/* * main.c - the main() function * * This file is part of zsh, the Z shell. * * Copyright (c) 1992-1997 Paul Falstad * All rights reserved. * * Permission is hereby granted, without written agreement and without * license or royalty fees, to use, copy, modify, and distribute this * software and to distribute modified versions of this software for any * purpose, provided that the above copyright notice and the following * two paragraphs appear in all copies of this software. * * In no event shall Paul Falstad or the Zsh Development Group be liable * to any party for direct, indirect, special, incidental, or consequential * damages arising out of the use of this software and its documentation, * even if Paul Falstad and the Zsh Development Group have been advised of * the possibility of such damage. * * Paul Falstad and the Zsh Development Group specifically disclaim any * warranties, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of * merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. The software * provided hereunder is on an "as is" basis, and Paul Falstad and the * Zsh Development Group have no obligation to provide maintenance, * support, updates, enhancements, or modifications. * */ #include "zsh.mdh" #include "main.pro" /* * Support for Cygwin binary/text mode filesystems. * Peter A. Castro * * This deserves some explaination, because it uses Cygwin specific * runtime functions. * * Cygwin supports the notion of binary or text mode access to files * based on the mount attributes of the filesystem. If a file is on * a binary mounted filesystem, you get exactly what's in the file, CRLF's * and all. If it's on a text mounted filesystem, Cygwin will strip out * the CRs. This presents a problem because zsh code doesn't allow for * CRLF's as line terminators. So, we must force all open files to be * in text mode reguardless of the underlying filesystem attributes. * However, we only want to do this for reading, not writing as we still * want to write files in the mode of the filesystem. To do this, * we have two options: augment all {f}open() calls to have O_TEXT added to * the list of file mode options, or have the Cygwin runtime do it for us. * I choose the latter. :) * * Cygwin's runtime provides pre-execution hooks which allow you to set * various attributes for the process which effect how the process functions. * One of these attributes controls how files are opened. I've set * it up so that all files opened RDONLY will have the O_TEXT option set, * thus forcing line termination manipulation. This seems to solve the * problem (at least the Test suite runs clean :). * * Note: this may not work in later implementations. This will override * all mode options passed into open(). Cygwin (really Windows) doesn't * support all that much in options, so for now this is OK, but later on * it may not, in which case O_TEXT will have to be added to all opens calls * appropriately. * * This function is actually a hook in the Cygwin runtime which * is called before the main of a program. Because it's part of the program * pre-startup, it must be located in the program main and not in a DLL. * It must also be made an export so the linker resolves this function to * our code instead of the default Cygwin stub routine. */ /**/ #ifdef __CYGWIN__ /**/ mod_export void cygwin_premain0 (int argc, char **argv, void *myself) { static struct __cygwin_perfile pf[] = { {"", O_RDONLY | O_TEXT}, {NULL, 0} }; cygwin_internal (CW_PERFILE, pf); } /**/ #endif /* __CYGWIN__ */ /**/ int main(int argc, char **argv) { return (zsh_main(argc, argv)); }