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1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1998, 1999
4 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6 @setfilename ../info/internals
7 @node GNU Emacs Internals, Standard Errors, Tips, Top
8 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
9 @appendix GNU Emacs Internals
10
11 This chapter describes how the runnable Emacs executable is dumped with
12 the preloaded Lisp libraries in it, how storage is allocated, and some
13 internal aspects of GNU Emacs that may be of interest to C programmers.
14
15 @menu
16 * Building Emacs:: How the dumped Emacs is made.
17 * Pure Storage:: A kludge to make preloaded Lisp functions sharable.
18 * Garbage Collection:: Reclaiming space for Lisp objects no longer used.
19 * Memory Usage:: Info about total size of Lisp objects made so far.
20 * Writing Emacs Primitives:: Writing C code for Emacs.
21 * Object Internals:: Data formats of buffers, windows, processes.
22 @end menu
23
24 @node Building Emacs
25 @appendixsec Building Emacs
26 @cindex building Emacs
27 @pindex temacs
28
29 This section explains the steps involved in building the Emacs
30 executable. You don't have to know this material to build and install
31 Emacs, since the makefiles do all these things automatically. This
32 information is pertinent to Emacs maintenance.
33
34 Compilation of the C source files in the @file{src} directory
35 produces an executable file called @file{temacs}, also called a
36 @dfn{bare impure Emacs}. It contains the Emacs Lisp interpreter and I/O
37 routines, but not the editing commands.
38
39 @cindex @file{loadup.el}
40 The command @w{@samp{temacs -l loadup}} uses @file{temacs} to create
41 the real runnable Emacs executable. These arguments direct
42 @file{temacs} to evaluate the Lisp files specified in the file
43 @file{loadup.el}. These files set up the normal Emacs editing
44 environment, resulting in an Emacs that is still impure but no longer
45 bare.
46
47 It takes a substantial time to load the standard Lisp files. Luckily,
48 you don't have to do this each time you run Emacs; @file{temacs} can
49 dump out an executable program called @file{emacs} that has these files
50 preloaded. @file{emacs} starts more quickly because it does not need to
51 load the files. This is the Emacs executable that is normally
52 installed.
53
54 To create @file{emacs}, use the command @samp{temacs -batch -l loadup
55 dump}. The purpose of @samp{-batch} here is to prevent @file{temacs}
56 from trying to initialize any of its data on the terminal; this ensures
57 that the tables of terminal information are empty in the dumped Emacs.
58 The argument @samp{dump} tells @file{loadup.el} to dump a new executable
59 named @file{emacs}.
60
61 Some operating systems don't support dumping. On those systems, you
62 must start Emacs with the @samp{temacs -l loadup} command each time you
63 use it. This takes a substantial time, but since you need to start
64 Emacs once a day at most---or once a week if you never log out---the
65 extra time is not too severe a problem.
66
67 @cindex @file{site-load.el}
68
69 You can specify additional files to preload by writing a library named
70 @file{site-load.el} that loads them. You may need to add a definition
71
72 @example
73 #define SITELOAD_PURESIZE_EXTRA @var{n}
74 @end example
75
76 @noindent
77 to make @var{n} added bytes of pure space to hold the additional files.
78 (Try adding increments of 20000 until it is big enough.) However, the
79 advantage of preloading additional files decreases as machines get
80 faster. On modern machines, it is usually not advisable.
81
82 After @file{loadup.el} reads @file{site-load.el}, it finds the
83 documentation strings for primitive and preloaded functions (and
84 variables) in the file @file{etc/DOC} where they are stored, by
85 calling @code{Snarf-documentation} (@pxref{Definition of
86 Snarf-documentation,, Accessing Documentation}).
87
88 @cindex @file{site-init.el}
89 You can specify other Lisp expressions to execute just before dumping
90 by putting them in a library named @file{site-init.el}. This file is
91 executed after the documentation strings are found.
92
93 If you want to preload function or variable definitions, there are
94 three ways you can do this and make their documentation strings
95 accessible when you subsequently run Emacs:
96
97 @itemize @bullet
98 @item
99 Arrange to scan these files when producing the @file{etc/DOC} file,
100 and load them with @file{site-load.el}.
101
102 @item
103 Load the files with @file{site-init.el}, then copy the files into the
104 installation directory for Lisp files when you install Emacs.
105
106 @item
107 Specify a non-@code{nil} value for
108 @code{byte-compile-dynamic-docstrings} as a local variable in each of these
109 files, and load them with either @file{site-load.el} or
110 @file{site-init.el}. (This method has the drawback that the
111 documentation strings take up space in Emacs all the time.)
112 @end itemize
113
114 It is not advisable to put anything in @file{site-load.el} or
115 @file{site-init.el} that would alter any of the features that users
116 expect in an ordinary unmodified Emacs. If you feel you must override
117 normal features for your site, do it with @file{default.el}, so that
118 users can override your changes if they wish. @xref{Startup Summary}.
119
120 @defun dump-emacs to-file from-file
121 @cindex unexec
122 This function dumps the current state of Emacs into an executable file
123 @var{to-file}. It takes symbols from @var{from-file} (this is normally
124 the executable file @file{temacs}).
125
126 If you want to use this function in an Emacs that was already dumped,
127 you must run Emacs with @samp{-batch}.
128 @end defun
129
130 @node Pure Storage
131 @appendixsec Pure Storage
132 @cindex pure storage
133
134 Emacs Lisp uses two kinds of storage for user-created Lisp objects:
135 @dfn{normal storage} and @dfn{pure storage}. Normal storage is where
136 all the new data created during an Emacs session are kept; see the
137 following section for information on normal storage. Pure storage is
138 used for certain data in the preloaded standard Lisp files---data that
139 should never change during actual use of Emacs.
140
141 Pure storage is allocated only while @file{temacs} is loading the
142 standard preloaded Lisp libraries. In the file @file{emacs}, it is
143 marked as read-only (on operating systems that permit this), so that
144 the memory space can be shared by all the Emacs jobs running on the
145 machine at once. Pure storage is not expandable; a fixed amount is
146 allocated when Emacs is compiled, and if that is not sufficient for the
147 preloaded libraries, @file{temacs} crashes. If that happens, you must
148 increase the compilation parameter @code{PURESIZE} in the file
149 @file{src/puresize.h}. This normally won't happen unless you try to
150 preload additional libraries or add features to the standard ones.
151
152 @defun purecopy object
153 This function makes a copy in pure storage of @var{object}, and returns
154 it. It copies a string by simply making a new string with the same
155 characters, but without text properties, in pure storage. It
156 recursively copies the contents of vectors and cons cells. It does
157 not make copies of other objects such as symbols, but just returns
158 them unchanged. It signals an error if asked to copy markers.
159
160 This function is a no-op except while Emacs is being built and dumped;
161 it is usually called only in the file @file{emacs/lisp/loaddefs.el}, but
162 a few packages call it just in case you decide to preload them.
163 @end defun
164
165 @defvar pure-bytes-used
166 The value of this variable is the number of bytes of pure storage
167 allocated so far. Typically, in a dumped Emacs, this number is very
168 close to the total amount of pure storage available---if it were not,
169 we would preallocate less.
170 @end defvar
171
172 @defvar purify-flag
173 This variable determines whether @code{defun} should make a copy of the
174 function definition in pure storage. If it is non-@code{nil}, then the
175 function definition is copied into pure storage.
176
177 This flag is @code{t} while loading all of the basic functions for
178 building Emacs initially (allowing those functions to be sharable and
179 non-collectible). Dumping Emacs as an executable always writes
180 @code{nil} in this variable, regardless of the value it actually has
181 before and after dumping.
182
183 You should not change this flag in a running Emacs.
184 @end defvar
185
186 @node Garbage Collection
187 @appendixsec Garbage Collection
188 @cindex garbage collector
189
190 @cindex memory allocation
191 When a program creates a list or the user defines a new function (such
192 as by loading a library), that data is placed in normal storage. If
193 normal storage runs low, then Emacs asks the operating system to
194 allocate more memory in blocks of 1k bytes. Each block is used for one
195 type of Lisp object, so symbols, cons cells, markers, etc., are
196 segregated in distinct blocks in memory. (Vectors, long strings,
197 buffers and certain other editing types, which are fairly large, are
198 allocated in individual blocks, one per object, while small strings are
199 packed into blocks of 8k bytes.)
200
201 It is quite common to use some storage for a while, then release it by
202 (for example) killing a buffer or deleting the last pointer to an
203 object. Emacs provides a @dfn{garbage collector} to reclaim this
204 abandoned storage. (This name is traditional, but ``garbage recycler''
205 might be a more intuitive metaphor for this facility.)
206
207 The garbage collector operates by finding and marking all Lisp objects
208 that are still accessible to Lisp programs. To begin with, it assumes
209 all the symbols, their values and associated function definitions, and
210 any data presently on the stack, are accessible. Any objects that can
211 be reached indirectly through other accessible objects are also
212 accessible.
213
214 When marking is finished, all objects still unmarked are garbage. No
215 matter what the Lisp program or the user does, it is impossible to refer
216 to them, since there is no longer a way to reach them. Their space
217 might as well be reused, since no one will miss them. The second
218 (``sweep'') phase of the garbage collector arranges to reuse them.
219
220 @c ??? Maybe add something describing weak hash tables here?
221
222 @cindex free list
223 The sweep phase puts unused cons cells onto a @dfn{free list}
224 for future allocation; likewise for symbols and markers. It compacts
225 the accessible strings so they occupy fewer 8k blocks; then it frees the
226 other 8k blocks. Vectors, buffers, windows, and other large objects are
227 individually allocated and freed using @code{malloc} and @code{free}.
228
229 @cindex CL note---allocate more storage
230 @quotation
231 @b{Common Lisp note:} Unlike other Lisps, GNU Emacs Lisp does not
232 call the garbage collector when the free list is empty. Instead, it
233 simply requests the operating system to allocate more storage, and
234 processing continues until @code{gc-cons-threshold} bytes have been
235 used.
236
237 This means that you can make sure that the garbage collector will not
238 run during a certain portion of a Lisp program by calling the garbage
239 collector explicitly just before it (provided that portion of the
240 program does not use so much space as to force a second garbage
241 collection).
242 @end quotation
243
244 @deffn Command garbage-collect
245 This command runs a garbage collection, and returns information on
246 the amount of space in use. (Garbage collection can also occur
247 spontaneously if you use more than @code{gc-cons-threshold} bytes of
248 Lisp data since the previous garbage collection.)
249
250 @code{garbage-collect} returns a list containing the following
251 information:
252
253 @example
254 @group
255 ((@var{used-conses} . @var{free-conses})
256 (@var{used-syms} . @var{free-syms})
257 @end group
258 (@var{used-miscs} . @var{free-miscs})
259 @var{used-string-chars}
260 @var{used-vector-slots}
261 (@var{used-floats} . @var{free-floats})
262 (@var{used-intervals} . @var{free-intervals})
263 (@var{used-strings} . @var{free-strings}))
264 @end example
265
266 Here is an example:
267
268 @example
269 @group
270 (garbage-collect)
271 @result{} ((106886 . 13184) (9769 . 0)
272 (7731 . 4651) 347543 121628
273 (31 . 94) (1273 . 168)
274 (25474 . 3569))
275 @end group
276 @end example
277
278 Here is a table explaining each element:
279
280 @table @var
281 @item used-conses
282 The number of cons cells in use.
283
284 @item free-conses
285 The number of cons cells for which space has been obtained from the
286 operating system, but that are not currently being used.
287
288 @item used-syms
289 The number of symbols in use.
290
291 @item free-syms
292 The number of symbols for which space has been obtained from the
293 operating system, but that are not currently being used.
294
295 @item used-miscs
296 The number of miscellaneous objects in use. These include markers and
297 overlays, plus certain objects not visible to users.
298
299 @item free-miscs
300 The number of miscellaneous objects for which space has been obtained
301 from the operating system, but that are not currently being used.
302
303 @item used-string-chars
304 The total size of all strings, in characters.
305
306 @item used-vector-slots
307 The total number of elements of existing vectors.
308
309 @item used-floats
310 @c Emacs 19 feature
311 The number of floats in use.
312
313 @item free-floats
314 @c Emacs 19 feature
315 The number of floats for which space has been obtained from the
316 operating system, but that are not currently being used.
317
318 @item used-intervals
319 The number of intervals in use. Intervals are an internal
320 data structure used for representing text properties.
321
322 @item free-intervals
323 The number of intervals for which space has been obtained
324 from the operating system, but that are not currently being used.
325
326 @item used-strings
327 The number of strings in use.
328
329 @item free-strings
330 The number of string headers for which the space was obtained from the
331 operating system, but which are currently not in use. (A string
332 object consists of a header and the storage for the string text
333 itself; the latter is only allocated when the string is created.)
334 @end table
335 @end deffn
336
337 @defopt garbage-collection-messages
338 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, Emacs displays a message at the
339 beginning and end of garbage collection. The default value is
340 @code{nil}, meaning there are no such messages.
341 @end defopt
342
343 @defvar post-gc-hook
344 This is a normal hook that is run at the end of garbage collection.
345 Garbage collection is inhibited while the hook functions run, so be
346 careful writing them.
347 @end defvar
348
349 @defopt gc-cons-threshold
350 The value of this variable is the number of bytes of storage that must
351 be allocated for Lisp objects after one garbage collection in order to
352 trigger another garbage collection. A cons cell counts as eight bytes,
353 a string as one byte per character plus a few bytes of overhead, and so
354 on; space allocated to the contents of buffers does not count. Note
355 that the subsequent garbage collection does not happen immediately when
356 the threshold is exhausted, but only the next time the Lisp evaluator is
357 called.
358
359 The initial threshold value is 400,000. If you specify a larger
360 value, garbage collection will happen less often. This reduces the
361 amount of time spent garbage collecting, but increases total memory use.
362 You may want to do this when running a program that creates lots of
363 Lisp data.
364
365 You can make collections more frequent by specifying a smaller value,
366 down to 10,000. A value less than 10,000 will remain in effect only
367 until the subsequent garbage collection, at which time
368 @code{garbage-collect} will set the threshold back to 10,000.
369 @end defopt
370
371 The value returned by @code{garbage-collect} describes the amount of
372 memory used by Lisp data, broken down by data type. By contrast, the
373 function @code{memory-limit} provides information on the total amount of
374 memory Emacs is currently using.
375
376 @c Emacs 19 feature
377 @defun memory-limit
378 This function returns the address of the last byte Emacs has allocated,
379 divided by 1024. We divide the value by 1024 to make sure it fits in a
380 Lisp integer.
381
382 You can use this to get a general idea of how your actions affect the
383 memory usage.
384 @end defun
385
386 @defun memory-use-counts
387 This returns a list of numbers that count the number of objects
388 created in this Emacs session. Each of these counters increments for
389 a certain kind of object. See the documentation string for details.
390 @end defun
391
392 @defvar gcs-done
393 This variable contains the total number of garbage collections
394 done so far in this Emacs session.
395 @end defvar
396
397 @defvar gc-elapsed
398 This variable contains the total number of seconds of elapsed time
399 during garbage collection so far in this Emacs session, as a floating
400 point number.
401 @end defvar
402
403 @node Memory Usage
404 @section Memory Usage
405
406 These functions and variables give information about the total amount
407 of memory allocation that Emacs has done, broken down by data type.
408 Note the difference between these and the values returned by
409 @code{(garbage-collect)}; those count objects that currently exist, but
410 these count the number or size of all allocations, including those for
411 objects that have since been freed.
412
413 @defvar cons-cells-consed
414 The total number of cons cells that have been allocated so far
415 in this Emacs session.
416 @end defvar
417
418 @defvar floats-consed
419 The total number of floats that have been allocated so far
420 in this Emacs session.
421 @end defvar
422
423 @defvar vector-cells-consed
424 The total number of vector cells that have been allocated so far
425 in this Emacs session.
426 @end defvar
427
428 @defvar symbols-consed
429 The total number of symbols that have been allocated so far
430 in this Emacs session.
431 @end defvar
432
433 @defvar string-chars-consed
434 The total number of string characters that have been allocated so far
435 in this Emacs session.
436 @end defvar
437
438 @defvar misc-objects-consed
439 The total number of miscellaneous objects that have been allocated so
440 far in this Emacs session. These include markers and overlays, plus
441 certain objects not visible to users.
442 @end defvar
443
444 @defvar intervals-consed
445 The total number of intervals that have been allocated so far
446 in this Emacs session.
447 @end defvar
448
449 @defvar strings-consed
450 The total number of strings that have been allocated so far in this
451 Emacs session.
452 @end defvar
453
454 @node Writing Emacs Primitives
455 @appendixsec Writing Emacs Primitives
456 @cindex primitive function internals
457
458 Lisp primitives are Lisp functions implemented in C. The details of
459 interfacing the C function so that Lisp can call it are handled by a few
460 C macros. The only way to really understand how to write new C code is
461 to read the source, but we can explain some things here.
462
463 An example of a special form is the definition of @code{or}, from
464 @file{eval.c}. (An ordinary function would have the same general
465 appearance.)
466
467 @cindex garbage collection protection
468 @smallexample
469 @group
470 DEFUN ("or", For, Sor, 0, UNEVALLED, 0,
471 doc: /* Eval args until one of them yields non-nil, then return that value.
472 The remaining args are not evalled at all.
473 If all args return nil, return nil.
474 @end group
475 @group
476 usage: (or CONDITIONS ...) */)
477 (args)
478 Lisp_Object args;
479 @{
480 register Lisp_Object val;
481 Lisp_Object args_left;
482 struct gcpro gcpro1;
483 @end group
484
485 @group
486 if (NILP (args))
487 return Qnil;
488
489 args_left = args;
490 GCPRO1 (args_left);
491 @end group
492
493 @group
494 do
495 @{
496 val = Feval (Fcar (args_left));
497 if (!NILP (val))
498 break;
499 args_left = Fcdr (args_left);
500 @}
501 while (!NILP (args_left));
502 @end group
503
504 @group
505 UNGCPRO;
506 return val;
507 @}
508 @end group
509 @end smallexample
510
511 Let's start with a precise explanation of the arguments to the
512 @code{DEFUN} macro. Here is a template for them:
513
514 @example
515 DEFUN (@var{lname}, @var{fname}, @var{sname}, @var{min}, @var{max}, @var{interactive}, @var{doc})
516 @end example
517
518 @table @var
519 @item lname
520 This is the name of the Lisp symbol to define as the function name; in
521 the example above, it is @code{or}.
522
523 @item fname
524 This is the C function name for this function. This is
525 the name that is used in C code for calling the function. The name is,
526 by convention, @samp{F} prepended to the Lisp name, with all dashes
527 (@samp{-}) in the Lisp name changed to underscores. Thus, to call this
528 function from C code, call @code{For}. Remember that the arguments must
529 be of type @code{Lisp_Object}; various macros and functions for creating
530 values of type @code{Lisp_Object} are declared in the file
531 @file{lisp.h}.
532
533 @item sname
534 This is a C variable name to use for a structure that holds the data for
535 the subr object that represents the function in Lisp. This structure
536 conveys the Lisp symbol name to the initialization routine that will
537 create the symbol and store the subr object as its definition. By
538 convention, this name is always @var{fname} with @samp{F} replaced with
539 @samp{S}.
540
541 @item min
542 This is the minimum number of arguments that the function requires. The
543 function @code{or} allows a minimum of zero arguments.
544
545 @item max
546 This is the maximum number of arguments that the function accepts, if
547 there is a fixed maximum. Alternatively, it can be @code{UNEVALLED},
548 indicating a special form that receives unevaluated arguments, or
549 @code{MANY}, indicating an unlimited number of evaluated arguments (the
550 equivalent of @code{&rest}). Both @code{UNEVALLED} and @code{MANY} are
551 macros. If @var{max} is a number, it may not be less than @var{min} and
552 it may not be greater than seven.
553
554 @item interactive
555 This is an interactive specification, a string such as might be used as
556 the argument of @code{interactive} in a Lisp function. In the case of
557 @code{or}, it is 0 (a null pointer), indicating that @code{or} cannot be
558 called interactively. A value of @code{""} indicates a function that
559 should receive no arguments when called interactively.
560
561 @item doc
562 This is the documentation string. It uses C comment syntax rather
563 than C string syntax because comment syntax requires nothing special
564 to include multiple lines. The @samp{doc:} identifies the comment
565 that follows as the documentation string. The @samp{/*} and @samp{*/}
566 delimiters that begin and end the comment are not part of the
567 documentation string.
568
569 If the last line of the documentation string begins with the keyword
570 @samp{usage:}, the rest of the line is treated as the argument list
571 for documentation purposes. This way, you can use different argument
572 names in the documentation string from the ones used in the C code.
573 @samp{usage:} is required if the function has an unlimited number of
574 arguments.
575
576 All the usual rules for documentation strings in Lisp code
577 (@pxref{Documentation Tips}) apply to C code documentation strings
578 too.
579 @end table
580
581 After the call to the @code{DEFUN} macro, you must write the argument
582 name list that every C function must have, followed by ordinary C
583 declarations for the arguments. For a function with a fixed maximum
584 number of arguments, declare a C argument for each Lisp argument, and
585 give them all type @code{Lisp_Object}. When a Lisp function has no
586 upper limit on the number of arguments, its implementation in C actually
587 receives exactly two arguments: the first is the number of Lisp
588 arguments, and the second is the address of a block containing their
589 values. They have types @code{int} and @w{@code{Lisp_Object *}}.
590
591 Within the function @code{For} itself, note the use of the macros
592 @code{GCPRO1} and @code{UNGCPRO}. @code{GCPRO1} is used to ``protect''
593 a variable from garbage collection---to inform the garbage collector that
594 it must look in that variable and regard its contents as an accessible
595 object. This is necessary whenever you call @code{Feval} or anything
596 that can directly or indirectly call @code{Feval}. At such a time, any
597 Lisp object that you intend to refer to again must be protected somehow.
598 @code{UNGCPRO} cancels the protection of the variables that are
599 protected in the current function. It is necessary to do this explicitly.
600
601 It suffices to ensure that at least one pointer to each object is
602 GC-protected; as long as the object is not recycled, all pointers to
603 it remain valid. So if you are sure that a local variable points to
604 an object that will be preserved by some other pointer, that local
605 variable does not need a @code{GCPRO}. (Formerly, strings were an
606 exception to this rule; in older Emacs versions, every pointer to a
607 string needed to be marked by GC.)
608
609 The macro @code{GCPRO1} protects just one local variable. If you
610 want to protect two, use @code{GCPRO2} instead; repeating
611 @code{GCPRO1} will not work. Macros, @code{GCPRO3}, @code{GCPRO4},
612 @code{GCPRO5}, and @code{GCPRO6} also exist. These macros implicitly
613 use local variables such as @code{gcpro1}; you must declare these
614 explicitly, with type @code{struct gcpro}. Thus, if you use
615 @code{GCPRO2}, you must declare @code{gcpro1} and @code{gcpro2}.
616 Alas, we can't explain all the tricky details here.
617
618 Built-in functions that take a variable number of arguments actually
619 accept two arguments at the C level: the number of Lisp arguments, and
620 a @code{Lisp_Object *} pointer to a C vector containing those Lisp
621 arguments. This C vector may be part of a Lisp vector, but it need
622 not be. The responsibility for using @code{GCPRO} to protect the Lisp
623 arguments from GC if necessary rests with the caller in this case,
624 since the caller allocated or found the storage for them.
625
626 You must not use C initializers for static or global variables unless
627 the variables are never written once Emacs is dumped. These variables
628 with initializers are allocated in an area of memory that becomes
629 read-only (on certain operating systems) as a result of dumping Emacs.
630 @xref{Pure Storage}.
631
632 Do not use static variables within functions---place all static
633 variables at top level in the file. This is necessary because Emacs on
634 some operating systems defines the keyword @code{static} as a null
635 macro. (This definition is used because those systems put all variables
636 declared static in a place that becomes read-only after dumping, whether
637 they have initializers or not.)
638
639 Defining the C function is not enough to make a Lisp primitive
640 available; you must also create the Lisp symbol for the primitive and
641 store a suitable subr object in its function cell. The code looks like
642 this:
643
644 @example
645 defsubr (&@var{subr-structure-name});
646 @end example
647
648 @noindent
649 Here @var{subr-structure-name} is the name you used as the third
650 argument to @code{DEFUN}.
651
652 If you add a new primitive to a file that already has Lisp primitives
653 defined in it, find the function (near the end of the file) named
654 @code{syms_of_@var{something}}, and add the call to @code{defsubr}
655 there. If the file doesn't have this function, or if you create a new
656 file, add to it a @code{syms_of_@var{filename}} (e.g.,
657 @code{syms_of_myfile}). Then find the spot in @file{emacs.c} where all
658 of these functions are called, and add a call to
659 @code{syms_of_@var{filename}} there.
660
661 @anchor{Defining Lisp variables in C}
662 @vindex byte-boolean-vars
663 The function @code{syms_of_@var{filename}} is also the place to define
664 any C variables that are to be visible as Lisp variables.
665 @code{DEFVAR_LISP} makes a C variable of type @code{Lisp_Object} visible
666 in Lisp. @code{DEFVAR_INT} makes a C variable of type @code{int}
667 visible in Lisp with a value that is always an integer.
668 @code{DEFVAR_BOOL} makes a C variable of type @code{int} visible in Lisp
669 with a value that is either @code{t} or @code{nil}. Note that variables
670 defined with @code{DEFVAR_BOOL} are automatically added to the list
671 @code{byte-boolean-vars} used by the byte compiler.
672
673 If you define a file-scope C variable of type @code{Lisp_Object},
674 you must protect it from garbage-collection by calling @code{staticpro}
675 in @code{syms_of_@var{filename}}, like this:
676
677 @example
678 staticpro (&@var{variable});
679 @end example
680
681 Here is another example function, with more complicated arguments.
682 This comes from the code in @file{window.c}, and it demonstrates the use
683 of macros and functions to manipulate Lisp objects.
684
685 @smallexample
686 @group
687 DEFUN ("coordinates-in-window-p", Fcoordinates_in_window_p,
688 Scoordinates_in_window_p, 2, 2,
689 "xSpecify coordinate pair: \nXExpression which evals to window: ",
690 "Return non-nil if COORDINATES is in WINDOW.\n\
691 COORDINATES is a cons of the form (X . Y), X and Y being distances\n\
692 ...
693 @end group
694 @group
695 If they are on the border between WINDOW and its right sibling,\n\
696 `vertical-line' is returned.")
697 (coordinates, window)
698 register Lisp_Object coordinates, window;
699 @{
700 int x, y;
701 @end group
702
703 @group
704 CHECK_LIVE_WINDOW (window, 0);
705 CHECK_CONS (coordinates, 1);
706 x = XINT (Fcar (coordinates));
707 y = XINT (Fcdr (coordinates));
708 @end group
709
710 @group
711 switch (coordinates_in_window (XWINDOW (window), &x, &y))
712 @{
713 case 0: /* NOT in window at all. */
714 return Qnil;
715 @end group
716
717 @group
718 case 1: /* In text part of window. */
719 return Fcons (make_number (x), make_number (y));
720 @end group
721
722 @group
723 case 2: /* In mode line of window. */
724 return Qmode_line;
725 @end group
726
727 @group
728 case 3: /* On right border of window. */
729 return Qvertical_line;
730 @end group
731
732 @group
733 default:
734 abort ();
735 @}
736 @}
737 @end group
738 @end smallexample
739
740 Note that C code cannot call functions by name unless they are defined
741 in C. The way to call a function written in Lisp is to use
742 @code{Ffuncall}, which embodies the Lisp function @code{funcall}. Since
743 the Lisp function @code{funcall} accepts an unlimited number of
744 arguments, in C it takes two: the number of Lisp-level arguments, and a
745 one-dimensional array containing their values. The first Lisp-level
746 argument is the Lisp function to call, and the rest are the arguments to
747 pass to it. Since @code{Ffuncall} can call the evaluator, you must
748 protect pointers from garbage collection around the call to
749 @code{Ffuncall}.
750
751 The C functions @code{call0}, @code{call1}, @code{call2}, and so on,
752 provide handy ways to call a Lisp function conveniently with a fixed
753 number of arguments. They work by calling @code{Ffuncall}.
754
755 @file{eval.c} is a very good file to look through for examples;
756 @file{lisp.h} contains the definitions for some important macros and
757 functions.
758
759 If you define a function which is side-effect free, update the code
760 in @file{byte-opt.el} which binds @code{side-effect-free-fns} and
761 @code{side-effect-and-error-free-fns} so that the compiler optimizer
762 knows about it.
763
764 @node Object Internals
765 @appendixsec Object Internals
766 @cindex object internals
767
768 GNU Emacs Lisp manipulates many different types of data. The actual
769 data are stored in a heap and the only access that programs have to it
770 is through pointers. Pointers are thirty-two bits wide in most
771 implementations. Depending on the operating system and type of machine
772 for which you compile Emacs, twenty-nine bits are used to address the
773 object, and the remaining three bits are used for the tag that
774 identifies the object's type.
775
776 Because Lisp objects are represented as tagged pointers, it is always
777 possible to determine the Lisp data type of any object. The C data type
778 @code{Lisp_Object} can hold any Lisp object of any data type. Ordinary
779 variables have type @code{Lisp_Object}, which means they can hold any
780 type of Lisp value; you can determine the actual data type only at run
781 time. The same is true for function arguments; if you want a function
782 to accept only a certain type of argument, you must check the type
783 explicitly using a suitable predicate (@pxref{Type Predicates}).
784 @cindex type checking internals
785
786 @menu
787 * Buffer Internals:: Components of a buffer structure.
788 * Window Internals:: Components of a window structure.
789 * Process Internals:: Components of a process structure.
790 @end menu
791
792 @node Buffer Internals
793 @appendixsubsec Buffer Internals
794 @cindex internals, of buffer
795 @cindex buffer internals
796
797 Buffers contain fields not directly accessible by the Lisp programmer.
798 We describe them here, naming them by the names used in the C code.
799 Many are accessible indirectly in Lisp programs via Lisp primitives.
800
801 Two structures are used to represent buffers in C. The
802 @code{buffer_text} structure contains fields describing the text of a
803 buffer; the @code{buffer} structure holds other fields. In the case
804 of indirect buffers, two or more @code{buffer} structures reference
805 the same @code{buffer_text} structure.
806
807 Here is a list of the @code{struct buffer_text} fields:
808
809 @table @code
810 @item beg
811 This field contains the actual address of the buffer contents.
812
813 @item gpt
814 This holds the character position of the gap in the buffer.
815 @xref{Buffer Gap}.
816
817 @item z
818 This field contains the character position of the end of the buffer
819 text.
820
821 @item gpt_byte
822 Contains the byte position of the gap.
823
824 @item z_byte
825 Holds the byte position of the end of the buffer text.
826
827 @item gap_size
828 Contains the size of buffer's gap. @xref{Buffer Gap}.
829
830 @item modiff
831 This field counts buffer-modification events for this buffer. It is
832 incremented for each such event, and never otherwise changed.
833
834 @item save_modiff
835 Contains the previous value of @code{modiff}, as of the last time a
836 buffer was visited or saved in a file.
837
838 @item overlay_modiff
839 Counts modifications to overlays analogous to @code{modiff}.
840
841 @item beg_unchanged
842 Holds the number of characters at the start of the text that are known
843 to be unchanged since the last redisplay that finished.
844
845 @item end_unchanged
846 Holds the number of characters at the end of the text that are known to
847 be unchanged since the last redisplay that finished.
848
849 @item unchanged_modified
850 Contains the value of @code{modiff} at the time of the last redisplay
851 that finished. If this value matches @code{modiff},
852 @code{beg_unchanged} and @code{end_unchanged} contain no useful
853 information.
854
855 @item overlay_unchanged_modified
856 Contains the value of @code{overlay_modiff} at the time of the last
857 redisplay that finished. If this value matches @code{overlay_modiff},
858 @code{beg_unchanged} and @code{end_unchanged} contain no useful
859 information.
860
861 @item markers
862 The markers that refer to this buffer. This is actually a single
863 marker, and successive elements in its marker @code{chain} are the other
864 markers referring to this buffer text.
865
866 @item intervals
867 Contains the interval tree which records the text properties of this
868 buffer.
869 @end table
870
871 The fields of @code{struct buffer} are:
872
873 @table @code
874 @item next
875 Points to the next buffer, in the chain of all buffers including killed
876 buffers. This chain is used only for garbage collection, in order to
877 collect killed buffers properly. Note that vectors, and most kinds of
878 objects allocated as vectors, are all on one chain, but buffers are on a
879 separate chain of their own.
880
881 @item own_text
882 This is a @code{struct buffer_text} structure. In an ordinary buffer,
883 it holds the buffer contents. In indirect buffers, this field is not
884 used.
885
886 @item text
887 This points to the @code{buffer_text} structure that is used for this
888 buffer. In an ordinary buffer, this is the @code{own_text} field above.
889 In an indirect buffer, this is the @code{own_text} field of the base
890 buffer.
891
892 @item pt
893 Contains the character position of point in a buffer.
894
895 @item pt_byte
896 Contains the byte position of point in a buffer.
897
898 @item begv
899 This field contains the character position of the beginning of the
900 accessible range of text in the buffer.
901
902 @item begv_byte
903 This field contains the byte position of the beginning of the
904 accessible range of text in the buffer.
905
906 @item zv
907 This field contains the character position of the end of the
908 accessible range of text in the buffer.
909
910 @item zv_byte
911 This field contains the byte position of the end of the
912 accessible range of text in the buffer.
913
914 @item base_buffer
915 In an indirect buffer, this points to the base buffer. In an ordinary
916 buffer, it is null.
917
918 @item local_var_flags
919 This field contains flags indicating that certain variables are local in
920 this buffer. Such variables are declared in the C code using
921 @code{DEFVAR_PER_BUFFER}, and their buffer-local bindings are stored in
922 fields in the buffer structure itself. (Some of these fields are
923 described in this table.)
924
925 @item modtime
926 This field contains the modification time of the visited file. It is
927 set when the file is written or read. Before writing the buffer into a
928 file, this field is compared to the modification time of the file to see
929 if the file has changed on disk. @xref{Buffer Modification}.
930
931 @item auto_save_modified
932 This field contains the time when the buffer was last auto-saved.
933
934 @item auto_save_failure_time
935 The time at which we detected a failure to auto-save, or -1 if we didn't
936 have a failure.
937
938 @item last_window_start
939 This field contains the @code{window-start} position in the buffer as of
940 the last time the buffer was displayed in a window.
941
942 @item clip_changed
943 This flag is set when narrowing changes in a buffer.
944
945 @item prevent_redisplay_optimizations_p
946 this flag indicates that redisplay optimizations should not be used
947 to display this buffer.
948
949 @item undo_list
950 This field points to the buffer's undo list. @xref{Undo}.
951
952 @item name
953 The buffer name is a string that names the buffer. It is guaranteed to
954 be unique. @xref{Buffer Names}.
955
956 @item filename
957 The name of the file visited in this buffer, or @code{nil}.
958
959 @item directory
960 The directory for expanding relative file names.
961
962 @item save_length
963 Length of the file this buffer is visiting, when last read or saved.
964 This and other fields concerned with saving are not kept in the
965 @code{buffer_text} structure because indirect buffers are never saved.
966
967 @item auto_save_file_name
968 File name used for auto-saving this buffer. This is not in the
969 @code{buffer_text} because it's not used in indirect buffers at all.
970
971 @item read_only
972 Non-@code{nil} means this buffer is read-only.
973
974 @item mark
975 This field contains the mark for the buffer. The mark is a marker,
976 hence it is also included on the list @code{markers}. @xref{The Mark}.
977
978 @item local_var_alist
979 This field contains the association list describing the buffer-local
980 variable bindings of this buffer, not including the built-in
981 buffer-local bindings that have special slots in the buffer object.
982 (Those slots are omitted from this table.) @xref{Buffer-Local
983 Variables}.
984
985 @item major_mode
986 Symbol naming the major mode of this buffer, e.g., @code{lisp-mode}.
987
988 @item mode_name
989 Pretty name of major mode, e.g., @code{"Lisp"}.
990
991 @item mode_line_format
992 Mode line element that controls the format of the mode line. If this
993 is @code{nil}, no mode line will be displayed.
994
995 @item header_line_format
996 This field is analoguous to @code{mode_line_format} for the mode
997 line displayed at the top of windows.
998
999 @item keymap
1000 This field holds the buffer's local keymap. @xref{Keymaps}.
1001
1002 @item abbrev_table
1003 This buffer's local abbrevs.
1004
1005 @item syntax_table
1006 This field contains the syntax table for the buffer. @xref{Syntax Tables}.
1007
1008 @item category_table
1009 This field contains the category table for the buffer.
1010
1011 @item case_fold_search
1012 The value of @code{case-fold-search} in this buffer.
1013
1014 @item tab_width
1015 The value of @code{tab-width} in this buffer.
1016
1017 @item fill_column
1018 The value of @code{fill-column} in this buffer.
1019
1020 @item left_margin
1021 The value of @code{left-margin} in this buffer.
1022
1023 @item auto_fill_function
1024 The value of @code{auto-fill-function} in this buffer.
1025
1026 @item downcase_table
1027 This field contains the conversion table for converting text to lower case.
1028 @xref{Case Tables}.
1029
1030 @item upcase_table
1031 This field contains the conversion table for converting text to upper case.
1032 @xref{Case Tables}.
1033
1034 @item case_canon_table
1035 This field contains the conversion table for canonicalizing text for
1036 case-folding search. @xref{Case Tables}.
1037
1038 @item case_eqv_table
1039 This field contains the equivalence table for case-folding search.
1040 @xref{Case Tables}.
1041
1042 @item truncate_lines
1043 The value of @code{truncate-lines} in this buffer.
1044
1045 @item ctl_arrow
1046 The value of @code{ctl-arrow} in this buffer.
1047
1048 @item selective_display
1049 The value of @code{selective-display} in this buffer.
1050
1051 @item selective_display_ellipsis
1052 The value of @code{selective-display-ellipsis} in this buffer.
1053
1054 @item minor_modes
1055 An alist of the minor modes of this buffer.
1056
1057 @item overwrite_mode
1058 The value of @code{overwrite_mode} in this buffer.
1059
1060 @item abbrev_mode
1061 The value of @code{abbrev-mode} in this buffer.
1062
1063 @item display_table
1064 This field contains the buffer's display table, or @code{nil} if it doesn't
1065 have one. @xref{Display Tables}.
1066
1067 @item save_modified
1068 This field contains the time when the buffer was last saved, as an integer.
1069 @xref{Buffer Modification}.
1070
1071 @item mark_active
1072 This field is non-@code{nil} if the buffer's mark is active.
1073
1074 @item overlays_before
1075 This field holds a list of the overlays in this buffer that end at or
1076 before the current overlay center position. They are sorted in order of
1077 decreasing end position.
1078
1079 @item overlays_after
1080 This field holds a list of the overlays in this buffer that end after
1081 the current overlay center position. They are sorted in order of
1082 increasing beginning position.
1083
1084 @item overlay_center
1085 This field holds the current overlay center position. @xref{Overlays}.
1086
1087 @item enable_multibyte_characters
1088 This field holds the buffer's local value of
1089 @code{enable-multibyte-characters}---either @code{t} or @code{nil}.
1090
1091 @item buffer_file_coding_system
1092 The value of @code{buffer-file-coding-system} in this buffer.
1093
1094 @item file_format
1095 The value of @code{buffer-file-format} in this buffer.
1096
1097 @item pt_marker
1098 In an indirect buffer, or a buffer that is the base of an indirect
1099 buffer, this holds a marker that records point for this buffer when the
1100 buffer is not current.
1101
1102 @item begv_marker
1103 In an indirect buffer, or a buffer that is the base of an indirect
1104 buffer, this holds a marker that records @code{begv} for this buffer
1105 when the buffer is not current.
1106
1107 @item zv_marker
1108 In an indirect buffer, or a buffer that is the base of an indirect
1109 buffer, this holds a marker that records @code{zv} for this buffer when
1110 the buffer is not current.
1111
1112 @item file_truename
1113 The truename of the visited file, or @code{nil}.
1114
1115 @item invisibility_spec
1116 The value of @code{buffer-invisibility-spec} in this buffer.
1117
1118 @item last_selected_window
1119 This is the last window that was selected with this buffer in it, or @code{nil}
1120 if that window no longer displays this buffer.
1121
1122 @item display_count
1123 This field is incremented each time the buffer is displayed in a window.
1124
1125 @item left_margin_width
1126 The value of @code{left-margin-width} in this buffer.
1127
1128 @item right_margin_width
1129 The value of @code{right-margin-width} in this buffer.
1130
1131 @item indicate_empty_lines
1132 Non-@code{nil} means indicate empty lines (lines with no text) with a
1133 small bitmap in the fringe, when using a window system that can do it.
1134
1135 @item display_time
1136 This holds a time stamp that is updated each time this buffer is
1137 displayed in a window.
1138
1139 @item scroll_up_aggressively
1140 The value of @code{scroll-up-aggressively} in this buffer.
1141
1142 @item scroll_down_aggressively
1143 The value of @code{scroll-down-aggressively} in this buffer.
1144 @end table
1145
1146 @node Window Internals
1147 @appendixsubsec Window Internals
1148 @cindex internals, of window
1149 @cindex window internals
1150
1151 Windows have the following accessible fields:
1152
1153 @table @code
1154 @item frame
1155 The frame that this window is on.
1156
1157 @item mini_p
1158 Non-@code{nil} if this window is a minibuffer window.
1159
1160 @item parent
1161 Internally, Emacs arranges windows in a tree; each group of siblings has
1162 a parent window whose area includes all the siblings. This field points
1163 to a window's parent.
1164
1165 Parent windows do not display buffers, and play little role in display
1166 except to shape their child windows. Emacs Lisp programs usually have
1167 no access to the parent windows; they operate on the windows at the
1168 leaves of the tree, which actually display buffers.
1169
1170 The following four fields also describe the window tree structure.
1171
1172 @item hchild
1173 In a window subdivided horizontally by child windows, the leftmost child.
1174 Otherwise, @code{nil}.
1175
1176 @item vchild
1177 In a window subdivided vertically by child windows, the topmost child.
1178 Otherwise, @code{nil}.
1179
1180 @item next
1181 The next sibling of this window. It is @code{nil} in a window that is
1182 the rightmost or bottommost of a group of siblings.
1183
1184 @item prev
1185 The previous sibling of this window. It is @code{nil} in a window that
1186 is the leftmost or topmost of a group of siblings.
1187
1188 @item left
1189 This is the left-hand edge of the window, measured in columns. (The
1190 leftmost column on the screen is @w{column 0}.)
1191
1192 @item top
1193 This is the top edge of the window, measured in lines. (The top line on
1194 the screen is @w{line 0}.)
1195
1196 @item height
1197 The height of the window, measured in lines.
1198
1199 @item width
1200 The width of the window, measured in columns. This width includes the
1201 scroll bar and fringes, and/or the separator line on the right of the
1202 window (if any).
1203
1204 @item buffer
1205 The buffer that the window is displaying. This may change often during
1206 the life of the window.
1207
1208 @item start
1209 The position in the buffer that is the first character to be displayed
1210 in the window.
1211
1212 @item pointm
1213 @cindex window point internals
1214 This is the value of point in the current buffer when this window is
1215 selected; when it is not selected, it retains its previous value.
1216
1217 @item force_start
1218 If this flag is non-@code{nil}, it says that the window has been
1219 scrolled explicitly by the Lisp program. This affects what the next
1220 redisplay does if point is off the screen: instead of scrolling the
1221 window to show the text around point, it moves point to a location that
1222 is on the screen.
1223
1224 @item frozen_window_start_p
1225 This field is set temporarily to 1 to indicate to redisplay that
1226 @code{start} of this window should not be changed, even if point
1227 gets invisible.
1228
1229 @item start_at_line_beg
1230 Non-@code{nil} means current value of @code{start} was the beginning of a line
1231 when it was chosen.
1232
1233 @item too_small_ok
1234 Non-@code{nil} means don't delete this window for becoming ``too small''.
1235
1236 @item height_fixed_p
1237 This field is temporarily set to 1 to fix the height of the selected
1238 window when the echo area is resized.
1239
1240 @item use_time
1241 This is the last time that the window was selected. The function
1242 @code{get-lru-window} uses this field.
1243
1244 @item sequence_number
1245 A unique number assigned to this window when it was created.
1246
1247 @item last_modified
1248 The @code{modiff} field of the window's buffer, as of the last time
1249 a redisplay completed in this window.
1250
1251 @item last_overlay_modified
1252 The @code{overlay_modiff} field of the window's buffer, as of the last
1253 time a redisplay completed in this window.
1254
1255 @item last_point
1256 The buffer's value of point, as of the last time a redisplay completed
1257 in this window.
1258
1259 @item last_had_star
1260 A non-@code{nil} value means the window's buffer was ``modified'' when the
1261 window was last updated.
1262
1263 @item vertical_scroll_bar
1264 This window's vertical scroll bar.
1265
1266 @item left_margin_width
1267 The width of the left margin in this window, or @code{nil} not to
1268 specify it (in which case the buffer's value of @code{left-margin-width}
1269 is used.
1270
1271 @item right_margin_width
1272 Likewise for the right margin.
1273
1274 @ignore
1275 @item last_mark_x
1276 @item last_mark_y
1277 ???Not used.
1278 @end ignore
1279
1280 @item window_end_pos
1281 This is computed as @code{z} minus the buffer position of the last glyph
1282 in the current matrix of the window. The value is only valid if
1283 @code{window_end_valid} is not @code{nil}.
1284
1285 @item window_end_bytepos
1286 The byte position corresponding to @code{window_end_pos}.
1287
1288 @item window_end_vpos
1289 The window-relative vertical position of the line containing
1290 @code{window_end_pos}.
1291
1292 @item window_end_valid
1293 This field is set to a non-@code{nil} value if @code{window_end_pos} is truly
1294 valid. This is @code{nil} if nontrivial redisplay is preempted since in that
1295 case the display that @code{window_end_pos} was computed for did not get
1296 onto the screen.
1297
1298 @item redisplay_end_trigger
1299 If redisplay in this window goes beyond this buffer position, it runs
1300 the @code{redisplay-end-trigger-hook}.
1301
1302 @ignore
1303 @item orig_height
1304 @item orig_top
1305 ??? Are temporary storage areas.
1306 @end ignore
1307
1308 @item cursor
1309 A structure describing where the cursor is in this window.
1310
1311 @item last_cursor
1312 The value of @code{cursor} as of the last redisplay that finished.
1313
1314 @item phys_cursor
1315 A structure describing where the cursor of this window physically is.
1316
1317 @item phys_cursor_type
1318 The type of cursor that was last displayed on this window.
1319
1320 @item phys_cursor_on_p
1321 This field is non-zero if the cursor is physically on.
1322
1323 @item cursor_off_p
1324 Non-zero means the cursor in this window is logically on.
1325
1326 @item last_cursor_off_p
1327 This field contains the value of @code{cursor_off_p} as of the time of
1328 the last redisplay.
1329
1330 @item must_be_updated_p
1331 This is set to 1 during redisplay when this window must be updated.
1332
1333 @item hscroll
1334 This is the number of columns that the display in the window is scrolled
1335 horizontally to the left. Normally, this is 0.
1336
1337 @item vscroll
1338 Vertical scroll amount, in pixels. Normally, this is 0.
1339
1340 @item dedicated
1341 Non-@code{nil} if this window is dedicated to its buffer.
1342
1343 @item display_table
1344 The window's display table, or @code{nil} if none is specified for it.
1345
1346 @item update_mode_line
1347 Non-@code{nil} means this window's mode line needs to be updated.
1348
1349 @item base_line_number
1350 The line number of a certain position in the buffer, or @code{nil}.
1351 This is used for displaying the line number of point in the mode line.
1352
1353 @item base_line_pos
1354 The position in the buffer for which the line number is known, or
1355 @code{nil} meaning none is known.
1356
1357 @item region_showing
1358 If the region (or part of it) is highlighted in this window, this field
1359 holds the mark position that made one end of that region. Otherwise,
1360 this field is @code{nil}.
1361
1362 @item column_number_displayed
1363 The column number currently displayed in this window's mode line, or @code{nil}
1364 if column numbers are not being displayed.
1365
1366 @item current_matrix
1367 A glyph matrix describing the current display of this window.
1368
1369 @item desired_matrix
1370 A glyph matrix describing the desired display of this window.
1371 @end table
1372
1373 @node Process Internals
1374 @appendixsubsec Process Internals
1375 @cindex internals, of process
1376 @cindex process internals
1377
1378 The fields of a process are:
1379
1380 @table @code
1381 @item name
1382 A string, the name of the process.
1383
1384 @item command
1385 A list containing the command arguments that were used to start this
1386 process.
1387
1388 @item filter
1389 A function used to accept output from the process instead of a buffer,
1390 or @code{nil}.
1391
1392 @item sentinel
1393 A function called whenever the process receives a signal, or @code{nil}.
1394
1395 @item buffer
1396 The associated buffer of the process.
1397
1398 @item pid
1399 An integer, the operating system's process @acronym{ID}.
1400
1401 @item childp
1402 A flag, non-@code{nil} if this is really a child process.
1403 It is @code{nil} for a network connection.
1404
1405 @item mark
1406 A marker indicating the position of the end of the last output from this
1407 process inserted into the buffer. This is often but not always the end
1408 of the buffer.
1409
1410 @item kill_without_query
1411 If this is non-@code{nil}, killing Emacs while this process is still
1412 running does not ask for confirmation about killing the process.
1413
1414 @item raw_status_low
1415 @itemx raw_status_high
1416 These two fields record 16 bits each of the process status returned by
1417 the @code{wait} system call.
1418
1419 @item status
1420 The process status, as @code{process-status} should return it.
1421
1422 @item tick
1423 @itemx update_tick
1424 If these two fields are not equal, a change in the status of the process
1425 needs to be reported, either by running the sentinel or by inserting a
1426 message in the process buffer.
1427
1428 @item pty_flag
1429 Non-@code{nil} if communication with the subprocess uses a @acronym{PTY};
1430 @code{nil} if it uses a pipe.
1431
1432 @item infd
1433 The file descriptor for input from the process.
1434
1435 @item outfd
1436 The file descriptor for output to the process.
1437
1438 @item subtty
1439 The file descriptor for the terminal that the subprocess is using. (On
1440 some systems, there is no need to record this, so the value is
1441 @code{nil}.)
1442
1443 @item tty_name
1444 The name of the terminal that the subprocess is using,
1445 or @code{nil} if it is using pipes.
1446
1447 @item decode_coding_system
1448 Coding-system for decoding the input from this process.
1449
1450 @item decoding_buf
1451 A working buffer for decoding.
1452
1453 @item decoding_carryover
1454 Size of carryover in decoding.
1455
1456 @item encode_coding_system
1457 Coding-system for encoding the output to this process.
1458
1459 @item encoding_buf
1460 A working buffer for encoding.
1461
1462 @item encoding_carryover
1463 Size of carryover in encoding.
1464
1465 @item inherit_coding_system_flag
1466 Flag to set @code{coding-system} of the process buffer from the
1467 coding system used to decode process output.
1468 @end table
1469
1470 @ignore
1471 arch-tag: 4b2c33bc-d7e4-43f5-bc20-27c0db52a53e
1472 @end ignore