/* **************************************************************** */ /* */ /* I-Search and Searching */ /* */ /* **************************************************************** */ /* Copyright (C) 1987-2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file contains the Readline Library (the Library), a set of routines for providing Emacs style line input to programs that ask for it. The Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. The Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. The GNU General Public License is often shipped with GNU software, and is generally kept in a file called COPYING or LICENSE. If you do not have a copy of the license, write to the Free Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111 USA. */ #define READLINE_LIBRARY #if defined (HAVE_CONFIG_H) # include #endif #include #include #if defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) # include #endif #if defined (HAVE_STDLIB_H) # include #else # include "ansi_stdlib.h" #endif #include "rldefs.h" #include "rlmbutil.h" #include "readline.h" #include "history.h" #include "rlprivate.h" #include "xmalloc.h" /* Variables exported to other files in the readline library. */ char *_rl_isearch_terminators = (char *)NULL; /* Variables imported from other files in the readline library. */ extern HIST_ENTRY *_rl_saved_line_for_history; /* Forward declarations */ static int rl_search_history PARAMS((int, int)); /* Last line found by the current incremental search, so we don't `find' identical lines many times in a row. */ static char *prev_line_found; /* Last search string and its length. */ static char *last_isearch_string; static int last_isearch_string_len; static char *default_isearch_terminators = "\033\012"; /* Search backwards through the history looking for a string which is typed interactively. Start with the current line. */ int rl_reverse_search_history (sign, key) int sign, key; { return (rl_search_history (-sign, key)); } /* Search forwards through the history looking for a string which is typed interactively. Start with the current line. */ int rl_forward_search_history (sign, key) int sign, key; { return (rl_search_history (sign, key)); } /* Display the current state of the search in the echo-area. SEARCH_STRING contains the string that is being searched for, DIRECTION is zero for forward, or 1 for reverse, WHERE is the history list number of the current line. If it is -1, then this line is the starting one. */ static void rl_display_search (search_string, reverse_p, where) char *search_string; int reverse_p, where; { char *message; int msglen, searchlen; searchlen = (search_string && *search_string) ? strlen (search_string) : 0; message = (char *)xmalloc (searchlen + 33); msglen = 0; #if defined (NOTDEF) if (where != -1) { sprintf (message, "[%d]", where + history_base); msglen = strlen (message); } #endif /* NOTDEF */ message[msglen++] = '('; if (reverse_p) { strcpy (message + msglen, "reverse-"); msglen += 8; } strcpy (message + msglen, "i-search)`"); msglen += 10; if (search_string) { strcpy (message + msglen, search_string); msglen += searchlen; } strcpy (message + msglen, "': "); rl_message ("%s", message); free (message); (*rl_redisplay_function) (); } /* Search through the history looking for an interactively typed string. This is analogous to i-search. We start the search in the current line. DIRECTION is which direction to search; >= 0 means forward, < 0 means backwards. */ static int rl_search_history (direction, invoking_key) int direction, invoking_key; { /* The string that the user types in to search for. */ char *search_string; /* The current length of SEARCH_STRING. */ int search_string_index; /* The amount of space that SEARCH_STRING has allocated to it. */ int search_string_size; /* The list of lines to search through. */ char **lines, *allocated_line; /* The length of LINES. */ int hlen; /* Where we get LINES from. */ HIST_ENTRY **hlist; register int i; int orig_point, orig_mark, orig_line, last_found_line; int c, found, failed, sline_len; int n, wstart, wlen; #if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE) char mb[MB_LEN_MAX]; #endif /* The line currently being searched. */ char *sline; /* Offset in that line. */ int line_index; /* Non-zero if we are doing a reverse search. */ int reverse; /* The list of characters which terminate the search, but are not subsequently executed. If the variable isearch-terminators has been set, we use that value, otherwise we use ESC and C-J. */ char *isearch_terminators; RL_SETSTATE(RL_STATE_ISEARCH); orig_point = rl_point; orig_mark = rl_mark; last_found_line = orig_line = where_history (); reverse = direction < 0; hlist = history_list (); allocated_line = (char *)NULL; isearch_terminators = _rl_isearch_terminators ? _rl_isearch_terminators : default_isearch_terminators; /* Create an arrary of pointers to the lines that we want to search. */ rl_maybe_replace_line (); i = 0; if (hlist) for (i = 0; hlist[i]; i++); /* Allocate space for this many lines, +1 for the current input line, and remember those lines. */ lines = (char **)xmalloc ((1 + (hlen = i)) * sizeof (char *)); for (i = 0; i < hlen; i++) lines[i] = hlist[i]->line; if (_rl_saved_line_for_history) lines[i] = _rl_saved_line_for_history->line; else { /* Keep track of this so we can free it. */ allocated_line = (char *)xmalloc (1 + strlen (rl_line_buffer)); strcpy (allocated_line, &rl_line_buffer[0]); lines[i] = allocated_line; } hlen++; /* The line where we start the search. */ i = orig_line; rl_save_prompt (); /* Initialize search parameters. */ search_string = (char *)xmalloc (search_string_size = 128); *search_string = '\0'; search_string_index = 0; prev_line_found = (char *)0; /* XXX */ /* Normalize DIRECTION into 1 or -1. */ direction = (direction >= 0) ? 1 : -1; rl_display_search (search_string, reverse, -1); sline = rl_line_buffer; sline_len = strlen (sline); line_index = rl_point; found = failed = 0; for (;;) { rl_command_func_t *f = (rl_command_func_t *)NULL; /* Read a key and decide how to proceed. */ RL_SETSTATE(RL_STATE_MOREINPUT); c = rl_read_key (); RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_MOREINPUT); #if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE) if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) c = _rl_read_mbstring (c, mb, MB_LEN_MAX); #endif /* Translate the keys we do something with to opcodes. */ if (c >= 0 && _rl_keymap[c].type == ISFUNC) { f = _rl_keymap[c].function; if (f == rl_reverse_search_history) c = reverse ? -1 : -2; else if (f == rl_forward_search_history) c = !reverse ? -1 : -2; else if (f == rl_rubout) c = -3; else if (c == CTRL ('G')) c = -4; else if (c == CTRL ('W')) /* XXX */ c = -5; else if (c == CTRL ('Y')) /* XXX */ c = -6; } /* The characters in isearch_terminators (set from the user-settable variable isearch-terminators) are used to terminate the search but not subsequently execute the character as a command. The default value is "\033\012" (ESC and C-J). */ if (strchr (isearch_terminators, c)) { /* ESC still terminates the search, but if there is pending input or if input arrives within 0.1 seconds (on systems with select(2)) it is used as a prefix character with rl_execute_next. WATCH OUT FOR THIS! This is intended to allow the arrow keys to be used like ^F and ^B are used to terminate the search and execute the movement command. XXX - since _rl_input_available depends on the application- settable keyboard timeout value, this could alternatively use _rl_input_queued(100000) */ if (c == ESC && _rl_input_available ()) rl_execute_next (ESC); break; } #define ENDSRCH_CHAR(c) \ ((CTRL_CHAR (c) || META_CHAR (c) || (c) == RUBOUT) && ((c) != CTRL ('G'))) #if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE) if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) { if (c >= 0 && strlen (mb) == 1 && ENDSRCH_CHAR (c)) { /* This sets rl_pending_input to c; it will be picked up the next time rl_read_key is called. */ rl_execute_next (c); break; } } else #endif if (c >= 0 && ENDSRCH_CHAR (c)) { /* This sets rl_pending_input to c; it will be picked up the next time rl_read_key is called. */ rl_execute_next (c); break; } switch (c) { case -1: if (search_string_index == 0) { if (last_isearch_string) { search_string_size = 64 + last_isearch_string_len; search_string = (char *)xrealloc (search_string, search_string_size); strcpy (search_string, last_isearch_string); search_string_index = last_isearch_string_len; rl_display_search (search_string, reverse, -1); break; } continue; } else if (reverse) --line_index; else if (line_index != sline_len) ++line_index; else rl_ding (); break; /* switch directions */ case -2: direction = -direction; reverse = direction < 0; break; /* delete character from search string. */ case -3: /* C-H, DEL */ /* This is tricky. To do this right, we need to keep a stack of search positions for the current search, with sentinels marking the beginning and end. But this will do until we have a real isearch-undo. */ if (search_string_index == 0) rl_ding (); else search_string[--search_string_index] = '\0'; break; case -4: /* C-G */ rl_replace_line (lines[orig_line], 0); rl_point = orig_point; rl_mark = orig_mark; rl_restore_prompt(); rl_clear_message (); if (allocated_line) free (allocated_line); free (lines); RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_ISEARCH); return 0; case -5: /* C-W */ /* skip over portion of line we already matched */ wstart = rl_point + search_string_index; if (wstart >= rl_end) { rl_ding (); break; } /* if not in a word, move to one. */ if (rl_alphabetic(rl_line_buffer[wstart]) == 0) { rl_ding (); break; } n = wstart; while (n < rl_end && rl_alphabetic(rl_line_buffer[n])) n++; wlen = n - wstart + 1; if (search_string_index + wlen + 1 >= search_string_size) { search_string_size += wlen + 1; search_string = (char *)xrealloc (search_string, search_string_size); } for (; wstart < n; wstart++) search_string[search_string_index++] = rl_line_buffer[wstart]; search_string[search_string_index] = '\0'; break; case -6: /* C-Y */ /* skip over portion of line we already matched */ wstart = rl_point + search_string_index; if (wstart >= rl_end) { rl_ding (); break; } n = rl_end - wstart + 1; if (search_string_index + n + 1 >= search_string_size) { search_string_size += n + 1; search_string = (char *)xrealloc (search_string, search_string_size); } for (n = wstart; n < rl_end; n++) search_string[search_string_index++] = rl_line_buffer[n]; search_string[search_string_index] = '\0'; break; default: /* Add character to search string and continue search. */ if (search_string_index + 2 >= search_string_size) { search_string_size += 128; search_string = (char *)xrealloc (search_string, search_string_size); } #if defined (HANDLE_MULTIBYTE) if (MB_CUR_MAX > 1 && rl_byte_oriented == 0) { int j, l; for (j = 0, l = strlen (mb); j < l; ) search_string[search_string_index++] = mb[j++]; } else #endif search_string[search_string_index++] = c; search_string[search_string_index] = '\0'; break; } for (found = failed = 0;;) { int limit = sline_len - search_string_index + 1; /* Search the current line. */ while (reverse ? (line_index >= 0) : (line_index < limit)) { if (STREQN (search_string, sline + line_index, search_string_index)) { found++; break; } else line_index += direction; } if (found) break; /* Move to the next line, but skip new copies of the line we just found and lines shorter than the string we're searching for. */ do { /* Move to the next line. */ i += direction; /* At limit for direction? */ if (reverse ? (i < 0) : (i == hlen)) { failed++; break; } /* We will need these later. */ sline = lines[i]; sline_len = strlen (sline); } while ((prev_line_found && STREQ (prev_line_found, lines[i])) || (search_string_index > sline_len)); if (failed) break; /* Now set up the line for searching... */ line_index = reverse ? sline_len - search_string_index : 0; } if (failed) { /* We cannot find the search string. Ding the bell. */ rl_ding (); i = last_found_line; continue; /* XXX - was break */ } /* We have found the search string. Just display it. But don't actually move there in the history list until the user accepts the location. */ if (found) { prev_line_found = lines[i]; rl_replace_line (lines[i], 0); rl_point = line_index; last_found_line = i; rl_display_search (search_string, reverse, (i == orig_line) ? -1 : i); } } /* The searching is over. The user may have found the string that she was looking for, or else she may have exited a failing search. If LINE_INDEX is -1, then that shows that the string searched for was not found. We use this to determine where to place rl_point. */ /* First put back the original state. */ strcpy (rl_line_buffer, lines[orig_line]); rl_restore_prompt (); /* Save the search string for possible later use. */ FREE (last_isearch_string); last_isearch_string = search_string; last_isearch_string_len = search_string_index; if (last_found_line < orig_line) rl_get_previous_history (orig_line - last_found_line, 0); else rl_get_next_history (last_found_line - orig_line, 0); /* If the string was not found, put point at the end of the last matching line. If last_found_line == orig_line, we didn't find any matching history lines at all, so put point back in its original position. */ if (line_index < 0) { if (last_found_line == orig_line) line_index = orig_point; else line_index = strlen (rl_line_buffer); rl_mark = orig_mark; } rl_point = line_index; /* Don't worry about where to put the mark here; rl_get_previous_history and rl_get_next_history take care of it. */ rl_clear_message (); FREE (allocated_line); free (lines); RL_UNSETSTATE(RL_STATE_ISEARCH); return 0; }