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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
acaf905b 3@c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-1999, 2001-2012
d24880de 4@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
b8d4c8d0 5@c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6336d8c3 6@setfilename ../../info/processes
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7@node Processes, Display, Abbrevs, Top
8@chapter Processes
9@cindex child process
10@cindex parent process
11@cindex subprocess
12@cindex process
13
14 In the terminology of operating systems, a @dfn{process} is a space in
15which a program can execute. Emacs runs in a process. Emacs Lisp
16programs can invoke other programs in processes of their own. These are
17called @dfn{subprocesses} or @dfn{child processes} of the Emacs process,
18which is their @dfn{parent process}.
19
20 A subprocess of Emacs may be @dfn{synchronous} or @dfn{asynchronous},
21depending on how it is created. When you create a synchronous
22subprocess, the Lisp program waits for the subprocess to terminate
23before continuing execution. When you create an asynchronous
24subprocess, it can run in parallel with the Lisp program. This kind of
25subprocess is represented within Emacs by a Lisp object which is also
e153c136 26called a ``process''. Lisp programs can use this object to communicate
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27with the subprocess or to control it. For example, you can send
28signals, obtain status information, receive output from the process, or
29send input to it.
30
31@defun processp object
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32This function returns @code{t} if @var{object} represents an Emacs
33subprocess, @code{nil} otherwise.
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34@end defun
35
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36 In addition to subprocesses of the current Emacs session, you can
37also access other processes running on your machine. @xref{System
38Processes}.
39
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40@menu
41* Subprocess Creation:: Functions that start subprocesses.
42* Shell Arguments:: Quoting an argument to pass it to a shell.
43* Synchronous Processes:: Details of using synchronous subprocesses.
44* Asynchronous Processes:: Starting up an asynchronous subprocess.
45* Deleting Processes:: Eliminating an asynchronous subprocess.
46* Process Information:: Accessing run-status and other attributes.
47* Input to Processes:: Sending input to an asynchronous subprocess.
48* Signals to Processes:: Stopping, continuing or interrupting
49 an asynchronous subprocess.
50* Output from Processes:: Collecting output from an asynchronous subprocess.
51* Sentinels:: Sentinels run when process run-status changes.
52* Query Before Exit:: Whether to query if exiting will kill a process.
23dd4ecd 53* System Processes:: Accessing other processes running on your system.
d24880de 54* Transaction Queues:: Transaction-based communication with subprocesses.
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55* Network:: Opening network connections.
56* Network Servers:: Network servers let Emacs accept net connections.
57* Datagrams:: UDP network connections.
58* Low-Level Network:: Lower-level but more general function
59 to create connections and servers.
d24880de 60* Misc Network:: Additional relevant functions for net connections.
c73e02fa 61* Serial Ports:: Communicating with serial ports.
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62* Byte Packing:: Using bindat to pack and unpack binary data.
63@end menu
64
65@node Subprocess Creation
66@section Functions that Create Subprocesses
67
583d8b3c 68 There are three primitives that create a new subprocess in which to run
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69a program. One of them, @code{start-process}, creates an asynchronous
70process and returns a process object (@pxref{Asynchronous Processes}).
71The other two, @code{call-process} and @code{call-process-region},
72create a synchronous process and do not return a process object
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73(@pxref{Synchronous Processes}). There are various higher-level
74functions that make use of these primitives to run particular types of
75process.
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76
77 Synchronous and asynchronous processes are explained in the following
78sections. Since the three functions are all called in a similar
79fashion, their common arguments are described here.
80
81@cindex execute program
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82@cindex @env{PATH} environment variable
83@cindex @env{HOME} environment variable
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84 In all cases, the function's @var{program} argument specifies the
85program to be run. An error is signaled if the file is not found or
86cannot be executed. If the file name is relative, the variable
87@code{exec-path} contains a list of directories to search. Emacs
88initializes @code{exec-path} when it starts up, based on the value of
8fc85b20 89the environment variable @env{PATH}. The standard file name
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90constructs, @samp{~}, @samp{.}, and @samp{..}, are interpreted as
91usual in @code{exec-path}, but environment variable substitutions
92(@samp{$HOME}, etc.) are not recognized; use
93@code{substitute-in-file-name} to perform them (@pxref{File Name
94Expansion}). @code{nil} in this list refers to
95@code{default-directory}.
96
97 Executing a program can also try adding suffixes to the specified
98name:
99
100@defvar exec-suffixes
101This variable is a list of suffixes (strings) to try adding to the
102specified program file name. The list should include @code{""} if you
103want the name to be tried exactly as specified. The default value is
104system-dependent.
105@end defvar
106
107 @strong{Please note:} The argument @var{program} contains only the
108name of the program; it may not contain any command-line arguments. You
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109must use a separate argument, @var{args}, to provide those, as
110described below.
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111
112 Each of the subprocess-creating functions has a @var{buffer-or-name}
e153c136 113argument that specifies where the standard output from the program will
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114go. It should be a buffer or a buffer name; if it is a buffer name,
115that will create the buffer if it does not already exist. It can also
116be @code{nil}, which says to discard the output unless a filter function
117handles it. (@xref{Filter Functions}, and @ref{Read and Print}.)
118Normally, you should avoid having multiple processes send output to the
119same buffer because their output would be intermixed randomly.
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120For synchronous processes, you can send the output to a file instead
121of a buffer.
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122
123@cindex program arguments
124 All three of the subprocess-creating functions have a @code{&rest}
125argument, @var{args}. The @var{args} must all be strings, and they are
126supplied to @var{program} as separate command line arguments. Wildcard
127characters and other shell constructs have no special meanings in these
128strings, since the strings are passed directly to the specified program.
129
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130@cindex environment variables, subprocesses
131 The subprocess inherits its environment from Emacs, but you can
132specify overrides for it with @code{process-environment}. @xref{System
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133Environment}. The subprocess gets its current directory from the
134value of @code{default-directory}.
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135
136@defvar exec-directory
137@pindex movemail
138The value of this variable is a string, the name of a directory that
e153c136 139contains programs that come with GNU Emacs and are intended for Emacs
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140to invoke. The program @code{movemail} is an example of such a program;
141Rmail uses it to fetch new mail from an inbox.
142@end defvar
143
144@defopt exec-path
145The value of this variable is a list of directories to search for
146programs to run in subprocesses. Each element is either the name of a
147directory (i.e., a string), or @code{nil}, which stands for the default
148directory (which is the value of @code{default-directory}).
149@cindex program directories
150
151The value of @code{exec-path} is used by @code{call-process} and
152@code{start-process} when the @var{program} argument is not an absolute
153file name.
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154
155Generally, you should not modify @code{exec-path} directly. Instead,
156ensure that your @env{PATH} environment variable is set appropriately
157before starting Emacs. Trying to modify @code{exec-path}
158independently of @env{PATH} can lead to confusing results.
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159@end defopt
160
161@node Shell Arguments
162@section Shell Arguments
163@cindex arguments for shell commands
164@cindex shell command arguments
165
166 Lisp programs sometimes need to run a shell and give it a command
167that contains file names that were specified by the user. These
168programs ought to be able to support any valid file name. But the shell
169gives special treatment to certain characters, and if these characters
170occur in the file name, they will confuse the shell. To handle these
171characters, use the function @code{shell-quote-argument}:
172
173@defun shell-quote-argument argument
e153c136 174This function returns a string that represents, in shell syntax,
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175an argument whose actual contents are @var{argument}. It should
176work reliably to concatenate the return value into a shell command
177and then pass it to a shell for execution.
178
179Precisely what this function does depends on your operating system. The
180function is designed to work with the syntax of your system's standard
181shell; if you use an unusual shell, you will need to redefine this
182function.
183
184@example
185;; @r{This example shows the behavior on GNU and Unix systems.}
186(shell-quote-argument "foo > bar")
187 @result{} "foo\\ \\>\\ bar"
188
189;; @r{This example shows the behavior on MS-DOS and MS-Windows.}
190(shell-quote-argument "foo > bar")
191 @result{} "\"foo > bar\""
192@end example
193
194Here's an example of using @code{shell-quote-argument} to construct
195a shell command:
196
197@example
198(concat "diff -c "
199 (shell-quote-argument oldfile)
200 " "
201 (shell-quote-argument newfile))
202@end example
203@end defun
204
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205@cindex quoting and unquoting command-line arguments
206@cindex minibuffer input, and command-line arguments
207@cindex @code{call-process}, command-line arguments from minibuffer
208@cindex @code{start-process}, command-line arguments from minibuffer
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209 The following two functions are useful for combining a list of
210individual command-line argument strings into a single string, and
211taking a string apart into a list of individual command-line
e153c136 212arguments. These functions are mainly intended for
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213converting user input in the minibuffer, a Lisp string, into a list of
214string arguments to be passed to @code{call-process} or
e153c136 215@code{start-process}, or for converting such lists of arguments into
3c73e30e 216a single Lisp string to be presented in the minibuffer or echo area.
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217
218@defun split-string-and-unquote string &optional separators
219This function splits @var{string} into substrings at matches for the
220regular expression @var{separators}, like @code{split-string} does
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221(@pxref{Creating Strings}); in addition, it removes quoting from the
222substrings. It then makes a list of the substrings and returns it.
a873ee3d 223
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224If @var{separators} is omitted or @code{nil}, it defaults to
225@code{"\\s-+"}, which is a regular expression that matches one or more
226characters with whitespace syntax (@pxref{Syntax Class Table}).
a873ee3d 227
3c73e30e 228This function supports two types of quoting: enclosing a whole string
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229in double quotes @code{"@dots{}"}, and quoting individual characters
230with a backslash escape @samp{\}. The latter is also used in Lisp
231strings, so this function can handle those as well.
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232@end defun
233
234@defun combine-and-quote-strings list-of-strings &optional separator
235This function concatenates @var{list-of-strings} into a single string,
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236quoting each string as necessary. It also sticks the @var{separator}
237string between each pair of strings; if @var{separator} is omitted or
238@code{nil}, it defaults to @code{" "}. The return value is the
239resulting string.
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240
241The strings in @var{list-of-strings} that need quoting are those that
242include @var{separator} as their substring. Quoting a string encloses
243it in double quotes @code{"@dots{}"}. In the simplest case, if you
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244are consing a command from the individual command-line arguments,
245every argument that includes embedded blanks will be quoted.
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246@end defun
247
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248@node Synchronous Processes
249@section Creating a Synchronous Process
250@cindex synchronous subprocess
251
252 After a @dfn{synchronous process} is created, Emacs waits for the
253process to terminate before continuing. Starting Dired on GNU or
254Unix@footnote{On other systems, Emacs uses a Lisp emulation of
255@code{ls}; see @ref{Contents of Directories}.} is an example of this: it
256runs @code{ls} in a synchronous process, then modifies the output
257slightly. Because the process is synchronous, the entire directory
258listing arrives in the buffer before Emacs tries to do anything with it.
259
260 While Emacs waits for the synchronous subprocess to terminate, the
261user can quit by typing @kbd{C-g}. The first @kbd{C-g} tries to kill
262the subprocess with a @code{SIGINT} signal; but it waits until the
263subprocess actually terminates before quitting. If during that time the
264user types another @kbd{C-g}, that kills the subprocess instantly with
265@code{SIGKILL} and quits immediately (except on MS-DOS, where killing
266other processes doesn't work). @xref{Quitting}.
267
268 The synchronous subprocess functions return an indication of how the
269process terminated.
270
271 The output from a synchronous subprocess is generally decoded using a
272coding system, much like text read from a file. The input sent to a
273subprocess by @code{call-process-region} is encoded using a coding
274system, much like text written into a file. @xref{Coding Systems}.
275
276@defun call-process program &optional infile destination display &rest args
b59a4335 277This function calls @var{program} and waits for it to finish.
b8d4c8d0 278
b59a4335 279The standard input for the new process comes from file @var{infile} if
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280@var{infile} is not @code{nil}, and from the null device otherwise.
281The argument @var{destination} says where to put the process output.
282Here are the possibilities:
283
284@table @asis
285@item a buffer
286Insert the output in that buffer, before point. This includes both the
287standard output stream and the standard error stream of the process.
288
289@item a string
290Insert the output in a buffer with that name, before point.
291
292@item @code{t}
293Insert the output in the current buffer, before point.
294
295@item @code{nil}
296Discard the output.
297
298@item 0
299Discard the output, and return @code{nil} immediately without waiting
300for the subprocess to finish.
301
302In this case, the process is not truly synchronous, since it can run in
303parallel with Emacs; but you can think of it as synchronous in that
304Emacs is essentially finished with the subprocess as soon as this
305function returns.
306
307MS-DOS doesn't support asynchronous subprocesses, so this option doesn't
308work there.
309
1ef14cb4 310@item @code{(:file @var{file-name})}
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311Send the output to the file name specified, overwriting it if it
312already exists.
1ef14cb4 313
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314@item @code{(@var{real-destination} @var{error-destination})}
315Keep the standard output stream separate from the standard error stream;
316deal with the ordinary output as specified by @var{real-destination},
317and dispose of the error output according to @var{error-destination}.
318If @var{error-destination} is @code{nil}, that means to discard the
319error output, @code{t} means mix it with the ordinary output, and a
320string specifies a file name to redirect error output into.
321
322You can't directly specify a buffer to put the error output in; that is
323too difficult to implement. But you can achieve this result by sending
324the error output to a temporary file and then inserting the file into a
325buffer.
326@end table
327
328If @var{display} is non-@code{nil}, then @code{call-process} redisplays
329the buffer as output is inserted. (However, if the coding system chosen
330for decoding output is @code{undecided}, meaning deduce the encoding
331from the actual data, then redisplay sometimes cannot continue once
332non-@acronym{ASCII} characters are encountered. There are fundamental
333reasons why it is hard to fix this; see @ref{Output from Processes}.)
334
335Otherwise the function @code{call-process} does no redisplay, and the
336results become visible on the screen only when Emacs redisplays that
337buffer in the normal course of events.
338
339The remaining arguments, @var{args}, are strings that specify command
340line arguments for the program.
341
342The value returned by @code{call-process} (unless you told it not to
343wait) indicates the reason for process termination. A number gives the
344exit status of the subprocess; 0 means success, and any other value
345means failure. If the process terminated with a signal,
346@code{call-process} returns a string describing the signal.
347
348In the examples below, the buffer @samp{foo} is current.
349
350@smallexample
351@group
352(call-process "pwd" nil t)
353 @result{} 0
354
355---------- Buffer: foo ----------
e153c136 356/home/lewis/manual
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357---------- Buffer: foo ----------
358@end group
359
360@group
361(call-process "grep" nil "bar" nil "lewis" "/etc/passwd")
362 @result{} 0
363
364---------- Buffer: bar ----------
e153c136 365lewis:x:1001:1001:Bil Lewis,,,,:/home/lewis:/bin/bash
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366
367---------- Buffer: bar ----------
368@end group
369@end smallexample
370
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371Here is an example of the use of @code{call-process}, as used to
372be found in the definition of the @code{insert-directory} function:
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373
374@smallexample
375@group
e153c136 376(call-process insert-directory-program nil t nil switches
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377 (if full-directory-p
378 (concat (file-name-as-directory file) ".")
379 file))
380@end group
381@end smallexample
382@end defun
383
384@defun process-file program &optional infile buffer display &rest args
385This function processes files synchronously in a separate process. It
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386is similar to @code{call-process}, but may invoke a file handler based
387on the value of the variable @code{default-directory}, which specifies
388the current working directory of the subprocess.
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389
390The arguments are handled in almost the same way as for
391@code{call-process}, with the following differences:
392
393Some file handlers may not support all combinations and forms of the
394arguments @var{infile}, @var{buffer}, and @var{display}. For example,
395some file handlers might behave as if @var{display} were @code{nil},
396regardless of the value actually passed. As another example, some
397file handlers might not support separating standard output and error
398output by way of the @var{buffer} argument.
399
400If a file handler is invoked, it determines the program to run based
e153c136 401on the first argument @var{program}. For instance, suppose that a
b8d4c8d0 402handler for remote files is invoked. Then the path that is used for
e153c136 403searching for the program might be different from @code{exec-path}.
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404
405The second argument @var{infile} may invoke a file handler. The file
406handler could be different from the handler chosen for the
407@code{process-file} function itself. (For example,
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408@code{default-directory} could be on one remote host, and
409@var{infile} on a different remote host. Or @code{default-directory}
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410could be non-special, whereas @var{infile} is on a remote host.)
411
412If @var{buffer} is a list of the form @code{(@var{real-destination}
413@var{error-destination})}, and @var{error-destination} names a file,
414then the same remarks as for @var{infile} apply.
415
416The remaining arguments (@var{args}) will be passed to the process
417verbatim. Emacs is not involved in processing file names that are
418present in @var{args}. To avoid confusion, it may be best to avoid
419absolute file names in @var{args}, but rather to specify all file
420names as relative to @code{default-directory}. The function
421@code{file-relative-name} is useful for constructing such relative
422file names.
423@end defun
424
3691a0a6 425@defvar process-file-side-effects
e153c136 426This variable indicates whether a call of @code{process-file} changes
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427remote files.
428
e153c136 429By default, this variable is always set to @code{t}, meaning that a
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430call of @code{process-file} could potentially change any file on a
431remote host. When set to @code{nil}, a file handler could optimize
e153c136 432its behavior with respect to remote file attribute caching.
3691a0a6 433
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434You should only ever change this variable with a let-binding; never
435with @code{setq}.
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436@end defvar
437
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438@defun call-process-region start end program &optional delete destination display &rest args
439This function sends the text from @var{start} to @var{end} as
440standard input to a process running @var{program}. It deletes the text
441sent if @var{delete} is non-@code{nil}; this is useful when
442@var{destination} is @code{t}, to insert the output in the current
443buffer in place of the input.
444
445The arguments @var{destination} and @var{display} control what to do
446with the output from the subprocess, and whether to update the display
447as it comes in. For details, see the description of
448@code{call-process}, above. If @var{destination} is the integer 0,
449@code{call-process-region} discards the output and returns @code{nil}
450immediately, without waiting for the subprocess to finish (this only
e153c136 451works if asynchronous subprocesses are supported; i.e. not on MS-DOS).
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452
453The remaining arguments, @var{args}, are strings that specify command
454line arguments for the program.
455
456The return value of @code{call-process-region} is just like that of
457@code{call-process}: @code{nil} if you told it to return without
458waiting; otherwise, a number or string which indicates how the
459subprocess terminated.
460
461In the following example, we use @code{call-process-region} to run the
462@code{cat} utility, with standard input being the first five characters
463in buffer @samp{foo} (the word @samp{input}). @code{cat} copies its
464standard input into its standard output. Since the argument
465@var{destination} is @code{t}, this output is inserted in the current
466buffer.
467
468@smallexample
469@group
470---------- Buffer: foo ----------
471input@point{}
472---------- Buffer: foo ----------
473@end group
474
475@group
476(call-process-region 1 6 "cat" nil t)
477 @result{} 0
478
479---------- Buffer: foo ----------
480inputinput@point{}
481---------- Buffer: foo ----------
482@end group
483@end smallexample
484
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485 For example, the @code{shell-command-on-region} command uses
486@code{call-process-region} in a manner similar to this:
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487
488@smallexample
489@group
490(call-process-region
491 start end
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492 shell-file-name ; @r{name of program}
493 nil ; @r{do not delete region}
494 buffer ; @r{send output to @code{buffer}}
495 nil ; @r{no redisplay during output}
496 "-c" command) ; @r{arguments for the shell}
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497@end group
498@end smallexample
12acf783 499@c It actually uses shell-command-switch, but no need to mention that here.
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500@end defun
501
502@defun call-process-shell-command command &optional infile destination display &rest args
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503This function executes the shell command @var{command} synchronously.
504The final arguments @var{args} are additional arguments to add at the
505end of @var{command}. The other arguments are handled as in
506@code{call-process}.
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507@end defun
508
509@defun process-file-shell-command command &optional infile destination display &rest args
510This function is like @code{call-process-shell-command}, but uses
511@code{process-file} internally. Depending on @code{default-directory},
512@var{command} can be executed also on remote hosts.
513@end defun
514
515@defun shell-command-to-string command
516This function executes @var{command} (a string) as a shell command,
517then returns the command's output as a string.
518@end defun
519
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520@c There is also shell-command-on-region, but that is more of a user
521@c command, not something to use in programs.
522
583d8b3c 523@defun process-lines program &rest args
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524This function runs @var{program}, waits for it to finish, and returns
525its output as a list of strings. Each string in the list holds a
526single line of text output by the program; the end-of-line characters
527are stripped from each line. The arguments beyond @var{program},
528@var{args}, are strings that specify command-line arguments with which
529to run the program.
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530
531If @var{program} exits with a non-zero exit status, this function
532signals an error.
533
534This function works by calling @code{call-process}, so program output
535is decoded in the same way as for @code{call-process}.
536@end defun
537
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538@node Asynchronous Processes
539@section Creating an Asynchronous Process
540@cindex asynchronous subprocess
541
542 After an @dfn{asynchronous process} is created, Emacs and the subprocess
543both continue running immediately. The process thereafter runs
544in parallel with Emacs, and the two can communicate with each other
545using the functions described in the following sections. However,
546communication is only partially asynchronous: Emacs sends data to the
547process only when certain functions are called, and Emacs accepts data
548from the process only when Emacs is waiting for input or for a time
549delay.
550
551 Here we describe how to create an asynchronous process.
552
553@defun start-process name buffer-or-name program &rest args
554This function creates a new asynchronous subprocess and starts the
555program @var{program} running in it. It returns a process object that
556stands for the new subprocess in Lisp. The argument @var{name}
557specifies the name for the process object; if a process with this name
558already exists, then @var{name} is modified (by appending @samp{<1>},
559etc.) to be unique. The buffer @var{buffer-or-name} is the buffer to
560associate with the process.
561
562The remaining arguments, @var{args}, are strings that specify command
563line arguments for the program.
564
565In the example below, the first process is started and runs (rather,
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566sleeps) for 100 seconds (the output buffer @samp{foo} is created
567immediately). Meanwhile, the second process is started, and
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568given the name @samp{my-process<1>} for the sake of uniqueness. It
569inserts the directory listing at the end of the buffer @samp{foo},
570before the first process finishes. Then it finishes, and a message to
571that effect is inserted in the buffer. Much later, the first process
572finishes, and another message is inserted in the buffer for it.
573
574@smallexample
575@group
576(start-process "my-process" "foo" "sleep" "100")
577 @result{} #<process my-process>
578@end group
579
580@group
12acf783 581(start-process "my-process" "foo" "ls" "-l" "/bin")
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582 @result{} #<process my-process<1>>
583
584---------- Buffer: foo ----------
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585total 8336
586-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 971384 Mar 30 10:14 bash
587-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 146920 Jul 5 2011 bsd-csh
588@dots{}
589-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 696880 Feb 28 15:55 zsh4
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590
591Process my-process<1> finished
592
593Process my-process finished
594---------- Buffer: foo ----------
595@end group
596@end smallexample
597@end defun
598
599@defun start-file-process name buffer-or-name program &rest args
600Like @code{start-process}, this function starts a new asynchronous
601subprocess running @var{program} in it, and returns its process
12acf783 602object.
b8d4c8d0 603
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604The difference from @code{start-process} is that this function may
605invoked a file handler based on the value of @code{default-directory}.
606This handler ought to run @var{program}, perhaps on the local host,
607perhaps on a remote host that corresponds to @code{default-directory}.
608In the latter case, the local part of @code{default-directory} becomes
609the working directory of the process.
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610
611This function does not try to invoke file name handlers for
612@var{program} or for the @var{program-args}.
613
614Depending on the implementation of the file handler, it might not be
615possible to apply @code{process-filter} or @code{process-sentinel} to
12acf783 616the resulting process object. @xref{Filter Functions}, and @ref{Sentinels}.
b8d4c8d0 617
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618@c FIXME Can we find a better example (i.e. a more modern function
619@c that is actually documented).
b8d4c8d0 620Some file handlers may not support @code{start-file-process} (for
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621example the function @code{ange-ftp-hook-function}). In such cases,
622this function does nothing and returns @code{nil}.
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623@end defun
624
03a74b84 625@defun start-process-shell-command name buffer-or-name command
12acf783 626This function is like @code{start-process}, except that it uses a shell
b8d4c8d0 627to execute the specified command. The argument @var{command} is a shell
03a74b84 628command name. The variable @code{shell-file-name} specifies which shell to
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629use.
630
631The point of running a program through the shell, rather than directly
632with @code{start-process}, is so that you can employ shell features such
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633as wildcards in the arguments. It follows that if you include any
634arbitrary user-specified arguments in the command, you should quote them
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635with @code{shell-quote-argument} first, so that any special shell
636characters do @emph{not} have their special shell meanings. @xref{Shell
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637Arguments}. Of course, when executing commands based on user input
638you should also consider the security implications.
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639@end defun
640
03a74b84 641@defun start-file-process-shell-command name buffer-or-name command
b8d4c8d0 642This function is like @code{start-process-shell-command}, but uses
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643@code{start-file-process} internally. Because of this, @var{command}
644can also be executed on remote hosts, depending on @code{default-directory}.
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645@end defun
646
647@defvar process-connection-type
648@cindex pipes
649@cindex @acronym{PTY}s
650This variable controls the type of device used to communicate with
651asynchronous subprocesses. If it is non-@code{nil}, then @acronym{PTY}s are
652used, when available. Otherwise, pipes are used.
653
654@acronym{PTY}s are usually preferable for processes visible to the user, as
655in Shell mode, because they allow job control (@kbd{C-c}, @kbd{C-z},
656etc.) to work between the process and its children, whereas pipes do
657not. For subprocesses used for internal purposes by programs, it is
658often better to use a pipe, because they are more efficient. In
659addition, the total number of @acronym{PTY}s is limited on many systems and
660it is good not to waste them.
661
662The value of @code{process-connection-type} takes effect when
663@code{start-process} is called. So you can specify how to communicate
664with one subprocess by binding the variable around the call to
665@code{start-process}.
666
667@smallexample
668@group
12acf783 669(let ((process-connection-type nil)) ; @r{use a pipe}
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670 (start-process @dots{}))
671@end group
672@end smallexample
673
674To determine whether a given subprocess actually got a pipe or a
675@acronym{PTY}, use the function @code{process-tty-name} (@pxref{Process
676Information}).
677@end defvar
678
679@node Deleting Processes
680@section Deleting Processes
681@cindex deleting processes
682
683 @dfn{Deleting a process} disconnects Emacs immediately from the
684subprocess. Processes are deleted automatically after they terminate,
685but not necessarily right away. You can delete a process explicitly
12acf783 686at any time. If you explicitly delete a terminated process before it
b8d4c8d0 687is deleted automatically, no harm results. Deleting a running
12acf783 688process sends a signal to terminate it (and its child processes, if
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689any), and calls the process sentinel if it has one. @xref{Sentinels}.
690
691 When a process is deleted, the process object itself continues to
692exist as long as other Lisp objects point to it. All the Lisp
693primitives that work on process objects accept deleted processes, but
694those that do I/O or send signals will report an error. The process
695mark continues to point to the same place as before, usually into a
696buffer where output from the process was being inserted.
697
698@defopt delete-exited-processes
699This variable controls automatic deletion of processes that have
700terminated (due to calling @code{exit} or to a signal). If it is
701@code{nil}, then they continue to exist until the user runs
702@code{list-processes}. Otherwise, they are deleted immediately after
703they exit.
704@end defopt
705
706@defun delete-process process
707This function deletes a process, killing it with a @code{SIGKILL}
708signal. The argument may be a process, the name of a process, a
709buffer, or the name of a buffer. (A buffer or buffer-name stands for
710the process that @code{get-buffer-process} returns.) Calling
711@code{delete-process} on a running process terminates it, updates the
712process status, and runs the sentinel (if any) immediately. If the
713process has already terminated, calling @code{delete-process} has no
714effect on its status, or on the running of its sentinel (which will
715happen sooner or later).
716
717@smallexample
718@group
719(delete-process "*shell*")
720 @result{} nil
721@end group
722@end smallexample
723@end defun
724
725@node Process Information
726@section Process Information
727
728 Several functions return information about processes.
b8d4c8d0 729
62f4b18c 730@deffn Command list-processes &optional query-only buffer
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731This command displays a listing of all living processes. In addition,
732it finally deletes any process whose status was @samp{Exited} or
733@samp{Signaled}. It returns @code{nil}.
734
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735The processes are shown in a buffer named @file{*Process List*}
736(unless you specify otherwise using the optional argument @var{buffer}),
737whose major mode is Process Menu mode.
82233bea 738
62f4b18c 739If @var{query-only} is non-@code{nil}, it only lists processes
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740whose query flag is non-@code{nil}. @xref{Query Before Exit}.
741@end deffn
742
743@defun process-list
744This function returns a list of all processes that have not been deleted.
745
746@smallexample
747@group
748(process-list)
749 @result{} (#<process display-time> #<process shell>)
750@end group
751@end smallexample
752@end defun
753
754@defun get-process name
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755This function returns the process named @var{name} (a string), or
756@code{nil} if there is none.
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757
758@smallexample
759@group
760(get-process "shell")
761 @result{} #<process shell>
762@end group
763@end smallexample
764@end defun
765
766@defun process-command process
767This function returns the command that was executed to start
768@var{process}. This is a list of strings, the first string being the
769program executed and the rest of the strings being the arguments that
770were given to the program.
771
772@smallexample
773@group
774(process-command (get-process "shell"))
62f4b18c 775 @result{} ("bash" "-i")
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776@end group
777@end smallexample
778@end defun
779
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780@defun process-contact process &optional key
781
782This function returns information about how a network or serial
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783process was set up. When @var{key} is @code{nil}, it returns
784@code{(@var{hostname} @var{service})} for a network process, and
785@code{(@var{port} @var{speed})} for a serial process.
786For an ordinary child process, this function always returns @code{t}.
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787
788If @var{key} is @code{t}, the value is the complete status information
789for the connection, server, or serial port; that is, the list of
790keywords and values specified in @code{make-network-process} or
791@code{make-serial-process}, except that some of the values represent
792the current status instead of what you specified.
793
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794For a network process, the values include (see
795@code{make-network-process} for a complete list):
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796
797@table @code
798@item :buffer
799The associated value is the process buffer.
800@item :filter
801The associated value is the process filter function.
802@item :sentinel
803The associated value is the process sentinel function.
804@item :remote
805In a connection, the address in internal format of the remote peer.
806@item :local
807The local address, in internal format.
808@item :service
809In a server, if you specified @code{t} for @var{service},
810this value is the actual port number.
811@end table
812
813@code{:local} and @code{:remote} are included even if they were not
814specified explicitly in @code{make-network-process}.
815
816For a serial process, see @code{make-serial-process} and
817@code{serial-process-configure} for a list of keys.
818
819If @var{key} is a keyword, the function returns the value corresponding
820to that keyword.
821@end defun
822
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823@defun process-id process
824This function returns the @acronym{PID} of @var{process}. This is an
825integer that distinguishes the process @var{process} from all other
826processes running on the same computer at the current time. The
827@acronym{PID} of a process is chosen by the operating system kernel when the
828process is started and remains constant as long as the process exists.
829@end defun
830
831@defun process-name process
62f4b18c 832This function returns the name of @var{process}, as a string.
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833@end defun
834
835@defun process-status process-name
836This function returns the status of @var{process-name} as a symbol.
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837The argument @var{process-name} must be a process, a buffer, or a
838process name (a string).
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839
840The possible values for an actual subprocess are:
841
842@table @code
843@item run
844for a process that is running.
845@item stop
846for a process that is stopped but continuable.
847@item exit
848for a process that has exited.
849@item signal
850for a process that has received a fatal signal.
851@item open
852for a network connection that is open.
853@item closed
854for a network connection that is closed. Once a connection
855is closed, you cannot reopen it, though you might be able to open
856a new connection to the same place.
857@item connect
858for a non-blocking connection that is waiting to complete.
859@item failed
860for a non-blocking connection that has failed to complete.
861@item listen
862for a network server that is listening.
863@item nil
864if @var{process-name} is not the name of an existing process.
865@end table
866
867@smallexample
868@group
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869(process-status (get-buffer "*shell*"))
870 @result{} run
871@end group
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872@end smallexample
873
874For a network connection, @code{process-status} returns one of the symbols
875@code{open} or @code{closed}. The latter means that the other side
876closed the connection, or Emacs did @code{delete-process}.
877@end defun
878
b96e6cde 879@defun process-live-p process
e153c136 880This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{process} is alive. A
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881process is considered alive if its status is @code{run}, @code{open},
882@code{listen}, @code{connect} or @code{stop}.
883@end defun
884
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885@defun process-type process
886This function returns the symbol @code{network} for a network
887connection or server, @code{serial} for a serial port connection, or
888@code{real} for a real subprocess.
889@end defun
890
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891@defun process-exit-status process
892This function returns the exit status of @var{process} or the signal
893number that killed it. (Use the result of @code{process-status} to
894determine which of those it is.) If @var{process} has not yet
895terminated, the value is 0.
896@end defun
897
898@defun process-tty-name process
899This function returns the terminal name that @var{process} is using for
900its communication with Emacs---or @code{nil} if it is using pipes
901instead of a terminal (see @code{process-connection-type} in
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902@ref{Asynchronous Processes}). If @var{process} represents a program
903running on a remote host, the terminal name used by that program on
904the remote host is provided as process property @code{remote-tty}.
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905@end defun
906
907@defun process-coding-system process
908@anchor{Coding systems for a subprocess}
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909This function returns a cons cell @code{(@var{decode} . @var{encode})},
910describing the coding systems in use for decoding output from, and
911encoding input to, @var{process} (@pxref{Coding Systems}).
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912@end defun
913
914@defun set-process-coding-system process &optional decoding-system encoding-system
915This function specifies the coding systems to use for subsequent output
916from and input to @var{process}. It will use @var{decoding-system} to
917decode subprocess output, and @var{encoding-system} to encode subprocess
918input.
919@end defun
920
921 Every process also has a property list that you can use to store
922miscellaneous values associated with the process.
923
924@defun process-get process propname
925This function returns the value of the @var{propname} property
926of @var{process}.
927@end defun
928
929@defun process-put process propname value
930This function sets the value of the @var{propname} property
931of @var{process} to @var{value}.
932@end defun
933
934@defun process-plist process
935This function returns the process plist of @var{process}.
936@end defun
937
938@defun set-process-plist process plist
939This function sets the process plist of @var{process} to @var{plist}.
940@end defun
941
942@node Input to Processes
943@section Sending Input to Processes
944@cindex process input
945
946 Asynchronous subprocesses receive input when it is sent to them by
947Emacs, which is done with the functions in this section. You must
948specify the process to send input to, and the input data to send. The
949data appears on the ``standard input'' of the subprocess.
950
62f4b18c 951@c FIXME which?
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952 Some operating systems have limited space for buffered input in a
953@acronym{PTY}. On these systems, Emacs sends an @acronym{EOF}
954periodically amidst the other characters, to force them through. For
955most programs, these @acronym{EOF}s do no harm.
956
957 Subprocess input is normally encoded using a coding system before the
958subprocess receives it, much like text written into a file. You can use
959@code{set-process-coding-system} to specify which coding system to use
960(@pxref{Process Information}). Otherwise, the coding system comes from
961@code{coding-system-for-write}, if that is non-@code{nil}; or else from
962the defaulting mechanism (@pxref{Default Coding Systems}).
963
964 Sometimes the system is unable to accept input for that process,
965because the input buffer is full. When this happens, the send functions
966wait a short while, accepting output from subprocesses, and then try
967again. This gives the subprocess a chance to read more of its pending
968input and make space in the buffer. It also allows filters, sentinels
969and timers to run---so take account of that in writing your code.
970
971 In these functions, the @var{process} argument can be a process or
972the name of a process, or a buffer or buffer name (which stands
973for a process via @code{get-buffer-process}). @code{nil} means
974the current buffer's process.
975
976@defun process-send-string process string
977This function sends @var{process} the contents of @var{string} as
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978standard input. It returns @code{nil}. For example, to make a
979Shell buffer list files:
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980
981@smallexample
982@group
983(process-send-string "shell<1>" "ls\n")
984 @result{} nil
985@end group
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986@end smallexample
987@end defun
988
989@defun process-send-region process start end
990This function sends the text in the region defined by @var{start} and
991@var{end} as standard input to @var{process}.
992
993An error is signaled unless both @var{start} and @var{end} are
994integers or markers that indicate positions in the current buffer. (It
995is unimportant which number is larger.)
996@end defun
997
998@defun process-send-eof &optional process
999This function makes @var{process} see an end-of-file in its
1000input. The @acronym{EOF} comes after any text already sent to it.
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1001The function returns @var{process}.
1002
1003@smallexample
1004@group
1005(process-send-eof "shell")
1006 @result{} "shell"
1007@end group
1008@end smallexample
1009@end defun
1010
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1011@defun process-running-child-p &optional process
1012This function will tell you whether a @var{process} has given control of
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1013its terminal to its own child process. The value is @code{t} if this is
1014true, or if Emacs cannot tell; it is @code{nil} if Emacs can be certain
1015that this is not so.
1016@end defun
1017
1018@node Signals to Processes
1019@section Sending Signals to Processes
1020@cindex process signals
1021@cindex sending signals
1022@cindex signals
1023
1024 @dfn{Sending a signal} to a subprocess is a way of interrupting its
1025activities. There are several different signals, each with its own
1026meaning. The set of signals and their names is defined by the operating
1027system. For example, the signal @code{SIGINT} means that the user has
1028typed @kbd{C-c}, or that some analogous thing has happened.
1029
1030 Each signal has a standard effect on the subprocess. Most signals
62f4b18c 1031kill the subprocess, but some stop (or resume) execution instead. Most
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1032signals can optionally be handled by programs; if the program handles
1033the signal, then we can say nothing in general about its effects.
1034
1035 You can send signals explicitly by calling the functions in this
1036section. Emacs also sends signals automatically at certain times:
1037killing a buffer sends a @code{SIGHUP} signal to all its associated
1038processes; killing Emacs sends a @code{SIGHUP} signal to all remaining
1039processes. (@code{SIGHUP} is a signal that usually indicates that the
62f4b18c 1040user ``hung up the phone'', i.e., disconnected.)
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1041
1042 Each of the signal-sending functions takes two optional arguments:
1043@var{process} and @var{current-group}.
1044
1045 The argument @var{process} must be either a process, a process
1046name, a buffer, a buffer name, or @code{nil}. A buffer or buffer name
1047stands for a process through @code{get-buffer-process}. @code{nil}
1048stands for the process associated with the current buffer. An error
1049is signaled if @var{process} does not identify a process.
1050
1051 The argument @var{current-group} is a flag that makes a difference
1052when you are running a job-control shell as an Emacs subprocess. If it
1053is non-@code{nil}, then the signal is sent to the current process-group
1054of the terminal that Emacs uses to communicate with the subprocess. If
1055the process is a job-control shell, this means the shell's current
1056subjob. If it is @code{nil}, the signal is sent to the process group of
1057the immediate subprocess of Emacs. If the subprocess is a job-control
1058shell, this is the shell itself.
1059
1060 The flag @var{current-group} has no effect when a pipe is used to
1061communicate with the subprocess, because the operating system does not
1062support the distinction in the case of pipes. For the same reason,
1063job-control shells won't work when a pipe is used. See
1064@code{process-connection-type} in @ref{Asynchronous Processes}.
1065
1066@defun interrupt-process &optional process current-group
1067This function interrupts the process @var{process} by sending the
1068signal @code{SIGINT}. Outside of Emacs, typing the ``interrupt
1069character'' (normally @kbd{C-c} on some systems, and @code{DEL} on
1070others) sends this signal. When the argument @var{current-group} is
1071non-@code{nil}, you can think of this function as ``typing @kbd{C-c}''
1072on the terminal by which Emacs talks to the subprocess.
1073@end defun
1074
1075@defun kill-process &optional process current-group
1076This function kills the process @var{process} by sending the
1077signal @code{SIGKILL}. This signal kills the subprocess immediately,
1078and cannot be handled by the subprocess.
1079@end defun
1080
1081@defun quit-process &optional process current-group
1082This function sends the signal @code{SIGQUIT} to the process
1083@var{process}. This signal is the one sent by the ``quit
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1084@c FIXME? Never heard of C-b being used for this. In readline, eg
1085@c bash, that is backward-word.
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1086character'' (usually @kbd{C-b} or @kbd{C-\}) when you are not inside
1087Emacs.
1088@end defun
1089
1090@defun stop-process &optional process current-group
1091This function stops the process @var{process} by sending the
1092signal @code{SIGTSTP}. Use @code{continue-process} to resume its
1093execution.
1094
1095Outside of Emacs, on systems with job control, the ``stop character''
1096(usually @kbd{C-z}) normally sends this signal. When
1097@var{current-group} is non-@code{nil}, you can think of this function as
1098``typing @kbd{C-z}'' on the terminal Emacs uses to communicate with the
1099subprocess.
1100@end defun
1101
1102@defun continue-process &optional process current-group
1103This function resumes execution of the process @var{process} by sending
1104it the signal @code{SIGCONT}. This presumes that @var{process} was
1105stopped previously.
1106@end defun
1107
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1108@defun signal-process process signal
1109This function sends a signal to process @var{process}. The argument
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1110@var{signal} specifies which signal to send; it should be an integer,
1111or a symbol whose name is a signal.
b8d4c8d0 1112
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1113The @var{process} argument can be a system process @acronym{ID} (an
1114integer); that allows you to send signals to processes that are not
1115children of Emacs. @xref{System Processes}.
b8d4c8d0
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1116@end defun
1117
1118@node Output from Processes
1119@section Receiving Output from Processes
1120@cindex process output
1121@cindex output from processes
1122
1123 There are two ways to receive the output that a subprocess writes to
1124its standard output stream. The output can be inserted in a buffer,
62f4b18c
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1125which is called the associated buffer of the process (@pxref{Process
1126Buffers}), or a function called the @dfn{filter function} can be
1127called to act on the output. If the process has no buffer and no
1128filter function, its output is discarded.
b8d4c8d0
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1129
1130 When a subprocess terminates, Emacs reads any pending output,
1131then stops reading output from that subprocess. Therefore, if the
1132subprocess has children that are still live and still producing
1133output, Emacs won't receive that output.
1134
1135 Output from a subprocess can arrive only while Emacs is waiting: when
016a35df
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1136reading terminal input (see the function @code{waiting-for-user-input-p}),
1137in @code{sit-for} and @code{sleep-for} (@pxref{Waiting}), and in
1138@code{accept-process-output} (@pxref{Accepting Output}). This
1139minimizes the problem of timing errors that usually plague parallel
1140programming. For example, you can safely create a process and only
1141then specify its buffer or filter function; no output can arrive
1142before you finish, if the code in between does not call any primitive
1143that waits.
b8d4c8d0
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1144
1145@defvar process-adaptive-read-buffering
1146On some systems, when Emacs reads the output from a subprocess, the
1147output data is read in very small blocks, potentially resulting in
1148very poor performance. This behavior can be remedied to some extent
62f4b18c 1149by setting the variable @code{process-adaptive-read-buffering} to a
b8d4c8d0
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1150non-@code{nil} value (the default), as it will automatically delay reading
1151from such processes, thus allowing them to produce more output before
1152Emacs tries to read it.
1153@end defvar
1154
1155 It is impossible to separate the standard output and standard error
1156streams of the subprocess, because Emacs normally spawns the subprocess
1157inside a pseudo-TTY, and a pseudo-TTY has only one output channel. If
1158you want to keep the output to those streams separate, you should
1159redirect one of them to a file---for example, by using an appropriate
1160shell command.
1161
1162@menu
1163* Process Buffers:: If no filter, output is put in a buffer.
1164* Filter Functions:: Filter functions accept output from the process.
1165* Decoding Output:: Filters can get unibyte or multibyte strings.
1166* Accepting Output:: How to wait until process output arrives.
1167@end menu
1168
1169@node Process Buffers
1170@subsection Process Buffers
1171
1172 A process can (and usually does) have an @dfn{associated buffer},
1173which is an ordinary Emacs buffer that is used for two purposes: storing
1174the output from the process, and deciding when to kill the process. You
1175can also use the buffer to identify a process to operate on, since in
1176normal practice only one process is associated with any given buffer.
1177Many applications of processes also use the buffer for editing input to
1178be sent to the process, but this is not built into Emacs Lisp.
1179
1180 Unless the process has a filter function (@pxref{Filter Functions}),
1181its output is inserted in the associated buffer. The position to insert
1182the output is determined by the @code{process-mark}, which is then
1183updated to point to the end of the text just inserted. Usually, but not
1184always, the @code{process-mark} is at the end of the buffer.
1185
16d1ff5f
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1186@findex process-kill-buffer-query-function
1187 Killing the associated buffer of a process also kills the process.
1188Emacs asks for confirmation first, if the process's
1189@code{process-query-on-exit-flag} is non-@code{nil} (@pxref{Query
1190Before Exit}). This confirmation is done by the function
1191@code{process-kill-buffer-query-function}, which is run from
1192@code{kill-buffer-query-functions} (@pxref{Killing Buffers}).
1193
b8d4c8d0
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1194@defun process-buffer process
1195This function returns the associated buffer of the process
1196@var{process}.
1197
1198@smallexample
1199@group
1200(process-buffer (get-process "shell"))
1201 @result{} #<buffer *shell*>
1202@end group
1203@end smallexample
1204@end defun
1205
1206@defun process-mark process
1207This function returns the process marker for @var{process}, which is the
1208marker that says where to insert output from the process.
1209
1210If @var{process} does not have a buffer, @code{process-mark} returns a
1211marker that points nowhere.
1212
1213Insertion of process output in a buffer uses this marker to decide where
1214to insert, and updates it to point after the inserted text. That is why
1215successive batches of output are inserted consecutively.
1216
1217Filter functions normally should use this marker in the same fashion
62f4b18c
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1218as is done by direct insertion of output in the buffer. For an
1219example of a filter function that uses @code{process-mark},
1220@pxref{Process Filter Example}.
b8d4c8d0
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1221
1222When the user is expected to enter input in the process buffer for
1223transmission to the process, the process marker separates the new input
1224from previous output.
1225@end defun
1226
1227@defun set-process-buffer process buffer
1228This function sets the buffer associated with @var{process} to
1229@var{buffer}. If @var{buffer} is @code{nil}, the process becomes
1230associated with no buffer.
1231@end defun
1232
1233@defun get-buffer-process buffer-or-name
1234This function returns a nondeleted process associated with the buffer
1235specified by @var{buffer-or-name}. If there are several processes
1236associated with it, this function chooses one (currently, the one most
1237recently created, but don't count on that). Deletion of a process
1238(see @code{delete-process}) makes it ineligible for this function to
1239return.
1240
1241It is usually a bad idea to have more than one process associated with
1242the same buffer.
1243
1244@smallexample
1245@group
1246(get-buffer-process "*shell*")
1247 @result{} #<process shell>
1248@end group
1249@end smallexample
1250
1251Killing the process's buffer deletes the process, which kills the
1252subprocess with a @code{SIGHUP} signal (@pxref{Signals to Processes}).
1253@end defun
1254
1255@node Filter Functions
1256@subsection Process Filter Functions
1257@cindex filter function
1258@cindex process filter
1259
1260 A process @dfn{filter function} is a function that receives the
1261standard output from the associated process. If a process has a filter,
1262then @emph{all} output from that process is passed to the filter. The
1263process buffer is used directly for output from the process only when
1264there is no filter.
1265
1266 The filter function can only be called when Emacs is waiting for
1267something, because process output arrives only at such times. Emacs
016a35df
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1268waits when reading terminal input (see the function
1269@code{waiting-for-user-input-p}), in @code{sit-for} and
1270@code{sleep-for} (@pxref{Waiting}), and in
1271@code{accept-process-output} (@pxref{Accepting Output}).
b8d4c8d0
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1272
1273 A filter function must accept two arguments: the associated process
1274and a string, which is output just received from it. The function is
1275then free to do whatever it chooses with the output.
1276
016a35df 1277@c Note this text is duplicated in the sentinels section.
b8d4c8d0
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1278 Quitting is normally inhibited within a filter function---otherwise,
1279the effect of typing @kbd{C-g} at command level or to quit a user
1280command would be unpredictable. If you want to permit quitting inside
1281a filter function, bind @code{inhibit-quit} to @code{nil}. In most
1282cases, the right way to do this is with the macro
1283@code{with-local-quit}. @xref{Quitting}.
1284
1285 If an error happens during execution of a filter function, it is
1286caught automatically, so that it doesn't stop the execution of whatever
1287program was running when the filter function was started. However, if
62f4b18c
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1288@code{debug-on-error} is non-@code{nil}, errors are not caught.
1289This makes it possible to use the Lisp debugger to debug the
b8d4c8d0
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1290filter function. @xref{Debugger}.
1291
62f4b18c 1292 Many filter functions sometimes (or always) insert the output in the
b8d4c8d0 1293process's buffer, mimicking the actions of Emacs when there is no
62f4b18c
GM
1294filter. Such filter functions need to make sure that they save the
1295current buffer, select the correct buffer (if different) before
1296inserting output, and then restore the original buffer.
1297They should also check whether the buffer is still alive, update the
1298process marker, and in some cases update the value of point. Here is
1299how to do these things:
1300
1301@anchor{Process Filter Example}
b8d4c8d0
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1302@smallexample
1303@group
1304(defun ordinary-insertion-filter (proc string)
78e33835
CY
1305 (when (buffer-live-p (process-buffer proc))
1306 (with-current-buffer (process-buffer proc)
1307 (let ((moving (= (point) (process-mark proc))))
b8d4c8d0
GM
1308@end group
1309@group
78e33835 1310 (save-excursion
62f4b18c 1311 ;; @r{Insert the text, advancing the process marker.}
78e33835
CY
1312 (goto-char (process-mark proc))
1313 (insert string)
1314 (set-marker (process-mark proc) (point)))
1315 (if moving (goto-char (process-mark proc)))))))
b8d4c8d0
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1316@end group
1317@end smallexample
1318
b8d4c8d0 1319 To make the filter force the process buffer to be visible whenever new
62f4b18c 1320text arrives, you could insert a line like the following just before the
b8d4c8d0
GM
1321@code{with-current-buffer} construct:
1322
1323@smallexample
1324(display-buffer (process-buffer proc))
1325@end smallexample
1326
1327 To force point to the end of the new output, no matter where it was
1328previously, eliminate the variable @code{moving} and call
1329@code{goto-char} unconditionally.
1330
62f4b18c 1331@ignore
b8d4c8d0
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1332 In earlier Emacs versions, every filter function that did regular
1333expression searching or matching had to explicitly save and restore the
1334match data. Now Emacs does this automatically for filter functions;
62f4b18c
GM
1335they never need to do it explicitly.
1336@end ignore
1337 Note that Emacs automatically saves and restores the match data
1338while executing filter functions. @xref{Match Data}.
b8d4c8d0 1339
62f4b18c 1340 The output to the filter may come in chunks of any size. A program
b8d4c8d0
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1341that produces the same output twice in a row may send it as one batch of
1342200 characters one time, and five batches of 40 characters the next. If
1343the filter looks for certain text strings in the subprocess output, make
1344sure to handle the case where one of these strings is split across two
fd211f0b
CY
1345or more batches of output; one way to do this is to insert the
1346received text into a temporary buffer, which can then be searched.
b8d4c8d0
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1347
1348@defun set-process-filter process filter
1349This function gives @var{process} the filter function @var{filter}. If
1350@var{filter} is @code{nil}, it gives the process no filter.
1351@end defun
1352
1353@defun process-filter process
1354This function returns the filter function of @var{process}, or @code{nil}
1355if it has none.
1356@end defun
1357
62f4b18c 1358 Here is an example of the use of a filter function:
b8d4c8d0
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1359
1360@smallexample
1361@group
1362(defun keep-output (process output)
1363 (setq kept (cons output kept)))
1364 @result{} keep-output
1365@end group
1366@group
1367(setq kept nil)
1368 @result{} nil
1369@end group
1370@group
1371(set-process-filter (get-process "shell") 'keep-output)
1372 @result{} keep-output
1373@end group
1374@group
1375(process-send-string "shell" "ls ~/other\n")
1376 @result{} nil
1377kept
62f4b18c 1378 @result{} ("lewis@@slug:$ "
b8d4c8d0
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1379@end group
1380@group
1381"FINAL-W87-SHORT.MSS backup.otl kolstad.mss~
1382address.txt backup.psf kolstad.psf
1383backup.bib~ david.mss resume-Dec-86.mss~
1384backup.err david.psf resume-Dec.psf
1385backup.mss dland syllabus.mss
1386"
1387"#backups.mss# backup.mss~ kolstad.mss
1388")
1389@end group
1390@end smallexample
1391
1392@ignore @c The code in this example doesn't show the right way to do things.
1393Here is another, more realistic example, which demonstrates how to use
1394the process mark to do insertion in the same fashion as is done when
1395there is no filter function:
1396
1397@smallexample
1398@group
1399;; @r{Insert input in the buffer specified by @code{my-shell-buffer}}
1400;; @r{and make sure that buffer is shown in some window.}
1401(defun my-process-filter (proc str)
1402 (let ((cur (selected-window))
1403 (pop-up-windows t))
1404 (pop-to-buffer my-shell-buffer)
1405@end group
1406@group
1407 (goto-char (point-max))
1408 (insert str)
1409 (set-marker (process-mark proc) (point-max))
1410 (select-window cur)))
1411@end group
1412@end smallexample
1413@end ignore
1414
1415@node Decoding Output
1416@subsection Decoding Process Output
1417@cindex decode process output
1418
1419 When Emacs writes process output directly into a multibyte buffer,
1420it decodes the output according to the process output coding system.
1421If the coding system is @code{raw-text} or @code{no-conversion}, Emacs
1422converts the unibyte output to multibyte using
1423@code{string-to-multibyte}, and inserts the resulting multibyte text.
1424
1425 You can use @code{set-process-coding-system} to specify which coding
1426system to use (@pxref{Process Information}). Otherwise, the coding
1427system comes from @code{coding-system-for-read}, if that is
1428non-@code{nil}; or else from the defaulting mechanism (@pxref{Default
3355f04d
EZ
1429Coding Systems}). If the text output by a process contains null
1430bytes, Emacs by default uses @code{no-conversion} for it; see
1431@ref{Lisp and Coding Systems, inhibit-null-byte-detection}, for how to
1432control this behavior.
b8d4c8d0 1433
62f4b18c
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1434 @strong{Warning:} Coding systems such as @code{undecided}, which
1435determine the coding system from the data, do not work entirely
b8d4c8d0
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1436reliably with asynchronous subprocess output. This is because Emacs
1437has to process asynchronous subprocess output in batches, as it
1438arrives. Emacs must try to detect the proper coding system from one
1439batch at a time, and this does not always work. Therefore, if at all
1440possible, specify a coding system that determines both the character
1441code conversion and the end of line conversion---that is, one like
1442@code{latin-1-unix}, rather than @code{undecided} or @code{latin-1}.
1443
4972c361
SM
1444@c Let's keep the index entries that were there for
1445@c set-process-filter-multibyte and process-filter-multibyte-p,
b8d4c8d0
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1446@cindex filter multibyte flag, of process
1447@cindex process filter multibyte flag
1448 When Emacs calls a process filter function, it provides the process
1449output as a multibyte string or as a unibyte string according to the
4972c361
SM
1450process's filter coding system. Emacs
1451decodes the output according to the process output coding system,
1452which usually produces a multibyte string, except for coding systems
62f4b18c 1453such as @code{binary} and @code{raw-text}.
b8d4c8d0
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1454
1455@node Accepting Output
1456@subsection Accepting Output from Processes
1457@cindex accept input from processes
1458
1459 Output from asynchronous subprocesses normally arrives only while
1460Emacs is waiting for some sort of external event, such as elapsed time
1461or terminal input. Occasionally it is useful in a Lisp program to
1462explicitly permit output to arrive at a specific point, or even to wait
1463until output arrives from a process.
1464
1465@defun accept-process-output &optional process seconds millisec just-this-one
1466This function allows Emacs to read pending output from processes. The
1467output is inserted in the associated buffers or given to their filter
1468functions. If @var{process} is non-@code{nil} then this function does
1469not return until some output has been received from @var{process}.
1470
b8d4c8d0
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1471The arguments @var{seconds} and @var{millisec} let you specify timeout
1472periods. The former specifies a period measured in seconds and the
1473latter specifies one measured in milliseconds. The two time periods
1474thus specified are added together, and @code{accept-process-output}
1475returns after that much time, whether or not there has been any
1476subprocess output.
1477
4f5d565f
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1478The argument @var{millisec} is obsolete (and should not be used),
1479because @var{seconds} can be a floating point number to specify
1480waiting a fractional number of seconds. If @var{seconds} is 0, the
1481function accepts whatever output is pending but does not wait.
b8d4c8d0
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1482
1483@c Emacs 22.1 feature
1484If @var{process} is a process, and the argument @var{just-this-one} is
1485non-@code{nil}, only output from that process is handled, suspending output
1486from other processes until some output has been received from that
1487process or the timeout expires. If @var{just-this-one} is an integer,
1488also inhibit running timers. This feature is generally not
1489recommended, but may be necessary for specific applications, such as
1490speech synthesis.
1491
1492The function @code{accept-process-output} returns non-@code{nil} if it
1493did get some output, or @code{nil} if the timeout expired before output
1494arrived.
1495@end defun
1496
1497@node Sentinels
1498@section Sentinels: Detecting Process Status Changes
1499@cindex process sentinel
1500@cindex sentinel (of process)
1501
1502 A @dfn{process sentinel} is a function that is called whenever the
1503associated process changes status for any reason, including signals
1504(whether sent by Emacs or caused by the process's own actions) that
1505terminate, stop, or continue the process. The process sentinel is
1506also called if the process exits. The sentinel receives two
1507arguments: the process for which the event occurred, and a string
1508describing the type of event.
1509
1510 The string describing the event looks like one of the following:
1511
016a35df 1512@c FIXME? Also "killed\n" - see example below?
b8d4c8d0
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1513@itemize @bullet
1514@item
1515@code{"finished\n"}.
1516
1517@item
1518@code{"exited abnormally with code @var{exitcode}\n"}.
1519
1520@item
1521@code{"@var{name-of-signal}\n"}.
1522
1523@item
1524@code{"@var{name-of-signal} (core dumped)\n"}.
1525@end itemize
1526
1527 A sentinel runs only while Emacs is waiting (e.g., for terminal
1528input, or for time to elapse, or for process output). This avoids the
016a35df 1529timing errors that could result from running sentinels at random places in
b8d4c8d0
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1530the middle of other Lisp programs. A program can wait, so that
1531sentinels will run, by calling @code{sit-for} or @code{sleep-for}
1532(@pxref{Waiting}), or @code{accept-process-output} (@pxref{Accepting
1533Output}). Emacs also allows sentinels to run when the command loop is
1534reading input. @code{delete-process} calls the sentinel when it
1535terminates a running process.
1536
1537 Emacs does not keep a queue of multiple reasons to call the sentinel
1538of one process; it records just the current status and the fact that
1539there has been a change. Therefore two changes in status, coming in
1540quick succession, can call the sentinel just once. However, process
1541termination will always run the sentinel exactly once. This is
1542because the process status can't change again after termination.
1543
1544 Emacs explicitly checks for output from the process before running
1545the process sentinel. Once the sentinel runs due to process
1546termination, no further output can arrive from the process.
1547
1548 A sentinel that writes the output into the buffer of the process
1549should check whether the buffer is still alive. If it tries to insert
1550into a dead buffer, it will get an error. If the buffer is dead,
1551@code{(buffer-name (process-buffer @var{process}))} returns @code{nil}.
1552
016a35df 1553@c Note this text is duplicated in the filter functions section.
b8d4c8d0
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1554 Quitting is normally inhibited within a sentinel---otherwise, the
1555effect of typing @kbd{C-g} at command level or to quit a user command
1556would be unpredictable. If you want to permit quitting inside a
1557sentinel, bind @code{inhibit-quit} to @code{nil}. In most cases, the
1558right way to do this is with the macro @code{with-local-quit}.
1559@xref{Quitting}.
1560
1561 If an error happens during execution of a sentinel, it is caught
1562automatically, so that it doesn't stop the execution of whatever
1563programs was running when the sentinel was started. However, if
016a35df
GM
1564@code{debug-on-error} is non-@code{nil}, errors are not caught.
1565This makes it possible to use the Lisp debugger to debug the
b8d4c8d0
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1566sentinel. @xref{Debugger}.
1567
1568 While a sentinel is running, the process sentinel is temporarily
1569set to @code{nil} so that the sentinel won't run recursively.
1570For this reason it is not possible for a sentinel to specify
1571a new sentinel.
1572
016a35df 1573@ignore
b8d4c8d0
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1574 In earlier Emacs versions, every sentinel that did regular expression
1575searching or matching had to explicitly save and restore the match data.
1576Now Emacs does this automatically for sentinels; they never need to do
016a35df
GM
1577it explicitly.
1578@end ignore
1579 Note that Emacs automatically saves and restores the match data
1580while executing sentinels. @xref{Match Data}.
b8d4c8d0
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1581
1582@defun set-process-sentinel process sentinel
1583This function associates @var{sentinel} with @var{process}. If
1584@var{sentinel} is @code{nil}, then the process will have no sentinel.
1585The default behavior when there is no sentinel is to insert a message in
1586the process's buffer when the process status changes.
1587
016a35df 1588Changes in process sentinels take effect immediately---if the sentinel
b8d4c8d0
GM
1589is slated to be run but has not been called yet, and you specify a new
1590sentinel, the eventual call to the sentinel will use the new one.
1591
1592@smallexample
1593@group
1594(defun msg-me (process event)
1595 (princ
1596 (format "Process: %s had the event `%s'" process event)))
1597(set-process-sentinel (get-process "shell") 'msg-me)
1598 @result{} msg-me
1599@end group
1600@group
1601(kill-process (get-process "shell"))
1602 @print{} Process: #<process shell> had the event `killed'
1603 @result{} #<process shell>
1604@end group
1605@end smallexample
1606@end defun
1607
1608@defun process-sentinel process
1609This function returns the sentinel of @var{process}, or @code{nil} if it
1610has none.
1611@end defun
1612
1613@defun waiting-for-user-input-p
1614While a sentinel or filter function is running, this function returns
1615non-@code{nil} if Emacs was waiting for keyboard input from the user at
016a35df 1616the time the sentinel or filter function was called, or @code{nil} if it
b8d4c8d0
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1617was not.
1618@end defun
1619
1620@node Query Before Exit
1621@section Querying Before Exit
1622
1623 When Emacs exits, it terminates all its subprocesses by sending them
1624the @code{SIGHUP} signal. Because subprocesses may be doing
1625valuable work, Emacs normally asks the user to confirm that it is ok
016a35df 1626to terminate them. Each process has a query flag, which, if
b8d4c8d0
GM
1627non-@code{nil}, says that Emacs should ask for confirmation before
1628exiting and thus killing that process. The default for the query flag
1629is @code{t}, meaning @emph{do} query.
1630
1631@defun process-query-on-exit-flag process
1632This returns the query flag of @var{process}.
1633@end defun
1634
1635@defun set-process-query-on-exit-flag process flag
1636This function sets the query flag of @var{process} to @var{flag}. It
1637returns @var{flag}.
1638
9fe9631c
CY
1639Here is an example of using @code{set-process-query-on-exit-flag} on a
1640shell process to avoid querying:
1641
b8d4c8d0
GM
1642@smallexample
1643@group
b8d4c8d0 1644(set-process-query-on-exit-flag (get-process "shell") nil)
016a35df 1645 @result{} nil
b8d4c8d0
GM
1646@end group
1647@end smallexample
1648@end defun
1649
23dd4ecd
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1650@node System Processes
1651@section Accessing Other Processes
1652@cindex system processes
1653
1654 In addition to accessing and manipulating processes that are
1655subprocesses of the current Emacs session, Emacs Lisp programs can
1656also access other processes running on the same machine. We call
016a35df 1657these @dfn{system processes}, to distinguish them from Emacs
23dd4ecd
EZ
1658subprocesses.
1659
1660 Emacs provides several primitives for accessing system processes.
1661Not all platforms support these primitives; on those which don't,
1662these primitives return @code{nil}.
1663
1664@defun list-system-processes
1665This function returns a list of all the processes running on the
1666system. Each process is identified by its @acronym{PID}, a numerical
1667process ID that is assigned by the OS and distinguishes the process
1668from all the other processes running on the same machine at the same
1669time.
1670@end defun
1671
a20878b6 1672@defun process-attributes pid
23dd4ecd
EZ
1673This function returns an alist of attributes for the process specified
1674by its process ID @var{pid}. Each association in the alist is of the
1675form @code{(@var{key} . @var{value})}, where @var{key} designates the
1676attribute and @var{value} is the value of that attribute. The various
016a35df 1677attribute @var{key}s that this function can return are listed below.
23dd4ecd
EZ
1678Not all platforms support all of these attributes; if an attribute is
1679not supported, its association will not appear in the returned alist.
1680Values that are numbers can be either integer or floating-point,
1681depending on the magnitude of the value.
1682
1683@table @code
1684@item euid
1685The effective user ID of the user who invoked the process. The
1686corresponding @var{value} is a number. If the process was invoked by
1687the same user who runs the current Emacs session, the value is
1688identical to what @code{user-uid} returns (@pxref{User
1689Identification}).
1690
1691@item user
1692User name corresponding to the process's effective user ID, a string.
1693
1694@item egid
1695The group ID of the effective user ID, a number.
1696
1697@item group
1698Group name corresponding to the effective user's group ID, a string.
1699
1700@item comm
1701The name of the command that runs in the process. This is a string
1702that usually specifies the name of the executable file of the process,
1703without the leading directories. However, some special system
1704processes can report strings that do not correspond to an executable
1705file of a program.
1706
1707@item state
1708The state code of the process. This is a short string that encodes
1709the scheduling state of the process. Here's a list of the most
1710frequently seen codes:
1711
1712@table @code
1dca458f 1713@item "D"
23dd4ecd 1714uninterruptible sleep (usually I/O)
1dca458f 1715@item "R"
23dd4ecd 1716running
1dca458f 1717@item "S"
23dd4ecd 1718interruptible sleep (waiting for some event)
1dca458f 1719@item "T"
23dd4ecd 1720stopped, e.g., by a job control signal
1dca458f
EZ
1721@item "Z"
1722``zombie'': a process that terminated, but was not reaped by its parent
23dd4ecd
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1723@end table
1724
1725@noindent
1726For the full list of the possible states, see the manual page of the
1727@command{ps} command.
1728
1729@item ppid
1730The process ID of the parent process, a number.
1731
1732@item pgrp
1733The process group ID of the process, a number.
1734
1735@item sess
1736The session ID of the process. This is a number that is the process
1737ID of the process's @dfn{session leader}.
1738
1739@item ttname
1740A string that is the name of the process's controlling terminal. On
1741Unix and GNU systems, this is normally the file name of the
1742corresponding terminal device, such as @file{/dev/pts65}.
1743
1744@item tpgid
1745The numerical process group ID of the foreground process group that
1746uses the process's terminal.
1747
1748@item minflt
1749The number of minor page faults caused by the process since its
1750beginning. (Minor page faults are those that don't involve reading
1751from disk.)
1752
1753@item majflt
1754The number of major page faults caused by the process since its
1755beginning. (Major page faults require a disk to be read, and are thus
1756more expensive than minor page faults.)
1757
1758@item cminflt
1759@itemx cmajflt
1760Like @code{minflt} and @code{majflt}, but include the number of page
1761faults for all the child processes of the given process.
1762
1763@item utime
1764Time spent by the process in the user context, for running the
1765application's code. The corresponding @var{value} is in the
1766@w{@code{(@var{high} @var{low} @var{microsec})}} format, the same
1767format used by functions @code{current-time} (@pxref{Time of Day,
1768current-time}) and @code{file-attributes} (@pxref{File Attributes}).
1769
1770@item stime
1771Time spent by the process in the system (kernel) context, for
1772processing system calls. The corresponding @var{value} is in the same
1773format as for @code{utime}.
1774
af34ad36
EZ
1775@item time
1776The sum of @code{utime} and @code{stime}. The corresponding
1777@var{value} is in the same format as for @code{utime}.
1778
23dd4ecd
EZ
1779@item cutime
1780@itemx cstime
af34ad36
EZ
1781@itemx ctime
1782Like @code{utime}, @code{stime}, and @code{time}, but include the
1783times of all the child processes of the given process.
23dd4ecd
EZ
1784
1785@item pri
1786The numerical priority of the process.
1787
1788@item nice
1dca458f
EZ
1789The @dfn{nice value} of the process, a number. (Processes with smaller
1790nice values get scheduled more favorably.)
23dd4ecd
EZ
1791
1792@item thcount
1793The number of threads in the process.
1794
1795@item start
049bcbcb
CY
1796The time when the process was started, in the same
1797@w{@code{(@var{high} @var{low} @var{microsec})}} format used by
1798@code{current-time} and @code{file-attributes}.
23dd4ecd
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1799
1800@item etime
1801The time elapsed since the process started, in the @w{@code{(@var{high}
1802@var{low} @var{microsec})}} format.
1803
1804@item vsize
1805The virtual memory size of the process, measured in kilobytes.
1806
1807@item rss
1808The size of the process's @dfn{resident set}, the number of kilobytes
1809occupied by the process in the machine's physical memory.
1810
1811@item pcpu
1812The percentage of the CPU time used by the process since it started.
1813The corresponding @var{value} is a floating-point number between 0 and
1814100.
1815
1816@item pmem
1817The percentage of the total physical memory installed on the machine
1818used by the process's resident set. The value is a floating-point
1819number between 0 and 100.
1820
1821@item args
1822The command-line with which the process was invoked. This is a string
1823in which individual command-line arguments are separated by blanks;
1824whitespace characters that are embedded in the arguments are quoted as
1825appropriate for the system's shell: escaped by backslash characters on
1826GNU and Unix, and enclosed in double quote characters on Windows.
1827Thus, this command-line string can be directly used in primitives such
1828as @code{shell-command}.
1829@end table
1830
1831@end defun
1832
1833
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1834@node Transaction Queues
1835@section Transaction Queues
1836@cindex transaction queue
1837
016a35df
GM
1838@c That's not very informative. What is a transaction, and when might
1839@c I want to use one?
b8d4c8d0
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1840You can use a @dfn{transaction queue} to communicate with a subprocess
1841using transactions. First use @code{tq-create} to create a transaction
1842queue communicating with a specified process. Then you can call
1843@code{tq-enqueue} to send a transaction.
1844
1845@defun tq-create process
1846This function creates and returns a transaction queue communicating with
1847@var{process}. The argument @var{process} should be a subprocess
1848capable of sending and receiving streams of bytes. It may be a child
1849process, or it may be a TCP connection to a server, possibly on another
1850machine.
1851@end defun
1852
1853@defun tq-enqueue queue question regexp closure fn &optional delay-question
1854This function sends a transaction to queue @var{queue}. Specifying the
1855queue has the effect of specifying the subprocess to talk to.
1856
1857The argument @var{question} is the outgoing message that starts the
1858transaction. The argument @var{fn} is the function to call when the
1859corresponding answer comes back; it is called with two arguments:
1860@var{closure}, and the answer received.
1861
1862The argument @var{regexp} is a regular expression that should match
1863text at the end of the entire answer, but nothing before; that's how
1864@code{tq-enqueue} determines where the answer ends.
1865
4185820c
CY
1866If the argument @var{delay-question} is non-@code{nil}, delay sending
1867this question until the process has finished replying to any previous
b8d4c8d0 1868questions. This produces more reliable results with some processes.
016a35df 1869@ignore
b8d4c8d0 1870
016a35df 1871@c Let's not mention it then.
b8d4c8d0 1872The return value of @code{tq-enqueue} itself is not meaningful.
016a35df 1873@end ignore
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1874@end defun
1875
1876@defun tq-close queue
1877Shut down transaction queue @var{queue}, waiting for all pending transactions
1878to complete, and then terminate the connection or child process.
1879@end defun
1880
1881Transaction queues are implemented by means of a filter function.
1882@xref{Filter Functions}.
1883
1884@node Network
1885@section Network Connections
1886@cindex network connection
1887@cindex TCP
1888@cindex UDP
1889
1890 Emacs Lisp programs can open stream (TCP) and datagram (UDP) network
016a35df
GM
1891connections (@pxref{Datagrams}) to other processes on the same machine
1892or other machines.
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1893A network connection is handled by Lisp much like a subprocess, and is
1894represented by a process object. However, the process you are
016a35df 1895communicating with is not a child of the Emacs process, has no
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GM
1896process @acronym{ID}, and you can't kill it or send it signals. All you
1897can do is send and receive data. @code{delete-process} closes the
1898connection, but does not kill the program at the other end; that
1899program must decide what to do about closure of the connection.
1900
1901 Lisp programs can listen for connections by creating network
1902servers. A network server is also represented by a kind of process
1903object, but unlike a network connection, the network server never
1904transfers data itself. When it receives a connection request, it
1905creates a new network connection to represent the connection just
1906made. (The network connection inherits certain information, including
1907the process plist, from the server.) The network server then goes
1908back to listening for more connection requests.
1909
1910 Network connections and servers are created by calling
1911@code{make-network-process} with an argument list consisting of
1912keyword/argument pairs, for example @code{:server t} to create a
1913server process, or @code{:type 'datagram} to create a datagram
1914connection. @xref{Low-Level Network}, for details. You can also use
1915the @code{open-network-stream} function described below.
1916
c73e02fa
GM
1917 To distinguish the different types of processes, the
1918@code{process-type} function returns the symbol @code{network} for a
1919network connection or server, @code{serial} for a serial port
1920connection, or @code{real} for a real subprocess.
1921
1922 The @code{process-status} function returns @code{open},
016a35df 1923@code{closed}, @code{connect}, or @code{failed} for network
c73e02fa 1924connections. For a network server, the status is always
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GM
1925@code{listen}. None of those values is possible for a real
1926subprocess. @xref{Process Information}.
1927
1928 You can stop and resume operation of a network process by calling
1929@code{stop-process} and @code{continue-process}. For a server
1930process, being stopped means not accepting new connections. (Up to 5
1931connection requests will be queued for when you resume the server; you
1932can increase this limit, unless it is imposed by the operating
016a35df
GM
1933system---see the @code{:server} keyword of @code{make-network-process},
1934@ref{Network Processes}.) For a network stream connection, being
1935stopped means not processing input (any arriving input waits until you
1936resume the connection). For a datagram connection, some number of
1937packets may be queued but input may be lost. You can use the function
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GM
1938@code{process-command} to determine whether a network connection or
1939server is stopped; a non-@code{nil} value means yes.
1940
fcacfa8d 1941@cindex network connection, encrypted
d7dbb11a 1942@cindex encrypted network connections
016a35df
GM
1943@cindex @acronym{TLS} network connections
1944@cindex @acronym{STARTTLS} network connections
1945Emacs can create encrypted network connections, using either built-in
1946or external support. The built-in support uses the GnuTLS
1947(``Transport Layer Security'') library; see
1948@uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/gnutls/, the GnuTLS project page}.
1949If your Emacs was compiled with GnuTLS support, the function
1950@code{gnutls-available-p} is defined and returns non-@code{nil}. For
1951more details, @pxref{Top,, Overview, emacs-gnutls, The Emacs-GnuTLS manual}.
1952The external support uses the @file{starttls.el} library, which
1953requires a helper utility such as @command{gnutls-cli} to be installed
1954on the system. The @code{open-network-stream} function can
1955transparently handle the details of creating encrypted connections for
1956you, using whatever support is available.
1957
1958@defun open-network-stream name buffer host service &rest parameters
d7dbb11a
GM
1959This function opens a TCP connection, with optional encryption, and
1960returns a process object that represents the connection.
b8d4c8d0
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1961
1962The @var{name} argument specifies the name for the process object. It
1963is modified as necessary to make it unique.
1964
016a35df 1965The @var{buffer} argument is the buffer to associate with the
b8d4c8d0
GM
1966connection. Output from the connection is inserted in the buffer,
1967unless you specify a filter function to handle the output. If
016a35df 1968@var{buffer} is @code{nil}, it means that the connection is not
b8d4c8d0
GM
1969associated with any buffer.
1970
1971The arguments @var{host} and @var{service} specify where to connect to;
1972@var{host} is the host name (a string), and @var{service} is the name of
1973a defined network service (a string) or a port number (an integer).
d7dbb11a 1974
d7dbb11a
GM
1975The remaining arguments @var{parameters} are keyword/argument pairs
1976that are mainly relevant to encrypted connections:
1977
1978@table @code
1979
1980@item :nowait @var{boolean}
1981If non-@code{nil}, try to make an asynchronous connection.
1982
1983@item :type @var{type}
1984The type of connection. Options are:
1985
1986@table @code
1987@item plain
1988An ordinary, unencrypted connection.
1989@item tls
1990@itemx ssl
016a35df 1991A @acronym{TLS} (``Transport Layer Security'') connection.
d7dbb11a
GM
1992@item nil
1993@itemx network
1994Start with a plain connection, and if parameters @samp{:success}
1995and @samp{:capability-command} are supplied, try to upgrade to an encrypted
016a35df
GM
1996connection via @acronym{STARTTLS}. If that fails, retain the
1997unencrypted connection.
d7dbb11a 1998@item starttls
016a35df 1999As for @code{nil}, but if @acronym{STARTTLS} fails drop the connection.
d7dbb11a
GM
2000@item shell
2001A shell connection.
2002@end table
2003
2004@item :always-query-capabilities @var{boolean}
2005If non-@code{nil}, always ask for the server's capabilities, even when
2006doing a @samp{plain} connection.
2007
2008@item :capability-command @var{capability-command}
2009Command string to query the host capabilities.
2010
2011@item :end-of-command @var{regexp}
2012@itemx :end-of-capability @var{regexp}
2013Regular expression matching the end of a command, or the end of the
2014command @var{capability-command}. The latter defaults to the former.
2015
2016@item :starttls-function @var{function}
2017Function of one argument (the response to @var{capability-command}),
016a35df 2018which returns either @code{nil}, or the command to activate @acronym{STARTTLS}
d7dbb11a
GM
2019if supported.
2020
2021@item :success @var{regexp}
016a35df 2022Regular expression matching a successful @acronym{STARTTLS} negotiation.
d7dbb11a
GM
2023
2024@item :use-starttls-if-possible @var{boolean}
016a35df
GM
2025If non-@code{nil}, do opportunistic @acronym{STARTTLS} upgrades even if Emacs
2026doesn't have built-in @acronym{TLS} support.
d7dbb11a
GM
2027
2028@item :client-certificate @var{list-or-t}
2029Either a list of the form @code{(@var{key-file} @var{cert-file})},
2030naming the certificate key file and certificate file itself, or
2031@code{t}, meaning to query @code{auth-source} for this information
016a35df
GM
2032(@pxref{Top,,Overview, auth, The Auth-Source Manual}).
2033Only used for @acronym{TLS} or @acronym{STARTTLS}.
d7dbb11a
GM
2034
2035@item :return-list @var{cons-or-nil}
2036The return value of this function. If omitted or @code{nil}, return a
2037process object. Otherwise, a cons of the form @code{(@var{process-object}
2038. @var{plist})}, where @var{plist} has keywords:
2039
2040@table @code
2041@item :greeting @var{string-or-nil}
2042If non-@code{nil}, the greeting string returned by the host.
2043@item :capabilities @var{string-or-nil}
2044If non-@code{nil}, the host's capability string.
2045@item :type @var{symbol}
2046The connection type: @samp{plain} or @samp{tls}.
2047@end table
2048
2049@end table
2050
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GM
2051@end defun
2052
b8d4c8d0
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2053@node Network Servers
2054@section Network Servers
2055@cindex network servers
2056
016a35df
GM
2057 You create a server by calling @code{make-network-process}
2058(@pxref{Network Processes}) with @code{:server t}. The server will
2059listen for connection requests from clients. When it accepts a client
2060connection request, that creates a new network connection, itself a
2061process object, with the following parameters:
b8d4c8d0
GM
2062
2063@itemize @bullet
2064@item
2065The connection's process name is constructed by concatenating the
9364727b 2066server process's @var{name} with a client identification string. The
016a35df 2067@c FIXME? What about IPv6? Say briefly what the difference is?
b8d4c8d0 2068client identification string for an IPv4 connection looks like
016a35df
GM
2069@samp{<@var{a}.@var{b}.@var{c}.@var{d}:@var{p}>}, which represents an
2070address and port number. Otherwise, it is a
b8d4c8d0
GM
2071unique number in brackets, as in @samp{<@var{nnn}>}. The number
2072is unique for each connection in the Emacs session.
2073
2074@item
2075If the server's filter is non-@code{nil}, the connection process does
2076not get a separate process buffer; otherwise, Emacs creates a new
2077buffer for the purpose. The buffer name is the server's buffer name
2078or process name, concatenated with the client identification string.
2079
cec2eab8
JB
2080The server's process buffer value is never used directly, but the log
2081function can retrieve it and use it to log connections by inserting
2082text there.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2083
2084@item
2085The communication type and the process filter and sentinel are
2086inherited from those of the server. The server never directly
2087uses its filter and sentinel; their sole purpose is to initialize
2088connections made to the server.
2089
2090@item
016a35df 2091The connection's process contact information is set according to the client's
b8d4c8d0
GM
2092addressing information (typically an IP address and a port number).
2093This information is associated with the @code{process-contact}
2094keywords @code{:host}, @code{:service}, @code{:remote}.
2095
2096@item
2097The connection's local address is set up according to the port
2098number used for the connection.
2099
2100@item
9364727b 2101The client process's plist is initialized from the server's plist.
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GM
2102@end itemize
2103
2104@node Datagrams
2105@section Datagrams
2106@cindex datagrams
2107
016a35df 2108 A @dfn{datagram} connection communicates with individual packets rather
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2109than streams of data. Each call to @code{process-send} sends one
2110datagram packet (@pxref{Input to Processes}), and each datagram
2111received results in one call to the filter function.
2112
2113 The datagram connection doesn't have to talk with the same remote
2114peer all the time. It has a @dfn{remote peer address} which specifies
2115where to send datagrams to. Each time an incoming datagram is passed
2116to the filter function, the peer address is set to the address that
2117datagram came from; that way, if the filter function sends a datagram,
2118it will go back to that place. You can specify the remote peer
2119address when you create the datagram connection using the
2120@code{:remote} keyword. You can change it later on by calling
2121@code{set-process-datagram-address}.
2122
2123@defun process-datagram-address process
2124If @var{process} is a datagram connection or server, this function
2125returns its remote peer address.
2126@end defun
2127
2128@defun set-process-datagram-address process address
2129If @var{process} is a datagram connection or server, this function
2130sets its remote peer address to @var{address}.
2131@end defun
2132
2133@node Low-Level Network
2134@section Low-Level Network Access
2135
2136 You can also create network connections by operating at a lower
2137level than that of @code{open-network-stream}, using
2138@code{make-network-process}.
2139
2140@menu
2141* Proc: Network Processes. Using @code{make-network-process}.
2142* Options: Network Options. Further control over network connections.
2143* Features: Network Feature Testing.
2144 Determining which network features work on
2145 the machine you are using.
2146@end menu
2147
2148@node Network Processes
2149@subsection @code{make-network-process}
2150
2151 The basic function for creating network connections and network
2152servers is @code{make-network-process}. It can do either of those
2153jobs, depending on the arguments you give it.
2154
2155@defun make-network-process &rest args
2156This function creates a network connection or server and returns the
2157process object that represents it. The arguments @var{args} are a
2158list of keyword/argument pairs. Omitting a keyword is always
2159equivalent to specifying it with value @code{nil}, except for
2160@code{:coding}, @code{:filter-multibyte}, and @code{:reuseaddr}. Here
016a35df
GM
2161are the meaningful keywords (those corresponding to network options
2162are listed in the following section):
b8d4c8d0
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2163
2164@table @asis
2165@item :name @var{name}
2166Use the string @var{name} as the process name. It is modified if
2167necessary to make it unique.
2168
2169@item :type @var{type}
2170Specify the communication type. A value of @code{nil} specifies a
2171stream connection (the default); @code{datagram} specifies a datagram
f7704e26
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2172connection; @code{seqpacket} specifies a ``sequenced packet stream''
2173connection. Both connections and servers can be of these types.
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2174
2175@item :server @var{server-flag}
2176If @var{server-flag} is non-@code{nil}, create a server. Otherwise,
2177create a connection. For a stream type server, @var{server-flag} may
016a35df 2178be an integer, which then specifies the length of the queue of pending
b8d4c8d0
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2179connections to the server. The default queue length is 5.
2180
2181@item :host @var{host}
2182Specify the host to connect to. @var{host} should be a host name or
2183Internet address, as a string, or the symbol @code{local} to specify
2184the local host. If you specify @var{host} for a server, it must
2185specify a valid address for the local host, and only clients
2186connecting to that address will be accepted.
2187
2188@item :service @var{service}
016a35df 2189@var{service} specifies a port number to connect to; or, for a server,
b8d4c8d0
GM
2190the port number to listen on. It should be a service name that
2191translates to a port number, or an integer specifying the port number
2192directly. For a server, it can also be @code{t}, which means to let
2193the system select an unused port number.
2194
2195@item :family @var{family}
2196@var{family} specifies the address (and protocol) family for
2197communication. @code{nil} means determine the proper address family
2198automatically for the given @var{host} and @var{service}.
2199@code{local} specifies a Unix socket, in which case @var{host} is
016a35df 2200ignored. @code{ipv4} and @code{ipv6} specify to use IPv4 and IPv6,
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GM
2201respectively.
2202
2203@item :local @var{local-address}
2204For a server process, @var{local-address} is the address to listen on.
016a35df
GM
2205It overrides @var{family}, @var{host} and @var{service}, so you
2206might as well not specify them.
b8d4c8d0
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2207
2208@item :remote @var{remote-address}
2209For a connection, @var{remote-address} is the address to connect to.
016a35df
GM
2210It overrides @var{family}, @var{host} and @var{service}, so you
2211might as well not specify them.
b8d4c8d0
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2212
2213For a datagram server, @var{remote-address} specifies the initial
2214setting of the remote datagram address.
2215
2216The format of @var{local-address} or @var{remote-address} depends on
2217the address family:
2218
2219@itemize -
2220@item
2221An IPv4 address is represented as a five-element vector of four 8-bit
2222integers and one 16-bit integer
2223@code{[@var{a} @var{b} @var{c} @var{d} @var{p}]} corresponding to
2224numeric IPv4 address @var{a}.@var{b}.@var{c}.@var{d} and port number
2225@var{p}.
2226
2227@item
2228An IPv6 address is represented as a nine-element vector of 16-bit
2229integers @code{[@var{a} @var{b} @var{c} @var{d} @var{e} @var{f}
2230@var{g} @var{h} @var{p}]} corresponding to numeric IPv6 address
2231@var{a}:@var{b}:@var{c}:@var{d}:@var{e}:@var{f}:@var{g}:@var{h} and
2232port number @var{p}.
2233
2234@item
016a35df 2235A local address is represented as a string, which specifies the address
b8d4c8d0
GM
2236in the local address space.
2237
2238@item
2239An ``unsupported family'' address is represented by a cons
2240@code{(@var{f} . @var{av})}, where @var{f} is the family number and
2241@var{av} is a vector specifying the socket address using one element
2242per address data byte. Do not rely on this format in portable code,
2243as it may depend on implementation defined constants, data sizes, and
2244data structure alignment.
2245@end itemize
2246
2247@item :nowait @var{bool}
2248If @var{bool} is non-@code{nil} for a stream connection, return
2249without waiting for the connection to complete. When the connection
2250succeeds or fails, Emacs will call the sentinel function, with a
2251second argument matching @code{"open"} (if successful) or
2252@code{"failed"}. The default is to block, so that
2253@code{make-network-process} does not return until the connection
2254has succeeded or failed.
2255
2256@item :stop @var{stopped}
016a35df
GM
2257If @var{stopped} is non-@code{nil}, start the network connection or
2258server in the ``stopped'' state.
b8d4c8d0
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2259
2260@item :buffer @var{buffer}
2261Use @var{buffer} as the process buffer.
2262
2263@item :coding @var{coding}
2264Use @var{coding} as the coding system for this process. To specify
2265different coding systems for decoding data from the connection and for
2266encoding data sent to it, specify @code{(@var{decoding} .
2267@var{encoding})} for @var{coding}.
2268
2269If you don't specify this keyword at all, the default
2270is to determine the coding systems from the data.
2271
2272@item :noquery @var{query-flag}
2273Initialize the process query flag to @var{query-flag}.
2274@xref{Query Before Exit}.
2275
2276@item :filter @var{filter}
2277Initialize the process filter to @var{filter}.
2278
016a35df
GM
2279@item :filter-multibyte @var{multibyte}
2280If @var{multibyte} is non-@code{nil}, strings given to the process
2281filter are multibyte, otherwise they are unibyte. The default is the
2282default value of @code{enable-multibyte-characters}.
2283
b8d4c8d0
GM
2284@item :sentinel @var{sentinel}
2285Initialize the process sentinel to @var{sentinel}.
2286
2287@item :log @var{log}
2288Initialize the log function of a server process to @var{log}. The log
2289function is called each time the server accepts a network connection
2290from a client. The arguments passed to the log function are
016a35df 2291@var{server}, @var{connection}, and @var{message}; where @var{server}
b8d4c8d0
GM
2292is the server process, @var{connection} is the new process for the
2293connection, and @var{message} is a string describing what has
2294happened.
2295
2296@item :plist @var{plist}
2297Initialize the process plist to @var{plist}.
2298@end table
2299
2300The original argument list, modified with the actual connection
2301information, is available via the @code{process-contact} function.
2302@end defun
2303
2304@node Network Options
2305@subsection Network Options
2306
2307 The following network options can be specified when you create a
2308network process. Except for @code{:reuseaddr}, you can also set or
2309modify these options later, using @code{set-network-process-option}.
2310
2311 For a server process, the options specified with
2312@code{make-network-process} are not inherited by the client
2313connections, so you will need to set the necessary options for each
2314child connection as it is created.
2315
2316@table @asis
2317@item :bindtodevice @var{device-name}
2318If @var{device-name} is a non-empty string identifying a network
2319interface name (see @code{network-interface-list}), only handle
2320packets received on that interface. If @var{device-name} is @code{nil}
2321(the default), handle packets received on any interface.
2322
2323Using this option may require special privileges on some systems.
2324
2325@item :broadcast @var{broadcast-flag}
2326If @var{broadcast-flag} is non-@code{nil} for a datagram process, the
2327process will receive datagram packet sent to a broadcast address, and
016a35df 2328be able to send packets to a broadcast address. This is ignored for a stream
b8d4c8d0
GM
2329connection.
2330
2331@item :dontroute @var{dontroute-flag}
2332If @var{dontroute-flag} is non-@code{nil}, the process can only send
2333to hosts on the same network as the local host.
2334
2335@item :keepalive @var{keepalive-flag}
2336If @var{keepalive-flag} is non-@code{nil} for a stream connection,
2337enable exchange of low-level keep-alive messages.
2338
2339@item :linger @var{linger-arg}
2340If @var{linger-arg} is non-@code{nil}, wait for successful
2341transmission of all queued packets on the connection before it is
2342deleted (see @code{delete-process}). If @var{linger-arg} is an
2343integer, it specifies the maximum time in seconds to wait for queued
016a35df
GM
2344packets to be sent before closing the connection. The default is
2345@code{nil}, which means to discard unsent queued packets when the
b8d4c8d0
GM
2346process is deleted.
2347
016a35df 2348@c FIXME Where out-of-band data is ...?
b8d4c8d0
GM
2349@item :oobinline @var{oobinline-flag}
2350If @var{oobinline-flag} is non-@code{nil} for a stream connection,
2351receive out-of-band data in the normal data stream. Otherwise, ignore
2352out-of-band data.
2353
2354@item :priority @var{priority}
2355Set the priority for packets sent on this connection to the integer
2356@var{priority}. The interpretation of this number is protocol
016a35df 2357specific; such as setting the TOS (type of service) field on IP
b8d4c8d0
GM
2358packets sent on this connection. It may also have system dependent
2359effects, such as selecting a specific output queue on the network
2360interface.
2361
2362@item :reuseaddr @var{reuseaddr-flag}
2363If @var{reuseaddr-flag} is non-@code{nil} (the default) for a stream
2364server process, allow this server to reuse a specific port number (see
016a35df 2365@code{:service}), unless another process on this host is already
b8d4c8d0
GM
2366listening on that port. If @var{reuseaddr-flag} is @code{nil}, there
2367may be a period of time after the last use of that port (by any
016a35df 2368process on the host) where it is not possible to make a new server on
b8d4c8d0
GM
2369that port.
2370@end table
2371
106e6894 2372@defun set-network-process-option process option value &optional no-error
b8d4c8d0 2373This function sets or modifies a network option for network process
016a35df
GM
2374@var{process}. The accepted options and values are as for
2375@code{make-network-process}. If @var{no-error} is non-@code{nil},
2376this function returns @code{nil} instead of signaling an error if
2377@var{option} is not a supported option. If the function successfully
2378completes, it returns @code{t}.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2379
2380The current setting of an option is available via the
2381@code{process-contact} function.
2382@end defun
2383
2384@node Network Feature Testing
2385@subsection Testing Availability of Network Features
2386
2387 To test for the availability of a given network feature, use
2388@code{featurep} like this:
2389
2390@example
2391(featurep 'make-network-process '(@var{keyword} @var{value}))
2392@end example
2393
2394@noindent
016a35df 2395The result of this form is @code{t} if it works to specify
b8d4c8d0 2396@var{keyword} with value @var{value} in @code{make-network-process}.
016a35df 2397Here are some of the @var{keyword}---@var{value} pairs you can test in
b8d4c8d0
GM
2398this way.
2399
2400@table @code
2401@item (:nowait t)
2402Non-@code{nil} if non-blocking connect is supported.
2403@item (:type datagram)
2404Non-@code{nil} if datagrams are supported.
2405@item (:family local)
2406Non-@code{nil} if local (a.k.a.@: ``UNIX domain'') sockets are supported.
2407@item (:family ipv6)
2408Non-@code{nil} if IPv6 is supported.
2409@item (:service t)
2410Non-@code{nil} if the system can select the port for a server.
2411@end table
2412
2413 To test for the availability of a given network option, use
2414@code{featurep} like this:
2415
2416@example
2417(featurep 'make-network-process '@var{keyword})
2418@end example
2419
2420@noindent
016a35df
GM
2421The accepted @var{keyword} values are @code{:bindtodevice}, etc.
2422For the complete list, @pxref{Network Options}. This form returns
2423non-@code{nil} if that particular network option is supported by
2424@code{make-network-process} (or @code{set-network-process-option}).
b8d4c8d0
GM
2425
2426@node Misc Network
2427@section Misc Network Facilities
2428
2429 These additional functions are useful for creating and operating
305a7ef2
EZ
2430on network connections. Note that they are supported only on some
2431systems.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2432
2433@defun network-interface-list
2434This function returns a list describing the network interfaces
2435of the machine you are using. The value is an alist whose
2436elements have the form @code{(@var{name} . @var{address})}.
2437@var{address} has the same form as the @var{local-address}
2438and @var{remote-address} arguments to @code{make-network-process}.
2439@end defun
2440
2441@defun network-interface-info ifname
2442This function returns information about the network interface named
2443@var{ifname}. The value is a list of the form
2444@code{(@var{addr} @var{bcast} @var{netmask} @var{hwaddr} @var{flags})}.
2445
2446@table @var
2447@item addr
2448The Internet protocol address.
2449@item bcast
2450The broadcast address.
2451@item netmask
2452The network mask.
2453@item hwaddr
2454The layer 2 address (Ethernet MAC address, for instance).
2455@item flags
2456The current flags of the interface.
2457@end table
2458@end defun
2459
2460@defun format-network-address address &optional omit-port
2461This function converts the Lisp representation of a network address to
2462a string.
2463
2464A five-element vector @code{[@var{a} @var{b} @var{c} @var{d} @var{p}]}
2465represents an IPv4 address @var{a}.@var{b}.@var{c}.@var{d} and port
2466number @var{p}. @code{format-network-address} converts that to the
2467string @code{"@var{a}.@var{b}.@var{c}.@var{d}:@var{p}"}.
2468
2469A nine-element vector @code{[@var{a} @var{b} @var{c} @var{d} @var{e}
2470@var{f} @var{g} @var{h} @var{p}]} represents an IPv6 address along
2471with a port number. @code{format-network-address} converts that to
2472the string
2473@code{"[@var{a}:@var{b}:@var{c}:@var{d}:@var{e}:@var{f}:@var{g}:@var{h}]:@var{p}"}.
2474
2475If the vector does not include the port number, @var{p}, or if
2476@var{omit-port} is non-@code{nil}, the result does not include the
2477@code{:@var{p}} suffix.
2478@end defun
2479
c73e02fa
GM
2480@node Serial Ports
2481@section Communicating with Serial Ports
2482@cindex @file{/dev/tty}
2483@cindex @file{COM1}
545c2782 2484@cindex serial connections
c73e02fa
GM
2485
2486 Emacs can communicate with serial ports. For interactive use,
2487@kbd{M-x serial-term} opens a terminal window. In a Lisp program,
2488@code{make-serial-process} creates a process object.
2489
2490 The serial port can be configured at run-time, without having to
2491close and re-open it. The function @code{serial-process-configure}
2492lets you change the speed, bytesize, and other parameters. In a
2493terminal window created by @code{serial-term}, you can click on the
2494mode line for configuration.
2495
4373fd43
GM
2496 A serial connection is represented by a process object, which can be
2497used in a similar way to a subprocess or network process. You can send and
2498receive data, and configure the serial port. A serial process object
2499has no process ID, however, and you can't send signals to it, and the
2500status codes are different from other types of processes.
c73e02fa
GM
2501@code{delete-process} on the process object or @code{kill-buffer} on
2502the process buffer close the connection, but this does not affect the
2503device connected to the serial port.
2504
2505 The function @code{process-type} returns the symbol @code{serial}
80e6b6df 2506for a process object representing a serial port connection.
c73e02fa 2507
4373fd43 2508 Serial ports are available on GNU/Linux, Unix, and MS Windows systems.
c73e02fa 2509
80e6b6df 2510@deffn Command serial-term port speed
c73e02fa 2511Start a terminal-emulator for a serial port in a new buffer.
4373fd43
GM
2512@var{port} is the name of the serial port to connect to. For
2513example, this could be @file{/dev/ttyS0} on Unix. On MS Windows, this
80e6b6df
EZ
2514could be @file{COM1}, or @file{\\.\COM10} (double the backslashes in
2515Lisp strings).
c73e02fa 2516
4373fd43
GM
2517@c FIXME is 9600 still the most common value, or is it 115200 now?
2518@c (Same value, 9600, appears below as well.)
c73e02fa 2519@var{speed} is the speed of the serial port in bits per second. 9600
80e6b6df
EZ
2520is a common value. The buffer is in Term mode; see @ref{Term Mode,,,
2521emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for the commands to use in that buffer.
2522You can change the speed and the configuration in the mode line menu.
2523@end deffn
c73e02fa
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2524
2525@defun make-serial-process &rest args
80e6b6df 2526This function creates a process and a buffer. Arguments are specified
4373fd43
GM
2527as keyword/argument pairs. Here's the list of the meaningful
2528keywords, with the first two (@var{port} and @var{speed}) being mandatory:
c73e02fa
GM
2529
2530@table @code
4373fd43 2531@item :port @var{port}
80e6b6df
EZ
2532This is the name of the serial port. On Unix and GNU systems, this is
2533a file name such as @file{/dev/ttyS0}. On Windows, this could be
2534@file{COM1}, or @file{\\.\COM10} for ports higher than @file{COM9}
2535(double the backslashes in Lisp strings).
2536
4373fd43 2537@item :speed @var{speed}
80e6b6df 2538The speed of the serial port in bits per second. This function calls
4373fd43
GM
2539@code{serial-process-configure} to handle the speed; see the
2540following documentation of that function for more details.
80e6b6df
EZ
2541
2542@item :name @var{name}
2543The name of the process. If @var{name} is not given, @var{port} will
2544serve as the process name as well.
2545
2546@item :buffer @var{buffer}
4373fd43 2547The buffer to associate with the process. The value can be either a
80e6b6df
EZ
2548buffer or a string that names a buffer. Process output goes at the
2549end of that buffer, unless you specify an output stream or filter
2550function to handle the output. If @var{buffer} is not given, the
2551process buffer's name is taken from the value of the @code{:name}
2552keyword.
2553
2554@item :coding @var{coding}
c73e02fa
GM
2555If @var{coding} is a symbol, it specifies the coding system used for
2556both reading and writing for this process. If @var{coding} is a cons
4373fd43
GM
2557@code{(@var{decoding} . @var{encoding})}, @var{decoding} is used for
2558reading, and @var{encoding} is used for writing. If not specified,
2559the default is to determine the coding systems from the data itself.
c73e02fa 2560
80e6b6df
EZ
2561@item :noquery @var{query-flag}
2562Initialize the process query flag to @var{query-flag}. @xref{Query
2563Before Exit}. The flags defaults to @code{nil} if unspecified.
c73e02fa 2564
80e6b6df 2565@item :stop @var{bool}
016a35df 2566Start process in the ``stopped'' state if @var{bool} is
c73e02fa
GM
2567non-@code{nil}. In the stopped state, a serial process does not
2568accept incoming data, but you can send outgoing data. The stopped
2569state is cleared by @code{continue-process} and set by
2570@code{stop-process}.
2571
80e6b6df 2572@item :filter @var{filter}
c73e02fa
GM
2573Install @var{filter} as the process filter.
2574
80e6b6df 2575@item :sentinel @var{sentinel}
c73e02fa
GM
2576Install @var{sentinel} as the process sentinel.
2577
80e6b6df 2578@item :plist @var{plist}
c73e02fa
GM
2579Install @var{plist} as the initial plist of the process.
2580
4373fd43 2581@item :bytesize
c73e02fa
GM
2582@itemx :parity
2583@itemx :stopbits
2584@itemx :flowcontrol
049bcbcb
CY
2585These are handled by @code{serial-process-configure}, which is called
2586by @code{make-serial-process}.
c73e02fa
GM
2587@end table
2588
2589The original argument list, possibly modified by later configuration,
2590is available via the function @code{process-contact}.
2591
049bcbcb 2592Here is an example:
c73e02fa
GM
2593
2594@example
2595(make-serial-process :port "/dev/ttyS0" :speed 9600)
c73e02fa
GM
2596@end example
2597@end defun
2598
2599@defun serial-process-configure &rest args
80e6b6df
EZ
2600@cindex baud, in serial connections
2601@cindex bytesize, in serial connections
2602@cindex parity, in serial connections
2603@cindex stopbits, in serial connections
2604@cindex flowcontrol, in serial connections
2605
2606This functions configures a serial port connection. Arguments are
2607specified as keyword/argument pairs. Attributes that are not given
2608are re-initialized from the process's current configuration (available
4373fd43 2609via the function @code{process-contact}), or set to reasonable default
80e6b6df 2610values. The following arguments are defined:
c73e02fa
GM
2611
2612@table @code
80e6b6df
EZ
2613@item :process @var{process}
2614@itemx :name @var{name}
2615@itemx :buffer @var{buffer}
2616@itemx :port @var{port}
c73e02fa
GM
2617Any of these arguments can be given to identify the process that is to
2618be configured. If none of these arguments is given, the current
2619buffer's process is used.
2620
2621@item :speed @var{speed}
545c2782
EZ
2622The speed of the serial port in bits per second, a.k.a.@: @dfn{baud
2623rate}. The value can be any number, but most serial ports work only
2624at a few defined values between 1200 and 115200, with 9600 being the
2625most common value. If @var{speed} is @code{nil}, the function ignores
2626all other arguments and does not configure the port. This may be
4373fd43
GM
2627useful for special serial ports such as Bluetooth-to-serial converters,
2628which can only be configured through @samp{AT} commands sent through the
538395d9
EZ
2629connection. The value of @code{nil} for @var{speed} is valid only for
2630connections that were already opened by a previous call to
80e6b6df 2631@code{make-serial-process} or @code{serial-term}.
c73e02fa
GM
2632
2633@item :bytesize @var{bytesize}
80e6b6df
EZ
2634The number of bits per byte, which can be 7 or 8. If @var{bytesize}
2635is not given or @code{nil}, it defaults to 8.
c73e02fa
GM
2636
2637@item :parity @var{parity}
80e6b6df 2638The value can be @code{nil} (don't use parity), the symbol
c73e02fa 2639@code{odd} (use odd parity), or the symbol @code{even} (use even
80e6b6df 2640parity). If @var{parity} is not given, it defaults to no parity.
c73e02fa
GM
2641
2642@item :stopbits @var{stopbits}
80e6b6df
EZ
2643The number of stopbits used to terminate a transmission
2644of each byte. @var{stopbits} can be 1 or 2. If @var{stopbits} is not
2645given or @code{nil}, it defaults to 1.
c73e02fa
GM
2646
2647@item :flowcontrol @var{flowcontrol}
80e6b6df
EZ
2648The type of flow control to use for this connection, which is either
2649@code{nil} (don't use flow control), the symbol @code{hw} (use RTS/CTS
2650hardware flow control), or the symbol @code{sw} (use XON/XOFF software
2651flow control). If @var{flowcontrol} is not given, it defaults to no
2652flow control.
c73e02fa
GM
2653@end table
2654
4373fd43
GM
2655Internally, @code{make-serial-process} calls
2656@code{serial-process-configure} for the initial configuration of the
2657serial port.
c73e02fa
GM
2658@end defun
2659
b8d4c8d0
GM
2660@node Byte Packing
2661@section Packing and Unpacking Byte Arrays
2662@cindex byte packing and unpacking
2663
2664 This section describes how to pack and unpack arrays of bytes,
2665usually for binary network protocols. These functions convert byte arrays
2666to alists, and vice versa. The byte array can be represented as a
4373fd43 2667@c FIXME? No multibyte?
b8d4c8d0
GM
2668unibyte string or as a vector of integers, while the alist associates
2669symbols either with fixed-size objects or with recursive sub-alists.
4373fd43
GM
2670To use the functions referred to in this section, load the
2671@code{bindat} library.
2672@c It doesn't have any autoloads.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2673
2674@cindex serializing
2675@cindex deserializing
2676@cindex packing
2677@cindex unpacking
2678 Conversion from byte arrays to nested alists is also known as
2679@dfn{deserializing} or @dfn{unpacking}, while going in the opposite
2680direction is also known as @dfn{serializing} or @dfn{packing}.
2681
2682@menu
2683* Bindat Spec:: Describing data layout.
2684* Bindat Functions:: Doing the unpacking and packing.
2685* Bindat Examples:: Samples of what bindat.el can do for you!
2686@end menu
2687
2688@node Bindat Spec
2689@subsection Describing Data Layout
2690
2691 To control unpacking and packing, you write a @dfn{data layout
2692specification}, a special nested list describing named and typed
4373fd43 2693@dfn{fields}. This specification controls the length of each field to be
b8d4c8d0
GM
2694processed, and how to pack or unpack it. We normally keep bindat specs
2695in variables whose names end in @samp{-bindat-spec}; that kind of name
e153c136 2696is automatically recognized as ``risky''.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2697
2698@cindex endianness
2699@cindex big endian
2700@cindex little endian
2701@cindex network byte ordering
2702 A field's @dfn{type} describes the size (in bytes) of the object
2703that the field represents and, in the case of multibyte fields, how
2704the bytes are ordered within the field. The two possible orderings
2705are ``big endian'' (also known as ``network byte ordering'') and
e153c136 2706``little endian''. For instance, the number @code{#x23cd} (decimal
b8d4c8d0
GM
27079165) in big endian would be the two bytes @code{#x23} @code{#xcd};
2708and in little endian, @code{#xcd} @code{#x23}. Here are the possible
2709type values:
2710
2711@table @code
2712@item u8
2713@itemx byte
2714Unsigned byte, with length 1.
2715
2716@item u16
2717@itemx word
2718@itemx short
2719Unsigned integer in network byte order, with length 2.
2720
2721@item u24
2722Unsigned integer in network byte order, with length 3.
2723
2724@item u32
2725@itemx dword
2726@itemx long
2727Unsigned integer in network byte order, with length 4.
44e97401 2728Note: These values may be limited by Emacs's integer implementation limits.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2729
2730@item u16r
2731@itemx u24r
2732@itemx u32r
2733Unsigned integer in little endian order, with length 2, 3 and 4, respectively.
2734
2735@item str @var{len}
2736String of length @var{len}.
2737
2738@item strz @var{len}
2739Zero-terminated string, in a fixed-size field with length @var{len}.
2740
2741@item vec @var{len} [@var{type}]
4373fd43 2742Vector of @var{len} elements of type @var{type}, defaulting to bytes.
b8d4c8d0 2743The @var{type} is any of the simple types above, or another vector
4373fd43 2744specified as a list of the form @code{(vec @var{len} [@var{type}])}.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2745
2746@item ip
4373fd43 2747@c FIXME? IPv6?
b8d4c8d0
GM
2748Four-byte vector representing an Internet address. For example:
2749@code{[127 0 0 1]} for localhost.
2750
2751@item bits @var{len}
2752List of set bits in @var{len} bytes. The bytes are taken in big
2753endian order and the bits are numbered starting with @code{8 *
2754@var{len} @minus{} 1} and ending with zero. For example: @code{bits
27552} unpacks @code{#x28} @code{#x1c} to @code{(2 3 4 11 13)} and
2756@code{#x1c} @code{#x28} to @code{(3 5 10 11 12)}.
2757
2758@item (eval @var{form})
2759@var{form} is a Lisp expression evaluated at the moment the field is
2760unpacked or packed. The result of the evaluation should be one of the
2761above-listed type specifications.
2762@end table
2763
2764For a fixed-size field, the length @var{len} is given as an integer
2765specifying the number of bytes in the field.
2766
2767When the length of a field is not fixed, it typically depends on the
2768value of a preceding field. In this case, the length @var{len} can be
2769given either as a list @code{(@var{name} ...)} identifying a
2770@dfn{field name} in the format specified for @code{bindat-get-field}
2771below, or by an expression @code{(eval @var{form})} where @var{form}
2772should evaluate to an integer, specifying the field length.
2773
2774A field specification generally has the form @code{([@var{name}]
4373fd43
GM
2775@var{handler})}, where @var{name} is optional. Don't use names that
2776are symbols meaningful as type specifications (above) or handler
2777specifications (below), since that would be ambiguous. @var{name} can
2778be a symbol or an expression @code{(eval @var{form})}, in which case
2779@var{form} should evaluate to a symbol.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2780
2781@var{handler} describes how to unpack or pack the field and can be one
2782of the following:
2783
2784@table @code
2785@item @var{type}
2786Unpack/pack this field according to the type specification @var{type}.
2787
2788@item eval @var{form}
2789Evaluate @var{form}, a Lisp expression, for side-effect only. If the
2790field name is specified, the value is bound to that field name.
2791
2792@item fill @var{len}
2793Skip @var{len} bytes. In packing, this leaves them unchanged,
2794which normally means they remain zero. In unpacking, this means
2795they are ignored.
2796
2797@item align @var{len}
2798Skip to the next multiple of @var{len} bytes.
2799
2800@item struct @var{spec-name}
2801Process @var{spec-name} as a sub-specification. This describes a
2802structure nested within another structure.
2803
2804@item union @var{form} (@var{tag} @var{spec})@dots{}
2805@c ??? I don't see how one would actually use this.
2806@c ??? what kind of expression would be useful for @var{form}?
2807Evaluate @var{form}, a Lisp expression, find the first @var{tag}
2808that matches it, and process its associated data layout specification
2809@var{spec}. Matching can occur in one of three ways:
2810
2811@itemize
2812@item
2813If a @var{tag} has the form @code{(eval @var{expr})}, evaluate
2814@var{expr} with the variable @code{tag} dynamically bound to the value
2815of @var{form}. A non-@code{nil} result indicates a match.
2816
2817@item
2818@var{tag} matches if it is @code{equal} to the value of @var{form}.
2819
2820@item
2821@var{tag} matches unconditionally if it is @code{t}.
2822@end itemize
2823
2824@item repeat @var{count} @var{field-specs}@dots{}
2825Process the @var{field-specs} recursively, in order, then repeat
4373fd43 2826starting from the first one, processing all the specifications @var{count}
b8d4c8d0
GM
2827times overall. The @var{count} is given using the same formats as a
2828field length---if an @code{eval} form is used, it is evaluated just once.
4373fd43
GM
2829For correct operation, each specification in @var{field-specs} must
2830include a name.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2831@end table
2832
2833For the @code{(eval @var{form})} forms used in a bindat specification,
2834the @var{form} can access and update these dynamically bound variables
2835during evaluation:
2836
2837@table @code
2838@item last
2839Value of the last field processed.
2840
2841@item bindat-raw
2842The data as a byte array.
2843
2844@item bindat-idx
2845Current index (within @code{bindat-raw}) for unpacking or packing.
2846
2847@item struct
2848The alist containing the structured data that have been unpacked so
2849far, or the entire structure being packed. You can use
2850@code{bindat-get-field} to access specific fields of this structure.
2851
2852@item count
2853@itemx index
2854Inside a @code{repeat} block, these contain the maximum number of
2855repetitions (as specified by the @var{count} parameter), and the
2856current repetition number (counting from 0). Setting @code{count} to
2857zero will terminate the inner-most repeat block after the current
2858repetition has completed.
2859@end table
2860
2861@node Bindat Functions
2862@subsection Functions to Unpack and Pack Bytes
2863
2864 In the following documentation, @var{spec} refers to a data layout
2865specification, @code{bindat-raw} to a byte array, and @var{struct} to an
2866alist representing unpacked field data.
2867
2868@defun bindat-unpack spec bindat-raw &optional bindat-idx
4373fd43 2869@c FIXME? Again, no multibyte?
b8d4c8d0
GM
2870This function unpacks data from the unibyte string or byte
2871array @code{bindat-raw}
4373fd43 2872according to @var{spec}. Normally, this starts unpacking at the
b8d4c8d0
GM
2873beginning of the byte array, but if @var{bindat-idx} is non-@code{nil}, it
2874specifies a zero-based starting position to use instead.
2875
2876The value is an alist or nested alist in which each element describes
2877one unpacked field.
2878@end defun
2879
2880@defun bindat-get-field struct &rest name
2881This function selects a field's data from the nested alist
2882@var{struct}. Usually @var{struct} was returned by
2883@code{bindat-unpack}. If @var{name} corresponds to just one argument,
2884that means to extract a top-level field value. Multiple @var{name}
2885arguments specify repeated lookup of sub-structures. An integer name
2886acts as an array index.
2887
2888For example, if @var{name} is @code{(a b 2 c)}, that means to find
2889field @code{c} in the third element of subfield @code{b} of field
2890@code{a}. (This corresponds to @code{struct.a.b[2].c} in C.)
2891@end defun
2892
2893 Although packing and unpacking operations change the organization of
2894data (in memory), they preserve the data's @dfn{total length}, which is
2895the sum of all the fields' lengths, in bytes. This value is not
2896generally inherent in either the specification or alist alone; instead,
2897both pieces of information contribute to its calculation. Likewise, the
2898length of a string or array being unpacked may be longer than the data's
2899total length as described by the specification.
2900
2901@defun bindat-length spec struct
2902This function returns the total length of the data in @var{struct},
2903according to @var{spec}.
2904@end defun
2905
2906@defun bindat-pack spec struct &optional bindat-raw bindat-idx
2907This function returns a byte array packed according to @var{spec} from
4373fd43 2908the data in the alist @var{struct}. It normally creates and fills a
b8d4c8d0
GM
2909new byte array starting at the beginning. However, if @var{bindat-raw}
2910is non-@code{nil}, it specifies a pre-allocated unibyte string or vector to
2911pack into. If @var{bindat-idx} is non-@code{nil}, it specifies the starting
2912offset for packing into @code{bindat-raw}.
2913
2914When pre-allocating, you should make sure @code{(length @var{bindat-raw})}
2915meets or exceeds the total length to avoid an out-of-range error.
2916@end defun
2917
2918@defun bindat-ip-to-string ip
2919Convert the Internet address vector @var{ip} to a string in the usual
2920dotted notation.
4373fd43 2921@c FIXME? Does it do IPv6?
b8d4c8d0
GM
2922
2923@example
2924(bindat-ip-to-string [127 0 0 1])
2925 @result{} "127.0.0.1"
2926@end example
2927@end defun
2928
2929@node Bindat Examples
2930@subsection Examples of Byte Unpacking and Packing
4373fd43
GM
2931@c FIXME? This seems a very long example for something that is not used
2932@c very often. As of 24.1, gdb-mi.el is the only user of bindat.el in Emacs.
2933@c Maybe one or both of these examples should just be moved to the
2934@c commentary of bindat.el.
b8d4c8d0
GM
2935
2936 Here is a complete example of byte unpacking and packing:
2937
2938@lisp
4373fd43
GM
2939(require 'bindat)
2940
b8d4c8d0
GM
2941(defvar fcookie-index-spec
2942 '((:version u32)
2943 (:count u32)
2944 (:longest u32)
2945 (:shortest u32)
2946 (:flags u32)
2947 (:delim u8)
2948 (:ignored fill 3)
4373fd43 2949 (:offset repeat (:count) (:foo u32)))
b8d4c8d0
GM
2950 "Description of a fortune cookie index file's contents.")
2951
2952(defun fcookie (cookies &optional index)
2953 "Display a random fortune cookie from file COOKIES.
2954Optional second arg INDEX specifies the associated index
4373fd43
GM
2955filename, by default \"COOKIES.dat\". Display cookie text
2956in buffer \"*Fortune Cookie: BASENAME*\", where BASENAME
b8d4c8d0
GM
2957is COOKIES without the directory part."
2958 (interactive "fCookies file: ")
2959 (let* ((info (with-temp-buffer
2960 (insert-file-contents-literally
2961 (or index (concat cookies ".dat")))
2962 (bindat-unpack fcookie-index-spec
2963 (buffer-string))))
2964 (sel (random (bindat-get-field info :count)))
2965 (beg (cdar (bindat-get-field info :offset sel)))
2966 (end (or (cdar (bindat-get-field info
2967 :offset (1+ sel)))
2968 (nth 7 (file-attributes cookies)))))
2969 (switch-to-buffer
2970 (get-buffer-create
2971 (format "*Fortune Cookie: %s*"
2972 (file-name-nondirectory cookies))))
2973 (erase-buffer)
2974 (insert-file-contents-literally
2975 cookies nil beg (- end 3))))
2976
2977(defun fcookie-create-index (cookies &optional index delim)
2978 "Scan file COOKIES, and write out its index file.
4373fd43
GM
2979Optional arg INDEX specifies the index filename, which by
2980default is \"COOKIES.dat\". Optional arg DELIM specifies the
2981unibyte character that, when found on a line of its own in
b8d4c8d0
GM
2982COOKIES, indicates the border between entries."
2983 (interactive "fCookies file: ")
2984 (setq delim (or delim ?%))
2985 (let ((delim-line (format "\n%c\n" delim))
2986 (count 0)
2987 (max 0)
2988 min p q len offsets)
2989 (unless (= 3 (string-bytes delim-line))
2990 (error "Delimiter cannot be represented in one byte"))
2991 (with-temp-buffer
2992 (insert-file-contents-literally cookies)
2993 (while (and (setq p (point))
2994 (search-forward delim-line (point-max) t)
2995 (setq len (- (point) 3 p)))
2996 (setq count (1+ count)
2997 max (max max len)
2998 min (min (or min max) len)
2999 offsets (cons (1- p) offsets))))
3000 (with-temp-buffer
3001 (set-buffer-multibyte nil)
3002 (insert
3003 (bindat-pack
3004 fcookie-index-spec
3005 `((:version . 2)
3006 (:count . ,count)
3007 (:longest . ,max)
3008 (:shortest . ,min)
3009 (:flags . 0)
3010 (:delim . ,delim)
3011 (:offset . ,(mapcar (lambda (o)
3012 (list (cons :foo o)))
3013 (nreverse offsets))))))
3014 (let ((coding-system-for-write 'raw-text-unix))
3015 (write-file (or index (concat cookies ".dat")))))))
3016@end lisp
3017
4373fd43
GM
3018The following is an example of defining and unpacking a complex
3019structure. Consider the following C structures:
b8d4c8d0
GM
3020
3021@example
3022struct header @{
3023 unsigned long dest_ip;
3024 unsigned long src_ip;
3025 unsigned short dest_port;
3026 unsigned short src_port;
3027@};
3028
3029struct data @{
3030 unsigned char type;
3031 unsigned char opcode;
4373fd43 3032 unsigned short length; /* in network byte order */
b8d4c8d0
GM
3033 unsigned char id[8]; /* null-terminated string */
3034 unsigned char data[/* (length + 3) & ~3 */];
3035@};
3036
3037struct packet @{
3038 struct header header;
4373fd43 3039 unsigned long counters[2]; /* in little endian order */
b8d4c8d0
GM
3040 unsigned char items;
3041 unsigned char filler[3];
3042 struct data item[/* items */];
3043
3044@};
3045@end example
3046
4373fd43 3047The corresponding data layout specification is:
b8d4c8d0
GM
3048
3049@lisp
3050(setq header-spec
3051 '((dest-ip ip)
3052 (src-ip ip)
3053 (dest-port u16)
3054 (src-port u16)))
3055
3056(setq data-spec
3057 '((type u8)
3058 (opcode u8)
4373fd43 3059 (length u16) ; network byte order
b8d4c8d0
GM
3060 (id strz 8)
3061 (data vec (length))
3062 (align 4)))
3063
3064(setq packet-spec
3065 '((header struct header-spec)
4373fd43 3066 (counters vec 2 u32r) ; little endian order
b8d4c8d0
GM
3067 (items u8)
3068 (fill 3)
3069 (item repeat (items)
3070 (struct data-spec))))
3071@end lisp
3072
4373fd43 3073A binary data representation is:
b8d4c8d0
GM
3074
3075@lisp
3076(setq binary-data
3077 [ 192 168 1 100 192 168 1 101 01 28 21 32
3078 160 134 1 0 5 1 0 0 2 0 0 0
3079 2 3 0 5 ?A ?B ?C ?D ?E ?F 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 0 0 0
3080 1 4 0 7 ?B ?C ?D ?E ?F ?G 0 0 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 0 ])
3081@end lisp
3082
4373fd43 3083The corresponding decoded structure is:
b8d4c8d0
GM
3084
3085@lisp
3086(setq decoded (bindat-unpack packet-spec binary-data))
3087 @result{}
3088((header
3089 (dest-ip . [192 168 1 100])
3090 (src-ip . [192 168 1 101])
3091 (dest-port . 284)
3092 (src-port . 5408))
3093 (counters . [100000 261])
3094 (items . 2)
3095 (item ((data . [1 2 3 4 5])
3096 (id . "ABCDEF")
3097 (length . 5)
3098 (opcode . 3)
3099 (type . 2))
3100 ((data . [6 7 8 9 10 11 12])
3101 (id . "BCDEFG")
3102 (length . 7)
3103 (opcode . 4)
3104 (type . 1))))
3105@end lisp
3106
4373fd43 3107An example of fetching data from this structure:
b8d4c8d0
GM
3108
3109@lisp
3110(bindat-get-field decoded 'item 1 'id)
3111 @result{} "BCDEFG"
3112@end lisp