freebsd-skq/contrib/nvi/ex/ex_bang.c
Peter Wemm f0957ccae4 Update nvi-1.79 to 2.1.1-4334a8297f
This is the gsoc-2011 project to clean up and backport multibyte support
from other nvi forks in a form we can use.

USE_WIDECHAR is on unless building for the rescue crunchgen. This should
allow editing in the native locale encoding.

USE_ICONV depends on make.conf having 'WITH_ICONV=YES' for now.  This
adds the ability to do things like edit a KOI8-R file while having $LANG
set to (say) en_US.UTF-8.  iconv is used to transcode the characters for
display.

Other points:
* It uses gencat and catopen/etc instead of homegrown msg catalog stuff.
* A lot of stuff has been trimmed out, eg: the perl and tcl bindings which
  we could never use in base anyway.
* It uses ncursesw when in widechar mode.  This could be interesting.

GSoC info: http://www.google-melange.com/gsoc/proposal/review/google/gsoc2011/zy/1
Repo at: https://github.com/lichray/nvi2

Obtained from:  Zhihao Yuan <lichray@gmail.com>
2013-08-11 20:03:12 +00:00

188 lines
5.3 KiB
C

/*-
* Copyright (c) 1992, 1993, 1994
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996
* Keith Bostic. All rights reserved.
*
* See the LICENSE file for redistribution information.
*/
#include "config.h"
#ifndef lint
static const char sccsid[] = "$Id: ex_bang.c,v 10.36 2001/06/25 15:19:14 skimo Exp $";
#endif /* not lint */
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/queue.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <bitstring.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include "../common/common.h"
#include "../vi/vi.h"
/*
* ex_bang -- :[line [,line]] ! command
*
* Pass the rest of the line after the ! character to the program named by
* the O_SHELL option.
*
* Historical vi did NOT do shell expansion on the arguments before passing
* them, only file name expansion. This means that the O_SHELL program got
* "$t" as an argument if that is what the user entered. Also, there's a
* special expansion done for the bang command. Any exclamation points in
* the user's argument are replaced by the last, expanded ! command.
*
* There's some fairly amazing slop in this routine to make the different
* ways of getting here display the right things. It took a long time to
* get it right (wrong?), so be careful.
*
* PUBLIC: int ex_bang __P((SCR *, EXCMD *));
*/
int
ex_bang(SCR *sp, EXCMD *cmdp)
{
enum filtertype ftype;
ARGS *ap;
EX_PRIVATE *exp;
MARK rm;
recno_t lno;
int rval;
const char *msg;
char *np;
size_t nlen;
ap = cmdp->argv[0];
if (ap->len == 0) {
ex_emsg(sp, cmdp->cmd->usage, EXM_USAGE);
return (1);
}
/* Set the "last bang command" remembered value. */
exp = EXP(sp);
if (exp->lastbcomm != NULL)
free(exp->lastbcomm);
if ((exp->lastbcomm = v_wstrdup(sp, ap->bp, ap->len)) == NULL) {
msgq(sp, M_SYSERR, NULL);
return (1);
}
/*
* If the command was modified by the expansion, it was historically
* redisplayed.
*/
if (F_ISSET(cmdp, E_MODIFY) && !F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_SILENT)) {
/*
* Display the command if modified. Historic ex/vi displayed
* the command if it was modified due to file name and/or bang
* expansion. If piping lines in vi, it would be immediately
* overwritten by any error or line change reporting.
*/
if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_VI))
vs_update(sp, "!", ap->bp);
else {
(void)ex_printf(sp, "!"WS"\n", ap->bp);
(void)ex_fflush(sp);
}
}
/*
* If no addresses were specified, run the command. If there's an
* underlying file, it's been modified and autowrite is set, write
* the file back. If the file has been modified, autowrite is not
* set and the warn option is set, tell the user about the file.
*/
if (cmdp->addrcnt == 0) {
msg = NULL;
if (sp->ep != NULL && F_ISSET(sp->ep, F_MODIFIED))
if (O_ISSET(sp, O_AUTOWRITE)) {
if (file_aw(sp, FS_ALL))
return (0);
} else if (O_ISSET(sp, O_WARN) &&
!F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_SILENT))
msg = msg_cat(sp,
"303|File modified since last write.",
NULL);
/* If we're still in a vi screen, move out explicitly. */
INT2CHAR(sp, ap->bp, ap->len+1, np, nlen);
(void)ex_exec_proc(sp,
cmdp, np, msg, !F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX | SC_SCR_EXWROTE));
}
/*
* If addresses were specified, pipe lines from the file through the
* command.
*
* Historically, vi lines were replaced by both the stdout and stderr
* lines of the command, but ex lines by only the stdout lines. This
* makes no sense to me, so nvi makes it consistent for both, and
* matches vi's historic behavior.
*/
else {
NEEDFILE(sp, cmdp);
/* Autoprint is set historically, even if the command fails. */
F_SET(cmdp, E_AUTOPRINT);
/*
* !!!
* Historical vi permitted "!!" in an empty file. When this
* happens, we arrive here with two addresses of 1,1 and a
* bad attitude. The simple solution is to turn it into a
* FILTER_READ operation, with the exception that stdin isn't
* opened for the utility, and the cursor position isn't the
* same. The only historic glitch (I think) is that we don't
* put an empty line into the default cut buffer, as historic
* vi did. Imagine, if you can, my disappointment.
*/
ftype = FILTER_BANG;
if (cmdp->addr1.lno == 1 && cmdp->addr2.lno == 1) {
if (db_last(sp, &lno))
return (1);
if (lno == 0) {
cmdp->addr1.lno = cmdp->addr2.lno = 0;
ftype = FILTER_RBANG;
}
}
rval = ex_filter(sp, cmdp,
&cmdp->addr1, &cmdp->addr2, &rm, ap->bp, ftype);
/*
* If in vi mode, move to the first nonblank.
*
* !!!
* Historic vi wasn't consistent in this area -- if you used
* a forward motion it moved to the first nonblank, but if you
* did a backward motion it didn't. And, if you followed a
* backward motion with a forward motion, it wouldn't move to
* the nonblank for either. Going to the nonblank generally
* seems more useful and consistent, so we do it.
*/
sp->lno = rm.lno;
if (F_ISSET(sp, SC_VI)) {
sp->cno = 0;
(void)nonblank(sp, sp->lno, &sp->cno);
} else
sp->cno = rm.cno;
}
/* Ex terminates with a bang, even if the command fails. */
if (!F_ISSET(sp, SC_VI) && !F_ISSET(sp, SC_EX_SILENT))
(void)ex_puts(sp, "!\n");
/*
* XXX
* The ! commands never return an error, so that autoprint always
* happens in the ex parser.
*/
return (0);
}