/* * Copyright (c) 1980 Regents of the University of California. * All rights reserved. The Berkeley software License Agreement * specifies the terms and conditions for redistribution. * * @(#)ex_temp.h 7.4 (Berkeley) 5/31/85 */ /* * The editor uses a temporary file for files being edited, in a structure * similar to that of ed. The first block of the file is used for a header * block which guides recovery after editor/system crashes. * Lines are represented in core by a pointer into the temporary file which * is packed into 16 bits (32 on VMUNIX). All but the low bit index the temp * file; the last is used by global commands. The parameters below control * how much the other bits are shifted left before they index the temp file. * Larger shifts give more slop in the temp file but allow larger files * to be edited. * * The editor does not garbage collect the temporary file. When a new * file is edited, the temporary file is rather discarded and a new one * created for the new file. Garbage collection would be rather complicated * in ex because of the general undo, and in any case would require more * work when throwing lines away because marks would have be carefully * checked before reallocating temporary file space. Said another way, * each time you create a new line in the temporary file you get a unique * number back, and this is a property used by marks. * * The following temp file parameters allow 256k bytes in the temporary * file. By changing to the numbers in comments you can get 512k. * For VMUNIX you get more than you could ever want. * VMUNIX uses long (32 bit) integers giving much more * space in the temp file and no waste. This doubles core * requirements but allows files of essentially unlimited size to be edited. */ #ifndef VMUNIX #define BLKMSK 0777 /* 01777 */ #define BNDRY 8 /* 16 */ #define INCRMT 0200 /* 0100 */ #define LBTMSK 0770 /* 0760 */ #define NMBLKS 506 /* 1018 */ #define OFFBTS 7 /* 6 */ #define OFFMSK 0177 /* 077 */ #define SHFT 2 /* 3 */ #else #define BLKMSK 077777 #define BNDRY 2 #define INCRMT 02000 #define LBTMSK 01776 #define NMBLKS 077770 #define OFFBTS 10 #define OFFMSK 01777 #define SHFT 0 #endif /* * The editor uses three buffers into the temporary file (ed uses two * and is very similar). These are two read buffers and one write buffer. * Basically, the editor deals with the file as a sequence of BUFSIZ character * blocks. Each block contains some number of lines (and lines * can run across block boundaries. * * New lines are written into the last block in the temporary file * which is in core as obuf. When a line is needed which isn't in obuf, * then it is brought into an input buffer. As there are two, the choice * is to take the buffer into which the last read (of the two) didn't go. * Thus this is a 2 buffer LRU replacement strategy. Measurement * shows that this saves roughly 25% of the buffer reads over a one * input buffer strategy. Since the editor (on our VAX over 1 week) * spends (spent) roughly 30% of its time in the system read routine, * this can be a big help. */ var bool hitin2; /* Last read hit was ibuff2 not ibuff */ var bool ichang2; /* Have actually changed ibuff2 */ var bool ichanged; /* Have actually changed ibuff */ var short iblock; /* Temp file block number of ibuff (or -1) */ var short iblock2; /* Temp file block number of ibuff2 (or -1) */ var short ninbuf; /* Number useful chars left in input buffer */ var short nleft; /* Number usable chars left in output buffer */ var short oblock; /* Temp file block number of obuff (or -1) */ #ifndef VMUNIX var short tline; /* Current temp file ptr */ #else var int tline; #endif var char ibuff[BUFSIZ]; var char ibuff2[BUFSIZ]; var char obuff[BUFSIZ]; /* * Structure of the descriptor block which resides * in the first block of the temporary file and is * the guiding light for crash recovery. * * As the Blocks field below implies, there are temporary file blocks * devoted to (some) image of the incore array of pointers into the temp * file. Thus, to recover from a crash we use these indices to get the * line pointers back, and then use the line pointers to get the text back. * Except for possible lost lines due to sandbagged I/O, the entire * file (at the time of the last editor "sync") can be recovered from * the temp file. */ /* This definition also appears in expreserve.c... beware */ struct header { time_t Time; /* Time temp file last updated */ int Uid; #ifndef VMUNIX short Flines; /* Number of lines in file */ #else int Flines; #endif char Savedfile[FNSIZE]; /* The current file name */ short Blocks[LBLKS]; /* Blocks where line pointers stashed */ }; var struct header H; #define uid H.Uid #define flines H.Flines #define savedfile H.Savedfile #define blocks H.Blocks