move-link-down-line moves the cursor down to the line with a link.
move-link-up-line moves the cursor up to the line with a link.
move-link-prev-line moves to the previous link horizontally.
move-link-next-line moves to the next link horizontally.
(cherry picked from commit 8259a56e99)
AsciiDoc 8 has changed the syntax again and generates e.g. subscripts
where we don't want them. Instead of updating the documents, I'll
just enable a compatibility mode so that ELinks doesn't require
AsciiDoc 8 yet.
On machines where sizeof(size_t) > sizeof(int), this could corrupt the stack.
I think -Wno-pointer-sign added by configure hid this bug until now.
STRLEN is correct in Perl 5.6.0 and later, perhaps earlier too.
The compression support in ELinks has always been buggy, with some large pages
failing to decompress and containing garbage at the end instead. However,
with the recent attempts to fix the compression support, it has been actually
made *so* buggy that not only these cases seem to occur more often, but in
some cases, the page is just silently chopped and no content visible; in other
cases, "Resource temporarily unavailable" is displayed. Etc.
The compression support got now to the point where it is so awfully unstable
that it is actively harmful to have it enabled by default. I've been burnt by
it several times already and once made a very serious error because of page
being chopped silently.
This necessitates that non-pairable elements be briefly pushed on the stack, so that get_css_selector_for_element sees them, and then popped.
It would be possible to push them only when CONFIG_CSS is defined, as they are otherwise not needed (as evidenced by the fact that we've gone so long without bothering to push them). However, the performance hit should be small, the necessary #ifdef/#endif wrappers would be pretty ugly, and ideally, the CSS code will someday be in such a state that it can be considered an integral feature.
Instead, convert the element pointers inside the comparison functions.
The last argument of qsort() is supposed to be of type
int (*)(const void *, const void *). Previously, comp_links() was
defined to take struct link * instead of const void *, and the type
mismatch was silenced by casting the function pointer to void *.
This was in principle not portable because:
(1) The different pointer types may have different representations.
In a word-oriented machine, the const void * might include a byte
selector while the struct link * might not.
(2) Casting a function pointer to a data pointer can lose bits in some
memory models. Apparently this does not occur in POSIX-conforming
systems though, as dlsym() would fail if it did.
This commit also fixes hits_cmp() and compare_dir_entries(), which
had similar problems. However, I'm leaving alias_compare() in
src/intl/gettext/localealias.c unchanged for now, so as not to diverge
from the GNU version.
I also checked the bsearch() calls but they were all okay, apart from
one that used the alias_compare() mentioned above.