-
-
-/* Machine dependent routines (MAPLIN, TYPE, MPINIT, SAVEIO) */
-
-void MAPLIN(FILE *OPENED) {
-long I, VAL;
-
-/* Read a line of input, from the specified input source,
- * translate the chars to integers in the range 0-126 and store
- * them in the common array "INLINE". Integer values are as follows:
- * 0 = space [ASCII CODE 40 octal, 32 decimal]
- * 1-2 = !" [ASCII 41-42 octal, 33-34 decimal]
- * 3-10 = '()*+,-. [ASCII 47-56 octal, 39-46 decimal]
- * 11-36 = upper-case letters
- * 37-62 = lower-case letters
- * 63 = percent (%) [ASCII 45 octal, 37 decimal]
- * 64-73 = digits, 0 through 9
- * Remaining characters can be translated any way that is convenient;
- * The "TYPE" routine below is used to map them back to characters when
- * necessary. The above mappings are required so that certain special
- * characters are known to fit in 6 bits and/or can be easily spotted.
- * Array elements beyond the end of the line should be filled with 0,
- * and LNLENG should be set to the index of the last character.
- *
- * If the data file uses a character other than space (e.g., tab) to
- * separate numbers, that character should also translate to 0.
- *
- * This procedure may use the map1,map2 arrays to maintain static data for
- * the mapping. MAP2(1) is set to 0 when the program starts
- * and is not changed thereafter unless the routines on this page choose
- * to do so. */
-
- if(MAP2[1] == 0)MPINIT();
-
- if (!oldstyle && OPENED == stdin)
- fputs("> ", stdout);
- do {
- IGNORE(fgets(rawbuf,sizeof(rawbuf)-1,OPENED));
- } while
- (!feof(OPENED) && rawbuf[0] == '#');
- if (feof(OPENED)) {
- if (logfp && OPENED == stdin)
- fclose(logfp);
- } else {
- if (logfp && OPENED == stdin)
- IGNORE(fputs(rawbuf, logfp));
- else if (!isatty(0))
- IGNORE(fputs(rawbuf, stdout));
- strcpy(INLINE+1, rawbuf);
- LNLENG=0;
- for (I=1; I<=(long)sizeof(INLINE) && INLINE[I]!=0; I++) {
- VAL=INLINE[I]+1;
- INLINE[I]=MAP1[VAL];
- if(INLINE[I] != 0)LNLENG=I;
- } /* end loop */
- LNPOSN=1;
- }
-}
-
-void TYPE(void) {
-long I, VAL;
-
-/* Type the first "LNLENG" characters stored in inline, mapping them
- * from integers to text per the rules described above. INLINE(I),
- * I=1,LNLENG may be changed by this routine. */
-
- if(LNLENG != 0) goto L10;
- printf("\n");
- return;
-
-L10: if(MAP2[1] == 0)MPINIT();
- for (I=1; I<=LNLENG; I++) {
- VAL=INLINE[I];
- {long x = VAL+1; INLINE[I]=MAP2[x];}
- } /* end loop */
- {long x = LNLENG+1; INLINE[x]=0;}
- printf("%s\n",INLINE+1);
- return;
-}
-
-void MPINIT(void) {
-long FIRST, I, J, LAST, VAL;
-static long RUNS[7][2] = { {32,34}, {39,46}, {65,90}, {97,122}, {37,37}, {48,57}, {0,126} };
-
- for (I=1; I<=128; I++) {
- MAP1[I]= -1;
- } /* end loop */
- VAL=0;
- for (I=0; I<7; I++) {
- FIRST=RUNS[I][0];
- LAST=RUNS[I][1];
- /* 22 */ for (J=FIRST; J<=LAST; J++) {
- J++; if(MAP1[J] >= 0) goto L22;
- MAP1[J]=VAL;
- VAL=VAL+1;
-L22: J--;
- } /* end loop */
- /*etc*/ ;
- } /* end loop */
- MAP1[128]=MAP1[10];
-/* For this version, tab (9) maps to space (32), so del (127) uses tab's value */
- MAP1[10]=MAP1[33];
- MAP1[11]=MAP1[33];
-
- for (I=0; I<=126; I++) {
- I++; VAL=MAP1[I]+1; I--;
- MAP2[VAL]=I*('B'-'A');
- if(I >= 64)MAP2[VAL]=(I-64)*('B'-'A')+'@';
- } /* end loop */
-
- return;
+bool MAPLIN(FILE *fp)
+{
+ bool eof;
+
+ /* Read a line of input, from the specified input source.
+ * This logic is complicated partly because it has to serve
+ * several cases with different requirements and partly because
+ * of a quirk in linenoise().
+ *
+ * The quirk shows up when you paste a test log from the clipboard
+ * to the program's command prompt. While fgets (as expected)
+ * consumes it a line at a time, linenoise() returns the first
+ * line and discards the rest. Thus, there needs to be an
+ * editline (-s) option to fall back to fgets while still
+ * prompting. Note that linenoise does behave properly when
+ * fed redirected stdin.
+ *
+ * The logging is a bit of a mess because there are two distinct cases
+ * in which you want to echo commands. One is when shipping them to
+ * a log under the -l option, in which case you want to suppress
+ * prompt generation (so test logs are unadorned command sequences).
+ * On the other hand, if you redirected stdin and are feeding the program
+ * a logfile, you *do* want prompt generation - it makes checkfiles
+ * easier to read when the commands are marked by a preceding prompt.
+ */
+ do {
+ if (!editline) {
+ if (prompt)
+ fputs("> ", stdout);
+ IGNORE(fgets(rawbuf, sizeof(rawbuf) - 1, fp));
+ eof = (feof(fp));
+ } else {
+ char *cp = linenoise("> ");
+ eof = (cp == NULL);
+ if (!eof) {
+ strncpy(rawbuf, cp, sizeof(rawbuf) - 1);
+ linenoiseHistoryAdd(rawbuf);
+ strncat(rawbuf, "\n", sizeof(rawbuf) - strlen(rawbuf) - 1);
+ linenoiseFree(cp);
+ }
+ }
+ } while
+ (!eof && rawbuf[0] == '#');
+ if (eof) {
+ if (logfp && fp == stdin)
+ fclose(logfp);
+ return false;
+ } else {
+ FILE *efp = NULL;
+ if (logfp && fp == stdin)
+ efp = logfp;
+ else if (!isatty(0))
+ efp = stdout;
+ if (efp != NULL) {
+ if (prompt && efp == stdout)
+ fputs("> ", efp);
+ IGNORE(fputs(rawbuf, efp));
+ }
+ strcpy(INLINE + 1, rawbuf);
+ /* translate the chars to integers in the range 0-126 and store
+ * them in the common array "INLINE". Integer values are as follows:
+ * 0 = space [ASCII CODE 40 octal, 32 decimal]
+ * 1-2 = !" [ASCII 41-42 octal, 33-34 decimal]
+ * 3-10 = '()*+,-. [ASCII 47-56 octal, 39-46 decimal]
+ * 11-36 = upper-case letters
+ * 37-62 = lower-case letters
+ * 63 = percent (%) [ASCII 45 octal, 37 decimal]
+ * 64-73 = digits, 0 through 9
+ * Remaining characters can be translated any way that is convenient;
+ * The above mappings are required so that certain special
+ * characters are known to fit in 6 bits and/or can be easily spotted.
+ * Array elements beyond the end of the line should be filled with 0,
+ * and LNLENG should be set to the index of the last character.
+ *
+ * If the data file uses a character other than space (e.g., tab) to
+ * separate numbers, that character should also translate to 0.
+ *
+ * This procedure may use the map1,map2 arrays to maintain
+ * static data for he mapping. MAP2(1) is set to 0 when the
+ * program starts and is not changed thereafter unless the
+ * routines in this module choose to do so. */
+ LNLENG = 0;
+ for (long i = 1; i <= (long)sizeof(INLINE) && INLINE[i] != 0; i++) {
+ long val = INLINE[i];
+ INLINE[i] = ascii_to_advent[val];
+ if (INLINE[i] != 0)
+ LNLENG = i;
+ }
+ LNPOSN = 1;
+ return true;
+ }