According to Jonas Fonseca, if init_string(&canonical) fails, then it
anyway sets canonical.source = NULL and makes done_string(&canonical)
safe, even if canonical was previously uninitialized.
Actions can now be bound to e.g. Ctrl-Alt-A. The keybinding code also
supports other combinations of modifiers, like Shift-Ctrl-Up, but the
escape sequence decoder doesn't yet.
Don't let Ctrl-Alt-letter combinations open menus.
The cast is not necessary since we already check the bounds, but by using a
cast here, it hopefully makes it more obvious what the long comment above
is pointing out: namely that we put the value of a signed integer into an
unsigned char.
This fixes a bug: in the previous version, l_bind_key() modified the
buffer whose address lua_tostring() returned, even though that is not
allowed according to Lua documentation <http://www.lua.org/pil/24.2.2.html>.
The change affects the user interface: previously, if the user typed
"ctrl+cokebottle" in the "Add keybinding" dialog box, ELinks would
change the text in the widget to "Ctrl-cokebottle" before complaining
that the keystroke is invalid. Now, it leaves the widget unchanged.
This commit does not yet add const to parameters of parse_keystroke()
and related functions.
Before really_add_keybinding() is called, check_keystroke() calls
parse_keystroke(), which converts the modifier prefix to canonical
form: for example, "alt+f9" becomes "Alt-f9". This commit makes
really_add_keybinding() normally ignore that string and generate a
brand new one, e.g. "Alt-F9" (note the upper-case F), for its
"Keystroke already used" warning. Likewise, " " turns to "Space".
After this commit, it should be possible to change parse_keystroke()
to never write back into its input string.
If really_add_keybinding() cannot generate the string for some reason
(out of memory?), then it will use whatever parse_keystroke() has left
in the buffer. The alternatives would be to omit the keystroke name
from the warning or to reject the keybinding entirely; it isn't clear
what the best solution is here, but the one I implemented is closest
to the previous behaviour.
This requires compiling cp2u() in even without CONFIG_UTF_8.
I also added an is_kbd_character macro to make try_document_key
more resilient to changes in the definition of term_event_key_T.
The previous version used only the low 8 bits of the key code.
This one arranges for the whole key to be rejected if it's not ASCII.
Perhaps the modifiers should be checked too, but I'm not changing that now.
In revision 1.15 of dns.c (as it was called way back then), pasky
backported a fix from Links 0.97pre2 to try gethostbyaddr before
trying gethostbyname for DNS lookups:
MacOS address resolution fix (Aldy Hernandez) (from 0.97pre2)
However, that fix introduced a bug, because it was calling gethostbyaddr
on all addresses, not just IP addresses. Mikulas fixed that bug in Links
0.98:
Do not call gethostbyaddr when name is not ip address (it should avoid
some useless nameserver queries)'
This fix was never backported to ELinks. Until today.
This commit is functionally the same as the fix in Links 0.98, plus it uses
inet_aton for great correctness!
This fixes a bug reported in #elinks by tnks, whereby lookups for
yubnub.org resulted in 121.117.98.110 == 0x7975626E == 'y', 'u', 'b', 'n'.
I believe that it also fixes bug 691 (which is already closed with a
workaround).
To reproduce before this patch:
- Run ELinks with an 80x25 terminal.
- Set document.browse.forms.confirm_submit = 1.
- Go to <http://bugzilla.elinks.cz/query.cgi>.
- Click the [ Search ] submit button.
- ELinks asks "Do you want to post form data to URL".
Each line of the URL begins at the horizontal center of the dialog,
and bleeds outside the right border of the dialog. Also, the
[ Yes ] and [ No ] buttons appear to float below the dialog.
Previously, ELinks used to silently discard the Alt modifier from
Alt-ö keystrokes when UTF-8 I/O was enabled. Now, separate actions
can be bound to ö and Alt-ö.
However, if CONFIG_UTF_8 is defined, then actions cannot be bound to
non-ASCII characters, regardless of modifiers. This is because the
code that handles names of keystrokes assumes a character can only be
a single byte. This commit does not change that.
Form fields and BFU text-input widgets then convert from UCS-4 to UTF-8.
If not all UTF-8 bytes fit, they don't insert anything. Thus it is no
longer possible to get invalid UTF-8 by hitting the length limit.
It is unclear to me which charset is supposed to be used for strings
in internal buffers. I made BFU insert UTF-8 whenever CONFIG_UTF_8,
but form fields use the charset of the terminal; that may have to be
changed.
As a side effect, this change should solve bug 782, because
term_send_ucs no longer encodes in UTF-8 if CONFIG_UTF_8 is defined.
I think the UTF-8 and codepage encoding calls I added are safe, too.
A similar bug may still surface somewhere else, but 782 could be
closed for now.
This change also lays the foundation for binding actions to non-ASCII
keys, but the keystroke name parser doesn't yet support that.
The CONFIG_UTF_8 mode does not currently support non-ASCII characters
in hot keys, either.
There is no need to check whether ev->ev == EVENT_KBD;
if decode_terminal_escape_sequence called
decode_terminal_mouse_escape_sequence, then the former neither modified
kbd.key nor passed &kbd to the latter, so kbd.key remains KBD_UNDEF.
If ev->ev was not checked, then it should not be trusted either.
So reinitialize the whole *ev if a keyboard event was indeed found.
For instance, if Ctrl-F1 were pressed and src/terminal/kbd.c supported it,
then toupper(KBD_F1) would be called, resulting in undefined behaviour.
src/terminal/kbd.c does not support such combinations yet, but it is
safest to fix the bug already.