When returning from an external program, unblock_itrm_x in the slave process will send a resize event to the master process for the slave terminal. In handle_interlink_event, when we receive this resize event, we can check whether we need to call textarea_edit.
Added EVENT_TEXTAREA used to notify the master terminal
about end of execution of an external program on a slave terminal.
The format of data sent to the master terminal by exec_on_slave_terminal
has changed. Now after 0, fg the value of term is sent.
Therfore this release of ELinks is incompatible with previous releases.
Patch by Witold Filipczyk, taken from his witekfl branch.
Conflicts:
src/viewer/text/textarea.c
Pass the session with some get_opt_* calls. These are the low-hanging fruit. Some places will be difficult because we don't have the session or for other reasons.
There were conflicts in src/document/css/ because 0.12.GIT switched
to LIST_OF(struct css_selector) and 0.13.GIT switched to struct
css_selector_set. Resolved by using LIST_OF(struct css_selector)
inside struct css_selector_set.
screen_driver_change_hook was comparing only strlen(name) characters
and ignoring the '\0'. To reproduce the bug in ELinks 0.11.3 and
ELinks 0.12.GIT:
- Run TERM=screen elinks.
- In another terminal, run TERM=scr elinks. Quit this slave ELinks.
- Open the terminal options dialog and set 16 colors.
- Open the option manager and change the terminal.scr.colors option to
1 and back to 0.
- Note that ELinks no longer displays colors.
That bug could be fixed just by using len+1 instead of len. However,
there is also another bug: memcmp may compare the specified number of
bytes, even if some of the earlier ones differ; thus, it could in
principle read past the end of the malloc block and thereby crash
ELinks. Using strcmp may be a little slower but I do not believe it
could become a bottleneck.
Use it for the actual I/O only. Previously, defining CONFIG_UTF8 and
enabling UTF-8 used to force many strings to the UTF-8 charset
regardless of the terminal charset option. Now, those strings always
follow the terminal charset. This fixes bug 914 which was caused
because _() returned strings in the terminal charset and functions
then assumed they were in UTF-8. This reduction in the effects of
UTF-8 I/O may also simplify future testing.