INIT_OPTION used to initialize union option_value at compile time by
casting the default value to LIST_OF(struct option) *, which is the
type of the first member. On sparc64 and other big-endian systems
where sizeof(int) < sizeof(struct list_head *), this tended to leave
option->value.number as zero, thus messing up OPT_INT and OPT_BOOL
at least. OPT_LONG however tended to work right.
This would be easy to fix with C99 designated initializers,
but doc/hacking.txt says ELinks must be kept C89 compatible.
Another solution would be to make register_options() read the
value from option->value.tree (the first member), cast it back
to the right type, and write it to the appropriate member;
but that would still require somewhat dubious conversions
between integers, data pointers, and function pointers.
So here's a rather more invasive solution. Add struct option_init,
which is somewhat similar to struct option but has non-overlapping
members for different types of values, to ensure nothing is lost
in compile-time conversions. Move unsigned char *path from struct
option_info to struct option_init, and replace struct option_info
with a union that contains struct option_init and struct option.
Now, this union can be initialized with no portability problems,
and register_options() then moves the values from struct option_init
to their final places in struct option.
In my x86 ELinks build with plenty of options configured in, this
change bloated the text section by 340 bytes but compressed the data
section by 2784 bytes, presumably because union option_info is a
pointer smaller than struct option_info was.
decompress_data() supposed that read_encoded() would return a positive
number if it decompressed something, 0 if no data is available yet but
may be later, or -1 if no more data will be available. However,
several backends actually returned 0 if they had seen an EOF marker or
an error in the stream, causing decompress_data() to keep calling
them. Make them return -1 in this situation.
Perhaps because of bug 981, if one opened hundreds of pages with
elinks --remote openURL(...), then ELinks 0.11.4 could crash with a
SIGSEGV in JS_InitClass called from spidermonkey_get_interpreter.
SpiderMonkey ran out of memory and began returning NULL and JS_FALSE
but ELinks didn't notice them and pressed on. Add some checks to
avoid the crash, although the underlying out-of-memory error remains.
ELinks 0.12pre4 has already been released and will not be modified.
Eventually, new changes will be made in ELinks 0.11.6.GIT and then
listed in this file. At that time, it would be wrong to claim that
0.12pre4 also includes the changes.
Avoid compilation error with GNUTLS 1.2.9:
/home/Kalle/src/elinks-0.12/src/network/ssl/ssl.c:258: error: implicit declaration of function ‘gnutls_priority_set_direct’
If the function is not available, use gnutls_set_default_priority instead.
Perhaps it'll work with bugzilla.novell.com, perhaps not.
- gnutls_handshake_set_private_extensions: Do not enable private cipher
suites that might not be supported by anything other than GNUTLS.
The GNUTLS 2.8.0 documentation notes that enabling these extensions
can cause interoperability problems.
- gnutls_set_default_priority: Explicitly disable OpenPGP certificates.
- gnutls_certificate_type_set_priority: Do not enable OpenPGP certificates.
The GNUTLS 2.8.0 documentation notes that OpenPGP certificate support
requires libgnutls-extra. Because libgnutls-extra 2.2.0 and later are
under GPLv3-or-later and thus not GPLv2 compatible, ELinks doesn't use
libgnutls-extra, so OpenPGP certificates didn't work anyway.
- gnutls_server_name_set: Do not tell the server the hostname from the URL.
This was supposed to let the server choose the appropriate certificate
for each name-based virtual host, but ELinks actually always sent just
"localhost", so it didn't work anyway. This will have to be revisited
when ELinks is changed to actually verify the subject name from the
server's certificate (ELinks bug 1024).
These changes should help ELinks negotiate SSL with bugzilla.novell.com.
[NEWS and commit message by me. --KON]
The configure script used to run libgnutls-config in order to find the
compiler and linker options needed for using GNUTLS, but GNUTLS 2.7
apparently doesn't ship that script any more. Use pkg-config instead.
GNUTLS 1.2.0 is the oldest version supported by ELinks, and that already
installs the gnutls.pc file required by pkg-config.
This commit also removes support for configure --with-gnutls=DIR.
The configure script used to look for libgnutls-config in DIR.
DIR thus had to be a directory where executable programs were installed,
and it's unlikely that gnutls.pc would be found there. So, any callers
that used this feature would have to be changed anyway, and they can as
well be changed to set the PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable instead.
The AsciiDoc 7.1.2 configuration files included in the ELinks
source tree apparently aren't compatible with AsciiDoc 8.4.4:
[ASCIIDOC] doc/elinks.1.xml
FAILED: [listdef-bulleted] missing section: [listtags-None]
make[1]: *** [elinks.1.xml] Error 1
Fix this by including asciidoc.py from AsciiDoc 7.1.2 as well.
The build system now doesn't care at all whether the user has
installed some version of AsciiDoc or not.
C99 6.7.4p3 and 6.7.4p6 set some constraints on what can be done in
inline functions and how they can be declared. In particular, any
function declared inline must also be defined in the same translation
unit. To comply with that, remove inline specifiers from function
declarations in header files when the functions are not also defined
in those header files.
Sun Studio 11 on Solaris 9 is stricter than C99 and does not allow
references to static identifiers in extern inline functions. Make the
configure script detect this and define NONSTATIC_INLINE accordingly
in config.h. Then use that in the definitions of all non-static
inline functions.
Document the restrictions and this scheme in doc/hacking.txt.
Check the return value of get_opt_rec on "document.browse.search.regex"
before dereferencing it. The option is not there if regular expression
support is disabled at build time.
This commit fixes a bug introduced in commit
b2d51c75ff0d6c52a4f6a2761801beb641cba3a2.
Change test/imgmap2.html so it can be used for testing this too.
Debian Iceweasel 3.0.4 does not appear to support such external
client-side image maps. Well, that's one place where ELinks is
superior, I guess. There might be a security problem though if ELinks
were to let scripts of the referring page examine the links in the
image map.
When ELinks runs in an X11 terminal emulator (e.g. xterm), or in GNU
Screen, it tries to update the title of the window to match the title
of the current document. To do this, ELinks sends an "OSC 1 ; Pt BEL"
sequence to the terminal. Unfortunately, xterm expects the Pt string
to be in the ISO-8859-1 charset, making it impossible to display e.g.
Cyrillic characters. In xterm patch #210 (2006-03-12) however, there
is a menu item and a resource that can make xterm take the Pt string
in UTF-8 instead, allowing characters from all around the world.
The downside is that ELinks apparently cannot ask xterm whether the
setting is on or off; so add a terminal._template_.latin1_title option
to ELinks and let the user edit that instead.
Complete list of changes:
- Add the terminal._template_.latin1_title option. But do not add
that to the terminal options window because it's already rather
crowded there.
- In set_window_title(), take a new codepage argument. Use it to
decode the title into Unicode characters, and remove only actual
control characters. For example, CP437 has graphical characters in
the 0x80...0x9F range, so don't remove those, even though ISO-8859-1
has control characters in the same range. Likewise, don't
misinterpret single bytes of UTF-8 characters as control characters.
- In set_window_title(), do not truncate the title to the width of the
window. The font is likely to be different and proportional anyway.
But do truncate before 1024 bytes, an xterm limit.
- In struct itrm, add a title_codepage member to remember which
charset the master said it was going to use in the terminal window
title. Initialize title_codepage in handle_trm(), update it in
dispatch_special() if the master sends the new request
TERM_FN_TITLE_CODEPAGE, and use it in most set_window_title() calls;
but not in the one that sets $TERM as the title, because that string
was not received from the master and should consist of ASCII
characters only.
- In set_terminal_title(), convert the caller-provided title to
ISO-8859-1 or UTF-8 if appropriate, and report the codepage to the
slave with the new TERM_FN_TITLE_CODEPAGE request. The conversion
can run out of memory, so return a success/error flag, rather than
void. In display_window_title(), check this result and don't update
caches on error.
- Add a NEWS entry for all of this.
look_for_link() used to return 0 both when it found the closing </MAP>
tag, and when it hit the end of the file. In the first case, it also
added *menu to the memory_list; in the second case, it did not. The
caller get_image_map() supposedly distinguished between these cases by
checking whether pos >= eof, and freed *menu separately if so.
However, if the </MAP> was at the very end of the HTML file, so that
not even a newline followed it, then look_for_link() left pos == eof
even though it had found the </MAP> and added *menu to the memory_list.
This made get_image_map() misinterpret the result and mem_free(*menu)
even though *menu had already been freed as part of the memory_list;
thus the crash.
To fix this, make look_for_link() return -1 instead of 0 if it hits
EOF without finding the </MAP>. Then make get_image_map() check the
return value instead of comparing pos to eof. And add a test case,
although not an automated one.
Alternatively, look_for_link() could have been changed to decrement
pos between finding the </MAP> and returning 0. Then, the pos >= eof
comparison in get_image_map() would have been false. That scheme
would however have been a bit more difficult to understand and
maintain, I think.
Reported by Paul B. Mahol.
(cherry picked from commit a2404407ce)
Before this patch, if you first moved the cursor to link X with
move-cursor-up and similar actions, and then clicked link Y with the
mouse, ELinks would activate link X, i.e. not the one you clicked.
This happened because the NAVIGATE_CURSOR_ROUTING mode was left
enabled and made ELinks ignore the doc_view->vs->current_link
member that ELinks had updated according to the click.
Make ELinks return the session to NAVIGATE_LINKWISE mode, so that
the update takes effect.
Reported by Paul B. Mahol.
(cherry picked from commit 4086418069)
Add copyright and licence notices, and a NEWS entry.
The data in the new versions is not entirely the same as what ELinks
used to have:
- Unicode/8859_1.cp: Adds control characters.
- Unicode/8859_2.cp: Adds control characters.
- Unicode/8859_4.cp: Adds some control characters that ELinks assumed
there already.
- Unicode/8859_7.cp: Adds three characters.
- Unicode/8859_15.cp: Adds control characters.
- Unicode/8859_16.cp: Adds control characters and swaps 0xA5 with 0xAB.
- Unicode/koi8_r.cp: Changes 0x95 and adds some control characters
that ELinks assumed there already.
- Unicode/macroman.cp: Changes 0xC6 and removes some control characters
that ELinks assumes there anyway.
Samba 3.2.0 switched to version 3 of the GNU General Public License,
which is not compatible with GPLv2 used in ELinks. Perhaps we can
eventually relicense ELinks to "GPL version 2 or later", or resolve
this in some other way. Until then, warn distributors of binaries
about the conflict.
ELinks attempted to display a message box on file_download.term, but
it had already closed that terminal and freed the struct terminal. To
fix this, reset file_download.term pointers to NULL when the terminal
is about to be destroyed. Also, assert in download_data_store() that
file_download.term is either NULL or in the global "terminals" list.
Reported by أحمد المحمودي.
(cherry picked from commit 6e2476ea4d)