It will grab at the first fragment of the cache entry and try to detect the
content-type by looking for valid HTML. It is very stupid for now, simply
searching for "<html>", which may be bogus in certain circumstances. And I
am not sure if this is better left out and up to the scripting backends,
e.g. SMJS can now modify the cache entry.
A feable fix for bug 396.
The problem is that if you run elinks in xterm with the default white
background, it will be totally unreadable if transparency is turned
on. We should default to usability in all common environments, eyecandy
lovers can do the extra setup for their specific one.
It also makes the description note that elinks still assumes the
background is black.
This is necessary when using a POSIX-compliant stdio implementation, which
will set the FILE error flag when input from the pipe is exhausted, causing
all subsequent reads to fail.
Adjust the size of to_read for the initial read instead of setting the init
flag and using that later to check whether to read a smaller amount than
the value in to_read. This also affects the realloc call on the initial
read, which was allocating more memory than necessary (altho this
discrepency would be corrected with the realloc for the next read).
Otherwise if the page installs multiple timers the old one would live
on unreferenced and possibly (likely) trigger after the document's death
and everything would go to hell.
/usr/bin/ld: warning multiple definitions of symbol _locale_charset
lib.o definition of _locale_charset in section (__TEXT,__text)
/usr/lib/libiconv.dylib(localcharset.o) definition of _locale_charset
Revert commit c9ce4260e5,
which made "elinks -remote http://elinks.cz/" fail with an error
"ELinks: Cannot parse option -remote: Remote method not supported"
even though doc/remote.txt says it should open the URL in a new tab.
The previous version assumed the first non-digit after the CSI was the
Final Byte, for example the first semicolon in the "\E[?1;2c" report.
It then treated all subsequent bytes as typed characters.
According to Standard ECMA-48 (Fifth Edition - June 1991), there may
be any number of Parameter Bytes in the range 0x30 to 0x3F, and then
any number of Intermediate Bytes in the range 0x20 to 0x2F, between
the CSI and the Final Byte.
This version still does not support control sequences longer than
ITRM_IN_QUEUE_SIZE bytes.
Added document.cache.interval option. When time elapsed since previous access
to the document is less than interval then the document is taken from
the cache. Otherwise the request with filled "If-Modified-Since" and/or
"If-None-Match" header field is sent. By default interval is set to 10 minutes.
This requires the correct time to be set on your machine.