freebsd-skq/contrib/file/names.h

189 lines
6.1 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (c) Ian F. Darwin 1986-1995.
* Software written by Ian F. Darwin and others;
* maintained 1995-present by Christos Zoulas and others.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice immediately at the beginning of the file, without modification,
* this list of conditions, and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR
* ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
/*
* Names.h - names and types used by ascmagic in file(1).
* These tokens are here because they can appear anywhere in
* the first HOWMANY bytes, while tokens in MAGIC must
* appear at fixed offsets into the file. Don't make HOWMANY
* too high unless you have a very fast CPU.
*
* $File: names.h,v 1.27 2007/05/08 16:47:03 christos Exp $
*/
/*
modified by Chris Lowth - 9 April 2000
to add mime type strings to the types table.
*/
/* these types are used to index the table 'types': keep em in sync! */
#define L_C 0 /* first and foremost on UNIX */
#define L_CC 1 /* Bjarne's postincrement */
#define L_FORT 2 /* the oldest one */
#define L_MAKE 3 /* Makefiles */
#define L_PLI 4 /* PL/1 */
#define L_MACH 5 /* some kinda assembler */
#define L_ENG 6 /* English */
#define L_PAS 7 /* Pascal */
#define L_MAIL 8 /* Electronic mail */
#define L_NEWS 9 /* Usenet Netnews */
#define L_JAVA 10 /* Java code */
#define L_HTML 11 /* HTML */
#define L_BCPL 12 /* BCPL */
#define L_M4 13 /* M4 */
#define L_PO 14 /* PO */
static const struct {
const char *human;
const char *mime;
} types[] = {
{ "C program", "text/x-c", },
{ "C++ program", "text/x-c++" },
{ "FORTRAN program", "text/x-fortran" },
{ "make commands", "text/x-makefile" },
{ "PL/1 program", "text/x-pl1" },
{ "assembler program", "text/x-asm" },
{ "English", "text/plain" },
{ "Pascal program", "text/x-pascal" },
{ "mail", "text/x-mail" },
{ "news", "text/x-news" },
{ "Java program", "text/x-java" },
{ "HTML document", "text/html", },
{ "BCPL program", "text/x-bcpl" },
{ "M4 macro language pre-processor", "text/x-m4" },
{ "PO (gettext message catalogue)", "text/x-po" },
{ "cannot happen error on names.h/types", "error/x-error" },
{ 0, 0}
};
/*
* XXX - how should we distinguish Java from C++?
* The trick used in a Debian snapshot, of having "extends" or "implements"
* as tags for Java, doesn't work very well, given that those keywords
* are often preceded by "class", which flags it as C++.
*
* Perhaps we need to be able to say
*
* If "class" then
*
* if "extends" or "implements" then
* Java
* else
* C++
* endif
*
* Or should we use other keywords, such as "package" or "import"?
* Unfortunately, Ada95 uses "package", and Modula-3 uses "import",
* although I infer from the language spec at
*
* http://www.research.digital.com/SRC/m3defn/html/m3.html
*
* that Modula-3 uses "IMPORT" rather than "import", i.e. it must be
* in all caps.
*
* So, for now, we go with "import". We must put it before the C++
* stuff, so that we don't misidentify Java as C++. Not using "package"
* means we won't identify stuff that defines a package but imports
* nothing; hopefully, very little Java code imports nothing (one of the
* reasons for doing OO programming is to import as much as possible
* and write only what you need to, right?).
*
* Unfortunately, "import" may cause us to misidentify English text
* as Java, as it comes after "the" and "The". Perhaps we need a fancier
* heuristic to identify Java?
*/
static struct names {
const char *name;
short type;
} names[] = {
/* These must be sorted by eye for optimal hit rate */
/* Add to this list only after substantial meditation */
{"msgid", L_PO},
{"dnl", L_M4},
{"import", L_JAVA},
{"\"libhdr\"", L_BCPL},
{"\"LIBHDR\"", L_BCPL},
{"//", L_CC},
{"template", L_CC},
{"virtual", L_CC},
{"class", L_CC},
{"public:", L_CC},
{"private:", L_CC},
{"/*", L_C}, /* must precede "The", "the", etc. */
{"#include", L_C},
{"char", L_C},
{"The", L_ENG},
{"the", L_ENG},
{"double", L_C},
{"extern", L_C},
{"float", L_C},
{"struct", L_C},
{"union", L_C},
{"CFLAGS", L_MAKE},
{"LDFLAGS", L_MAKE},
{"all:", L_MAKE},
{".PRECIOUS", L_MAKE},
/* Too many files of text have these words in them. Find another way
* to recognize Fortrash.
*/
#ifdef NOTDEF
{"subroutine", L_FORT},
{"function", L_FORT},
{"block", L_FORT},
{"common", L_FORT},
{"dimension", L_FORT},
{"integer", L_FORT},
{"data", L_FORT},
#endif /*NOTDEF*/
{".ascii", L_MACH},
{".asciiz", L_MACH},
{".byte", L_MACH},
{".even", L_MACH},
{".globl", L_MACH},
{".text", L_MACH},
{"clr", L_MACH},
{"(input,", L_PAS},
{"program", L_PAS},
{"record", L_PAS},
{"dcl", L_PLI},
{"Received:", L_MAIL},
{">From", L_MAIL},
{"Return-Path:",L_MAIL},
{"Cc:", L_MAIL},
{"Newsgroups:", L_NEWS},
{"Path:", L_NEWS},
{"Organization:",L_NEWS},
{"href=", L_HTML},
{"HREF=", L_HTML},
{"<body", L_HTML},
{"<BODY", L_HTML},
{"<html", L_HTML},
{"<HTML", L_HTML},
{NULL, 0}
};
#define NNAMES ((sizeof(names)/sizeof(struct names)) - 1)