/* Definitions file for GNU Emacs running on AT&T's System V Release 2.0 Copyright (C) 1985 Richard M. Stallman. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY. No author or distributor accepts responsibility to anyone for the consequences of using it or for whether it serves any particular purpose or works at all, unless he says so in writing. Refer to the GNU Emacs General Public License for full details. Everyone is granted permission to copy, modify and redistribute GNU Emacs, but only under the conditions described in the GNU Emacs General Public License. A copy of this license is supposed to have been given to you along with GNU Emacs so you can know your rights and responsibilities. It should be in a file named COPYING. Among other things, the copyright notice and this notice must be preserved on all copies. */ /* * Define symbols to identify the version of Unix this is. * Define all the symbols that apply correctly. */ #define USG /* System III, System V, etc */ #define USG5 /* SYSTEM_TYPE should indicate the kind of system you are using. It sets the Lisp variable system-type. */ #define SYSTEM_TYPE "usg-unix-v" /* nomultiplejobs should be defined if your system's shell does not have "job control" (the ability to stop a program, run some other program, then continue the first one). */ #define NOMULTIPLEJOBS /* Default is to set interrupt_input to 0: don't do input buffering within Emacs */ /* #define INTERRUPT_INPUT */ /* Letter to use in finding device name of first pty, if system supports pty's. 'p' means it is /dev/ptyp0 */ #define FIRST_PTY_LETTER 'p' /* * Define HAVE_TIMEVAL if the system supports the BSD style clock values. * Look in for a timeval structure. */ /* #define HAVE_TIMEVAL */ /* * Define HAVE_SELECT if the system supports the `select' system call. */ /* #define HAVE_SELECT */ /* * Define HAVE_PTYS if the system supports pty devices. */ /* #define HAVE_PTYS */ /* * Define NONSYSTEM_DIR_LIBRARY to make Emacs emulate * The 4.2 opendir, etc., library functions. */ #define NONSYSTEM_DIR_LIBRARY /* Define this symbol if your system has the functions bcopy, etc. */ /* #define BSTRING */ /* subprocesses should be defined if you want to have code for asynchronous subprocesses (as used in M-x compile and M-x shell). This is supposed to work now on system V release 2. */ #define subprocesses /* If your system uses COFF (Common Object File Format) then define the preprocessor symbol "COFF". */ #define COFF /* define MAIL_USE_FLOCK if the mailer uses flock to interlock access to /usr/spool/mail/$USER. The alternative is that a lock file named /usr/spool/mail/$USER.lock. */ /* #define MAIL_USE_FLOCK */ /* Define CLASH_DETECTION if you want lock files to be written so that Emacs can tell instantly when you try to modify a file that someone else has modified in his Emacs. */ /* #define CLASH_DETECTION */ /* Define SHORTNAMES if the C compiler can distinguish only short names. It means that the stuff in ../shortnames must be run to convert the long names to short ones. */ /* #define SHORTNAMES */ /* Special hacks needed to make Emacs run on this system. */ /* * Make the sigsetmask function go away. Don't know what the * ramifications of this are, but doesn't seem possible to * emulate it properly anyway at this point. */ #define sigsetmask(mask) /* Null expansion */ /* setjmp and longjmp can safely replace _setjmp and _longjmp, but they will run slower. */ #define _setjmp setjmp #define _longjmp longjmp /* On USG systems the system calls are interruptable by signals that the user program has elected to catch. Thus the system call must be retried in these cases. To handle this without massive changes in the source code, we remap the standard system call names to names for our own functions in sysdep.c that do the system call with retries. */ #define read sys_read #define open sys_open #define write sys_write /* On USG systems these have different names */ #define index strchr #define rindex strrchr /* USG systems tend to put everything declared static into the initialized data area, which becomes pure after dumping Emacs. Foil this. Emacs carefully avoids static vars inside functions. */ #define static /* Compiler bug bites on many systems when default ADDR_CORRECT is used. */ #define ADDR_CORRECT(x) (x)