* Stack high-water mark. */
long overflows; /* Number of stack overflow ($STKOFEN) calls. */
long hits; /* Number of internal buffer hits. */
long extends; /* Number of block extensions. */
long stko_mallocs; /* Block allocations by $STKOFEN. */
long underflows; /* Number of stack underflow calls ($STKRETN). */
long stko_free; /* Number of deallocations by $STKRETN. */
long stkm_free; /* Number of deallocations by $STKMRET. */
long segments; /* Current number of stack segments. */
long maxs; /* Maximum number of stack segments so far. */
long pad_size; /* Stack pad size. */
long current_address; /* Current stack segment address. */
long current_size; /* Current stack segment size. This
number is actually corrupted by STKSTAT to
include the fifteen word trailer area. */
long initial_address; /* Address of initial segment. */
long initial_size; /* Size of initial segment. */
};
/* The following structure describes the data structure which trails
any stack segment. I think that the description in 'asdef' is
out of date. I only describe the parts that I am sure about. */
struct stk_trailer
{
long this_address; /* Address of this block. */
long this_size; /* Size of this block (does not include
this trailer). */
long unknown2;
long unknown3;
long link; /* Address of trailer block of previous
segment. */
long unknown5;
long unknown6;
long unknown7;
long unknown8;
long unknown9;
long unknown10;
long unknown11;
long unknown12;
long unknown13;
long unknown14;
};
#endif /* CRAY2 */
#endif /* not CRAY_STACK */
#ifdef CRAY2
/* Determine a "stack measure" for an arbitrary ADDRESS.
I doubt that "lint" will like this much. */
static long
i00afunc (long *address)
{
struct stk_stat status;
struct stk_trailer *trailer;
long *block, size;
long result = 0;
/* We want to iterate through all of the segments. The first
step is to get the stack status structure. We could do this
more quickly and more directly, perhaps, by referencing the
$LM00 common block, but I know that this works. */
STKSTAT (&status);
/* Set up the iteration. */
trailer = (struct stk_trailer *) (status.current_address
+ status.current_size
- 15);
/* There must be at least one stack segment. Therefore it is
a fatal error if "trailer" is null. */
if (trailer == 0)
abort ();
/* Discard segments that do not contain our argument address. */
while (trailer != 0)
{
block = (long *) trailer->this_address;
size = trailer->this_size;
if (block == 0 || size == 0)
abort ();
trailer = (struct stk_trailer *) trailer->link;
if ((block <= address) && (address < (block + size)))
break;
}
/* Set the result to the offset in this segment and add the sizes
of all predecessor segments. */
result = address - block;
if (trailer == 0)
{
return result;
}
do
{
if (trailer->this_size <= 0)
abort ();
result += trailer->this_size;
trailer = (struct stk_trailer *) trailer->link;
}
while (trailer != 0);
/* We are done. Note that if you present a bogus address (one
not in any segment), you will get a different number back, formed
from subtracting the address of the first block. This is probably
not what you want. */
return (result);
}
#else /* not CRAY2 */
/* Stack address function for a CRAY-1, CRAY X-MP, or CRAY Y-MP.
Determine the number of the cell within the stack,
given the address of the cell. The purpose of this
routine is to linearize, in some sense, stack addresses
for alloca. */
static long
i00afunc (long address)
{
long stkl = 0;
long size, pseg, this_segment, stack;
long result = 0;
struct stack_segment_linkage *ssptr;
/* Register B67 contains the address of the end of the
current stack segment. If you (as a subprogram) store
your registers on the stack and find that you are past
the contents of B67, you have overflowed the segment.
B67 also points to the stack segment linkage control
area, which is what we are really interested in. */
stkl = CRAY_STACKSEG_END ();
ssptr = (struct stack_segment_linkage *) stkl;
/* If one subtracts 'size' from the end of the segment,
one has the address of the first word of the segment.
If this is not the first segment, 'pseg' will be
nonzero. */
pseg = ssptr->sspseg;
size = ssptr->sssize;
this_segment = stkl - size;
/* It is possible that calling this routine itself caused
a stack overflow. Discard stack segments which do not
contain the target address. */
while (!(this_segment <= address && address <= stkl))
{
#ifdef DEBUG_I00AFUNC
fprintf (stderr, "%011o %011o %011o\n", this_segment, address, stkl);
#endif
if (pseg == 0)
break;
stkl = stkl - pseg;
ssptr = (struct stack_segment_linkage *) stkl;
size = ssptr->sssize;
pseg = ssptr->sspseg;
this_segment = stkl - size;
}
result = address - this_segment;
/* If you subtract pseg from the current end of the stack,
you get the address of the previous stack segment's end.
This seems a little convoluted to me, but I'll bet you save
a cycle somewhere. */
while (pseg != 0)
{
#ifdef DEBUG_I00AFUNC
fprintf (stderr, "%011o %011o\n", pseg, size);
#endif
stkl = stkl - pseg;
ssptr = (struct stack_segment_linkage *) stkl;
size = ssptr->sssize;
pseg = ssptr->sspseg;
result += size;
}
return (result);
}
#endif /* not CRAY2 */
#endif /* CRAY */
#endif /* no alloca */
#endif /* not GCC version 2 */

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@ -0,0 +1,94 @@
/* argmatch.c -- find a match for a string in an array
Copyright (C) 1990 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
/* Written by David MacKenzie <djm@ai.mit.edu> */
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#if defined (CONFIG_BROKETS)
/* We use <config.h> instead of "config.h" so that a compilation
using -I. -I$srcdir will use ./config.h rather than $srcdir/config.h
(which it would do because it found this file in $srcdir). */
#include <config.h>
#else
#include "config.h"
#endif
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
#ifdef STDC_HEADERS
#include <string.h>
#endif
extern char *program_name;
/* If ARG is an unambiguous match for an element of the
null-terminated array OPTLIST, return the index in OPTLIST
of the matched element, else -1 if it does not match any element
or -2 if it is ambiguous (is a prefix of more than one element). */
int
argmatch (arg, optlist)
char *arg;
char **optlist;
{
int i; /* Temporary index in OPTLIST. */
int arglen; /* Length of ARG. */
int matchind = -1; /* Index of first nonexact match. */
int ambiguous = 0; /* If nonzero, multiple nonexact match(es). */
arglen = strlen (arg);
/* Test all elements for either exact match or abbreviated matches. */
for (i = 0; optlist[i]; i++)
{
if (!strncmp (optlist[i], arg, arglen))
{
if (strlen (optlist[i]) == arglen)
/* Exact match found. */
return i;
else if (matchind == -1)
/* First nonexact match found. */
matchind = i;
else
/* Second nonexact match found. */
ambiguous = 1;
}
}
if (ambiguous)
return -2;
else
return matchind;
}
/* Error reporting for argmatch.
KIND is a description of the type of entity that was being matched.
VALUE is the invalid value that was given.
PROBLEM is the return value from argmatch. */
void
invalid_arg (kind, value, problem)
char *kind;
char *value;
int problem;
{
fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", program_name);
if (problem == -1)
fprintf (stderr, "invalid");
else /* Assume -2. */
fprintf (stderr, "ambiguous");
fprintf (stderr, " %s `%s'\n", kind, value);
}

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@ -0,0 +1,58 @@
/* BUMP_ALLOC macro - increase table allocation by one element.
Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>, 1990.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------.
| Bump the allocation of the array pointed to by TABLE whenever required. |
| The table already has already COUNT elements in it, this macro ensure it |
| has enough space to accommodate at least one more element. Space is |
| allocated (2 ^ EXPONENT) elements at a time. Each element of the array |
| is of type TYPE. |
`-------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/* Routines `xmalloc' and `xrealloc' are called to do the actual memory
management. This implies that the program will abort with an `Virtual
Memory exhausted!' error if any problem arise.
To work correctly, at least EXPONENT and TYPE should always be the
same for all uses of this macro for any given TABLE. A secure way to
achieve this is to never use this macro directly, but use it to define
other macros, which would then be TABLE-specific.
The first time through, COUNT is usually zero. Note that COUNT is not
updated by this macro, but it should be update elsewhere, later. This
is convenient, because it allows TABLE[COUNT] to refer to the new
element at the end. Once its construction is completed, COUNT++ will
record it in the table. Calling this macro several times in a row
without updating COUNT is a bad thing to do. */
#define BUMP_ALLOC(Table, Count, Exponent, Type) \
BUMP_ALLOC_WITH_SIZE ((Table), (Count), (Exponent), Type, sizeof (Type))
/* In cases `sizeof TYPE' would not always yield the correct value for
the size of each element entry, this macro accepts a supplementary
SIZE argument. The EXPONENT, TYPE and SIZE parameters should still
have the same value for all macro calls related to a specific TABLE. */
#define BUMP_ALLOC_WITH_SIZE(Table, Count, Exponent, Type, Size) \
if (((Count) & (~(~0 << (Exponent)))) == 0) \
if ((Count) == 0) \
(Table) = (Type *) xmalloc ((1 << (Exponent)) * (Size)); \
else \
(Table) = (Type *) \
xrealloc ((Table), ((Count) + (1 << (Exponent))) * (Size)); \
else

65
gnu/usr.bin/ptx/check-out Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
:30: /ranslate to certain respons ibilities for you if you distr/
:183: c/ These actions are proh ibited by law if you do not ac
:278: AS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSS IBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. /Y H
:232: /his License may add an expl icit geographical distribution/
:267: /COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERV ICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
:216: /ht claims or to contest val idity of any such claims; this/
:45: e/ If the software is mod ified by someone else and pass
:57: pying, distribution and mod ification follow. /for co
:60: /PYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MOD IFICATION 0. This License a/
:68: /either verbatim or with mod ifications and/or translated i/
:70: limitation in the term "mod ification".) /ithout
:72: /pying, distribution and mod ification are not covered by t/
:92: /opy and distribute such mod ifications or work under the t/
:95: /a) You must cause the mod ified files to carry prominent/
:103: ommands in/ c) If the mod ified program normally reads c
:114: quirements apply to the mod ified work as a whole. /se re
:115: are not derived/ If ident ifiable sections of that work
:156: of the work for making mod ifications to it. /ed form
:243: Lice/ If the Program spec ifies a version number of this
:46: /hat they have is not the or iginal, so that any problems i/
:47: /will not reflect on the or iginal authors' reputations.
:191: /eives a license from the or iginal licensor to copy, distr/
:231: /yrighted interfaces, the or iginal copyright holder who pl/
:265: /ED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTAB ILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTIC/
:274: /NG OUT OF THE USE OR INAB ILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCL/
:303: /warranty of MERCHANTAB ILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICU/
:69: /ation is included without l imitation in the term "modific/
:198: /for any other reason (not l imited to patent issues), cond/
:232: /geographical distribution l imitation excluding those coun/
:235: /License incorporates the l imitation as if written in the/
:239: Such new versions will be s imilar in spirit to the presen/
:264: /PLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT L IMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANT/
:274: /ROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT L IMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA/
:67: /hat is to say, a work conta ining the Program or a portion/
:158: /ny associated interface def inition files, plus the script/
:34: /fee, you must give the rec ipients all the rights that yo/
:46: /passed on, we want its rec ipients to know that what they/
:84: /nty; and give any other rec ipients of the Program a copy/
:190: /ed on the Program), the rec ipient automatically receives/
:193: /her restrictions on the rec ipients' exercise of the right/
:239: /sions will be similar in sp irit to the present version, b/
:254: o goals of prese/ Our dec ision will be guided by the tw
:273: /OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES AR ISING OUT OF THE USE OR INAB/
:315: /teractive mode: Gnomov ision version 69, Copyright (C/
:316: /y name of author Gnomov ision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO/
:330: /st in the program `Gnomov ision' (which makes passes at/
:30: /late to certain responsibil ities for you if you distribut/
:56: The precise terms and cond itions for copying, distributi/
:60: /C LICENSE TERMS AND COND ITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTI/
:93: /also meet all of these cond itions: a) You must cause/
:109: /rogram under these cond itions, and telling the user h/
:129: ther work not bas/ In add ition, mere aggregation of ano
:186: /and all its terms and cond itions for copying, distributi/
:192: ect to these terms and cond itions. /am subj
:199: /ted to patent issues), cond itions are imposed on you (whe/
:200: /e) that contradict the cond itions of this License, they d/
:201: ot excuse you from the cond itions of this License. /do n
:244: /ollowing the terms and cond itions either of that version/
:251: /ams whose distribution cond itions are different, write to/
:262: /WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WR ITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AN/
:270: /ABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WR ITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDE/
:280: ly/ END OF TERMS AND COND ITIONS Appendix: How to App
:318: /e it under certain cond itions; type `show c' for deta/
:52: /of a free program will ind ividually obtain patent licens/
:72: stribution and mod/ Act ivities other than copying, di

57
gnu/usr.bin/ptx/config.h Normal file
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/* config.h. Generated automatically by configure. */
/* config.h.in. Generated automatically from configure.in by autoheader. */
/* Define if using alloca.c. */
/* #undef C_ALLOCA */
/* Define if type char is unsigned and you are not using gcc. */
/* #undef __CHAR_UNSIGNED__ */
/* Define to empty if the keyword does not work. */
/* #undef const */
/* Define to one of _getb67, GETB67, getb67 for Cray-2 and Cray-YMP systems.
This function is required for alloca.c support on those systems. */
/* #undef CRAY_STACKSEG_END */
/* Define if you have alloca.h and it should be used (not Ultrix). */
/* #undef HAVE_ALLOCA_H */
/* Define if you don't have vprintf but do have _doprnt. */
/* #undef HAVE_DOPRNT */
/* Define if you have the vprintf function. */
#define HAVE_VPRINTF 1
/* Define if you need to in order for stat and other things to work. */
/* #undef _POSIX_SOURCE */
/* If using the C implementation of alloca, define if you know the
direction of stack growth for your system; otherwise it will be
automatically deduced at run-time.
STACK_DIRECTION > 0 => grows toward higher addresses
STACK_DIRECTION < 0 => grows toward lower addresses
STACK_DIRECTION = 0 => direction of growth unknown
*/
/* #undef STACK_DIRECTION */
/* Define if you have the ANSI C header files. */
#define STDC_HEADERS 1
/* In regex, request the capability of modifying the letter syntax. */
#define SYNTAX_TABLE 1
/* In regex, use 8 bits per character. */
#define CHAR_SET_SIZE 256
/* Define if you have mcheck. */
/* #undef HAVE_MCHECK */
/* Define if you have setchrclass. */
/* #undef HAVE_SETCHRCLASS */
/* Define if you have strerror. */
#define HAVE_STRERROR 1
/* Define if you have the <string.h> header file. */
#define HAVE_STRING_H 1

148
gnu/usr.bin/ptx/diacrit.c Normal file
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/* Diacritics processing for a few character codes.
Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>, 1988.
All this file is a temporary hack, waiting for locales in GNU.
*/
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#include "config.h"
#endif
#include "diacrit.h"
/* ISO 8859-1 Latin-1 code is used as the underlying character set. If
MSDOS is defined, IBM-PC's character set code is used instead. */
/*--------------------------------------------------------------------.
| For each alphabetic character, returns what it would be without its |
| possible diacritic symbol. |
`--------------------------------------------------------------------*/
const char diacrit_base[256] =
{
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, '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, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, '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, 0, 0, 0, 0,
#ifdef MSDOS
'C', 'u', 'e', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'c',
'e', 'e', 'e', 'i', 'i', 'i', 'A', 'A',
'E', 'e', 'E', 'o', 'o', 'o', 'u', 'u',
'y', 'O', 'U', 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
'a', 'i', 'o', 'u', 'n', 'N', 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
#else /* not MSDOS */
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
'A', 'A', 'A', 'A', 'A', 'A', 'A', 'C',
'E', 'E', 'E', 'E', 'I', 'I', 'I', 'I',
0, 'N', 'O', 'O', 'O', 'O', 'O', 0,
'O', 'U', 'U', 'U', 'U', 'Y', 0, 0,
'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'c',
'e', 'e', 'e', 'e', 'i', 'i', 'i', 'i',
0, 'n', 'o', 'o', 'o', 'o', 'o', 0,
'o', 'u', 'u', 'u', 'u', 'y', 0, 'y',
#endif /* not MSDOS */
};
/*------------------------------------------------------------------------.
| For each alphabetic character, returns a code of what its diacritic is, |
| according to the following codes: 1 (eE) over aA for latin diphtongs; 2 |
| (') acute accent; 3 (`) grave accent; 4 (^) circumflex accent; 5 (") |
| umlaut or diaraesis; 6 (~) tilda; 7 (,) cedilla; 8 (o) covering degree |
| symbol; 9 (|) slashed character. |
`------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
const char diacrit_diac[256] =
{
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 4, 0,
3, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 6, 0,
#ifdef MSDOS
7, 5, 2, 4, 5, 3, 8, 7,
4, 5, 3, 5, 4, 3, 5, 8,
2, 1, 1, 4, 5, 3, 4, 3,
5, 5, 5, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
2, 2, 2, 2, 6, 6, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
#else /* not MSDOS */
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
3, 2, 4, 6, 5, 8, 1, 7,
3, 2, 4, 5, 3, 2, 4, 5,
0, 6, 3, 2, 4, 6, 5, 0,
9, 3, 2, 4, 5, 2, 0, 0,
3, 2, 4, 6, 5, 8, 1, 7,
3, 2, 4, 5, 3, 2, 4, 5,
0, 6, 3, 2, 4, 6, 5, 0,
9, 3, 2, 4, 5, 2, 0, 0,
#endif /* not MSDOS */
};

16
gnu/usr.bin/ptx/diacrit.h Normal file
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/* Diacritics processing for a few character codes.
Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>, 1988.
All this file is a temporary hack, waiting for locales in GNU.
*/
extern const char diacrit_base[]; /* characters without diacritics */
extern const char diacrit_diac[]; /* diacritic code for each character */
/* Returns CHR without its diacritic. CHR is known to be alphabetic. */
#define tobase(chr) (diacrit_base[(unsigned char) (chr)])
/* Returns a diacritic code for CHR. CHR is known to be alphabetic. */
#define todiac(chr) (diacrit_diac[(unsigned char) (chr)])

117
gnu/usr.bin/ptx/error.c Normal file
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/* error.c -- error handler for noninteractive utilities
Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
/* Written by David MacKenzie. */
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#if defined (CONFIG_BROKETS)
/* We use <config.h> instead of "config.h" so that a compilation
using -I. -I$srcdir will use ./config.h rather than $srcdir/config.h
(which it would do because it found this file in $srcdir). */
#include <config.h>
#else
#include "config.h"
#endif
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
#ifdef HAVE_VPRINTF
#if __STDC__
#include <stdarg.h>
#define VA_START(args, lastarg) va_start(args, lastarg)
#else /* !__STDC__ */
#include <varargs.h>
#define VA_START(args, lastarg) va_start(args)
#endif /* !__STDC__ */
#else /* !HAVE_VPRINTF */
#ifdef HAVE_DOPRNT
#define va_alist args
#define va_dcl int args;
#else /* !HAVE_DOPRNT */
#define va_alist a1, a2, a3, a4, a5, a6, a7, a8
#define va_dcl char *a1, *a2, *a3, *a4, *a5, *a6, *a7, *a8;
#endif /* !HAVE_DOPRNT */
#endif /* !HAVE_VPRINTF */
#ifdef STDC_HEADERS
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#else /* !STDC_HEADERS */
void exit ();
#endif /* !STDC_HEADERS */
extern char *program_name;
#ifndef HAVE_STRERROR
static char *
private_strerror (errnum)
int errnum;
{
extern char *sys_errlist[];
extern int sys_nerr;
if (errnum > 0 && errnum <= sys_nerr)
return sys_errlist[errnum];
return "Unknown system error";
}
#define strerror private_strerror
#endif /* !HAVE_STRERROR */
/* Print the program name and error message MESSAGE, which is a printf-style
format string with optional args.
If ERRNUM is nonzero, print its corresponding system error message.
Exit with status STATUS if it is nonzero. */
/* VARARGS */
void
#if defined (HAVE_VPRINTF) && __STDC__
error (int status, int errnum, char *message, ...)
#else /* !HAVE_VPRINTF or !__STDC__ */
error (status, errnum, message, va_alist)
int status;
int errnum;
char *message;
va_dcl
#endif /* !HAVE_VPRINTF or !__STDC__ */
{
#ifdef HAVE_VPRINTF
va_list args;
#endif /* HAVE_VPRINTF */
fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", program_name);
#ifdef HAVE_VPRINTF
VA_START (args, message);
vfprintf (stderr, message, args);
va_end (args);
#else /* !HAVE_VPRINTF */
#ifdef HAVE_DOPRNT
_doprnt (message, &args, stderr);
#else /* !HAVE_DOPRNT */
fprintf (stderr, message, a1, a2, a3, a4, a5, a6, a7, a8);
#endif /* !HAVE_DOPRNT */
#endif /* !HAVE_VPRINTF */
if (errnum)
fprintf (stderr, ": %s", strerror (errnum));
putc ('\n', stderr);
fflush (stderr);
if (status)
exit (status);
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
Various examples of GNU ptx usages.
Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>, 1993.
This directory contains a few examples contributed by GNU ptx users.
Feel free to look at them for tricks or ideas. When an example
requires many files, a subdirectory is used to hold them together.
I have not necessarily tested these examples recently, if at all.
If you have examples you would like to share, please submit them to
me. You may also submit corrections to the examples given in this
directory, however, please write to the authors first, since they most
probably will like to have their say about their own contribution.
* include.pl: A Perl script studying system include files.
* luke/: A shell script permuting indices for man pages. It contains
two examples of an .xx definition for *roff, one simple, one complex.
* latex/: A simple example of \xx definition for latex.
* ajay/: A more complex application of latex with ptx.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
JUNKFILES = tip-index.ps tip-index.dvi tip-index.tex tip-index.log \
tip-index.aux
tip-index.ps : tip-index.dvi
dvips tip-index.dvi
tip-index.dvi : tip-index.tex
latex tip-index.tex
tip-index.tex : tip.texified header.tex footer.tex
cat header.tex tip.texified footer.tex > tip-index.tex
tip.texified : tip.eign tip.forgptx Makefile
gptx -f -r -i ./tip.eign -T < tip.forgptx | x.pl > tip.texified
tip.eign : /usr/lib/eign exclude-words
cat /usr/lib/eign exclude-words > tip.eign
screenlist : tip.texified
cat tip.texified \
| gawk -F\{ '{count[$$4]++} \
END {for (s in count) printf("%d %20s\n", count[s], s)}' \
| tr -d '}' \
| sort -n > screenlist
@echo "Check (say) the last 100 lines of ./screenlist".
clean :
rm -f tip.eign tip.texified $(JUNKFILES) screenlist

View File

@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
To: pinard@iro.umontreal.ca
Subject: Re: Gptx suggestions and help request
Date: Tue, 28 Sep 93 11:30:04 +0500
From: ajayshah@cmie.ernet.in
[...] My plaintext input looks like: "pagenum multiword-phrase" where
the multiword phrase is atmost five words. So [...], I'm doing two
columns in small type.
I got one of the programmers here to write me a tex macro for my
problem. When it goes into production I'll mail you a few files: a
sample input, the gptx command, the output, and the tex macro. If you
find these interesting you can ship them with future gptx releases.
Thanks a lot for gptx. If you have a mailing list of loyal users,
you can add us to it :-)
To: pinard@iro.umontreal.ca
Cc: rk@cmie.ernet.in
Subject: All glue code I used with gptx
Date: Tue, 05 Oct 93 15:23:44 +0500
From: ajayshah@zigma.cmie.ernet.in
That is a full set of a files for an example of "production use". You
are welcome to post them, or use them as a sample supplied with the
gptx distribution, etc., with absolutely no restrictions on what
anyone does with this. In case you do so, please acknowledge the
contribution of Rakesh Chauhan, rk@cmie.ernet.in, who is the author of
x.pl and header.tex. [...]
As you can tell, I used it for a 100% realworld problem, and it
worked. Thanks a million. If you'd like, I can send you a hardcopy
of the full finished document (just send me your mailing address). If
you would like to mention the name of this document when you use
these files as a demo, it is
Trends in Industrial Production
September 1993
Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, Bombay, India.

View File

@ -0,0 +1 @@
\end{document}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
\documentstyle [twocolumn,a4]{article}
\pagestyle{empty}
\textwidth 6.8in
\oddsidemargin -.8in
\evensidemargin -.8in
\textheight 10in
\topmargin -1in
% \columnseprule 1pt
\begin{document}
\def\xx #1#2#3#4#5#6{\hbox to \hsize{%
\hbox to 1.4in{\hfill #2}\hskip .05in%
\hbox to .8in{\it #3\hfil}\hskip .05in%
\hbox to 1.4in{#4\hfil}\hskip .05in%
\hbox{\hfil #6}\hfil}%
}
\scriptsize

View File

@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
1 Zinc concentrate
1 Coal
1 Ball clay
1 Non-coking coal
1 Calcareous sand
1 Natural Gas
1 Chalk
1 Bauxite
1 Clay (others)
1 Copper ore

View File

@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
#! /usr/local/bin/perl
while ($l = <>)
{
chop $l;
$l =~ s/\\xx //;
$l =~ s/}{/|/g;
$l =~ s/{//g;
$l =~ s/}//g;
@x = split(/\|/, $l);
printf ("\\xx ");
for ($i = 0; $i <= $#x; $i++)
{
$v = substr($x[$i], 0, 17);
$v =~ s/\\$//;
printf("{%s}", $v);
}
printf ("\n");
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
From beebe@math.utah.edu Wed Oct 27 19:37:22 1993
Date: Tue, 26 Oct 93 15:43:19 MDT
From: "Nelson H. F. Beebe" <beebe@math.utah.edu>
To: pinard@iro.umontreal.ca
Subject: Re: Another short comment on gptx 0.2
/usr/lib/eign: DECstation 5000, ULTRIX 4.3
HP 9000/735, HP-UX 9.0
IBM RS/6000, AIX 2.3
IBM 3090, AIX MP370 2.1
Stardent 1520, OS 2.2
Sun SPARCstation, SunOS 4.x
No eign anywhere on: HP 375, BSD 4.3 (ptx.c is in /usr/src/usr.bin,
and the source code refers to /usr/lib/eign,
but I could not find it in the source tree)
NeXT, Mach 3.0 (though documented in man pages)
Sun SPARCstation, Solaris 2.x
SGI Indigo, IRIX 4.0.x
The contents of the eign files that I found on the above machines were
almost identical. With the exception of the Stardent and the IBM
3090, there were only two such files, one with 150 words, and the
other with 133, with only a few differences between them (some words
in the 133-word file were not in the 150-word file). I found the
133-word variant in groff-1.06/src/indxbib. I used archie to search
for eign, and it found 7 sites, all with the groff versions.
The Stardent and IBM 3090 eign files have the same contents as the
150-word version, but have a multiline copyright comment at the
beginning. None of the others contains a copyright.
I recently had occasion to build a similar list of words for bibindex,
which indexes a BibTeX .bib file, and for which omission of common
words, like articles and prepositions, helps to reduce the size of the
index. I didn't use eign to build that list, but instead, went
through the word lists from 3.8MB of .bib files in the tuglib
collection on ftp.math.utah.edu:pub/tex/bib, and collected words to be
ignored. That list includes words from several languages. I'll leave
it up to you to decide whether you wish to merge them or not; I
suspect it may be a better design choice to keep a separate eign file
for each language, although in my own application of ptx-ing
bibliographies, the titles do occur in multiple languages, so a
mixed-language eign is appropriate. Since there are standard ISO
2-letter abbreviations for every country, perhaps one could have
eign.xy for country xy (of course, only approximately is country ==
language). The exact list of words in eign is not so critical; its
only purpose is to reduce the size of the output by not indexing words
that occur very frequently and have little content in themselves.
I'm enclosing a shar bundle at the end of this message with the merger
of the multiple eign versions (duplicates eliminated, and the list
sorted into 179 unique words), followed by the bibindex list.
========================================================================
Nelson H. F. Beebe Tel: +1 801 581 5254
Center for Scientific Computing FAX: +1 801 581 4148
Department of Mathematics, 105 JWB Internet: beebe@math.utah.edu
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA
========================================================================

View File

@ -0,0 +1,109 @@
ab
aber
als
an
and
are
as
auf
aus
az
bei
bir
but
da
das
dat
de
dei
dem
den
der
des
det
di
die
dos
een
eene
egy
ei
ein
eine
einen
einer
eines
eit
el
en
er
es
et
ett
eyn
eyne
for
from
fuer
fur
gl
gli
ha
haben
had
hai
has
hat
have
he
heis
hen
hena
henas
het
hin
hinar
hinir
hinn
hith
ho
hoi
il
in
ist
ka
ke
la
las
le
les
lo
los
mia
mit
na
nji
not
oder
of
on
or
os
others
sie
sind
so
ta
the
to
um
uma
un
una
und
une
uno
unter
von
with
yr

View File

@ -0,0 +1,163 @@
a
about
after
against
all
also
an
and
another
any
are
as
at
back
be
because
been
before
being
between
both
but
by
came
can
come
could
current
day
did
do
down
each
end
even
first
for
from
get
go
good
great
had
has
have
he
her
here
him
his
how
i
if
in
into
is
it
its
just
know
last
life
like
little
long
made
make
man
many
may
me
men
might
more
most
mr
much
must
my
name
never
new
no
not
now
of
off
old
on
one
only
or
other
our
out
over
own
part
people
point
right
said
same
say
see
she
should
since
so
some
start
state
still
such
take
than
that
the
their
them
then
there
these
they
this
those
three
through
time
to
too
true
try
two
under
up
us
use
used
value
very
was
way
we
well
were
what
when
where
which
while
who
why
will
with
without
work
world
would
year
years
you
your

View File

@ -0,0 +1,79 @@
#!/usr/bin/perl -- # -*-Perl-*-
eval "exec /usr/bin/perl -S $0 $*"
if $running_under_some_shell;
# Construct a permuted index for all system include files.
# Copyright (C) 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>, June 1991.
# NOTE: about removing asm statements?
# NOTE: about removing strings?
# NOTE: about ignoring 0xHEXDIGITS, unchar/ushort/etc.
# Construct a sorted list of system include files.
opendir (DIR, "/usr/include");
@includes = sort grep (-f "/usr/include/$_", readdir (DIR));
opendir (DIR, "/usr/include/sys");
foreach (sort grep (-f "/usr/include/sys/$_", readdir (DIR))) {
push (@includes, "sys/$_");
}
closedir (DIR);
# Launch the permuted indexer, with a list of ignore words.
$ignore = "/tmp/incptx.$$";
open (IGNORE, "> $ignore");
print IGNORE join ("\n", split (' ', <<IGNORE)), "\n";
asm at at386 break bss case ch char continue copyright corporation
default define defined do double dst else endif enum extern file flag
float for goto i286 i386 ident if ifdef ifndef int interactive len
lint long m32 mpat num pdp11 printf ptr register return sco5 short siz
sizeof src static str struct sun switch sys systems type typedef u370
u3b u3b15 u3b2 u3b5 undef union unsigned vax void while win
IGNORE
close IGNORE;
exit 0;
open (OUTPUT, "| ptx -r -f -W '[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]+' -F ... -i $ignore")
|| die "ptx did not start\n";
select (OUTPUT);
# Reformat all files, removing C comments and adding a reference field.
foreach $include (@includes)
{
warn "Reading /usr/include/$include\n";
open (INPUT, "/usr/include/$include");
while (<INPUT>)
{
# Get rid of comments.
$comment = $next_comment;
if ($comment)
{
$next_comment = !s,^.*\*/,,;
}
else
{
s,/\*.*\*/,,g;
$next_comment = s,/\*.*,,;
}
next if $comment && $next_comment;
# Remove extraneous white space.
s/[ \t]+/ /g;
s/ $//;
next if /^$/;
# Print the line with its reference.
print "$include($.): ", $_;
}
}
warn "All read, now ptx' game!\n";
close OUTPUT || die "ptx failed...\n";
unlink $ignore;

View File

@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
# Example of using ptx with latex.
# Copyright (C) 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>, 1993.
PTX = ../ptx
PTX_OPTIONS = -AfTWi.i
try: latex.dvi
xdvi latex
latex.dvi: latex.tex table.tex
latex latex
table.tex: Makefile ../COPYING
$(PTX) $(PTX_OPTIONS) ../COPYING | sed 's/ //' > table.tex

View File

@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
Date: Sun, 26 Sep 93 19:07:10 EDT
From: Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>
To: ajayshah@cmie.ernet.in
Subject: Re: Gptx suggestions and help request
In fact, if you could send me such a macro right now I would be
thrilled :-)
Ok, I worked out this example for you. Even if a little rude, you can
still start from it for your own need. [...]

View File

@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
\documentstyle[11pt]{article}
\begin{document}
\def\xx#1#2#3#4#5#6{\hbox{
\hbox to2.5in{\hfil#5#2}
\hbox to3.0in{{\sl #3}\,#4#1\hfil}
\hbox to1.5in{\tiny#6\hfil}
}}
\input table
\end{document}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
\xx {}{ate to certain respons}{ibi}{lities for you if you}{}{../COPYING:30}
\xx {}{These actions are proh}{ibi}{ted by law if you do n}{}{../COPYING:183}
\xx {}{EN ADVISED OF THE POSS}{IBI}{LITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.}{}{../COPYING:278}
\xx {}{icense may add an expl}{ici}{t geographical distrib}{}{../COPYING:232}
\xx {}{OF ALL NECESSARY SERV}{ICI}{NG, REPAIR OR CORRECTI}{}{../COPYING:267}
\xx {}{aims or to contest val}{idi}{ty of any such claims;}{}{../COPYING:216}
\xx {}{If the software is mod}{ifi}{ed by someone else and}{}{../COPYING:45}
\xx {}{, distribution and mod}{ifi}{cation follow.}{pying}{../COPYING:57}
\xx {}{, DISTRIBUTION AND MOD}{IFI}{CATION 0. This Lice}{}{../COPYING:60}
\xx {}{r verbatim or with mod}{ifi}{cations and/or transla}{}{../COPYING:68}
\xx {}{ation in the term "mod}{ifi}{cation".)}{t limit}{../COPYING:70}
\xx {}{, distribution and mod}{ifi}{cation are not covered}{}{../COPYING:72}
\xx {}{nd distribute such mod}{ifi}{cations or work under}{}{../COPYING:92}
\xx {}{You must cause the mod}{ifi}{ed files to carry prom}{}{../COPYING:95}
\xx {ads c}{c) If the mod}{ifi}{ed program normally re}{}{../COPYING:103}
\xx {}{ments apply to the mod}{ifi}{ed work as a whole.}{}{../COPYING:114}
\xx {work are n}{If ident}{ifi}{able sections of that}{}{../COPYING:115}
\xx {}{he work for making mod}{ifi}{cations to it.}{of t}{../COPYING:156}
\xx {}{If the Program spec}{ifi}{es a version number of}{}{../COPYING:243}
\xx {}{hey have is not the or}{igi}{nal, so that any probl}{}{../COPYING:46}
\xx {}{not reflect on the or}{igi}{nal authors' reputatio}{}{../COPYING:47}
\xx {}{a license from the or}{igi}{nal licensor to copy,}{}{../COPYING:191}
\xx {}{ted interfaces, the or}{igi}{nal copyright holder w}{}{../COPYING:231}
\xx {}{RRANTIES OF MERCHANTAB}{ILI}{TY AND FITNESS FOR A P}{}{../COPYING:265}
\xx {}{OUT OF THE USE OR INAB}{ILI}{TY TO USE THE PROGRAM}{}{../COPYING:274}
\xx {}{anty of MERCHANTAB}{ILI}{TY or FITNESS FOR A PA}{}{../COPYING:303}
\xx {}{is included without l}{imi}{tation in the term "mo}{}{../COPYING:69}
\xx {}{ny other reason (not l}{imi}{ted to patent issues),}{}{../COPYING:198}
\xx {}{aphical distribution l}{imi}{tation excluding those}{}{../COPYING:232}
\xx {}{nse incorporates the l}{imi}{tation as if written i}{}{../COPYING:235}
\xx {}{new versions will be s}{imi}{lar in spirit to the p}{}{../COPYING:239}
\xx {}{, INCLUDING, BUT NOT L}{IMI}{TED TO, THE IMPLIED WA}{}{../COPYING:264}
\xx {}{M (INCLUDING BUT NOT L}{IMI}{TED TO LOSS OF DATA OR}{}{../COPYING:274}
\xx {}{s to say, a work conta}{ini}{ng the Program or a po}{}{../COPYING:67}
\xx {}{sociated interface def}{ini}{tion files, plus the s}{}{../COPYING:158}
\xx {}{you must give the rec}{ipi}{ents all the rights th}{}{../COPYING:34}
\xx {}{ed on, we want its rec}{ipi}{ents to know that what}{}{../COPYING:46}
\xx {}{and give any other rec}{ipi}{ents of the Program a}{}{../COPYING:84}
\xx {}{the Program), the rec}{ipi}{ent automatically rece}{}{../COPYING:190}
\xx {}{estrictions on the rec}{ipi}{ents' exercise of the}{}{../COPYING:193}
\xx {}{will be similar in sp}{iri}{t to the present versi}{}{../COPYING:239}
\xx {he two goal}{Our dec}{isi}{on will be guided by t}{}{../COPYING:254}
\xx {}{NSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES AR}{ISI}{NG OUT OF THE USE OR I}{}{../COPYING:273}
\xx {}{tive mode: Gnomov}{isi}{on version 69, Copyrig}{}{../COPYING:315}
\xx {}{e of author Gnomov}{isi}{on comes with ABSOLUTE}{}{../COPYING:316}
\xx {}{the program `Gnomov}{isi}{on' (which makes passe}{}{../COPYING:330}
\xx {}{to certain responsibil}{iti}{es for you if you dist}{}{../COPYING:30}
\xx {}{precise terms and cond}{iti}{ons for copying, distr}{}{../COPYING:56}
\xx {}{ENSE TERMS AND COND}{ITI}{ONS FOR COPYING, DISTR}{}{../COPYING:60}
\xx {}{meet all of these cond}{iti}{ons: a) You must}{}{../COPYING:93}
\xx {}{m under these cond}{iti}{ons, and telling the u}{}{../COPYING:109}
\xx {f another wo}{In add}{iti}{on, mere aggregation o}{}{../COPYING:129}
\xx {}{all its terms and cond}{iti}{ons for copying, distr}{}{../COPYING:186}
\xx {}{o these terms and cond}{iti}{ons.}{bject t}{../COPYING:192}
\xx {}{o patent issues), cond}{iti}{ons are imposed on you}{}{../COPYING:199}
\xx {}{at contradict the cond}{iti}{ons of this License, t}{}{../COPYING:200}
\xx {}{cuse you from the cond}{iti}{ons of this License.}{}{../COPYING:201}
\xx {}{ing the terms and cond}{iti}{ons either of that ver}{}{../COPYING:244}
\xx {}{hose distribution cond}{iti}{ons are different, wri}{}{../COPYING:251}
\xx {}{OTHERWISE STATED IN WR}{ITI}{NG THE COPYRIGHT HOLDE}{}{../COPYING:262}
\xx {}{LAW OR AGREED TO IN WR}{ITI}{NG WILL ANY COPYRIGHT}{}{../COPYING:270}
\xx {}{END OF TERMS AND COND}{ITI}{ONS Appendix: How t}{}{../COPYING:280}
\xx {}{under certain cond}{iti}{ons; type `show c' for}{}{../COPYING:318}
\xx {}{free program will ind}{ivi}{dually obtain patent l}{}{../COPYING:52}
\xx {g, distribution}{Act}{ivi}{ties other than copyin}{}{../COPYING:72}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
From: Luke Kendall <luke@research.canon.oz.au>
Date: Wed, 16 Oct 91 12:26:39 EST

View File

@ -0,0 +1,108 @@
#!/bin/sh
#
# Author: Luke Kendall
#
MYNAME=`basename $0`
usage="usage: $MYNAME [man-directory]
(generates permuted index of -man files in directory)"
md=/usr/man
#
if [ $# = 0 ]
then
echo "$MYNAME: no man directory specified: assuming $md"
elif [ $# != 1 ]
then
echo "$usage"
exit 1
elif [ -d $1 ]
then
md="$1"
else
echo "$usage"
exit 1
fi
echo "Permuted index of $md:"
out=ptx.tr
# ------ clumsy permuted index macros (replaced by stuff below) ------------
cat <<'EOF' > $out
.pn 1
.de xx
\\$1 \\$2 \\fB\\$3\\fR \\$4 \\s-1\\$5\\s0
..
.pl 10i
.de NP
.ev 1
.ft 1
.ps 10
.sp 0.75c
.tl '\s-2\\fIpermuted index\\fP\s0'\- \\n% \-'\s-2\\fIpermuted index\\fP\s0'
.pn +1
.bp
.ev
..
.wh 9i NP
.nf
.na
.ta 6.5i-1.1iR 6.5iR 6.51iR 6.52R
.ll 6.0i
.po 0i
.sp 0.25i
'\"
EOF
# ------ ------- ------- ------- ------- -------
# ------ alternate permuted index macros (from net) ------------
cat <<'EOF' > $out
.pl 10i
.de NP
.ev 1
.ft 1
.ps 10
.sp 0.75c
.tl '\s-2\\fIpermuted index\\fP\s0'\- \\n% \-'\s-2\\fIpermuted index\\fP\s0'
.pn +1
.bp
.ev
..
.wh 9i NP
.po 0.5i
.sp 0.25i
.tr ~ \" tildes will translate to blanks
'\".ll 80 \" line length of output
.ll 6.0i \" line length of output
.nf \" must be in no-fill mode
.nr )r \n(.lu-10n \" set position of reference in line (10 less than length)
.nr )k \n()ru/2u \" set position of keyword (approx. centered)
.ds s2 ~~~ \" this is the center gap -- 3 spaces
.de xx \"definition of xx macro
.ds s1\" \" initialise to null string
.if \w@\\$2@ .ds s1 ~\" \"set to single blank if there is second arg
.ds s3\" \" initialise to null string
.if \w@\\$4@ .ds s3 ~\" \"set to single blank if there is second arg
.ds s4 ~\" \" set to single blank
.ds s5 ~\" \" set to single blank
.ds y \\*(s4\a\\*(s5\" \" blank, leader, blank
.ta \\n()ru-\w@\\*(s5@u \" set tab just to left of ref
\h@\\n()ku-\w@\\$1\\*(s1\\$2\\*(s2@u@\\$1\\*(s1\\$2\\*(s2\\$3\\*(s3\\$4\\*y\\$5
..
~
EOF
# ------ ------- ------- ------- ------- -------
find $md -type f -name "*.[1-8nl]*" -print |
while read f
do
man=`basename $f`
man=`expr "$man" : "\(.*\)\.[^\.]*"`
echo $man:
#
# Use 1st non-"." and non-"'" started line as input to ptx (this
# should be the synopsis after the `.SH NAME');
# strip any "\-" from it (a silly sort key for ptx to avoid);
# insert a leading man page name for the -r option to find
#
sed -n '/^[^.]/s/\\-//g;/^[^.]/p;/^[^.]/q' $f | sed "s/^/($man) /"
done | ptx -t -f -r >> $out
#
# Turn the troff'able permuted index file into PostScript
#
psroff -t -rL10i $out > ptx.ps
echo "$out and ptx.ps produced from man directory $md."

757
gnu/usr.bin/ptx/getopt.c Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,757 @@
/* Getopt for GNU.
NOTE: getopt is now part of the C library, so if you don't know what
"Keep this file name-space clean" means, talk to roland@gnu.ai.mit.edu
before changing it!
Copyright (C) 1987, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 1993
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any
later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#if defined (emacs) || defined (CONFIG_BROKETS)
/* We use <config.h> instead of "config.h" so that a compilation
using -I. -I$srcdir will use ./config.h rather than $srcdir/config.h
(which it would do because it found this file in $srcdir). */
#include <config.h>
#else
#include "config.h"
#endif
#endif
#ifndef __STDC__
/* This is a separate conditional since some stdc systems
reject `defined (const)'. */
#ifndef const
#define const
#endif
#endif
/* This tells Alpha OSF/1 not to define a getopt prototype in <stdio.h>. */
#ifndef _NO_PROTO
#define _NO_PROTO
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
/* Comment out all this code if we are using the GNU C Library, and are not
actually compiling the library itself. This code is part of the GNU C
Library, but also included in many other GNU distributions. Compiling
and linking in this code is a waste when using the GNU C library
(especially if it is a shared library). Rather than having every GNU
program understand `configure --with-gnu-libc' and omit the object files,
it is simpler to just do this in the source for each such file. */
#if defined (_LIBC) || !defined (__GNU_LIBRARY__)
/* This needs to come after some library #include
to get __GNU_LIBRARY__ defined. */
#ifdef __GNU_LIBRARY__
/* Don't include stdlib.h for non-GNU C libraries because some of them
contain conflicting prototypes for getopt. */
#include <stdlib.h>
#endif /* GNU C library. */
/* If GETOPT_COMPAT is defined, `+' as well as `--' can introduce a
long-named option. Because this is not POSIX.2 compliant, it is
being phased out. */
/* #define GETOPT_COMPAT */
/* This version of `getopt' appears to the caller like standard Unix `getopt'
but it behaves differently for the user, since it allows the user
to intersperse the options with the other arguments.
As `getopt' works, it permutes the elements of ARGV so that,
when it is done, all the options precede everything else. Thus
all application programs are extended to handle flexible argument order.
Setting the environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT disables permutation.
Then the behavior is completely standard.
GNU application programs can use a third alternative mode in which
they can distinguish the relative order of options and other arguments. */
#include "getopt.h"
/* For communication from `getopt' to the caller.
When `getopt' finds an option that takes an argument,
the argument value is returned here.
Also, when `ordering' is RETURN_IN_ORDER,
each non-option ARGV-element is returned here. */
char *optarg = 0;
/* Index in ARGV of the next element to be scanned.
This is used for communication to and from the caller
and for communication between successive calls to `getopt'.
On entry to `getopt', zero means this is the first call; initialize.
When `getopt' returns EOF, this is the index of the first of the
non-option elements that the caller should itself scan.
Otherwise, `optind' communicates from one call to the next
how much of ARGV has been scanned so far. */
/* XXX 1003.2 says this must be 1 before any call. */
int optind = 0;
/* The next char to be scanned in the option-element
in which the last option character we returned was found.
This allows us to pick up the scan where we left off.
If this is zero, or a null string, it means resume the scan
by advancing to the next ARGV-element. */
static char *nextchar;
/* Callers store zero here to inhibit the error message
for unrecognized options. */
int opterr = 1;
/* Set to an option character which was unrecognized.
This must be initialized on some systems to avoid linking in the
system's own getopt implementation. */
int optopt = '?';
/* Describe how to deal with options that follow non-option ARGV-elements.
If the caller did not specify anything,
the default is REQUIRE_ORDER if the environment variable
POSIXLY_CORRECT is defined, PERMUTE otherwise.
REQUIRE_ORDER means don't recognize them as options;
stop option processing when the first non-option is seen.
This is what Unix does.
This mode of operation is selected by either setting the environment
variable POSIXLY_CORRECT, or using `+' as the first character
of the list of option characters.
PERMUTE is the default. We permute the contents of ARGV as we scan,
so that eventually all the non-options are at the end. This allows options
to be given in any order, even with programs that were not written to
expect this.
RETURN_IN_ORDER is an option available to programs that were written
to expect options and other ARGV-elements in any order and that care about
the ordering of the two. We describe each non-option ARGV-element
as if it were the argument of an option with character code 1.
Using `-' as the first character of the list of option characters
selects this mode of operation.
The special argument `--' forces an end of option-scanning regardless
of the value of `ordering'. In the case of RETURN_IN_ORDER, only
`--' can cause `getopt' to return EOF with `optind' != ARGC. */
static enum
{
REQUIRE_ORDER, PERMUTE, RETURN_IN_ORDER
} ordering;
#ifdef __GNU_LIBRARY__
/* We want to avoid inclusion of string.h with non-GNU libraries
because there are many ways it can cause trouble.
On some systems, it contains special magic macros that don't work
in GCC. */
#include <string.h>
#define my_index strchr
#else
/* Avoid depending on library functions or files
whose names are inconsistent. */
char *getenv ();
static char *
my_index (str, chr)
const char *str;
int chr;
{
while (*str)
{
if (*str == chr)
return (char *) str;
str++;
}
return 0;
}
/* If using GCC, we can safely declare strlen this way.
If not using GCC, it is ok not to declare it.
(Supposedly there are some machines where it might get a warning,
but changing this conditional to __STDC__ is too risky.) */
#ifdef __GNUC__
#ifdef IN_GCC
#include "gstddef.h"
#else
#include <stddef.h>
#endif
extern size_t strlen (const char *);
#endif
#endif /* GNU C library. */
/* Handle permutation of arguments. */
/* Describe the part of ARGV that contains non-options that have
been skipped. `first_nonopt' is the index in ARGV of the first of them;
`last_nonopt' is the index after the last of them. */
static int first_nonopt;
static int last_nonopt;
/* Exchange two adjacent subsequences of ARGV.
One subsequence is elements [first_nonopt,last_nonopt)
which contains all the non-options that have been skipped so far.
The other is elements [last_nonopt,optind), which contains all
the options processed since those non-options were skipped.
`first_nonopt' and `last_nonopt' are relocated so that they describe
the new indices of the non-options in ARGV after they are moved. */
static void
exchange (argv)
char **argv;
{
int bottom = first_nonopt;
int middle = last_nonopt;
int top = optind;
char *tem;
/* Exchange the shorter segment with the far end of the longer segment.
That puts the shorter segment into the right place.
It leaves the longer segment in the right place overall,
but it consists of two parts that need to be swapped next. */
while (top > middle && middle > bottom)
{
if (top - middle > middle - bottom)
{
/* Bottom segment is the short one. */
int len = middle - bottom;
register int i;
/* Swap it with the top part of the top segment. */
for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
{
tem = argv[bottom + i];
argv[bottom + i] = argv[top - (middle - bottom) + i];
argv[top - (middle - bottom) + i] = tem;
}
/* Exclude the moved bottom segment from further swapping. */
top -= len;
}
else
{
/* Top segment is the short one. */
int len = top - middle;
register int i;
/* Swap it with the bottom part of the bottom segment. */
for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
{
tem = argv[bottom + i];
argv[bottom + i] = argv[middle + i];
argv[middle + i] = tem;
}
/* Exclude the moved top segment from further swapping. */
bottom += len;
}
}
/* Update records for the slots the non-options now occupy. */
first_nonopt += (optind - last_nonopt);
last_nonopt = optind;
}
/* Scan elements of ARGV (whose length is ARGC) for option characters
given in OPTSTRING.
If an element of ARGV starts with '-', and is not exactly "-" or "--",
then it is an option element. The characters of this element
(aside from the initial '-') are option characters. If `getopt'
is called repeatedly, it returns successively each of the option characters
from each of the option elements.
If `getopt' finds another option character, it returns that character,
updating `optind' and `nextchar' so that the next call to `getopt' can
resume the scan with the following option character or ARGV-element.
If there are no more option characters, `getopt' returns `EOF'.
Then `optind' is the index in ARGV of the first ARGV-element
that is not an option. (The ARGV-elements have been permuted
so that those that are not options now come last.)
OPTSTRING is a string containing the legitimate option characters.
If an option character is seen that is not listed in OPTSTRING,
return '?' after printing an error message. If you set `opterr' to
zero, the error message is suppressed but we still return '?'.
If a char in OPTSTRING is followed by a colon, that means it wants an arg,
so the following text in the same ARGV-element, or the text of the following
ARGV-element, is returned in `optarg'. Two colons mean an option that
wants an optional arg; if there is text in the current ARGV-element,
it is returned in `optarg', otherwise `optarg' is set to zero.
If OPTSTRING starts with `-' or `+', it requests different methods of
handling the non-option ARGV-elements.
See the comments about RETURN_IN_ORDER and REQUIRE_ORDER, above.
Long-named options begin with `--' instead of `-'.
Their names may be abbreviated as long as the abbreviation is unique
or is an exact match for some defined option. If they have an
argument, it follows the option name in the same ARGV-element, separated
from the option name by a `=', or else the in next ARGV-element.
When `getopt' finds a long-named option, it returns 0 if that option's
`flag' field is nonzero, the value of the option's `val' field
if the `flag' field is zero.
The elements of ARGV aren't really const, because we permute them.
But we pretend they're const in the prototype to be compatible
with other systems.
LONGOPTS is a vector of `struct option' terminated by an
element containing a name which is zero.
LONGIND returns the index in LONGOPT of the long-named option found.
It is only valid when a long-named option has been found by the most
recent call.
If LONG_ONLY is nonzero, '-' as well as '--' can introduce
long-named options. */
int
_getopt_internal (argc, argv, optstring, longopts, longind, long_only)
int argc;
char *const *argv;
const char *optstring;
const struct option *longopts;
int *longind;
int long_only;
{
int option_index;
optarg = 0;
/* Initialize the internal data when the first call is made.
Start processing options with ARGV-element 1 (since ARGV-element 0
is the program name); the sequence of previously skipped
non-option ARGV-elements is empty. */
if (optind == 0)
{
first_nonopt = last_nonopt = optind = 1;
nextchar = NULL;
/* Determine how to handle the ordering of options and nonoptions. */
if (optstring[0] == '-')
{
ordering = RETURN_IN_ORDER;
++optstring;
}
else if (optstring[0] == '+')
{
ordering = REQUIRE_ORDER;
++optstring;
}
else if (getenv ("POSIXLY_CORRECT") != NULL)
ordering = REQUIRE_ORDER;
else
ordering = PERMUTE;
}
if (nextchar == NULL || *nextchar == '\0')
{
if (ordering == PERMUTE)
{
/* If we have just processed some options following some non-options,
exchange them so that the options come first. */
if (first_nonopt != last_nonopt && last_nonopt != optind)
exchange ((char **) argv);
else if (last_nonopt != optind)
first_nonopt = optind;
/* Now skip any additional non-options
and extend the range of non-options previously skipped. */
while (optind < argc
&& (argv[optind][0] != '-' || argv[optind][1] == '\0')
#ifdef GETOPT_COMPAT
&& (longopts == NULL
|| argv[optind][0] != '+' || argv[optind][1] == '\0')
#endif /* GETOPT_COMPAT */
)
optind++;
last_nonopt = optind;
}
/* Special ARGV-element `--' means premature end of options.
Skip it like a null option,
then exchange with previous non-options as if it were an option,
then skip everything else like a non-option. */
if (optind != argc && !strcmp (argv[optind], "--"))
{
optind++;
if (first_nonopt != last_nonopt && last_nonopt != optind)
exchange ((char **) argv);
else if (first_nonopt == last_nonopt)
first_nonopt = optind;
last_nonopt = argc;
optind = argc;
}
/* If we have done all the ARGV-elements, stop the scan
and back over any non-options that we skipped and permuted. */
if (optind == argc)
{
/* Set the next-arg-index to point at the non-options
that we previously skipped, so the caller will digest them. */
if (first_nonopt != last_nonopt)
optind = first_nonopt;
return EOF;
}
/* If we have come to a non-option and did not permute it,
either stop the scan or describe it to the caller and pass it by. */
if ((argv[optind][0] != '-' || argv[optind][1] == '\0')
#ifdef GETOPT_COMPAT
&& (longopts == NULL
|| argv[optind][0] != '+' || argv[optind][1] == '\0')
#endif /* GETOPT_COMPAT */
)
{
if (ordering == REQUIRE_ORDER)
return EOF;
optarg = argv[optind++];
return 1;
}
/* We have found another option-ARGV-element.
Start decoding its characters. */
nextchar = (argv[optind] + 1
+ (longopts != NULL && argv[optind][1] == '-'));
}
if (longopts != NULL
&& ((argv[optind][0] == '-'
&& (argv[optind][1] == '-' || long_only))
#ifdef GETOPT_COMPAT
|| argv[optind][0] == '+'
#endif /* GETOPT_COMPAT */
))
{
const struct option *p;
char *s = nextchar;
int exact = 0;
int ambig = 0;
const struct option *pfound = NULL;
int indfound;
while (*s && *s != '=')
s++;
/* Test all options for either exact match or abbreviated matches. */
for (p = longopts, option_index = 0; p->name;
p++, option_index++)
if (!strncmp (p->name, nextchar, s - nextchar))
{
if (s - nextchar == strlen (p->name))
{
/* Exact match found. */
pfound = p;
indfound = option_index;
exact = 1;
break;
}
else if (pfound == NULL)
{
/* First nonexact match found. */
pfound = p;
indfound = option_index;
}
else
/* Second nonexact match found. */
ambig = 1;
}
if (ambig && !exact)
{
if (opterr)
fprintf (stderr, "%s: option `%s' is ambiguous\n",
argv[0], argv[optind]);
nextchar += strlen (nextchar);
optind++;
return '?';
}
if (pfound != NULL)
{
option_index = indfound;
optind++;
if (*s)
{
/* Don't test has_arg with >, because some C compilers don't
allow it to be used on enums. */
if (pfound->has_arg)
optarg = s + 1;
else
{
if (opterr)
{
if (argv[optind - 1][1] == '-')
/* --option */
fprintf (stderr,
"%s: option `--%s' doesn't allow an argument\n",
argv[0], pfound->name);
else
/* +option or -option */
fprintf (stderr,
"%s: option `%c%s' doesn't allow an argument\n",
argv[0], argv[optind - 1][0], pfound->name);
}
nextchar += strlen (nextchar);
return '?';
}
}
else if (pfound->has_arg == 1)
{
if (optind < argc)
optarg = argv[optind++];
else
{
if (opterr)
fprintf (stderr, "%s: option `%s' requires an argument\n",
argv[0], argv[optind - 1]);
nextchar += strlen (nextchar);
return optstring[0] == ':' ? ':' : '?';
}
}
nextchar += strlen (nextchar);
if (longind != NULL)
*longind = option_index;
if (pfound->flag)
{
*(pfound->flag) = pfound->val;
return 0;
}
return pfound->val;
}
/* Can't find it as a long option. If this is not getopt_long_only,
or the option starts with '--' or is not a valid short
option, then it's an error.
Otherwise interpret it as a short option. */
if (!long_only || argv[optind][1] == '-'
#ifdef GETOPT_COMPAT
|| argv[optind][0] == '+'
#endif /* GETOPT_COMPAT */
|| my_index (optstring, *nextchar) == NULL)
{
if (opterr)
{
if (argv[optind][1] == '-')
/* --option */
fprintf (stderr, "%s: unrecognized option `--%s'\n",
argv[0], nextchar);
else
/* +option or -option */
fprintf (stderr, "%s: unrecognized option `%c%s'\n",
argv[0], argv[optind][0], nextchar);
}
nextchar = (char *) "";
optind++;
return '?';
}
}
/* Look at and handle the next option-character. */
{
char c = *nextchar++;
char *temp = my_index (optstring, c);
/* Increment `optind' when we start to process its last character. */
if (*nextchar == '\0')
++optind;
if (temp == NULL || c == ':')
{
if (opterr)
{
#if 0
if (c < 040 || c >= 0177)
fprintf (stderr, "%s: unrecognized option, character code 0%o\n",
argv[0], c);
else
fprintf (stderr, "%s: unrecognized option `-%c'\n", argv[0], c);
#else
/* 1003.2 specifies the format of this message. */
fprintf (stderr, "%s: illegal option -- %c\n", argv[0], c);
#endif
}
optopt = c;
return '?';
}
if (temp[1] == ':')
{
if (temp[2] == ':')
{
/* This is an option that accepts an argument optionally. */
if (*nextchar != '\0')
{
optarg = nextchar;
optind++;
}
else
optarg = 0;
nextchar = NULL;
}
else
{
/* This is an option that requires an argument. */
if (*nextchar != '\0')
{
optarg = nextchar;
/* If we end this ARGV-element by taking the rest as an arg,
we must advance to the next element now. */
optind++;
}
else if (optind == argc)
{
if (opterr)
{
#if 0
fprintf (stderr, "%s: option `-%c' requires an argument\n",
argv[0], c);
#else
/* 1003.2 specifies the format of this message. */
fprintf (stderr, "%s: option requires an argument -- %c\n",
argv[0], c);
#endif
}
optopt = c;
if (optstring[0] == ':')
c = ':';
else
c = '?';
}
else
/* We already incremented `optind' once;
increment it again when taking next ARGV-elt as argument. */
optarg = argv[optind++];
nextchar = NULL;
}
}
return c;
}
}
int
getopt (argc, argv, optstring)
int argc;
char *const *argv;
const char *optstring;
{
return _getopt_internal (argc, argv, optstring,
(const struct option *) 0,
(int *) 0,
0);
}
#endif /* _LIBC or not __GNU_LIBRARY__. */
#ifdef TEST
/* Compile with -DTEST to make an executable for use in testing
the above definition of `getopt'. */
int
main (argc, argv)
int argc;
char **argv;
{
int c;
int digit_optind = 0;
while (1)
{
int this_option_optind = optind ? optind : 1;
c = getopt (argc, argv, "abc:d:0123456789");
if (c == EOF)
break;
switch (c)
{
case '0':
case '1':
case '2':
case '3':
case '4':
case '5':
case '6':
case '7':
case '8':
case '9':
if (digit_optind != 0 && digit_optind != this_option_optind)
printf ("digits occur in two different argv-elements.\n");
digit_optind = this_option_optind;
printf ("option %c\n", c);
break;
case 'a':
printf ("option a\n");
break;
case 'b':
printf ("option b\n");
break;
case 'c':
printf ("option c with value `%s'\n", optarg);
break;
case '?':
break;
default:
printf ("?? getopt returned character code 0%o ??\n", c);
}
}
if (optind < argc)
{
printf ("non-option ARGV-elements: ");
while (optind < argc)
printf ("%s ", argv[optind++]);
printf ("\n");
}
exit (0);
}
#endif /* TEST */

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/* Declarations for getopt.
Copyright (C) 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any
later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#ifndef _GETOPT_H
#define _GETOPT_H 1
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/* For communication from `getopt' to the caller.
When `getopt' finds an option that takes an argument,
the argument value is returned here.
Also, when `ordering' is RETURN_IN_ORDER,
each non-option ARGV-element is returned here. */
extern char *optarg;
/* Index in ARGV of the next element to be scanned.
This is used for communication to and from the caller
and for communication between successive calls to `getopt'.
On entry to `getopt', zero means this is the first call; initialize.
When `getopt' returns EOF, this is the index of the first of the
non-option elements that the caller should itself scan.
Otherwise, `optind' communicates from one call to the next
how much of ARGV has been scanned so far. */
extern int optind;
/* Callers store zero here to inhibit the error message `getopt' prints
for unrecognized options. */
extern int opterr;
/* Set to an option character which was unrecognized. */
extern int optopt;
/* Describe the long-named options requested by the application.
The LONG_OPTIONS argument to getopt_long or getopt_long_only is a vector
of `struct option' terminated by an element containing a name which is
zero.
The field `has_arg' is:
no_argument (or 0) if the option does not take an argument,
required_argument (or 1) if the option requires an argument,
optional_argument (or 2) if the option takes an optional argument.
If the field `flag' is not NULL, it points to a variable that is set
to the value given in the field `val' when the option is found, but
left unchanged if the option is not found.
To have a long-named option do something other than set an `int' to
a compiled-in constant, such as set a value from `optarg', set the
option's `flag' field to zero and its `val' field to a nonzero
value (the equivalent single-letter option character, if there is
one). For long options that have a zero `flag' field, `getopt'
returns the contents of the `val' field. */
struct option
{
#if __STDC__
const char *name;
#else
char *name;
#endif
/* has_arg can't be an enum because some compilers complain about
type mismatches in all the code that assumes it is an int. */
int has_arg;
int *flag;
int val;
};
/* Names for the values of the `has_arg' field of `struct option'. */
#define no_argument 0
#define required_argument 1
#define optional_argument 2
#if __STDC__
#if defined(__GNU_LIBRARY__)
/* Many other libraries have conflicting prototypes for getopt, with
differences in the consts, in stdlib.h. To avoid compilation
errors, only prototype getopt for the GNU C library. */
extern int getopt (int argc, char *const *argv, const char *shortopts);
#else /* not __GNU_LIBRARY__ */
extern int getopt ();
#endif /* not __GNU_LIBRARY__ */
extern int getopt_long (int argc, char *const *argv, const char *shortopts,
const struct option *longopts, int *longind);
extern int getopt_long_only (int argc, char *const *argv,
const char *shortopts,
const struct option *longopts, int *longind);
/* Internal only. Users should not call this directly. */
extern int _getopt_internal (int argc, char *const *argv,
const char *shortopts,
const struct option *longopts, int *longind,
int long_only);
#else /* not __STDC__ */
extern int getopt ();
extern int getopt_long ();
extern int getopt_long_only ();
extern int _getopt_internal ();
#endif /* not __STDC__ */
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#endif /* _GETOPT_H */

187
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/* getopt_long and getopt_long_only entry points for GNU getopt.
Copyright (C) 1987, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 1993
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any
later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#if defined (emacs) || defined (CONFIG_BROKETS)
/* We use <config.h> instead of "config.h" so that a compilation
using -I. -I$srcdir will use ./config.h rather than $srcdir/config.h
(which it would do because it found this file in $srcdir). */
#include <config.h>
#else
#include "config.h"
#endif
#endif
#include "getopt.h"
#ifndef __STDC__
/* This is a separate conditional since some stdc systems
reject `defined (const)'. */
#ifndef const
#define const
#endif
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
/* Comment out all this code if we are using the GNU C Library, and are not
actually compiling the library itself. This code is part of the GNU C
Library, but also included in many other GNU distributions. Compiling
and linking in this code is a waste when using the GNU C library
(especially if it is a shared library). Rather than having every GNU
program understand `configure --with-gnu-libc' and omit the object files,
it is simpler to just do this in the source for each such file. */
#if defined (_LIBC) || !defined (__GNU_LIBRARY__)
/* This needs to come after some library #include
to get __GNU_LIBRARY__ defined. */
#ifdef __GNU_LIBRARY__
#include <stdlib.h>
#else
char *getenv ();
#endif
#ifndef NULL
#define NULL 0
#endif
int
getopt_long (argc, argv, options, long_options, opt_index)
int argc;
char *const *argv;
const char *options;
const struct option *long_options;
int *opt_index;
{
return _getopt_internal (argc, argv, options, long_options, opt_index, 0);
}
/* Like getopt_long, but '-' as well as '--' can indicate a long option.
If an option that starts with '-' (not '--') doesn't match a long option,
but does match a short option, it is parsed as a short option
instead. */
int
getopt_long_only (argc, argv, options, long_options, opt_index)
int argc;
char *const *argv;
const char *options;
const struct option *long_options;
int *opt_index;
{
return _getopt_internal (argc, argv, options, long_options, opt_index, 1);
}
#endif /* _LIBC or not __GNU_LIBRARY__. */
#ifdef TEST
#include <stdio.h>
int
main (argc, argv)
int argc;
char **argv;
{
int c;
int digit_optind = 0;
while (1)
{
int this_option_optind = optind ? optind : 1;
int option_index = 0;
static struct option long_options[] =
{
{"add", 1, 0, 0},
{"append", 0, 0, 0},
{"delete", 1, 0, 0},
{"verbose", 0, 0, 0},
{"create", 0, 0, 0},
{"file", 1, 0, 0},
{0, 0, 0, 0}
};
c = getopt_long (argc, argv, "abc:d:0123456789",
long_options, &option_index);
if (c == EOF)
break;
switch (c)
{
case 0:
printf ("option %s", long_options[option_index].name);
if (optarg)
printf (" with arg %s", optarg);
printf ("\n");
break;
case '0':
case '1':
case '2':
case '3':
case '4':
case '5':
case '6':
case '7':
case '8':
case '9':
if (digit_optind != 0 && digit_optind != this_option_optind)
printf ("digits occur in two different argv-elements.\n");
digit_optind = this_option_optind;
printf ("option %c\n", c);
break;
case 'a':
printf ("option a\n");
break;
case 'b':
printf ("option b\n");
break;
case 'c':
printf ("option c with value `%s'\n", optarg);
break;
case 'd':
printf ("option d with value `%s'\n", optarg);
break;
case '?':
break;
default:
printf ("?? getopt returned character code 0%o ??\n", c);
}
}
if (optind < argc)
{
printf ("non-option ARGV-elements: ");
while (optind < argc)
printf ("%s ", argv[optind++]);
printf ("\n");
}
exit (0);
}
#endif /* TEST */

35
gnu/usr.bin/ptx/mkinstalldirs Executable file
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@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
#!/bin/sh
# Make directory hierarchy.
# Written by Noah Friedman <friedman@prep.ai.mit.edu>
# Public domain.
defaultIFS='
'
IFS="${IFS-${defaultIFS}}"
errstatus=0
for file in ${1+"$@"} ; do
oIFS="${IFS}"
# Some sh's can't handle IFS=/ for some reason.
IFS='%'
set - `echo ${file} | sed -e 's@/@%@g' -e 's@^%@/@'`
IFS="${oIFS}"
pathcomp=''
for d in ${1+"$@"} ; do
pathcomp="${pathcomp}${d}"
if test ! -d "${pathcomp}"; then
echo "mkdir $pathcomp" 1>&2
mkdir "${pathcomp}" || errstatus=$?
fi
pathcomp="${pathcomp}/"
done
done
exit $errstatus
# eof

2237
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496
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This is Info file ptx.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.47 from the input
file ./ptx.texinfo.
This file documents the `ptx' command, which has the purpose of
generated permuted indices for group of files.
Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1993 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of
this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that
the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
permission notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified
versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a
translation approved by the Foundation.

File: ptx.info, Node: Top, Next: Invoking ptx, Prev: (dir), Up: (dir)
Introduction
************
This is the 0.3 beta release of `ptx', the GNU version of a permuted
index generator. This software has the main goal of providing a
replacement for the traditional `ptx' as found on System V machines,
able to handle small files quickly, while providing a platform for more
development.
This version reimplements and extends traditional `ptx'. Among
other things, it can produce a readable "KWIC" (keywords in their
context) without the need of `nroff', there is also an option to
produce TeX compatible output. This version does not handle huge input
files, that is, those files which do not fit in memory all at once.
*Please note* that an overall renaming of all options is
foreseeable. In fact, GNU ptx specifications are not frozen yet.
* Menu:
* Invoking ptx:: How to use this program
* Compatibility:: The GNU extensions to `ptx'
-- The Detailed Node Listing --
How to use this program
* General options:: Options which affect general program behaviour.
* Charset selection:: Underlying character set considerations.
* Input processing:: Input fields, contexts, and keyword selection.
* Output formatting:: Types of output format, and sizing the fields.

File: ptx.info, Node: Invoking ptx, Next: Compatibility, Prev: Top, Up: Top
How to use this program
***********************
This tool reads a text file and essentially produces a permuted
index, with each keyword in its context. The calling sketch is one of:
ptx [OPTION ...] [FILE ...]
or:
ptx -G [OPTION ...] [INPUT [OUTPUT]]
The `-G' (or its equivalent: `--traditional') option disables all
GNU extensions and revert to traditional mode, thus introducing some
limitations, and changes several of the program's default option values.
When `-G' is not specified, GNU extensions are always enabled. GNU
extensions to `ptx' are documented wherever appropriate in this
document. See *Note Compatibility:: for an explicit list of them.
Individual options are explained later in this document.
When GNU extensions are enabled, there may be zero, one or several
FILE after the options. If there is no FILE, the program reads the
standard input. If there is one or several FILE, they give the name of
input files which are all read in turn, as if all the input files were
concatenated. However, there is a full contextual break between each
file and, when automatic referencing is requested, file names and line
numbers refer to individual text input files. In all cases, the
program produces the permuted index onto the standard output.
When GNU extensions are *not* enabled, that is, when the program
operates in traditional mode, there may be zero, one or two parameters
besides the options. If there is no parameters, the program reads the
standard input and produces the permuted index onto the standard output.
If there is only one parameter, it names the text INPUT to be read
instead of the standard input. If two parameters are given, they give
respectively the name of the INPUT file to read and the name of the
OUTPUT file to produce. *Be very careful* to note that, in this case,
the contents of file given by the second parameter is destroyed. This
behaviour is dictated only by System V `ptx' compatibility, because GNU
Standards discourage output parameters not introduced by an option.
Note that for *any* file named as the value of an option or as an
input text file, a single dash `-' may be used, in which case standard
input is assumed. However, it would not make sense to use this
convention more than once per program invocation.
* Menu:
* General options:: Options which affect general program behaviour.
* Charset selection:: Underlying character set considerations.
* Input processing:: Input fields, contexts, and keyword selection.
* Output formatting:: Types of output format, and sizing the fields.

File: ptx.info, Node: General options, Next: Charset selection, Prev: Invoking ptx, Up: Invoking ptx
General options
===============
`-C'
`--copyright'
Prints a short note about the Copyright and copying conditions,
then exit without further processing.
`-G'
`--traditional'
As already explained, this option disables all GNU extensions to
`ptx' and switch to traditional mode.
`--help'
Prints a short help on standard output, then exit without further
processing.
`--version'
Prints the program verison on standard output, then exit without
further processing.

File: ptx.info, Node: Charset selection, Next: Input processing, Prev: General options, Up: Invoking ptx
Charset selection
=================
As it is setup now, the program assumes that the input file is coded
using 8-bit ISO 8859-1 code, also known as Latin-1 character set,
*unless* if it is compiled for MS-DOS, in which case it uses the
character set of the IBM-PC. (GNU `ptx' is not known to work on
smaller MS-DOS machines anymore.) Compared to 7-bit ASCII, the set of
characters which are letters is then different, this fact alters the
behaviour of regular expression matching. Thus, the default regular
expression for a keyword allows foreign or diacriticized letters.
Keyword sorting, however, is still crude; it obeys the underlying
character set ordering quite blindly.
`-f'
`--ignore-case'
Fold lower case letters to upper case for sorting.

File: ptx.info, Node: Input processing, Next: Output formatting, Prev: Charset selection, Up: Invoking ptx
Word selection
==============
`-b FILE'
`--break-file=FILE'
This option is an alternative way to option `-W' for describing
which characters make up words. This option introduces the name
of a file which contains a list of characters which can*not* be
part of one word, this file is called the "Break file". Any
character which is not part of the Break file is a word
constituent. If both options `-b' and `-W' are specified, then
`-W' has precedence and `-b' is ignored.
When GNU extensions are enabled, the only way to avoid newline as a
break character is to write all the break characters in the file
with no newline at all, not even at the end of the file. When GNU
extensions are disabled, spaces, tabs and newlines are always
considered as break characters even if not included in the Break
file.
`-i FILE'
`--ignore-file=FILE'
The file associated with this option contains a list of words
which will never be taken as keywords in concordance output. It
is called the "Ignore file". The file contains exactly one word
in each line; the end of line separation of words is not subject
to the value of the `-S' option.
There is a default Ignore file used by `ptx' when this option is
not specified, usually found in `/usr/local/lib/eign' if this has
not been changed at installation time. If you want to deactivate
the default Ignore file, specify `/dev/null' instead.
`-o FILE'
`--only-file=FILE'
The file associated with this option contains a list of words
which will be retained in concordance output, any word not
mentioned in this file is ignored. The file is called the "Only
file". The file contains exactly one word in each line; the end
of line separation of words is not subject to the value of the
`-S' option.
There is no default for the Only file. In the case there are both
an Only file and an Ignore file, a word will be subject to be a
keyword only if it is given in the Only file and not given in the
Ignore file.
`-r'
`--references'
On each input line, the leading sequence of non white characters
will be taken to be a reference that has the purpose of
identifying this input line on the produced permuted index. See
*Note Output formatting:: for more information about reference
production. Using this option change the default value for option
`-S'.
Using this option, the program does not try very hard to remove
references from contexts in output, but it succeeds in doing so
*when* the context ends exactly at the newline. If option `-r' is
used with `-S' default value, or when GNU extensions are disabled,
this condition is always met and references are completely
excluded from the output contexts.
`-S REGEXP'
`--sentence-regexp=REGEXP'
This option selects which regular expression will describe the end
of a line or the end of a sentence. In fact, there is other
distinction between end of lines or end of sentences than the
effect of this regular expression, and input line boundaries have
no special significance outside this option. By default, when GNU
extensions are enabled and if `-r' option is not used, end of
sentences are used. In this case, the precise REGEX is imported
from GNU emacs:
[.?!][]\"')}]*\\($\\|\t\\| \\)[ \t\n]*
Whenever GNU extensions are disabled or if `-r' option is used, end
of lines are used; in this case, the default REGEXP is just:
\n
Using an empty REGEXP is equivalent to completely disabling end of
line or end of sentence recognition. In this case, the whole file
is considered to be a single big line or sentence. The user might
want to disallow all truncation flag generation as well, through
option `-F ""'. *Note Syntax of Regular Expressions:
(emacs)Regexps.
When the keywords happen to be near the beginning of the input
line or sentence, this often creates an unused area at the
beginning of the output context line; when the keywords happen to
be near the end of the input line or sentence, this often creates
an unused area at the end of the output context line. The program
tries to fill those unused areas by wrapping around context in
them; the tail of the input line or sentence is used to fill the
unused area on the left of the output line; the head of the input
line or sentence is used to fill the unused area on the right of
the output line.
As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed
escape sequences, as found in the C language, are recognized and
converted to the corresponding characters by `ptx' itself.
`-W REGEXP'
`--word-regexp=REGEXP'
This option selects which regular expression will describe each
keyword. By default, if GNU extensions are enabled, a word is a
sequence of letters; the REGEXP used is `\w+'. When GNU
extensions are disabled, a word is by default anything which ends
with a space, a tab or a newline; the REGEXP used is `[^ \t\n]+'.
An empty REGEXP is equivalent to not using this option, letting the
default dive in. *Note Syntax of Regular Expressions:
(emacs)Regexps.
As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed
escape sequences, as found in the C language, are recognized and
converted to the corresponding characters by `ptx' itself.

File: ptx.info, Node: Output formatting, Prev: Input processing, Up: Invoking ptx
Output formatting
=================
Output format is mainly controlled by `-O' and `-T' options,
described in the table below. When neither `-O' nor `-T' is selected,
and if GNU extensions are enabled, the program choose an output format
suited for a dumb terminal. Each keyword occurrence is output to the
center of one line, surrounded by its left and right contexts. Each
field is properly justified, so the concordance output could readily be
observed. As a special feature, if automatic references are selected
by option `-A' and are output before the left context, that is, if
option `-R' is *not* selected, then a colon is added after the
reference; this nicely interfaces with GNU Emacs `next-error'
processing. In this default output format, each white space character,
like newline and tab, is merely changed to exactly one space, with no
special attempt to compress consecutive spaces. This might change in
the future. Except for those white space characters, every other
character of the underlying set of 256 characters is transmitted
verbatim.
Output format is further controlled by the following options.
`-g NUMBER'
`--gap-size=NUMBER'
Select the size of the minimum white gap between the fields on the
output line.
`-w NUMBER'
`--width=NUMBER'
Select the output maximum width of each final line. If references
are used, they are included or excluded from the output maximum
width depending on the value of option `-R'. If this option is not
selected, that is, when references are output before the left
context, the output maximum width takes into account the maximum
length of all references. If this options is selected, that is,
when references are output after the right context, the output
maximum width does not take into account the space taken by
references, nor the gap that precedes them.
`-A'
`--auto-reference'
Select automatic references. Each input line will have an
automatic reference made up of the file name and the line ordinal,
with a single colon between them. However, the file name will be
empty when standard input is being read. If both `-A' and `-r'
are selected, then the input reference is still read and skipped,
but the automatic reference is used at output time, overriding the
input reference.
`-R'
`--right-side-refs'
In default output format, when option `-R' is not used, any
reference produced by the effect of options `-r' or `-A' are given
to the far right of output lines, after the right context. In
default output format, when option `-R' is specified, references
are rather given to the beginning of each output line, before the
left context. For any other output format, option `-R' is almost
ignored, except for the fact that the width of references is *not*
taken into account in total output width given by `-w' whenever
`-R' is selected.
This option is automatically selected whenever GNU extensions are
disabled.
`-F STRING'
`--flac-truncation=STRING'
This option will request that any truncation in the output be
reported using the string STRING. Most output fields
theoretically extend towards the beginning or the end of the
current line, or current sentence, as selected with option `-S'.
But there is a maximum allowed output line width, changeable
through option `-w', which is further divided into space for
various output fields. When a field has to be truncated because
cannot extend until the beginning or the end of the current line
to fit in the, then a truncation occurs. By default, the string
used is a single slash, as in `-F /'.
STRING may have more than one character, as in `-F ...'. Also, in
the particular case STRING is empty (`-F ""'), truncation flagging
is disabled, and no truncation marks are appended in this case.
As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed
escape sequences, as found in the C language, are recognized and
converted to the corresponding characters by `ptx' itself.
`-M STRING'
`--macro-name=STRING'
Select another STRING to be used instead of `xx', while generating
output suitable for `nroff', `troff' or TeX.
`-O'
`--format=roff'
Choose an output format suitable for `nroff' or `troff'
processing. Each output line will look like:
.xx "TAIL" "BEFORE" "KEYWORD_AND_AFTER" "HEAD" "REF"
so it will be possible to write an `.xx' roff macro to take care of
the output typesetting. This is the default output format when GNU
extensions are disabled. Option `-M' might be used to change `xx'
to another macro name.
In this output format, each non-graphical character, like newline
and tab, is merely changed to exactly one space, with no special
attempt to compress consecutive spaces. Each quote character: `"'
is doubled so it will be correctly processed by `nroff' or `troff'.
`-T'
`--format=tex'
Choose an output format suitable for TeX processing. Each output
line will look like:
\xx {TAIL}{BEFORE}{KEYWORD}{AFTER}{HEAD}{REF}
so it will be possible to write write a `\xx' definition to take
care of the output typesetting. Note that when references are not
being produced, that is, neither option `-A' nor option `-r' is
selected, the last parameter of each `\xx' call is inhibited.
Option `-M' might be used to change `xx' to another macro name.
In this output format, some special characters, like `$', `%',
`&', `#' and `_' are automatically protected with a backslash.
Curly brackets `{', `}' are also protected with a backslash, but
also enclosed in a pair of dollar signs to force mathematical
mode. The backslash itself produces the sequence `\backslash{}'.
Circumflex and tilde diacritics produce the sequence `^\{ }' and
`~\{ }' respectively. Other diacriticized characters of the
underlying character set produce an appropriate TeX sequence as
far as possible. The other non-graphical characters, like newline
and tab, and all others characters which are not part of ASCII,
are merely changed to exactly one space, with no special attempt
to compress consecutive spaces. Let me know how to improve this
special character processing for TeX.

File: ptx.info, Node: Compatibility, Prev: Invoking ptx, Up: Top
The GNU extensions to `ptx'
***************************
This version of `ptx' contains a few features which do not exist in
System V `ptx'. These extra features are suppressed by using the `-G'
command line option, unless overridden by other command line options.
Some GNU extensions cannot be recovered by overriding, so the simple
rule is to avoid `-G' if you care about GNU extensions. Here are the
differences between this program and System V `ptx'.
* This program can read many input files at once, it always writes
the resulting concordance on standard output. On the other end,
System V `ptx' reads only one file and produce the result on
standard output or, if a second FILE parameter is given on the
command, to that FILE.
Having output parameters not introduced by options is a quite
dangerous practice which GNU avoids as far as possible. So, for
using `ptx' portably between GNU and System V, you should pay
attention to always use it with a single input file, and always
expect the result on standard output. You might also want to
automatically configure in a `-G' option to `ptx' calls in
products using `ptx', if the configurator finds that the installed
`ptx' accepts `-G'.
* The only options available in System V `ptx' are options `-b',
`-f', `-g', `-i', `-o', `-r', `-t' and `-w'. All other options
are GNU extensions and are not repeated in this enumeration.
Moreover, some options have a slightly different meaning when GNU
extensions are enabled, as explained below.
* By default, concordance output is not formatted for `troff' or
`nroff'. It is rather formatted for a dumb terminal. `troff' or
`nroff' output may still be selected through option `-O'.
* Unless `-R' option is used, the maximum reference width is
subtracted from the total output line width. With GNU extensions
disabled, width of references is not taken into account in the
output line width computations.
* All 256 characters, even `NUL's, are always read and processed from
input file with no adverse effect, even if GNU extensions are
disabled. However, System V `ptx' does not accept 8-bit
characters, a few control characters are rejected, and the tilda
`~' is condemned.
* Input line length is only limited by available memory, even if GNU
extensions are disabled. However, System V `ptx' processes only
the first 200 characters in each line.
* The break (non-word) characters default to be every character
except all letters of the underlying character set, diacriticized
or not. When GNU extensions are disabled, the break characters
default to space, tab and newline only.
* The program makes better use of output line width. If GNU
extensions are disabled, the program rather tries to imitate
System V `ptx', but still, there are some slight disposition
glitches this program does not completely reproduce.
* The user can specify both an Ignore file and an Only file. This
is not allowed with System V `ptx'.

Tag Table:
Node: Top939
Node: Invoking ptx2298
Node: General options5025
Node: Charset selection5639
Node: Input processing6514
Node: Output formatting12205
Node: Compatibility18737

End Tag Table

554
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@ -0,0 +1,554 @@
\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
@c %**start of header
@setfilename ptx.info
@settitle GNU @code{ptx} reference manual
@finalout
@c %**end of header
@ifinfo
This file documents the @code{ptx} command, which has the purpose of
generated permuted indices for group of files.
Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1993 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
are preserved on all copies.
@ignore
Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
@end ignore
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
by the Foundation.
@end ifinfo
@titlepage
@title ptx
@subtitle The GNU permuted indexer
@subtitle Edition 0.3, for ptx version 0.3
@subtitle November 1993
@author by Francois Pinard
@page
@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
Copyright @copyright{} 1990, 1991, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
are preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
by the Foundation.
@end titlepage
@node Top, Invoking ptx, (dir), (dir)
@chapter Introduction
This is the 0.3 beta release of @code{ptx}, the GNU version of a
permuted index generator. This software has the main goal of providing
a replacement for the traditional @code{ptx} as found on System V
machines, able to handle small files quickly, while providing a platform
for more development.
This version reimplements and extends traditional @code{ptx}. Among
other things, it can produce a readable @dfn{KWIC} (keywords in their
context) without the need of @code{nroff}, there is also an option to
produce @TeX{} compatible output. This version does not handle huge
input files, that is, those files which do not fit in memory all at
once.
@emph{Please note} that an overall renaming of all options is
foreseeable. In fact, GNU ptx specifications are not frozen yet.
@menu
* Invoking ptx:: How to use this program
* Compatibility:: The GNU extensions to @code{ptx}
--- The Detailed Node Listing ---
How to use this program
* General options:: Options which affect general program behaviour.
* Charset selection:: Underlying character set considerations.
* Input processing:: Input fields, contexts, and keyword selection.
* Output formatting:: Types of output format, and sizing the fields.
@end menu
@node Invoking ptx, Compatibility, Top, Top
@chapter How to use this program
This tool reads a text file and essentially produces a permuted index, with
each keyword in its context. The calling sketch is one of:
@example
ptx [@var{option} @dots{}] [@var{file} @dots{}]
@end example
or:
@example
ptx -G [@var{option} @dots{}] [@var{input} [@var{output}]]
@end example
The @samp{-G} (or its equivalent: @samp{--traditional}) option disables
all GNU extensions and revert to traditional mode, thus introducing some
limitations, and changes several of the program's default option values.
When @samp{-G} is not specified, GNU extensions are always enabled. GNU
extensions to @code{ptx} are documented wherever appropriate in this
document. See @xref{Compatibility} for an explicit list of them.
Individual options are explained later in this document.
When GNU extensions are enabled, there may be zero, one or several
@var{file} after the options. If there is no @var{file}, the program
reads the standard input. If there is one or several @var{file}, they
give the name of input files which are all read in turn, as if all the
input files were concatenated. However, there is a full contextual
break between each file and, when automatic referencing is requested,
file names and line numbers refer to individual text input files. In
all cases, the program produces the permuted index onto the standard
output.
When GNU extensions are @emph{not} enabled, that is, when the program
operates in traditional mode, there may be zero, one or two parameters
besides the options. If there is no parameters, the program reads the
standard input and produces the permuted index onto the standard output.
If there is only one parameter, it names the text @var{input} to be read
instead of the standard input. If two parameters are given, they give
respectively the name of the @var{input} file to read and the name of
the @var{output} file to produce. @emph{Be very careful} to note that,
in this case, the contents of file given by the second parameter is
destroyed. This behaviour is dictated only by System V @code{ptx}
compatibility, because GNU Standards discourage output parameters not
introduced by an option.
Note that for @emph{any} file named as the value of an option or as an
input text file, a single dash @kbd{-} may be used, in which case
standard input is assumed. However, it would not make sense to use this
convention more than once per program invocation.
@menu
* General options:: Options which affect general program behaviour.
* Charset selection:: Underlying character set considerations.
* Input processing:: Input fields, contexts, and keyword selection.
* Output formatting:: Types of output format, and sizing the fields.
@end menu
@node General options, Charset selection, Invoking ptx, Invoking ptx
@section General options
@table @code
@item -C
@itemx --copyright
Prints a short note about the Copyright and copying conditions, then
exit without further processing.
@item -G
@itemx --traditional
As already explained, this option disables all GNU extensions to
@code{ptx} and switch to traditional mode.
@item --help
Prints a short help on standard output, then exit without further
processing.
@item --version
Prints the program verison on standard output, then exit without further
processing.
@end table
@node Charset selection, Input processing, General options, Invoking ptx
@section Charset selection
As it is setup now, the program assumes that the input file is coded
using 8-bit ISO 8859-1 code, also known as Latin-1 character set,
@emph{unless} if it is compiled for MS-DOS, in which case it uses the
character set of the IBM-PC. (GNU @code{ptx} is not known to work on
smaller MS-DOS machines anymore.) Compared to 7-bit ASCII, the set of
characters which are letters is then different, this fact alters the
behaviour of regular expression matching. Thus, the default regular
expression for a keyword allows foreign or diacriticized letters.
Keyword sorting, however, is still crude; it obeys the underlying
character set ordering quite blindly.
@table @code
@item -f
@itemx --ignore-case
Fold lower case letters to upper case for sorting.
@end table
@node Input processing, Output formatting, Charset selection, Invoking ptx
@section Word selection
@table @code
@item -b @var{file}
@item --break-file=@var{file}
This option is an alternative way to option @code{-W} for describing
which characters make up words. This option introduces the name of a
file which contains a list of characters which can@emph{not} be part of
one word, this file is called the @dfn{Break file}. Any character which
is not part of the Break file is a word constituent. If both options
@code{-b} and @code{-W} are specified, then @code{-W} has precedence and
@code{-b} is ignored.
When GNU extensions are enabled, the only way to avoid newline as a
break character is to write all the break characters in the file with no
newline at all, not even at the end of the file. When GNU extensions
are disabled, spaces, tabs and newlines are always considered as break
characters even if not included in the Break file.
@item -i @var{file}
@itemx --ignore-file=@var{file}
The file associated with this option contains a list of words which will
never be taken as keywords in concordance output. It is called the
@dfn{Ignore file}. The file contains exactly one word in each line; the
end of line separation of words is not subject to the value of the
@code{-S} option.
There is a default Ignore file used by @code{ptx} when this option is
not specified, usually found in @file{/usr/local/lib/eign} if this has
not been changed at installation time. If you want to deactivate the
default Ignore file, specify @code{/dev/null} instead.
@item -o @var{file}
@itemx --only-file=@var{file}
The file associated with this option contains a list of words which will
be retained in concordance output, any word not mentioned in this file
is ignored. The file is called the @dfn{Only file}. The file contains
exactly one word in each line; the end of line separation of words is
not subject to the value of the @code{-S} option.
There is no default for the Only file. In the case there are both an
Only file and an Ignore file, a word will be subject to be a keyword
only if it is given in the Only file and not given in the Ignore file.
@item -r
@itemx --references
On each input line, the leading sequence of non white characters will be
taken to be a reference that has the purpose of identifying this input
line on the produced permuted index. See @xref{Output formatting} for
more information about reference production. Using this option change
the default value for option @code{-S}.
Using this option, the program does not try very hard to remove
references from contexts in output, but it succeeds in doing so
@emph{when} the context ends exactly at the newline. If option
@code{-r} is used with @code{-S} default value, or when GNU extensions
are disabled, this condition is always met and references are completely
excluded from the output contexts.
@item -S @var{regexp}
@itemx --sentence-regexp=@var{regexp}
This option selects which regular expression will describe the end of a
line or the end of a sentence. In fact, there is other distinction
between end of lines or end of sentences than the effect of this regular
expression, and input line boundaries have no special significance
outside this option. By default, when GNU extensions are enabled and if
@code{-r} option is not used, end of sentences are used. In this
case, the precise @var{regex} is imported from GNU emacs:
@example
[.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\|\t\\| \\)[ \t\n]*
@end example
Whenever GNU extensions are disabled or if @code{-r} option is used, end
of lines are used; in this case, the default @var{regexp} is just:
@example
\n
@end example
Using an empty REGEXP is equivalent to completely disabling end of line or end
of sentence recognition. In this case, the whole file is considered to
be a single big line or sentence. The user might want to disallow all
truncation flag generation as well, through option @code{-F ""}.
@xref{Regexps, , Syntax of Regular Expressions, emacs, The GNU Emacs
Manual}.
When the keywords happen to be near the beginning of the input line or
sentence, this often creates an unused area at the beginning of the
output context line; when the keywords happen to be near the end of the
input line or sentence, this often creates an unused area at the end of
the output context line. The program tries to fill those unused areas
by wrapping around context in them; the tail of the input line or
sentence is used to fill the unused area on the left of the output line;
the head of the input line or sentence is used to fill the unused area
on the right of the output line.
As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed escape
sequences, as found in the C language, are recognized and converted to
the corresponding characters by @code{ptx} itself.
@item -W @var{regexp}
@itemx --word-regexp=@var{regexp}
This option selects which regular expression will describe each keyword.
By default, if GNU extensions are enabled, a word is a sequence of
letters; the @var{regexp} used is @code{\w+}. When GNU extensions are
disabled, a word is by default anything which ends with a space, a tab
or a newline; the @var{regexp} used is @code{[^ \t\n]+}.
An empty REGEXP is equivalent to not using this option, letting the
default dive in. @xref{Regexps, , Syntax of Regular Expressions, emacs,
The GNU Emacs Manual}.
As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed escape
sequences, as found in the C language, are recognized and converted to
the corresponding characters by @code{ptx} itself.
@end table
@node Output formatting, , Input processing, Invoking ptx
@section Output formatting
Output format is mainly controlled by @code{-O} and @code{-T} options,
described in the table below. When neither @code{-O} nor @code{-T} is
selected, and if GNU extensions are enabled, the program choose an
output format suited for a dumb terminal. Each keyword occurrence is
output to the center of one line, surrounded by its left and right
contexts. Each field is properly justified, so the concordance output
could readily be observed. As a special feature, if automatic
references are selected by option @code{-A} and are output before the
left context, that is, if option @code{-R} is @emph{not} selected, then
a colon is added after the reference; this nicely interfaces with GNU
Emacs @code{next-error} processing. In this default output format, each
white space character, like newline and tab, is merely changed to
exactly one space, with no special attempt to compress consecutive
spaces. This might change in the future. Except for those white space
characters, every other character of the underlying set of 256
characters is transmitted verbatim.
Output format is further controlled by the following options.
@table @code
@item -g @var{number}
@itemx --gap-size=@var{number}
Select the size of the minimum white gap between the fields on the output
line.
@item -w @var{number}
@itemx --width=@var{number}
Select the output maximum width of each final line. If references are
used, they are included or excluded from the output maximum width
depending on the value of option @code{-R}. If this option is not
selected, that is, when references are output before the left context,
the output maximum width takes into account the maximum length of all
references. If this options is selected, that is, when references are
output after the right context, the output maximum width does not take
into account the space taken by references, nor the gap that precedes
them.
@item -A
@itemx --auto-reference
Select automatic references. Each input line will have an automatic
reference made up of the file name and the line ordinal, with a single
colon between them. However, the file name will be empty when standard
input is being read. If both @code{-A} and @code{-r} are selected, then
the input reference is still read and skipped, but the automatic
reference is used at output time, overriding the input reference.
@item -R
@itemx --right-side-refs
In default output format, when option @code{-R} is not used, any
reference produced by the effect of options @code{-r} or @code{-A} are
given to the far right of output lines, after the right context. In
default output format, when option @code{-R} is specified, references
are rather given to the beginning of each output line, before the left
context. For any other output format, option @code{-R} is almost
ignored, except for the fact that the width of references is @emph{not}
taken into account in total output width given by @code{-w} whenever
@code{-R} is selected.
This option is automatically selected whenever GNU extensions are
disabled.
@item -F @var{string}
@itemx --flac-truncation=@var{string}
This option will request that any truncation in the output be reported
using the string @var{string}. Most output fields theoretically extend
towards the beginning or the end of the current line, or current
sentence, as selected with option @code{-S}. But there is a maximum
allowed output line width, changeable through option @code{-w}, which is
further divided into space for various output fields. When a field has
to be truncated because cannot extend until the beginning or the end of
the current line to fit in the, then a truncation occurs. By default,
the string used is a single slash, as in @code{-F /}.
@var{string} may have more than one character, as in @code{-F ...}.
Also, in the particular case @var{string} is empty (@code{-F ""}),
truncation flagging is disabled, and no truncation marks are appended in
this case.
As a matter of convenience to the user, many usual backslashed escape
sequences, as found in the C language, are recognized and converted to
the corresponding characters by @code{ptx} itself.
@item -M @var{string}
@itemx --macro-name=@var{string}
Select another @var{string} to be used instead of @samp{xx}, while
generating output suitable for @code{nroff}, @code{troff} or @TeX{}.
@item -O
@itemx --format=roff
Choose an output format suitable for @code{nroff} or @code{troff}
processing. Each output line will look like:
@example
.xx "@var{tail}" "@var{before}" "@var{keyword_and_after}" "@var{head}" "@var{ref}"
@end example
so it will be possible to write an @samp{.xx} roff macro to take care of
the output typesetting. This is the default output format when GNU
extensions are disabled. Option @samp{-M} might be used to change
@samp{xx} to another macro name.
In this output format, each non-graphical character, like newline and
tab, is merely changed to exactly one space, with no special attempt to
compress consecutive spaces. Each quote character: @kbd{"} is doubled
so it will be correctly processed by @code{nroff} or @code{troff}.
@item -T
@itemx --format=tex
Choose an output format suitable for @TeX{} processing. Each output
line will look like:
@example
\xx @{@var{tail}@}@{@var{before}@}@{@var{keyword}@}@{@var{after}@}@{@var{head}@}@{@var{ref}@}
@end example
@noindent
so it will be possible to write write a @code{\xx} definition to take
care of the output typesetting. Note that when references are not being
produced, that is, neither option @code{-A} nor option @code{-r} is
selected, the last parameter of each @code{\xx} call is inhibited.
Option @samp{-M} might be used to change @samp{xx} to another macro
name.
In this output format, some special characters, like @kbd{$}, @kbd{%},
@kbd{&}, @kbd{#} and @kbd{_} are automatically protected with a
backslash. Curly brackets @kbd{@{}, @kbd{@}} are also protected with a
backslash, but also enclosed in a pair of dollar signs to force
mathematical mode. The backslash itself produces the sequence
@code{\backslash@{@}}. Circumflex and tilde diacritics produce the
sequence @code{^\@{ @}} and @code{~\@{ @}} respectively. Other
diacriticized characters of the underlying character set produce an
appropriate @TeX{} sequence as far as possible. The other non-graphical
characters, like newline and tab, and all others characters which are
not part of ASCII, are merely changed to exactly one space, with no
special attempt to compress consecutive spaces. Let me know how to
improve this special character processing for @TeX{}.
@end table
@node Compatibility, , Invoking ptx, Top
@chapter The GNU extensions to @code{ptx}
This version of @code{ptx} contains a few features which do not exist in
System V @code{ptx}. These extra features are suppressed by using the
@samp{-G} command line option, unless overridden by other command line
options. Some GNU extensions cannot be recovered by overriding, so the
simple rule is to avoid @samp{-G} if you care about GNU extensions.
Here are the differences between this program and System V @code{ptx}.
@itemize @bullet
@item
This program can read many input files at once, it always writes the
resulting concordance on standard output. On the other end, System V
@code{ptx} reads only one file and produce the result on standard output
or, if a second @var{file} parameter is given on the command, to that
@var{file}.
Having output parameters not introduced by options is a quite dangerous
practice which GNU avoids as far as possible. So, for using @code{ptx}
portably between GNU and System V, you should pay attention to always
use it with a single input file, and always expect the result on
standard output. You might also want to automatically configure in a
@samp{-G} option to @code{ptx} calls in products using @code{ptx}, if
the configurator finds that the installed @code{ptx} accepts @samp{-G}.
@item
The only options available in System V @code{ptx} are options @samp{-b},
@samp{-f}, @samp{-g}, @samp{-i}, @samp{-o}, @samp{-r}, @samp{-t} and
@samp{-w}. All other options are GNU extensions and are not repeated in
this enumeration. Moreover, some options have a slightly different
meaning when GNU extensions are enabled, as explained below.
@item
By default, concordance output is not formatted for @code{troff} or
@code{nroff}. It is rather formatted for a dumb terminal. @code{troff}
or @code{nroff} output may still be selected through option @code{-O}.
@item
Unless @code{-R} option is used, the maximum reference width is
subtracted from the total output line width. With GNU extensions
disabled, width of references is not taken into account in the output
line width computations.
@item
All 256 characters, even @kbd{NUL}s, are always read and processed from
input file with no adverse effect, even if GNU extensions are disabled.
However, System V @code{ptx} does not accept 8-bit characters, a few
control characters are rejected, and the tilda @kbd{~} is condemned.
@item
Input line length is only limited by available memory, even if GNU
extensions are disabled. However, System V @code{ptx} processes only
the first 200 characters in each line.
@item
The break (non-word) characters default to be every character except all
letters of the underlying character set, diacriticized or not. When GNU
extensions are disabled, the break characters default to space, tab and
newline only.
@item
The program makes better use of output line width. If GNU extensions
are disabled, the program rather tries to imitate System V @code{ptx},
but still, there are some slight disposition glitches this program does
not completely reproduce.
@item
The user can specify both an Ignore file and an Only file. This is not
allowed with System V @code{ptx}.
@end itemize
@bye

88
gnu/usr.bin/ptx/xmalloc.c Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,88 @@
/* xmalloc.c -- malloc with out of memory checking
Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#if defined (CONFIG_BROKETS)
/* We use <config.h> instead of "config.h" so that a compilation
using -I. -I$srcdir will use ./config.h rather than $srcdir/config.h
(which it would do because it found this file in $srcdir). */
#include <config.h>
#else
#include "config.h"
#endif
#endif
#if __STDC__
#define VOID void
#else
#define VOID char
#endif
#include <sys/types.h>
#if STDC_HEADERS
#include <stdlib.h>
#else
VOID *malloc ();
VOID *realloc ();
void free ();
#endif
#if __STDC__ && defined (HAVE_VPRINTF)
void error (int, int, char const *, ...);
#else
void error ();
#endif
/* Allocate N bytes of memory dynamically, with error checking. */
VOID *
xmalloc (n)
size_t n;
{
VOID *p;
p = malloc (n);
if (p == 0)
/* Must exit with 2 for `cmp'. */
error (2, 0, "virtual memory exhausted");
return p;
}
/* Change the size of an allocated block of memory P to N bytes,
with error checking.
If P is NULL, run xmalloc.
If N is 0, run free and return NULL. */
VOID *
xrealloc (p, n)
VOID *p;
size_t n;
{
if (p == 0)
return xmalloc (n);
if (n == 0)
{
free (p);
return 0;
}
p = realloc (p, n);
if (p == 0)
/* Must exit with 2 for `cmp'. */
error (2, 0, "virtual memory exhausted");
return p;
}