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putty-source/unix/gtkcomm.c

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Divide the whole of gtkwin.c into three parts. This lays further groundwork for the OS X GTK3 port, which is going to have to deal with multiple sessions sharing the same process. gtkwin.c was a bit too monolithic for this, since it included some process-global runtime state (timers, toplevel callbacks), some process startup stuff (gtk_init, gtk_main, argv processing) and some per-session-window stuff. The per-session stuff remains in gtkwin.c, with the top-level function now being new_session_window() taking a Conf. The new gtkmain.c contains the outer skeleton of pt_main(), handling argv processing and one-off startup stuff like setlocale; and the new gtkcomm.c contains the pieces of PuTTY infrastructure like timers and uxsel that are shared between multiple sessions rather than reinstantiated per session, which have been rewritten to use global variables rather than fields in 'inst' (since it's now clear to me that they'll have to apply to all the insts in existence at once). There are still some lurking assumptions of one-session-per-process, e.g. the use of gtk_main_quit when a session finishes, and the fact that the config box insists on running as a separate invocation of gtk_main so that one session's preliminary config box can't coexist with another session already active. But this should make it possible to at least write an OS X app good enough to start testing with, even if it doesn't get everything quite right yet. This change is almost entirely rearranging existing code, so it shouldn't be seriously destabilising. But two noticeable actual changes have happened, both pleasantly simplifying: Firstly, the global-variables rewrite of gtkcomm.c has allowed the post_main edifice to become a great deal simpler. Most of its complexity was about remembering what 'inst' it had to call back to, and in fact the right answer is that it shouldn't be calling back to one at all. So now the post_main() called by gtkdlg.c has become the same function as the old inst_post_main() that actually did the work, instead of the two having to be connected by a piece of ugly plumbing. Secondly, a piece of code that's vanished completely in this refactoring is the temporary blocking of SIGCHLD around most of the session setup code. This turns out to have been introduced in 2002, _before_ I switched to using the intra-process signal pipe strategy for SIGCHLD handling in 2003. So I now expect that we should be robust in any case against receiving SIGCHLD at an inconvenient moment, and hence there's no need to block it.
2016-03-22 21:24:30 +00:00
/*
* gtkcomm.c: machinery in the GTK front end which is common to all
* programs that run a session in a terminal window, and also common
* across all _sessions_ rather than specific to one session. (Timers,
* uxsel etc.)
*/
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <string.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <locale.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <gtk/gtk.h>
#if !GTK_CHECK_VERSION(3,0,0)
#include <gdk/gdkkeysyms.h>
#endif
#if GTK_CHECK_VERSION(2,0,0)
#include <gtk/gtkimmodule.h>
#endif
#define MAY_REFER_TO_GTK_IN_HEADERS
#include "putty.h"
#include "terminal.h"
#include "gtkcompat.h"
#include "gtkfont.h"
#include "gtkmisc.h"
#ifndef NOT_X_WINDOWS
#include <gdk/gdkx.h>
#include <X11/Xlib.h>
#include <X11/Xutil.h>
#include <X11/Xatom.h>
#endif
#define CAT2(x,y) x ## y
#define CAT(x,y) CAT2(x,y)
#define ASSERT(x) enum {CAT(assertion_,__LINE__) = 1 / (x)}
#if GTK_CHECK_VERSION(2,0,0)
ASSERT(sizeof(long) <= sizeof(gsize));
#define LONG_TO_GPOINTER(l) GSIZE_TO_POINTER(l)
#define GPOINTER_TO_LONG(p) GPOINTER_TO_SIZE(p)
#else /* Gtk 1.2 */
ASSERT(sizeof(long) <= sizeof(gpointer));
#define LONG_TO_GPOINTER(l) ((gpointer)(long)(l))
#define GPOINTER_TO_LONG(p) ((long)(p))
#endif
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
* File descriptors and uxsel.
*/
struct uxsel_id {
#if GTK_CHECK_VERSION(2,0,0)
GIOChannel *chan;
guint watch_id;
#else
int id;
#endif
};
#if GTK_CHECK_VERSION(2,0,0)
gboolean fd_input_func(GIOChannel *source, GIOCondition condition,
gpointer data)
{
int sourcefd = g_io_channel_unix_get_fd(source);
/*
* We must process exceptional notifications before ordinary
* readability ones, or we may go straight past the urgent
* marker.
*/
if (condition & G_IO_PRI)
select_result(sourcefd, 4);
if (condition & G_IO_IN)
select_result(sourcefd, 1);
if (condition & G_IO_OUT)
select_result(sourcefd, 2);
return TRUE;
}
#else
void fd_input_func(gpointer data, gint sourcefd, GdkInputCondition condition)
{
if (condition & GDK_INPUT_EXCEPTION)
select_result(sourcefd, 4);
if (condition & GDK_INPUT_READ)
select_result(sourcefd, 1);
if (condition & GDK_INPUT_WRITE)
select_result(sourcefd, 2);
}
#endif
uxsel_id *uxsel_input_add(int fd, int rwx) {
uxsel_id *id = snew(uxsel_id);
#if GTK_CHECK_VERSION(2,0,0)
int flags = 0;
if (rwx & 1) flags |= G_IO_IN;
if (rwx & 2) flags |= G_IO_OUT;
if (rwx & 4) flags |= G_IO_PRI;
id->chan = g_io_channel_unix_new(fd);
g_io_channel_set_encoding(id->chan, NULL, NULL);
id->watch_id = g_io_add_watch_full(id->chan, GDK_PRIORITY_REDRAW+1, flags,
fd_input_func, NULL, NULL);
#else
int flags = 0;
if (rwx & 1) flags |= GDK_INPUT_READ;
if (rwx & 2) flags |= GDK_INPUT_WRITE;
if (rwx & 4) flags |= GDK_INPUT_EXCEPTION;
assert(flags);
id->id = gdk_input_add(fd, flags, fd_input_func, NULL);
#endif
return id;
}
void uxsel_input_remove(uxsel_id *id) {
#if GTK_CHECK_VERSION(2,0,0)
g_source_remove(id->watch_id);
g_io_channel_unref(id->chan);
#else
gdk_input_remove(id->id);
#endif
sfree(id);
}
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
* Timers.
*/
static guint timer_id = 0;
static gint timer_trigger(gpointer data)
{
unsigned long now = GPOINTER_TO_LONG(data);
unsigned long next, then;
long ticks;
/*
* Destroy the timer we got here on.
*/
if (timer_id) {
g_source_remove(timer_id);
timer_id = 0;
}
/*
* run_timers() may cause a call to timer_change_notify, in which
* case a new timer will already have been set up and left in
* timer_id. If it hasn't, and run_timers reports that some timing
* still needs to be done, we do it ourselves.
*/
if (run_timers(now, &next) && !timer_id) {
then = now;
now = GETTICKCOUNT();
if (now - then > next - then)
ticks = 0;
else
ticks = next - now;
timer_id = g_timeout_add(ticks, timer_trigger, LONG_TO_GPOINTER(next));
}
/*
* Returning FALSE means 'don't call this timer again', which
* _should_ be redundant given that we removed it above, but just
* in case, return FALSE anyway.
*/
return FALSE;
}
void timer_change_notify(unsigned long next)
{
long ticks;
if (timer_id)
g_source_remove(timer_id);
ticks = next - GETTICKCOUNT();
if (ticks <= 0)
ticks = 1; /* just in case */
timer_id = g_timeout_add(ticks, timer_trigger, LONG_TO_GPOINTER(next));
}
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
* Toplevel callbacks.
*/
static guint toplevel_callback_idle_id;
static int idle_fn_scheduled;
static void notify_toplevel_callback(void *);
static gint idle_toplevel_callback_func(gpointer data)
{
run_toplevel_callbacks();
Divide the whole of gtkwin.c into three parts. This lays further groundwork for the OS X GTK3 port, which is going to have to deal with multiple sessions sharing the same process. gtkwin.c was a bit too monolithic for this, since it included some process-global runtime state (timers, toplevel callbacks), some process startup stuff (gtk_init, gtk_main, argv processing) and some per-session-window stuff. The per-session stuff remains in gtkwin.c, with the top-level function now being new_session_window() taking a Conf. The new gtkmain.c contains the outer skeleton of pt_main(), handling argv processing and one-off startup stuff like setlocale; and the new gtkcomm.c contains the pieces of PuTTY infrastructure like timers and uxsel that are shared between multiple sessions rather than reinstantiated per session, which have been rewritten to use global variables rather than fields in 'inst' (since it's now clear to me that they'll have to apply to all the insts in existence at once). There are still some lurking assumptions of one-session-per-process, e.g. the use of gtk_main_quit when a session finishes, and the fact that the config box insists on running as a separate invocation of gtk_main so that one session's preliminary config box can't coexist with another session already active. But this should make it possible to at least write an OS X app good enough to start testing with, even if it doesn't get everything quite right yet. This change is almost entirely rearranging existing code, so it shouldn't be seriously destabilising. But two noticeable actual changes have happened, both pleasantly simplifying: Firstly, the global-variables rewrite of gtkcomm.c has allowed the post_main edifice to become a great deal simpler. Most of its complexity was about remembering what 'inst' it had to call back to, and in fact the right answer is that it shouldn't be calling back to one at all. So now the post_main() called by gtkdlg.c has become the same function as the old inst_post_main() that actually did the work, instead of the two having to be connected by a piece of ugly plumbing. Secondly, a piece of code that's vanished completely in this refactoring is the temporary blocking of SIGCHLD around most of the session setup code. This turns out to have been introduced in 2002, _before_ I switched to using the intra-process signal pipe strategy for SIGCHLD handling in 2003. So I now expect that we should be robust in any case against receiving SIGCHLD at an inconvenient moment, and hence there's no need to block it.
2016-03-22 21:24:30 +00:00
/*
* If we've emptied our toplevel callback queue, unschedule
* ourself. Otherwise, leave ourselves pending so we'll be called
* again to deal with more callbacks after another round of the
* event loop.
*/
if (!toplevel_callback_pending() && idle_fn_scheduled) {
g_source_remove(toplevel_callback_idle_id);
idle_fn_scheduled = FALSE;
}
return TRUE;
}
static void notify_toplevel_callback(void *frontend)
{
if (!idle_fn_scheduled) {
toplevel_callback_idle_id =
g_idle_add(idle_toplevel_callback_func, NULL);
idle_fn_scheduled = TRUE;
}
}
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
* Setup function. The real main program must call this.
*/
void gtkcomm_setup(void)
{
uxsel_init();
request_callback_notifications(notify_toplevel_callback, NULL);
}