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1 /* Parameters and display hooks for terminal devices.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1985-1986, 1993-1994, 2001-2015 Free Software Foundation,
4 Inc.
5
6 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
7
8 GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
11 (at your option) any later version.
12
13 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 GNU General Public License for more details.
17
18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
20
21 #ifndef EMACS_TERMHOOKS_H
22 #define EMACS_TERMHOOKS_H
23
24 /* Miscellanea. */
25
26 #include "systime.h" /* for Time */
27
28 INLINE_HEADER_BEGIN
29
30 enum scroll_bar_part {
31 scroll_bar_nowhere,
32 scroll_bar_above_handle,
33 scroll_bar_handle,
34 scroll_bar_below_handle,
35 scroll_bar_up_arrow,
36 scroll_bar_down_arrow,
37 scroll_bar_to_top,
38 scroll_bar_to_bottom,
39 scroll_bar_end_scroll,
40 scroll_bar_move_ratio,
41 scroll_bar_before_handle,
42 scroll_bar_horizontal_handle,
43 scroll_bar_after_handle,
44 scroll_bar_left_arrow,
45 scroll_bar_right_arrow,
46 scroll_bar_to_leftmost,
47 scroll_bar_to_rightmost
48 };
49
50 /* Output method of a terminal (and frames on this terminal, respectively). */
51
52 enum output_method
53 {
54 output_initial,
55 output_termcap,
56 output_x_window,
57 output_msdos_raw,
58 output_w32,
59 output_ns
60 };
61
62 /* Input queue declarations and hooks. */
63
64 enum event_kind
65 {
66 NO_EVENT, /* nothing happened. This should never
67 actually appear in the event queue. */
68
69 ASCII_KEYSTROKE_EVENT, /* The ASCII code is in .code, perhaps
70 with modifiers applied.
71 .modifiers holds the state of the
72 modifier keys.
73 .frame_or_window is the frame in
74 which the key was typed.
75 .timestamp gives a timestamp (in
76 milliseconds) for the keystroke. */
77 MULTIBYTE_CHAR_KEYSTROKE_EVENT, /* The multibyte char code is in .code,
78 perhaps with modifiers applied.
79 The others are the same as
80 ASCII_KEYSTROKE_EVENT. */
81 NON_ASCII_KEYSTROKE_EVENT, /* .code is a number identifying the
82 function key. A code N represents
83 a key whose name is
84 function_key_names[N]; function_key_names
85 is a table in keyboard.c to which you
86 should feel free to add missing keys.
87 .modifiers holds the state of the
88 modifier keys.
89 .frame_or_window is the frame in
90 which the key was typed.
91 .timestamp gives a timestamp (in
92 milliseconds) for the keystroke. */
93 TIMER_EVENT, /* A timer fired. */
94 MOUSE_CLICK_EVENT, /* The button number is in .code; it must
95 be >= 0 and < NUM_MOUSE_BUTTONS, defined
96 below.
97 .modifiers holds the state of the
98 modifier keys.
99 .x and .y give the mouse position,
100 in characters, within the window.
101 .frame_or_window gives the frame
102 the mouse click occurred in.
103 .timestamp gives a timestamp (in
104 milliseconds) for the click. */
105 WHEEL_EVENT, /* A wheel event is generated by a
106 wheel on a mouse (e.g., MS
107 Intellimouse).
108 .modifiers holds the rotate
109 direction (up or down), and the
110 state of the modifier keys.
111 .x and .y give the mouse position,
112 in characters, within the window.
113 .frame_or_window gives the frame
114 the wheel event occurred in.
115 .timestamp gives a timestamp (in
116 milliseconds) for the event. */
117 HORIZ_WHEEL_EVENT, /* A wheel event generated by a second
118 horizontal wheel that is present on some
119 mice. See WHEEL_EVENT. */
120 #ifdef HAVE_NTGUI
121 LANGUAGE_CHANGE_EVENT, /* A LANGUAGE_CHANGE_EVENT is
122 generated when HAVE_NTGUI or on Mac OS
123 when the keyboard layout or input
124 language is changed by the
125 user. */
126 #endif
127 SCROLL_BAR_CLICK_EVENT, /* .code gives the number of the mouse button
128 that was clicked.
129 .modifiers holds the state of the modifier
130 keys.
131 .part is a lisp symbol indicating which
132 part of the scroll bar got clicked.
133 .x gives the distance from the start of the
134 scroll bar of the click; .y gives the total
135 length of the scroll bar.
136 .frame_or_window gives the window
137 whose scroll bar was clicked in.
138 .timestamp gives a timestamp (in
139 milliseconds) for the click. */
140 HORIZONTAL_SCROLL_BAR_CLICK_EVENT, /* .code gives the number of the mouse button
141 that was clicked.
142 .modifiers holds the state of the modifier
143 keys.
144 .part is a lisp symbol indicating which
145 part of the scroll bar got clicked.
146 .x gives the distance from the start of the
147 scroll bar of the click; .y gives the total
148 length of the scroll bar.
149 .frame_or_window gives the window
150 whose scroll bar was clicked in.
151 .timestamp gives a timestamp (in
152 milliseconds) for the click. */
153 SELECTION_REQUEST_EVENT, /* Another X client wants a selection from us.
154 See `struct selection_input_event'. */
155 SELECTION_CLEAR_EVENT, /* Another X client cleared our selection. */
156 BUFFER_SWITCH_EVENT, /* A process filter has switched buffers. */
157 DELETE_WINDOW_EVENT, /* An X client said "delete this window". */
158 MENU_BAR_EVENT, /* An event generated by the menu bar.
159 The frame_or_window field's cdr holds the
160 Lisp-level event value.
161 (Only the toolkit version uses these.) */
162 ICONIFY_EVENT, /* An X client iconified this window. */
163 DEICONIFY_EVENT, /* An X client deiconified this window. */
164 MENU_BAR_ACTIVATE_EVENT, /* A button press in the menu bar
165 (toolkit version only). */
166 DRAG_N_DROP_EVENT, /* A drag-n-drop event is generated when
167 files selected outside of Emacs are dropped
168 onto an Emacs window.
169 .modifiers holds the state of the
170 modifier keys.
171 .x and .y give the mouse position,
172 in characters, within the window.
173 .frame_or_window is the frame in
174 which the drop was made.
175 .arg is a platform-dependent
176 representation of the dropped items.
177 .timestamp gives a timestamp (in
178 milliseconds) for the click. */
179 USER_SIGNAL_EVENT, /* A user signal.
180 code is a number identifying it,
181 index into lispy_user_signals. */
182
183 /* Help events. Member `frame_or_window' of the input_event is the
184 frame on which the event occurred, and member `arg' contains
185 the help to show. */
186 HELP_EVENT,
187
188 /* An event from a tool-bar. Member `arg' of the input event
189 contains the tool-bar item selected. If `frame_or_window'
190 and `arg' are equal, this is a prefix event. */
191 TOOL_BAR_EVENT,
192
193 /* Queued from XTread_socket on FocusIn events. Translated into
194 `switch-frame' events in kbd_buffer_get_event, if necessary. */
195 FOCUS_IN_EVENT,
196
197 FOCUS_OUT_EVENT,
198
199 /* Generated when mouse moves over window not currently selected. */
200 SELECT_WINDOW_EVENT,
201
202 /* Queued from XTread_socket when session manager sends
203 save yourself before shutdown. */
204 SAVE_SESSION_EVENT
205
206 #ifdef HAVE_GPM
207 , GPM_CLICK_EVENT
208 #endif
209
210 #ifdef HAVE_DBUS
211 , DBUS_EVENT
212 #endif
213
214 , CONFIG_CHANGED_EVENT
215
216 #ifdef HAVE_NTGUI
217 /* Generated when an APPCOMMAND event is received, in response to
218 Multimedia or Internet buttons on some keyboards.
219 Such keys are available as normal function keys on X through the
220 Xkeyboard extension.
221 On Windows, some of them get mapped to normal function key events,
222 but others need to be handled by APPCOMMAND. Handling them all as
223 APPCOMMAND events means they can be disabled
224 (w32-pass-multimedia-buttons-to-system), important on Windows since
225 the system never sees these keys if Emacs claims to handle them.
226 On X, the window manager seems to grab the keys it wants
227 first, so this is not a problem there. */
228 , MULTIMEDIA_KEY_EVENT
229 #endif
230
231 #ifdef HAVE_NS
232 /* Generated when native multi-keystroke input method is used to modify
233 tentative or indicative text display. */
234 , NS_TEXT_EVENT
235 /* Non-key system events (e.g. application menu events) */
236 , NS_NONKEY_EVENT
237 #endif
238
239 #ifdef HAVE_XWIDGETS
240 /* events generated by xwidgets*/
241 , XWIDGET_EVENT
242 #endif
243 #ifdef USE_FILE_NOTIFY
244 /* File or directory was changed. */
245 , FILE_NOTIFY_EVENT
246 #endif
247
248 };
249
250 /* If a struct input_event has a kind which is SELECTION_REQUEST_EVENT
251 or SELECTION_CLEAR_EVENT, then its contents are really described
252 by `struct selection_input_event'; see xterm.h. */
253
254 /* The keyboard input buffer is an array of these structures. Each one
255 represents some sort of input event - a keystroke, a mouse click, or
256 a window system event. These get turned into their lispy forms when
257 they are removed from the event queue. */
258
259 struct input_event
260 {
261 /* What kind of event was this? */
262 ENUM_BF (event_kind) kind : 16;
263
264 /* Used in scroll back click events. */
265 ENUM_BF (scroll_bar_part) part : 16;
266
267 /* For an ASCII_KEYSTROKE_EVENT and MULTIBYTE_CHAR_KEYSTROKE_EVENT,
268 this is the character.
269 For a NON_ASCII_KEYSTROKE_EVENT, this is the keysym code.
270 For a mouse event, this is the button number. */
271 unsigned code;
272
273 /* See enum below for interpretation. */
274 unsigned modifiers;
275
276 /* One would prefer C integers, but HELP_EVENT uses these to
277 record frame or window object and a help form, respectively. */
278 Lisp_Object x, y;
279
280 /* Usually a time as reported by window system-specific event loop.
281 For a HELP_EVENT, this is the position within the object (stored
282 in ARG below) where the help was found. */
283 Time timestamp;
284
285 /* This field is copied into a vector while the event is in
286 the queue, so that garbage collections won't kill it. */
287 Lisp_Object frame_or_window;
288
289 /* This additional argument is used in attempt to avoid extra consing
290 when building events. Unfortunately some events have to pass much
291 more data than it's reasonable to pack directly into this structure. */
292 Lisp_Object arg;
293 };
294
295 #define EVENT_INIT(event) memset (&(event), 0, sizeof (struct input_event))
296
297 /* Bits in the modifiers member of the input_event structure.
298 Note that reorder_modifiers assumes that the bits are in canonical
299 order.
300
301 The modifiers applied to mouse clicks are rather ornate. The
302 window-system-specific code should store mouse clicks with
303 up_modifier or down_modifier set. Having an explicit down modifier
304 simplifies some of window-system-independent code; without it, the
305 code would have to recognize down events by checking if the event
306 is a mouse click lacking the click and drag modifiers.
307
308 The window-system independent code turns all up_modifier events
309 bits into drag_modifier, click_modifier, double_modifier, or
310 triple_modifier events. The click_modifier has no written
311 representation in the names of the symbols used as event heads,
312 but it does appear in the Qevent_symbol_components property of the
313 event heads. */
314 enum {
315 up_modifier = 1, /* Only used on mouse buttons - always
316 turned into a click or a drag modifier
317 before lisp code sees the event. */
318 down_modifier = 2, /* Only used on mouse buttons. */
319 drag_modifier = 4, /* This is never used in the event
320 queue; it's only used internally by
321 the window-system-independent code. */
322 click_modifier= 8, /* See drag_modifier. */
323 double_modifier= 16, /* See drag_modifier. */
324 triple_modifier= 32, /* See drag_modifier. */
325
326 /* The next four modifier bits are used also in keyboard events at
327 the Lisp level.
328
329 It's probably not the greatest idea to use the 2^28 bit for any
330 modifier. It may or may not be the sign bit, depending on
331 FIXNUM_BITS, so using it to represent a modifier key means that
332 characters thus modified have different integer equivalents
333 depending on the architecture they're running on. Oh, and
334 applying XINT to a character whose 2^28 bit is set might sign-extend
335 it, so you get a bunch of bits in the mask you didn't want.
336
337 The CHAR_ macros are defined in lisp.h. */
338 alt_modifier = CHAR_ALT, /* Under X, the XK_Alt_[LR] keysyms. */
339 super_modifier= CHAR_SUPER, /* Under X, the XK_Super_[LR] keysyms. */
340 hyper_modifier= CHAR_HYPER, /* Under X, the XK_Hyper_[LR] keysyms. */
341 shift_modifier= CHAR_SHIFT,
342 ctrl_modifier = CHAR_CTL,
343 meta_modifier = CHAR_META /* Under X, the XK_Meta_[LR] keysyms. */
344 };
345
346 #ifdef HAVE_GPM
347 #include <gpm.h>
348 extern int handle_one_term_event (struct tty_display_info *, Gpm_Event *, struct input_event *);
349 #ifndef HAVE_WINDOW_SYSTEM
350 extern void term_mouse_moveto (int, int);
351 #endif
352
353 /* The device for which we have enabled gpm support. */
354 extern struct tty_display_info *gpm_tty;
355 #endif
356
357 /* Terminal-local parameters. */
358 struct terminal
359 {
360 /* This is for Lisp; the terminal code does not refer to it. */
361 struct vectorlike_header header;
362
363 /* Parameter alist of this terminal. */
364 Lisp_Object param_alist;
365
366 /* List of charsets supported by the terminal. It is set by
367 Fset_terminal_coding_system_internal along with
368 the member terminal_coding. */
369 Lisp_Object charset_list;
370
371 /* This is an association list containing the X selections that
372 Emacs might own on this terminal. Each element has the form
373 (SELECTION-NAME SELECTION-VALUE SELECTION-TIMESTAMP FRAME)
374 SELECTION-NAME is a lisp symbol, whose name is the name of an X Atom.
375 SELECTION-VALUE is the value that emacs owns for that selection.
376 It may be any kind of Lisp object.
377 SELECTION-TIMESTAMP is the time at which emacs began owning this
378 selection, as a cons of two 16-bit numbers (making a 32 bit
379 time.)
380 FRAME is the frame for which we made the selection. If there is
381 an entry in this alist, then it can be assumed that Emacs owns
382 that selection.
383 The only (eq) parts of this list that are visible from Lisp are
384 the selection-values. */
385 Lisp_Object Vselection_alist;
386
387 /* All fields before `next_terminal' should be Lisp_Object and are traced
388 by the GC. All fields afterwards are ignored by the GC. */
389
390 /* Chain of all terminal devices. */
391 struct terminal *next_terminal;
392
393 /* Unique id for this terminal device. */
394 int id;
395
396 /* The number of frames that are on this terminal. */
397 int reference_count;
398
399 /* The type of the terminal device. */
400 enum output_method type;
401
402 /* The name of the terminal device. Do not use this to uniquely
403 identify a terminal; the same device may be opened multiple
404 times. */
405 char *name;
406
407 /* The terminal's keyboard object. */
408 struct kboard *kboard;
409
410 #ifdef HAVE_WINDOW_SYSTEM
411 /* Cache of images. */
412 struct image_cache *image_cache;
413 #endif /* HAVE_WINDOW_SYSTEM */
414
415 /* Device-type dependent data shared amongst all frames on this terminal. */
416 union display_info
417 {
418 struct tty_display_info *tty; /* termchar.h */
419 struct x_display_info *x; /* xterm.h */
420 struct w32_display_info *w32; /* w32term.h */
421 struct ns_display_info *ns; /* nsterm.h */
422 } display_info;
423
424 \f
425 /* Coding-system to be used for encoding terminal output. This
426 structure contains information of a coding-system specified by
427 the function `set-terminal-coding-system'. Also see
428 `safe_terminal_coding' in coding.h. */
429 struct coding_system *terminal_coding;
430
431 /* Coding-system of what is sent from terminal keyboard. This
432 structure contains information of a coding-system specified by
433 the function `set-keyboard-coding-system'. */
434 struct coding_system *keyboard_coding;
435
436 /* Window-based redisplay interface for this device (0 for tty
437 devices). */
438 struct redisplay_interface *rif;
439
440 /* Frame-based redisplay interface. */
441
442 /* Text display hooks. */
443
444 void (*cursor_to_hook) (struct frame *f, int vpos, int hpos);
445 void (*raw_cursor_to_hook) (struct frame *, int, int);
446
447 void (*clear_to_end_hook) (struct frame *);
448 void (*clear_frame_hook) (struct frame *);
449 void (*clear_end_of_line_hook) (struct frame *, int);
450
451 void (*ins_del_lines_hook) (struct frame *f, int, int);
452
453 void (*insert_glyphs_hook) (struct frame *f, struct glyph *s, int n);
454 void (*write_glyphs_hook) (struct frame *f, struct glyph *s, int n);
455 void (*delete_glyphs_hook) (struct frame *, int);
456
457 void (*ring_bell_hook) (struct frame *f);
458 void (*toggle_invisible_pointer_hook) (struct frame *f, bool invisible);
459
460 void (*reset_terminal_modes_hook) (struct terminal *);
461 void (*set_terminal_modes_hook) (struct terminal *);
462
463 void (*update_begin_hook) (struct frame *);
464 void (*update_end_hook) (struct frame *);
465 void (*set_terminal_window_hook) (struct frame *, int);
466
467 /* Multi-frame and mouse support hooks. */
468
469 /* Return the current position of the mouse.
470
471 Set *f to the frame the mouse is in, or zero if the mouse is in no
472 Emacs frame. If it is set to zero, all the other arguments are
473 garbage.
474
475 If the motion started in a scroll bar, set *bar_window to the
476 scroll bar's window, *part to the part the mouse is currently over,
477 *x to the position of the mouse along the scroll bar, and *y to the
478 overall length of the scroll bar.
479
480 Otherwise, set *bar_window to Qnil, and *x and *y to the column and
481 row of the character cell the mouse is over.
482
483 Set *time to the time the mouse was at the returned position. */
484 void (*mouse_position_hook) (struct frame **f, int,
485 Lisp_Object *bar_window,
486 enum scroll_bar_part *part,
487 Lisp_Object *x,
488 Lisp_Object *y,
489 Time *);
490
491 /* When a frame's focus redirection is changed, this hook tells the
492 window system code to re-decide where to put the highlight. Under
493 X, this means that Emacs lies about where the focus is. */
494 void (*frame_rehighlight_hook) (struct frame *);
495
496 /* If we're displaying frames using a window system that can stack
497 frames on top of each other, this hook allows you to bring a frame
498 to the front, or bury it behind all the other windows. If this
499 hook is zero, that means the terminal we're displaying on doesn't
500 support overlapping frames, so there's no need to raise or lower
501 anything.
502
503 If RAISE_FLAG, F is brought to the front, before all other
504 windows. If !RAISE_FLAG, F is sent to the back, behind all other
505 windows. */
506 void (*frame_raise_lower_hook) (struct frame *f, bool raise_flag);
507
508 /* If the value of the frame parameter changed, this hook is called.
509 For example, if going from fullscreen to not fullscreen this hook
510 may do something OS dependent, like extended window manager hints on X11. */
511 void (*fullscreen_hook) (struct frame *f);
512
513 /* This hook is called to display menus. */
514 Lisp_Object (*menu_show_hook) (struct frame *f, int x, int y, int menuflags,
515 Lisp_Object title, const char **error_name);
516
517 /* This hook is called to display popup dialog. */
518 Lisp_Object (*popup_dialog_hook) (struct frame *f, Lisp_Object header,
519 Lisp_Object contents);
520
521 /* Scroll bar hooks. */
522
523 /* The representation of scroll bars is determined by the code which
524 implements them, except for one thing: they must be represented by
525 lisp objects. This allows us to place references to them in
526 Lisp_Windows without worrying about those references becoming
527 dangling references when the scroll bar is destroyed.
528
529 The window-system-independent portion of Emacs just refers to
530 scroll bars via their windows, and never looks inside the scroll bar
531 representation; it always uses hook functions to do all the
532 scroll bar manipulation it needs.
533
534 The `vertical_scroll_bar' field of a Lisp_Window refers to that
535 window's scroll bar, or is nil if the window doesn't have a
536 scroll bar.
537
538 The `scroll_bars' and `condemned_scroll_bars' fields of a Lisp_Frame
539 are free for use by the scroll bar implementation in any way it sees
540 fit. They are marked by the garbage collector. */
541
542
543 /* Set the vertical scroll bar for WINDOW to have its upper left corner
544 at (TOP, LEFT), and be LENGTH rows high. Set its handle to
545 indicate that we are displaying PORTION characters out of a total
546 of WHOLE characters, starting at POSITION. If WINDOW doesn't yet
547 have a scroll bar, create one for it. */
548 void (*set_vertical_scroll_bar_hook) (struct window *window,
549 int portion, int whole,
550 int position);
551
552
553 /* Set the horizontal scroll bar for WINDOW to have its upper left
554 corner at (TOP, LEFT), and be LENGTH rows high. Set its handle to
555 indicate that we are displaying PORTION characters out of a total
556 of WHOLE characters, starting at POSITION. If WINDOW doesn't yet
557 have a scroll bar, create one for it. */
558 void (*set_horizontal_scroll_bar_hook) (struct window *window,
559 int portion, int whole,
560 int position);
561
562
563 /* The following three hooks are used when we're doing a thorough
564 redisplay of the frame. We don't explicitly know which scroll bars
565 are going to be deleted, because keeping track of when windows go
566 away is a real pain - can you say set-window-configuration?
567 Instead, we just assert at the beginning of redisplay that *all*
568 scroll bars are to be removed, and then save scroll bars from the
569 fiery pit when we actually redisplay their window. */
570
571 /* Arrange for all scroll bars on FRAME to be removed at the next call
572 to `*judge_scroll_bars_hook'. A scroll bar may be spared if
573 `*redeem_scroll_bar_hook' is applied to its window before the judgment.
574
575 This should be applied to each frame each time its window tree is
576 redisplayed, even if it is not displaying scroll bars at the moment;
577 if the HAS_SCROLL_BARS flag has just been turned off, only calling
578 this and the judge_scroll_bars_hook will get rid of them.
579
580 If non-zero, this hook should be safe to apply to any frame,
581 whether or not it can support scroll bars, and whether or not it is
582 currently displaying them. */
583 void (*condemn_scroll_bars_hook) (struct frame *frame);
584
585 /* Unmark WINDOW's scroll bar for deletion in this judgment cycle.
586 Note that it's okay to redeem a scroll bar that is not condemned. */
587 void (*redeem_scroll_bar_hook) (struct window *window);
588
589 /* Remove all scroll bars on FRAME that haven't been saved since the
590 last call to `*condemn_scroll_bars_hook'.
591
592 This should be applied to each frame after each time its window
593 tree is redisplayed, even if it is not displaying scroll bars at the
594 moment; if the HAS_SCROLL_BARS flag has just been turned off, only
595 calling this and condemn_scroll_bars_hook will get rid of them.
596
597 If non-zero, this hook should be safe to apply to any frame,
598 whether or not it can support scroll bars, and whether or not it is
599 currently displaying them. */
600 void (*judge_scroll_bars_hook) (struct frame *FRAME);
601
602 \f
603 /* Called to read input events.
604
605 TERMINAL indicates which terminal device to read from. Input
606 events should be read into HOLD_QUIT.
607
608 A positive return value indicates that that many input events
609 were read into BUF.
610 Zero means no events were immediately available.
611 A value of -1 means a transient read error, while -2 indicates
612 that the device was closed (hangup), and it should be deleted. */
613 int (*read_socket_hook) (struct terminal *terminal,
614 struct input_event *hold_quit);
615
616 /* Called when a frame's display becomes entirely up to date. */
617 void (*frame_up_to_date_hook) (struct frame *);
618
619 \f
620 /* Called to delete the device-specific portions of a frame that is
621 on this terminal device. */
622 void (*delete_frame_hook) (struct frame *);
623
624 /* Called after the last frame on this terminal is deleted, or when
625 the display device was closed (hangup).
626
627 If this is NULL, then the generic delete_terminal is called
628 instead. Otherwise the hook must call delete_terminal itself.
629
630 The hook must check for and close any live frames that are still
631 on the terminal. delete_frame ensures that there are no live
632 frames on the terminal when it calls this hook, so infinite
633 recursion is prevented. */
634 void (*delete_terminal_hook) (struct terminal *);
635 };
636
637 /* Most code should use these functions to set Lisp fields in struct
638 terminal. */
639 INLINE void
640 tset_charset_list (struct terminal *t, Lisp_Object val)
641 {
642 t->charset_list = val;
643 }
644 INLINE void
645 tset_selection_alist (struct terminal *t, Lisp_Object val)
646 {
647 t->Vselection_alist = val;
648 }
649
650 /* Chain of all terminal devices currently in use. */
651 extern struct terminal *terminal_list;
652
653 #define FRAME_MUST_WRITE_SPACES(f) (FRAME_TTY (f)->must_write_spaces)
654 #define FRAME_LINE_INS_DEL_OK(f) (FRAME_TTY (f)->line_ins_del_ok)
655 #define FRAME_CHAR_INS_DEL_OK(f) (FRAME_TTY (f)->char_ins_del_ok)
656 #define FRAME_SCROLL_REGION_OK(f) (FRAME_TTY (f)->scroll_region_ok)
657 #define FRAME_SCROLL_REGION_COST(f) (FRAME_TTY (f)->scroll_region_cost)
658 #define FRAME_MEMORY_BELOW_FRAME(f) (FRAME_TTY (f)->memory_below_frame)
659
660 #define FRAME_TERMINAL_CODING(f) ((f)->terminal->terminal_coding)
661 #define FRAME_KEYBOARD_CODING(f) ((f)->terminal->keyboard_coding)
662
663 #define TERMINAL_TERMINAL_CODING(d) ((d)->terminal_coding)
664 #define TERMINAL_KEYBOARD_CODING(d) ((d)->keyboard_coding)
665
666 #define FRAME_RIF(f) ((f)->terminal->rif)
667
668 #define FRAME_TERMINAL(f) ((f)->terminal)
669
670 /* Return true if the terminal device is not suspended. */
671 #define TERMINAL_ACTIVE_P(d) \
672 (((d)->type != output_termcap && (d)->type != output_msdos_raw) \
673 || (d)->display_info.tty->input)
674
675 /* Return font cache data for the specified terminal. The historical
676 name is grossly misleading, actually it is (NAME . FONT-LIST-CACHE). */
677 #if defined (HAVE_X_WINDOWS)
678 #define TERMINAL_FONT_CACHE(t) \
679 (t->type == output_x_window ? t->display_info.x->name_list_element : Qnil)
680 #elif defined (HAVE_NTGUI)
681 #define TERMINAL_FONT_CACHE(t) \
682 (t->type == output_w32 ? t->display_info.w32->name_list_element : Qnil)
683 #elif defined (HAVE_NS)
684 #define TERMINAL_FONT_CACHE(t) \
685 (t->type == output_ns ? t->display_info.ns->name_list_element : Qnil)
686 #endif
687
688 extern struct terminal *decode_live_terminal (Lisp_Object);
689 extern struct terminal *decode_tty_terminal (Lisp_Object);
690 extern struct terminal *get_named_terminal (const char *);
691 extern struct terminal *create_terminal (enum output_method,
692 struct redisplay_interface *);
693 extern void delete_terminal (struct terminal *);
694
695 /* The initial terminal device, created by initial_term_init. */
696 extern struct terminal *initial_terminal;
697
698 extern unsigned char *encode_terminal_code (struct glyph *, int,
699 struct coding_system *);
700
701 #ifdef HAVE_GPM
702 extern void close_gpm (int gpm_fd);
703 #endif
704
705 #ifdef WINDOWSNT
706 extern int cursorX (struct tty_display_info *);
707 extern int cursorY (struct tty_display_info *);
708 #else
709 #define cursorX(t) curX(t)
710 #define cursorY(t) curY(t)
711 #endif
712
713 INLINE_HEADER_END
714
715 #endif /* EMACS_TERMHOOKS_H */