#ifndef EL__SESSION_HISTORY_H #define EL__SESSION_HISTORY_H struct location; struct session; struct ses_history { /* The first list item is the first visited location. The last list * item is the last location in the unhistory. The @current location is * included in this list. */ struct list_head history; /* -> struct location */ /* The current location. This is moveable pivot pointing somewhere at * the middle of @history. */ struct location *current; }; void create_history(struct ses_history *history); void destroy_history(struct ses_history *history); void clean_unhistory(struct ses_history *history); void add_to_history(struct ses_history *history, struct location *loc); void del_from_history(struct ses_history *history, struct location *loc); /* Note that this function is dangerous, and its results are sort of * unpredictable. If the document is cached and is permitted to be fetched from * the cache, the effect of this function is immediate and you end up with the * new location being cur_loc(). BUT if the cache entry cannot be used, the * effect is delayed to the next main loop iteration, as the TASK_HISTORY * session task (ses_history_move()) is executed not now but in the bottom-half * handler. So, you MUST NOT depend on cur_loc() having an arbitrary value * after call to this function (or the regents go_(un)back(), of course). */ void go_history(struct session *ses, struct location *loc); /* Move back -n times if n is negative, forward n times if positive. */ void go_history_by_n(struct session *ses, int n); void go_back(struct session *ses); void go_unback(struct session *ses); void ses_history_move(struct session *ses); #endif