1/*-
2 * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993, 1994
3 *	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
4 * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996
5 *	Keith Bostic.  All rights reserved.
6 *
7 * See the LICENSE file for redistribution information.
8 *
9 *	@(#)vi.h	10.19 (Berkeley) 6/30/96
10 */
11
12/* Definition of a vi "word". */
13#define	inword(ch)	(isalnum(ch) || (ch) == '_')
14
15typedef struct _vikeys VIKEYS;
16
17/* Structure passed around to functions implementing vi commands. */
18typedef struct _vicmd {
19	CHAR_T	key;			/* Command key. */
20	CHAR_T	buffer;			/* Buffer. */
21	CHAR_T	character;		/* Character. */
22	u_long	count;			/* Count. */
23	u_long	count2;			/* Second count (only used by z). */
24	EVENT	ev;			/* Associated event. */
25
26#define	ISCMD(p, key)	((p) == &vikeys[key])
27	VIKEYS const *kp;		/* Command/Motion VIKEYS entry. */
28#define	ISMOTION(vp)	(vp->rkp != NULL && F_ISSET(vp->rkp, V_MOTION))
29	VIKEYS const *rkp;		/* Related C/M VIKEYS entry. */
30
31	/*
32	 * Historic vi allowed "dl" when the cursor was on the last column,
33	 * deleting the last character, and similarly allowed "dw" when
34	 * the cursor was on the last column of the file.  It didn't allow
35	 * "dh" when the cursor was on column 1, although these cases are
36	 * not strictly analogous.  The point is that some movements would
37	 * succeed if they were associated with a motion command, and fail
38	 * otherwise.  This is part of the off-by-1 schizophrenia that
39	 * plagued vi.  Other examples are that "dfb" deleted everything
40	 * up to and including the next 'b' character, while "d/b" deleted
41	 * everything up to the next 'b' character.  While this implementation
42	 * regularizes the interface to the extent possible, there are many
43	 * special cases that can't be fixed.  The special cases are handled
44	 * by setting flags per command so that the underlying command and
45	 * motion routines know what's really going on.
46	 *
47	 * The VM_* flags are set in the vikeys array and by the underlying
48	 * functions (motion component or command) as well.  For this reason,
49	 * the flags in the VICMD and VIKEYS structures live in the same name
50	 * space.
51	 */
52#define	VM_CMDFAILED	0x00000001	/* Command failed. */
53#define	VM_CUTREQ	0x00000002	/* Always cut into numeric buffers. */
54#define	VM_LDOUBLE	0x00000004	/* Doubled command for line mode. */
55#define	VM_LMODE	0x00000008	/* Motion is line oriented. */
56#define	VM_COMMASK	0x0000000f	/* Mask for VM flags. */
57
58	/*
59	 * The VM_RCM_* flags are single usage, i.e. if you set one, you have
60	 * to clear the others.
61	 */
62#define	VM_RCM		0x00000010	/* Use relative cursor movment (RCM). */
63#define	VM_RCM_SET	0x00000020	/* RCM: set to current position. */
64#define	VM_RCM_SETFNB	0x00000040	/* RCM: set to first non-blank (FNB). */
65#define	VM_RCM_SETLAST	0x00000080	/* RCM: set to last character. */
66#define	VM_RCM_SETNNB	0x00000100	/* RCM: set to next non-blank. */
67#define	VM_RCM_MASK	0x000001f0	/* Mask for RCM flags. */
68
69	/* Flags for the underlying function. */
70#define	VC_BUFFER	0x00000200	/* The buffer was set. */
71#define	VC_C1RESET	0x00000400	/* Reset C1SET flag for dot commands. */
72#define	VC_C1SET	0x00000800	/* Count 1 was set. */
73#define	VC_C2SET	0x00001000	/* Count 2 was set. */
74#define	VC_ISDOT	0x00002000	/* Command was the dot command. */
75	u_int32_t flags;
76
77	/*
78	 * There are four cursor locations that we worry about: the initial
79	 * cursor position, the start of the range, the end of the range,
80	 * and the final cursor position.  The initial cursor position and
81	 * the start of the range are both m_start, and are always the same.
82	 * All locations are initialized to the starting cursor position by
83	 * the main vi routines, and the underlying functions depend on this.
84	 *
85	 * Commands that can be motion components set the end of the range
86	 * cursor position, m_stop.  All commands must set the ending cursor
87	 * position, m_final.  The reason that m_stop isn't the same as m_final
88	 * is that there are situations where the final position of the cursor
89	 * is outside of the cut/delete range (e.g. 'd[[' from the first column
90	 * of a line).  The final cursor position often varies based on the
91	 * direction of the movement, as well as the command.  The only special
92	 * case that the delete code handles is that it will make adjustments
93	 * if the final cursor position is deleted.
94	 *
95	 * The reason for all of this is that the historic vi semantics were
96	 * defined command-by-command.  Every function has to roll its own
97	 * starting and stopping positions, and adjust them if it's being used
98	 * as a motion component.  The general rules are as follows:
99	 *
100	 *	1: If not a motion component, the final cursor is at the end
101	 *	   of the range.
102	 *	2: If moving backward in the file, delete and yank move the
103	 *	   final cursor to the end of the range.
104	 *	3: If moving forward in the file, delete and yank leave the
105	 *	   final cursor at the start of the range.
106	 *
107	 * Usually, if moving backward in the file and it's a motion component,
108	 * the starting cursor is decremented by a single character (or, in a
109	 * few cases, to the end of the previous line) so that the starting
110	 * cursor character isn't cut or deleted.  No cursor adjustment is
111	 * needed for moving forward, because the cut/delete routines handle
112	 * m_stop inclusively, i.e. the last character in the range is cut or
113	 * deleted.  This makes cutting to the EOF/EOL reasonable.
114	 *
115	 * The 'c', '<', '>', and '!' commands are special cases.  We ignore
116	 * the final cursor position for all of them: for 'c', the text input
117	 * routines set the cursor to the last character inserted; for '<',
118	 * '>' and '!', the underlying ex commands that do the operation will
119	 * set the cursor for us, usually to something related to the first
120	 * <nonblank>.
121	 */
122	MARK	 m_start;		/* mark: initial cursor, range start. */
123	MARK	 m_stop;		/* mark: range end. */
124	MARK	 m_final;		/* mark: final cursor position. */
125} VICMD;
126
127/* Vi command table structure. */
128struct _vikeys {			/* Underlying function. */
129	int	 (*func) __P((SCR *, VICMD *));
130#define	V_ABS		0x00004000	/* Absolute movement, set '' mark. */
131#define	V_ABS_C		0x00008000	/* V_ABS: if the line/column changed. */
132#define	V_ABS_L		0x00010000	/* V_ABS: if the line changed. */
133#define	V_CHAR		0x00020000	/* Character (required, trailing). */
134#define	V_CNT		0x00040000	/* Count (optional, leading). */
135#define	V_DOT		0x00080000	/* On success, sets dot command. */
136#define	V_KEYW		0x00100000	/* Cursor referenced word. */
137#define	V_MOTION	0x00200000	/* Motion (required, trailing). */
138#define	V_MOVE		0x00400000	/* Command defines movement. */
139#define	V_OBUF		0x00800000	/* Buffer (optional, leading). */
140#define	V_RBUF		0x01000000	/* Buffer (required, trailing). */
141#define	V_SECURE	0x02000000	/* Permission denied if O_SECURE set. */
142	u_int32_t flags;
143	char	*usage;			/* Usage line. */
144	char	*help;			/* Help line. */
145};
146#define	MAXVIKEY	126		/* List of vi commands. */
147extern VIKEYS const vikeys[MAXVIKEY + 1];
148extern VIKEYS const tmotion;		/* XXX Hacked ~ command. */
149
150/* Character stream structure, prototypes. */
151typedef struct _vcs {
152	recno_t	 cs_lno;		/* Line. */
153	size_t	 cs_cno;		/* Column. */
154	CHAR_T	*cs_bp;			/* Buffer. */
155	size_t	 cs_len;		/* Length. */
156	CHAR_T	 cs_ch;			/* Character. */
157#define	CS_EMP	1			/* Empty line. */
158#define	CS_EOF	2			/* End-of-file. */
159#define	CS_EOL	3			/* End-of-line. */
160#define	CS_SOF	4			/* Start-of-file. */
161	int	 cs_flags;		/* Return flags. */
162} VCS;
163
164int	cs_bblank __P((SCR *, VCS *));
165int	cs_fblank __P((SCR *, VCS *));
166int	cs_fspace __P((SCR *, VCS *));
167int	cs_init __P((SCR *, VCS *));
168int	cs_next __P((SCR *, VCS *));
169int	cs_prev __P((SCR *, VCS *));
170
171/*
172 * We use a single "window" for each set of vi screens.  The model would be
173 * simpler with two windows (one for the text, and one for the modeline)
174 * because scrolling the text window down would work correctly then, not
175 * affecting the mode line.  As it is we have to play games to make it look
176 * right.  The reason for this choice is that it would be difficult for
177 * curses to optimize the movement, i.e. detect that the downward scroll
178 * isn't going to change the modeline, set the scrolling region on the
179 * terminal and only scroll the first part of the text window.
180 *
181 * Structure for mapping lines to the screen.  An SMAP is an array, with one
182 * structure element per screen line, which holds information describing the
183 * physical line which is displayed in the screen line.  The first two fields
184 * (lno and off) are all that are necessary to describe a line.  The rest of
185 * the information is useful to keep information from being re-calculated.
186 *
187 * The SMAP always has an entry for each line of the physical screen, plus a
188 * slot for the colon command line, so there is room to add any screen into
189 * another one at screen exit.
190 *
191 * Lno is the line number.  If doing the historic vi long line folding, off
192 * is the screen offset into the line.  For example, the pair 2:1 would be
193 * the first screen of line 2, and 2:2 would be the second.  In the case of
194 * long lines, the screen map will tend to be staggered, e.g., 1:1, 1:2, 1:3,
195 * 2:1, 3:1, etc.  If doing left-right scrolling, the off field is the screen
196 * column offset into the lines, and can take on any value, as it's adjusted
197 * by the user set value O_SIDESCROLL.
198 */
199typedef struct _smap {
200	recno_t  lno;		/* 1-N: Physical file line number. */
201	size_t	 coff;		/* 0-N: Column offset in the line. */
202	size_t	 soff;		/* 1-N: Screen offset in the line. */
203
204				/* vs_line() cache information. */
205	size_t	 c_sboff;	/* 0-N: offset of first character byte. */
206	size_t	 c_eboff;	/* 0-N: offset of  last character byte. */
207	u_int8_t c_scoff;	/* 0-N: offset into the first character. */
208	u_int8_t c_eclen;	/* 1-N: columns from the last character. */
209	u_int8_t c_ecsize;	/* 1-N: size of the last character. */
210} SMAP;
211				/* Macros to flush/test cached information. */
212#define	SMAP_CACHE(smp)		((smp)->c_ecsize != 0)
213#define	SMAP_FLUSH(smp)		((smp)->c_ecsize = 0)
214
215				/* Character search information. */
216typedef enum { CNOTSET, FSEARCH, fSEARCH, TSEARCH, tSEARCH } cdir_t;
217
218typedef enum { AB_NOTSET, AB_NOTWORD, AB_INWORD } abb_t;
219typedef enum { Q_NOTSET, Q_BNEXT, Q_BTHIS, Q_VNEXT, Q_VTHIS } quote_t;
220
221/* Vi private, per-screen memory. */
222typedef struct _vi_private {
223	VICMD	cmd;		/* Current command, motion. */
224	VICMD	motion;
225
226	/*
227	 * !!!
228	 * The saved command structure can be modified by the underlying
229	 * vi functions, see v_Put() and v_put().
230	 */
231	VICMD	sdot;		/* Saved dot, motion command. */
232	VICMD	sdotmotion;
233
234	CHAR_T *keyw;		/* Keyword buffer. */
235	size_t	klen;		/* Keyword length. */
236	size_t	keywlen;	/* Keyword buffer length. */
237
238	CHAR_T	rlast;		/* Last 'r' replacement character. */
239	e_key_t	rvalue;		/* Value of last replacement character. */
240
241	EVENT  *rep;		/* Input replay buffer. */
242	size_t	rep_len;	/* Input replay buffer length. */
243	size_t	rep_cnt;	/* Input replay buffer characters. */
244
245	mtype_t	mtype;		/* Last displayed message type. */
246	size_t	linecount;	/* 1-N: Output overwrite count. */
247	size_t	lcontinue;	/* 1-N: Output line continue value. */
248	size_t	totalcount;	/* 1-N: Output overwrite count. */
249
250				/* Busy state. */
251	int	busy_ref;	/* Busy reference count. */
252	int	busy_ch;	/* Busy character. */
253	size_t	busy_fx;	/* Busy character x coordinate. */
254	size_t	busy_oldy;	/* Saved y coordinate. */
255	size_t	busy_oldx;	/* Saved x coordinate. */
256	struct timeval busy_tv;	/* Busy timer. */
257
258	char   *ps;		/* Paragraph plus section list. */
259
260	u_long	u_ccnt;		/* Undo command count. */
261
262	CHAR_T	lastckey;	/* Last search character. */
263	cdir_t	csearchdir;	/* Character search direction. */
264
265	SMAP   *h_smap;		/* First slot of the line map. */
266	SMAP   *t_smap;		/* Last slot of the line map. */
267
268	/*
269	 * One extra slot is always allocated for the map so that we can use
270	 * it to do vi :colon command input; see v_tcmd().
271	 */
272	recno_t	sv_tm_lno;	/* tcmd: saved TMAP lno field. */
273	size_t	sv_tm_coff;	/* tcmd: saved TMAP coff field. */
274	size_t	sv_tm_soff;	/* tcmd: saved TMAP soff field. */
275	size_t	sv_t_maxrows;	/* tcmd: saved t_maxrows. */
276	size_t	sv_t_minrows;	/* tcmd: saved t_minrows. */
277	size_t	sv_t_rows;	/* tcmd: saved t_rows. */
278#define	SIZE_HMAP(sp)	(VIP(sp)->srows + 1)
279
280	/*
281	 * Macros to get to the head/tail of the smap.  If the screen only has
282	 * one line, HMAP can be equal to TMAP, so the code has to understand
283	 * the off-by-one errors that can result.  If stepping through an SMAP
284	 * and operating on each entry, use sp->t_rows as the count of slots,
285	 * don't use a loop that compares <= TMAP.
286	 */
287#define	_HMAP(sp)	(VIP(sp)->h_smap)
288#define	HMAP		_HMAP(sp)
289#define	_TMAP(sp)	(VIP(sp)->t_smap)
290#define	TMAP		_TMAP(sp)
291
292	recno_t	ss_lno;	/* 1-N: vi_opt_screens cached line number. */
293	size_t	ss_screens;	/* vi_opt_screens cached return value. */
294#define	VI_SCR_CFLUSH(vip)	vip->ss_lno = OOBLNO
295
296	size_t	srows;		/* 1-N: rows in the terminal/window. */
297	recno_t	olno;		/* 1-N: old cursor file line. */
298	size_t	ocno;		/* 0-N: old file cursor column. */
299	size_t	sc_col;		/* 0-N: LOGICAL screen column. */
300	SMAP   *sc_smap;	/* SMAP entry where sc_col occurs. */
301
302#define	VIP_CUR_INVALID	0x0001	/* Cursor position is unknown. */
303#define	VIP_DIVIDER	0x0002	/* Divider line was displayed. */
304#define	VIP_N_EX_PAINT	0x0004	/* Clear and repaint when ex finishes. */
305#define	VIP_N_EX_REDRAW	0x0008	/* Schedule SC_SCR_REDRAW when ex finishes. */
306#define	VIP_N_REFRESH	0x0010	/* Repaint (from SMAP) on the next refresh. */
307#define	VIP_N_RENUMBER	0x0020	/* Renumber screen on the next refresh. */
308#define	VIP_RCM_LAST	0x0040	/* Cursor drawn to the last column. */
309#define	VIP_S_MODELINE	0x0080	/* Skip next modeline refresh. */
310#define	VIP_S_REFRESH	0x0100	/* Skip next refresh. */
311	u_int16_t flags;
312} VI_PRIVATE;
313
314/* Vi private area. */
315#define	VIP(sp)	((VI_PRIVATE *)((sp)->vi_private))
316
317#define	O_NUMBER_FMT	"%7lu "			/* O_NUMBER format, length. */
318#define	O_NUMBER_LENGTH	8
319#define	SCREEN_COLS(sp)				/* Screen columns. */	\
320	((O_ISSET(sp, O_NUMBER) ? (sp)->cols - O_NUMBER_LENGTH : (sp)->cols))
321
322/*
323 * LASTLINE is the zero-based, last line in the screen.  Note that it is correct
324 * regardless of the changes in the screen to permit text input on the last line
325 * of the screen, or the existence of small screens.
326 */
327#define LASTLINE(sp) \
328	((sp)->t_maxrows < (sp)->rows ? (sp)->t_maxrows : (sp)->rows - 1)
329
330/*
331 * Small screen (see vs_refresh.c, section 6a) and one-line screen test.
332 * Note, both cannot be true for the same screen.
333 */
334#define	IS_SMALL(sp)	((sp)->t_minrows != (sp)->t_maxrows)
335#define	IS_ONELINE(sp)	((sp)->rows == 1)
336
337#define	HALFTEXT(sp)				/* Half text. */	\
338	((sp)->t_rows == 1 ? 1 : (sp)->t_rows / 2)
339#define	HALFSCREEN(sp)				/* Half text screen. */	\
340	((sp)->t_maxrows == 1 ? 1 : (sp)->t_maxrows / 2)
341
342/*
343 * Next tab offset.
344 *
345 * !!!
346 * There are problems with how the historical vi handled tabs.  For example,
347 * by doing "set ts=3" and building lines that fold, you can get it to step
348 * through tabs as if they were spaces and move inserted characters to new
349 * positions when <esc> is entered.  I believe that nvi does tabs correctly,
350 * but there are some historical incompatibilities.
351 */
352#define	TAB_OFF(c)	COL_OFF((c), O_VAL(sp, O_TABSTOP))
353
354/* If more than one screen being shown. */
355#define	IS_SPLIT(sp)							\
356	((sp)->q.cqe_next != (void *)&(sp)->gp->dq ||			\
357	(sp)->q.cqe_prev != (void *)&(sp)->gp->dq)
358
359/* Screen adjustment operations. */
360typedef enum { A_DECREASE, A_INCREASE, A_SET } adj_t;
361
362/* Screen position operations. */
363typedef enum { P_BOTTOM, P_FILL, P_MIDDLE, P_TOP } pos_t;
364
365/* Scrolling operations. */
366typedef enum {
367	CNTRL_B, CNTRL_D, CNTRL_E, CNTRL_F,
368	CNTRL_U, CNTRL_Y, Z_CARAT, Z_PLUS
369} scroll_t;
370
371/* Vi common error messages. */
372typedef enum {
373	VIM_COMBUF, VIM_EMPTY, VIM_EOF, VIM_EOL,
374	VIM_NOCOM, VIM_NOCOM_B, VIM_USAGE, VIM_WRESIZE
375} vim_t;
376
377#include "vi_extern.h"
378