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diff --git a/contrib/ncurses/misc/hackguide.doc b/contrib/ncurses/misc/hackguide.doc deleted file mode 100644 index 5fd49b3..0000000 --- a/contrib/ncurses/misc/hackguide.doc +++ /dev/null @@ -1,692 +0,0 @@ - - A Hacker's Guide to NCURSES - - Contents - - * Abstract - * Objective of the Package - + Why System V Curses? - + How to Design Extensions - * Portability and Configuration - * Documentation Conventions - * How to Report Bugs - * A Tour of the Ncurses Library - + Library Overview - + The Engine Room - + Keyboard Input - + Mouse Events - + Output and Screen Updating - * The Forms and Menu Libraries - * A Tour of the Terminfo Compiler - + Translation of Non-use Capabilities - + Use Capability Resolution - + Source-Form Translation - * Other Utilities - * Style Tips for Developers - * Porting Hints - - Abstract - - This document is a hacker's tour of the ncurses library and utilities. - It discusses design philosophy, implementation methods, and the - conventions used for coding and documentation. It is recommended - reading for anyone who is interested in porting, extending or - improving the package. - - Objective of the Package - - The objective of the ncurses package is to provide a free software API - for character-cell terminals and terminal emulators with the following - characteristics: - - * Source-compatible with historical curses implementations - (including the original BSD curses and System V curses. - * Conformant with the XSI Curses standard issued as part of XPG4 by - X/Open. - * High-quality -- stable and reliable code, wide portability, good - packaging, superior documentation. - * Featureful -- should eliminate as much of the drudgery of C - interface programming as possible, freeing programmers to think at - a higher level of design. - - These objectives are in priority order. So, for example, source - compatibility with older version must trump featurefulness -- we - cannot add features if it means breaking the portion of the API - corresponding to historical curses versions. - -Why System V Curses? - - We used System V curses as a model, reverse-engineering their API, in - order to fulfill the first two objectives. - - System V curses implementations can support BSD curses programs with - just a recompilation, so by capturing the System V API we also capture - BSD's. - - More importantly for the future, the XSI Curses standard issued by - X/Open is explicitly and closely modeled on System V. So conformance - with System V took us most of the way to base-level XSI conformance. - -How to Design Extensions - - The third objective (standards conformance) requires that it be easy - to condition source code using ncurses so that the absence of - nonstandard extensions does not break the code. - - Accordingly, we have a policy of associating with each nonstandard - extension a feature macro, so that ncurses client code can use this - macro to condition in or out the code that requires the ncurses - extension. - - For example, there is a macro NCURSES_MOUSE_VERSION which XSI Curses - does not define, but which is defined in the ncurses library header. - You can use this to condition the calls to the mouse API calls. - - Portability and Configuration - - Code written for ncurses may assume an ANSI-standard C compiler and - POSIX-compatible OS interface. It may also assume the presence of a - System-V-compatible select(2) call. - - We encourage (but do not require) developers to make the code friendly - to less-capable UNIX environments wherever possible. - - We encourage developers to support OS-specific optimizations and - methods not available under POSIX/ANSI, provided only that: - - * All such code is properly conditioned so the build process does - not attempt to compile it under a plain ANSI/POSIX environment. - * Adding such implementation methods does not introduce - incompatibilities in the ncurses API between platforms. - - We use GNU autoconf(1) as a tool to deal with portability issues. The - right way to leverage an OS-specific feature is to modify the autoconf - specification files (configure.in and aclocal.m4) to set up a new - feature macro, which you then use to condition your code. - - Documentation Conventions - - There are three kinds of documentation associated with this package. - Each has a different preferred format: - - * Package-internal files (README, INSTALL, TO-DO etc.) - * Manual pages. - * Everything else (i.e., narrative documentation). - - Our conventions are simple: - - 1. Maintain package-internal files in plain text. The expected viewer - for them more(1) or an editor window; there's no point in - elaborate mark-up. - 2. Mark up manual pages in the man macros. These have to be viewable - through traditional man(1) programs. - 3. Write everything else in HTML. - - When in doubt, HTMLize a master and use lynx(1) to generate plain - ASCII (as we do for the announcement document). - - The reason for choosing HTML is that it's (a) well-adapted for on-line - browsing through viewers that are everywhere; (b) more easily readable - as plain text than most other mark-ups, if you don't have a viewer; - and (c) carries enough information that you can generate a - nice-looking printed version from it. Also, of course, it make - exporting things like the announcement document to WWW pretty trivial. - - How to Report Bugs - - The reporting address for bugs is bug-ncurses@gnu.org. This is a - majordomo list; to join, write to bug-ncurses-request@gnu.org with a - message containing the line: - subscribe <name>@<host.domain> - - The ncurses code is maintained by a small group of volunteers. While - we try our best to fix bugs promptly, we simply don't have a lot of - hours to spend on elementary hand-holding. We rely on intelligent - cooperation from our users. If you think you have found a bug in - ncurses, there are some steps you can take before contacting us that - will help get the bug fixed quickly. - - In order to use our bug-fixing time efficiently, we put people who - show us they've taken these steps at the head of our queue. This means - that if you don't, you'll probably end up at the tail end and have to - wait a while. - - 1. Develop a recipe to reproduce the bug. - Bugs we can reproduce are likely to be fixed very quickly, often - within days. The most effective single thing you can do to get a - quick fix is develop a way we can duplicate the bad behavior -- - ideally, by giving us source for a small, portable test program - that breaks the library. (Even better is a keystroke recipe using - one of the test programs provided with the distribution.) - 2. Try to reproduce the bug on a different terminal type. - In our experience, most of the behaviors people report as library - bugs are actually due to subtle problems in terminal descriptions. - This is especially likely to be true if you're using a traditional - asynchronous terminal or PC-based terminal emulator, rather than - xterm or a UNIX console entry. - It's therefore extremely helpful if you can tell us whether or not - your problem reproduces on other terminal types. Usually you'll - have both a console type and xterm available; please tell us - whether or not your bug reproduces on both. - If you have xterm available, it is also good to collect xterm - reports for different window sizes. This is especially true if you - normally use an unusual xterm window size -- a surprising number - of the bugs we've seen are either triggered or masked by these. - 3. Generate and examine a trace file for the broken behavior. - Recompile your program with the debugging versions of the - libraries. Insert a trace() call with the argument set to - TRACE_UPDATE. (See "Writing Programs with NCURSES" for details on - trace levels.) Reproduce your bug, then look at the trace file to - see what the library was actually doing. - Another frequent cause of apparent bugs is application coding - errors that cause the wrong things to be put on the virtual - screen. Looking at the virtual-screen dumps in the trace file will - tell you immediately if this is happening, and save you from the - possible embarrassment of being told that the bug is in your code - and is your problem rather than ours. - If the virtual-screen dumps look correct but the bug persists, - it's possible to crank up the trace level to give more and more - information about the library's update actions and the control - sequences it issues to perform them. The test directory of the - distribution contains a tool for digesting these logs to make them - less tedious to wade through. - Often you'll find terminfo problems at this stage by noticing that - the escape sequences put out for various capabilities are wrong. - If not, you're likely to learn enough to be able to characterize - any bug in the screen-update logic quite exactly. - 4. Report details and symptoms, not just interpretations. - If you do the preceding two steps, it is very likely that you'll - discover the nature of the problem yourself and be able to send us - a fix. This will create happy feelings all around and earn you - good karma for the first time you run into a bug you really can't - characterize and fix yourself. - If you're still stuck, at least you'll know what to tell us. - Remember, we need details. If you guess about what is safe to - leave out, you are too likely to be wrong. - If your bug produces a bad update, include a trace file. Try to - make the trace at the least voluminous level that pins down the - bug. Logs that have been through tracemunch are OK, it doesn't - throw away any information (actually they're better than - un-munched ones because they're easier to read). - If your bug produces a core-dump, please include a symbolic stack - trace generated by gdb(1) or your local equivalent. - Tell us about every terminal on which you've reproduced the bug -- - and every terminal on which you can't. Ideally, sent us terminfo - sources for all of these (yours might differ from ours). - Include your ncurses version and your OS/machine type, of course! - You can find your ncurses version in the curses.h file. - - If your problem smells like a logic error or in cursor movement or - scrolling or a bad capability, there are a couple of tiny test frames - for the library algorithms in the progs directory that may help you - isolate it. These are not part of the normal build, but do have their - own make productions. - - The most important of these is mvcur, a test frame for the - cursor-movement optimization code. With this program, you can see - directly what control sequences will be emitted for any given cursor - movement or scroll/insert/delete operations. If you think you've got a - bad capability identified, you can disable it and test again. The - program is command-driven and has on-line help. - - If you think the vertical-scroll optimization is broken, or just want - to understand how it works better, build hashmap and read the header - comments of hardscroll.c and hashmap.c; then try it out. You can also - test the hardware-scrolling optimization separately with hardscroll. - - There's one other interactive tester, tctest, that exercises - translation between termcap and terminfo formats. If you have a - serious need to run this, you probably belong on our development team! - - A Tour of the Ncurses Library - -Library Overview - - Most of the library is superstructure -- fairly trivial convenience - interfaces to a small set of basic functions and data structures used - to manipulate the virtual screen (in particular, none of this code - does any I/O except through calls to more fundamental modules - described below). The files - - lib_addch.c lib_bkgd.c lib_box.c lib_chgat.c lib_clear.c - lib_clearok.c lib_clrbot.c lib_clreol.c lib_colorset.c lib_data.c - lib_delch.c lib_delwin.c lib_echo.c lib_erase.c lib_gen.c - lib_getstr.c lib_hline.c lib_immedok.c lib_inchstr.c lib_insch.c - lib_insdel.c lib_insstr.c lib_instr.c lib_isendwin.c lib_keyname.c - lib_leaveok.c lib_move.c lib_mvwin.c lib_overlay.c lib_pad.c - lib_printw.c lib_redrawln.c lib_scanw.c lib_screen.c lib_scroll.c - lib_scrollok.c lib_scrreg.c lib_set_term.c lib_slk.c - lib_slkatr_set.c lib_slkatrof.c lib_slkatron.c lib_slkatrset.c - lib_slkattr.c lib_slkclear.c lib_slkcolor.c lib_slkinit.c - lib_slklab.c lib_slkrefr.c lib_slkset.c lib_slktouch.c lib_touch.c - lib_unctrl.c lib_vline.c lib_wattroff.c lib_wattron.c lib_window.c - - are all in this category. They are very unlikely to need change, - barring bugs or some fundamental reorganization in the underlying data - structures. - - These files are used only for debugging support: - - lib_trace.c lib_traceatr.c lib_tracebits.c lib_tracechr.c - lib_tracedmp.c lib_tracemse.c trace_buf.c - - It is rather unlikely you will ever need to change these, unless you - want to introduce a new debug trace level for some reasoon. - - There is another group of files that do direct I/O via tputs(), - computations on the terminal capabilities, or queries to the OS - environment, but nevertheless have only fairly low complexity. These - include: - - lib_acs.c lib_beep.c lib_color.c lib_endwin.c lib_initscr.c - lib_longname.c lib_newterm.c lib_options.c lib_termcap.c lib_ti.c - lib_tparm.c lib_tputs.c lib_vidattr.c read_entry.c. - - They are likely to need revision only if ncurses is being ported to an - environment without an underlying terminfo capability representation. - - These files have serious hooks into the tty driver and signal - facilities: - - lib_kernel.c lib_baudrate.c lib_raw.c lib_tstp.c lib_twait.c - - If you run into porting snafus moving the package to another UNIX, the - problem is likely to be in one of these files. The file lib_print.c - uses sleep(2) and also falls in this category. - - Almost all of the real work is done in the files - - hardscroll.c hashmap.c lib_addch.c lib_doupdate.c lib_getch.c - lib_mouse.c lib_mvcur.c lib_refresh.c lib_setup.c lib_vidattr.c - - Most of the algorithmic complexity in the library lives in these - files. If there is a real bug in ncurses itself, it's probably here. - We'll tour some of these files in detail below (see The Engine Room). - - Finally, there is a group of files that is actually most of the - terminfo compiler. The reason this code lives in the ncurses library - is to support fallback to /etc/termcap. These files include - - alloc_entry.c captoinfo.c comp_captab.c comp_error.c comp_hash.c - comp_parse.c comp_scan.c parse_entry.c read_termcap.c write_entry.c - - We'll discuss these in the compiler tour. - -The Engine Room - - Keyboard Input - - All ncurses input funnels through the function wgetch(), defined in - lib_getch.c. This function is tricky; it has to poll for keyboard and - mouse events and do a running match of incoming input against the set - of defined special keys. - - The central data structure in this module is a FIFO queue, used to - match multiple-character input sequences against special-key - capabilities; also to implement pushback via ungetch(). - - The wgetch() code distinguishes between function key sequences and the - same sequences typed manually by doing a timed wait after each input - character that could lead a function key sequence. If the entire - sequence takes less than 1 second, it is assumed to have been - generated by a function key press. - - Hackers bruised by previous encounters with variant select(2) calls - may find the code in lib_twait.c interesting. It deals with the - problem that some BSD selects don't return a reliable time-left value. - The function timed_wait() effectively simulates a System V select. - - Mouse Events - - If the mouse interface is active, wgetch() polls for mouse events each - call, before it goes to the keyboard for input. It is up to - lib_mouse.c how the polling is accomplished; it may vary for different - devices. - - Under xterm, however, mouse event notifications come in via the - keyboard input stream. They are recognized by having the kmous - capability as a prefix. This is kind of klugey, but trying to wire in - recognition of a mouse key prefix without going through the - function-key machinery would be just too painful, and this turns out - to imply having the prefix somewhere in the function-key capabilities - at terminal-type initialization. - - This kluge only works because kmous isn't actually used by any - historic terminal type or curses implementation we know of. Best guess - is it's a relic of some forgotten experiment in-house at Bell Labs - that didn't leave any traces in the publicly-distributed System V - terminfo files. If System V or XPG4 ever gets serious about using it - again, this kluge may have to change. - - Here are some more details about mouse event handling: - - The lib_mouse()code is logically split into a lower level that accepts - event reports in a device-dependent format and an upper level that - parses mouse gestures and filters events. The mediating data structure - is a circular queue of event structures. - - Functionally, the lower level's job is to pick up primitive events and - put them on the circular queue. This can happen in one of two ways: - either (a) _nc_mouse_event() detects a series of incoming mouse - reports and queues them, or (b) code in lib_getch.c detects the kmous - prefix in the keyboard input stream and calls _nc_mouse_inline to - queue up a series of adjacent mouse reports. - - In either case, _nc_mouse_parse() should be called after the series is - accepted to parse the digested mouse reports (low-level events) into a - gesture (a high-level or composite event). - - Output and Screen Updating - - With the single exception of character echoes during a wgetnstr() call - (which simulates cooked-mode line editing in an ncurses window), the - library normally does all its output at refresh time. - - The main job is to go from the current state of the screen (as - represented in the curscr window structure) to the desired new state - (as represented in the newscr window structure), while doing as little - I/O as possible. - - The brains of this operation are the modules hashmap.c, hardscroll.c - and lib_doupdate.c; the latter two use lib_mvcur.c. Essentially, what - happens looks like this: - - The hashmap.c module tries to detect vertical motion changes between - the real and virtual screens. This information is represented by the - oldindex members in the newscr structure. These are modified by - vertical-motion and clear operations, and both are re-initialized - after each update. To this change-journalling information, the hashmap - code adds deductions made using a modified Heckel algorithm on hash - values generated from the line contents. - - The hardscroll.c module computes an optimum set of scroll, insertion, - and deletion operations to make the indices match. It calls - _nc_mvcur_scrolln() in lib_mvcur.c to do those motions. - - Then lib_doupdate.c goes to work. Its job is to do line-by-line - transformations of curscr lines to newscr lines. Its main tool is the - routine mvcur() in lib_mvcur.c. This routine does cursor-movement - optimization, attempting to get from given screen location A to given - location B in the fewest output characters posible. - - If you want to work on screen optimizations, you should use the fact - that (in the trace-enabled version of the library) enabling the - TRACE_TIMES trace level causes a report to be emitted after each - screen update giving the elapsed time and a count of characters - emitted during the update. You can use this to tell when an update - optimization improves efficiency. - - In the trace-enabled version of the library, it is also possible to - disable and re-enable various optimizations at runtime by tweaking the - variable _nc_optimize_enable. See the file include/curses.h.in for - mask values, near the end. - - The Forms and Menu Libraries - - The forms and menu libraries should work reliably in any environment - you can port ncurses to. The only portability issue anywhere in them - is what flavor of regular expressions the built-in form field type - TYPE_REGEXP will recognize. - - The configuration code prefers the POSIX regex facility, modeled on - System V's, but will settle for BSD regexps if the former isn't - available. - - Historical note: the panels code was written primarily to assist in - porting u386mon 2.0 (comp.sources.misc v14i001-4) to systems lacking - panels support; u386mon 2.10 and beyond use it. This version has been - slightly cleaned up for ncurses. - - A Tour of the Terminfo Compiler - - The ncurses implementation of tic is rather complex internally; it has - to do a trying combination of missions. This starts with the fact - that, in addition to its normal duty of compiling terminfo sources - into loadable terminfo binaries, it has to be able to handle termcap - syntax and compile that too into terminfo entries. - - The implementation therefore starts with a table-driven, dual-mode - lexical analyzer (in comp_scan.c). The lexer chooses its mode (termcap - or terminfo) based on the first `,' or `:' it finds in each entry. The - lexer does all the work of recognizing capability names and values; - the grammar above it is trivial, just "parse entries till you run out - of file". - -Translation of Non-use Capabilities - - Translation of most things besides use capabilities is pretty - straightforward. The lexical analyzer's tokenizer hands each - capability name to a hash function, which drives a table lookup. The - table entry yields an index which is used to look up the token type in - another table, and controls interpretation of the value. - - One possibly interesting aspect of the implementation is the way the - compiler tables are initialized. All the tables are generated by - various awk/sed/sh scripts from a master table include/Caps; these - scripts actually write C initializers which are linked to the - compiler. Furthermore, the hash table is generated in the same way, so - it doesn't have to be generated at compiler startup time (another - benefit of this organization is that the hash table can be in - shareable text space). - - Thus, adding a new capability is usually pretty trivial, just a matter - of adding one line to the include/Caps file. We'll have more to say - about this in the section on Source-Form Translation. - -Use Capability Resolution - - The background problem that makes tic tricky isn't the capability - translation itself, it's the resolution of use capabilities. Older - versions would not handle forward use references for this reason (that - is, a using terminal always had to follow its use target in the source - file). By doing this, they got away with a simple implementation - tactic; compile everything as it blows by, then resolve uses from - compiled entries. - - This won't do for ncurses. The problem is that that the whole - compilation process has to be embeddable in the ncurses library so - that it can be called by the startup code to translate termcap entries - on the fly. The embedded version can't go promiscuously writing - everything it translates out to disk -- for one thing, it will - typically be running with non-root permissions. - - So our tic is designed to parse an entire terminfo file into a - doubly-linked circular list of entry structures in-core, and then do - use resolution in-memory before writing everything out. This design - has other advantages: it makes forward and back use-references equally - easy (so we get the latter for free), and it makes checking for name - collisions before they're written out easy to do. - - And this is exactly how the embedded version works. But the - stand-alone user-accessible version of tic partly reverts to the - historical strategy; it writes to disk (not keeping in core) any entry - with no use references. - - This is strictly a core-economy kluge, implemented because the - terminfo master file is large enough that some core-poor systems swap - like crazy when you compile it all in memory...there have been reports - of this process taking three hours, rather than the twenty seconds or - less typical on the author's development box. - - So. The executable tic passes the entry-parser a hook that immediately - writes out the referenced entry if it has no use capabilities. The - compiler main loop refrains from adding the entry to the in-core list - when this hook fires. If some other entry later needs to reference an - entry that got written immediately, that's OK; the resolution code - will fetch it off disk when it can't find it in core. - - Name collisions will still be detected, just not as cleanly. The - write_entry() code complains before overwriting an entry that - postdates the time of tic's first call to write_entry(), Thus it will - complain about overwriting entries newly made during the tic run, but - not about overwriting ones that predate it. - -Source-Form Translation - - Another use of tic is to do source translation between various termcap - and terminfo formats. There are more variants out there than you might - think; the ones we know about are described in the captoinfo(1) manual - page. - - The translation output code (dump_entry() in ncurses/dump_entry.c) is - shared with the infocmp(1) utility. It takes the same internal - representation used to generate the binary form and dumps it to - standard output in a specified format. - - The include/Caps file has a header comment describing ways you can - specify source translations for nonstandard capabilities just by - altering the master table. It's possible to set up capability aliasing - or tell the compiler to plain ignore a given capability without - writing any C code at all. - - For circumstances where you need to do algorithmic translation, there - are functions in parse_entry.c called after the parse of each entry - that are specifically intended to encapsulate such translations. This, - for example, is where the AIX box1 capability get translated to an - acsc string. - - Other Utilities - - The infocmp utility is just a wrapper around the same entry-dumping - code used by tic for source translation. Perhaps the one interesting - aspect of the code is the use of a predicate function passed in to - dump_entry() to control which capabilities are dumped. This is - necessary in order to handle both the ordinary De-compilation case and - entry difference reporting. - - The tput and clear utilities just do an entry load followed by a - tputs() of a selected capability. - - Style Tips for Developers - - See the TO-DO file in the top-level directory of the source - distribution for additions that would be particularly useful. - - The prefix _nc_ should be used on library public functions that are - not part of the curses API in order to prevent pollution of the - application namespace. If you have to add to or modify the function - prototypes in curses.h.in, read ncurses/MKlib_gen.sh first so you can - avoid breaking XSI conformance. Please join the ncurses mailing list. - See the INSTALL file in the top level of the distribution for details - on the list. - - Look for the string FIXME in source files to tag minor bugs and - potential problems that could use fixing. - - Don't try to auto-detect OS features in the main body of the C code. - That's the job of the configuration system. - - To hold down complexity, do make your code data-driven. Especially, if - you can drive logic from a table filtered out of include/Caps, do it. - If you find you need to augment the data in that file in order to - generate the proper table, that's still preferable to ad-hoc code -- - that's why the fifth field (flags) is there. - - Have fun! - - Porting Hints - - The following notes are intended to be a first step towards DOS and - Macintosh ports of the ncurses libraries. - - The following library modules are `pure curses'; they operate only on - the curses internal structures, do all output through other curses - calls (not including tputs() and putp()) and do not call any other - UNIX routines such as signal(2) or the stdio library. Thus, they - should not need to be modified for single-terminal ports. - - lib_addch.c lib_addstr.c lib_bkgd.c lib_box.c lib_clear.c - lib_clrbot.c lib_clreol.c lib_delch.c lib_delwin.c lib_erase.c - lib_inchstr.c lib_insch.c lib_insdel.c lib_insstr.c lib_keyname.c - lib_move.c lib_mvwin.c lib_newwin.c lib_overlay.c lib_pad.c - lib_printw.c lib_refresh.c lib_scanw.c lib_scroll.c lib_scrreg.c - lib_set_term.c lib_touch.c lib_tparm.c lib_tputs.c lib_unctrl.c - lib_window.c panel.c - - This module is pure curses, but calls outstr(): - - lib_getstr.c - - These modules are pure curses, except that they use tputs() and - putp(): - - lib_beep.c lib_color.c lib_endwin.c lib_options.c lib_slk.c - lib_vidattr.c - - This modules assist in POSIX emulation on non-POSIX systems: - - sigaction.c - signal calls - - The following source files will not be needed for a - single-terminal-type port. - - alloc_entry.c captoinfo.c clear.c comp_captab.c comp_error.c - comp_hash.c comp_main.c comp_parse.c comp_scan.c dump_entry.c - infocmp.c parse_entry.c read_entry.c tput.c write_entry.c - - The following modules will use open()/read()/write()/close()/lseek() - on files, but no other OS calls. - - lib_screen.c - used to read/write screen dumps - - lib_trace.c - used to write trace data to the logfile - - Modules that would have to be modified for a port start here: - - The following modules are `pure curses' but contain assumptions - inappropriate for a memory-mapped port. - - lib_longname.c - assumes there may be multiple terminals - - lib_acs.c - assumes acs_map as a double indirection - - lib_mvcur.c - assumes cursor moves have variable cost - - lib_termcap.c - assumes there may be multiple terminals - - lib_ti.c - assumes there may be multiple terminals - - The following modules use UNIX-specific calls: - - lib_doupdate.c - input checking - - lib_getch.c - read() - - lib_initscr.c - getenv() - - lib_newterm.c - lib_baudrate.c - lib_kernel.c - various tty-manipulation and system calls - - lib_raw.c - various tty-manipulation calls - - lib_setup.c - various tty-manipulation calls - - lib_restart.c - various tty-manipulation calls - - lib_tstp.c - signal-manipulation calls - - lib_twait.c - gettimeofday(), select(). - _________________________________________________________________ - - - Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> - - (Note: This is not the bug address!) |