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1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1990-1995, 1998-1999, 2001-2015 Free Software
4 @c Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions.
6 @node System Interface
7 @chapter Operating System Interface
8
9 This chapter is about starting and getting out of Emacs, access to
10 values in the operating system environment, and terminal input, output.
11
12 @xref{Building Emacs}, for related information. @xref{Display}, for
13 additional operating system status information pertaining to the
14 terminal and the screen.
15
16 @menu
17 * Starting Up:: Customizing Emacs startup processing.
18 * Getting Out:: How exiting works (permanent or temporary).
19 * System Environment:: Distinguish the name and kind of system.
20 * User Identification:: Finding the name and user id of the user.
21 * Time of Day:: Getting the current time.
22 * Time Conversion:: Converting a time from numeric form to
23 calendrical data and vice versa.
24 * Time Parsing:: Converting a time from numeric form to text
25 and vice versa.
26 * Processor Run Time:: Getting the run time used by Emacs.
27 * Time Calculations:: Adding, subtracting, comparing times, etc.
28 * Timers:: Setting a timer to call a function at a certain time.
29 * Idle Timers:: Setting a timer to call a function when Emacs has
30 been idle for a certain length of time.
31 * Terminal Input:: Accessing and recording terminal input.
32 * Terminal Output:: Controlling and recording terminal output.
33 * Sound Output:: Playing sounds on the computer's speaker.
34 * X11 Keysyms:: Operating on key symbols for X Windows.
35 * Batch Mode:: Running Emacs without terminal interaction.
36 * Session Management:: Saving and restoring state with X Session Management.
37 * Desktop Notifications:: Desktop notifications.
38 * File Notifications:: File notifications.
39 * Dynamic Libraries:: On-demand loading of support libraries.
40 @end menu
41
42 @node Starting Up
43 @section Starting Up Emacs
44
45 This section describes what Emacs does when it is started, and how you
46 can customize these actions.
47
48 @menu
49 * Startup Summary:: Sequence of actions Emacs performs at startup.
50 * Init File:: Details on reading the init file.
51 * Terminal-Specific:: How the terminal-specific Lisp file is read.
52 * Command-Line Arguments:: How command-line arguments are processed,
53 and how you can customize them.
54 @end menu
55
56 @node Startup Summary
57 @subsection Summary: Sequence of Actions at Startup
58 @cindex initialization of Emacs
59 @cindex startup of Emacs
60 @cindex @file{startup.el}
61
62 When Emacs is started up, it performs the following operations
63 (see @code{normal-top-level} in @file{startup.el}):
64
65 @enumerate
66 @item
67 It adds subdirectories to @code{load-path}, by running the file named
68 @file{subdirs.el} in each directory in the list. Normally, this file
69 adds the directory's subdirectories to the list, and those are scanned
70 in their turn. The files @file{subdirs.el} are normally generated
71 automatically when Emacs is installed.
72
73 @item
74 It loads any @file{leim-list.el} that it finds in the @code{load-path}
75 directories. This file is intended for registering input methods.
76 The search is only for any personal @file{leim-list.el} files that you
77 may have created; it skips the directories containing the standard Emacs
78 libraries (these should contain only a single @file{leim-list.el} file,
79 which is compiled into the Emacs executable).
80
81 @vindex before-init-time
82 @item
83 It sets the variable @code{before-init-time} to the value of
84 @code{current-time} (@pxref{Time of Day}). It also sets
85 @code{after-init-time} to @code{nil}, which signals to Lisp programs
86 that Emacs is being initialized.
87
88 @c set-locale-environment
89 @item
90 It sets the language environment and the terminal coding system,
91 if requested by environment variables such as @env{LANG}.
92
93 @item
94 It does some basic parsing of the command-line arguments.
95
96 @vindex initial-window-system@r{, and startup}
97 @vindex window-system-initialization-alist
98 @item
99 If not running in batch mode, it initializes the window system that
100 the variable @code{initial-window-system} specifies (@pxref{Window
101 Systems, initial-window-system}). The initialization function for
102 each supported window system is specified by
103 @code{window-system-initialization-alist}. If the value
104 of @code{initial-window-system} is @var{windowsystem}, then the
105 appropriate initialization function is defined in the file
106 @file{term/@var{windowsystem}-win.el}. This file should have been
107 compiled into the Emacs executable when it was built.
108
109 @item
110 It runs the normal hook @code{before-init-hook}.
111
112 @item
113 If appropriate, it creates a graphical frame. This is not done if the
114 options @samp{--batch} or @samp{--daemon} were specified.
115
116 @item
117 It initializes the initial frame's faces, and sets up the menu bar
118 and tool bar if needed. If graphical frames are supported, it sets up
119 the tool bar even if the current frame is not a graphical one, since a
120 graphical frame may be created later on.
121
122 @item
123 It use @code{custom-reevaluate-setting} to re-initialize the members
124 of the list @code{custom-delayed-init-variables}. These are any
125 pre-loaded user options whose default value depends on the run-time,
126 rather than build-time, context.
127 @xref{Building Emacs, custom-initialize-delay}.
128
129 @c @item
130 @c It registers the colors available for tty frames.
131
132 @item
133 It loads the library @file{site-start}, if it exists. This is not
134 done if the options @samp{-Q} or @samp{--no-site-file} were specified.
135 @cindex @file{site-start.el}
136
137 @item
138 It loads your init file (@pxref{Init File}). This is not done if the
139 options @samp{-q}, @samp{-Q}, or @samp{--batch} were specified. If
140 the @samp{-u} option was specified, Emacs looks for the init file in
141 that user's home directory instead.
142
143 @item
144 It loads the library @file{default}, if it exists. This is not done
145 if @code{inhibit-default-init} is non-@code{nil}, nor if the options
146 @samp{-q}, @samp{-Q}, or @samp{--batch} were specified.
147 @cindex @file{default.el}
148
149 @item
150 It loads your abbrevs from the file specified by
151 @code{abbrev-file-name}, if that file exists and can be read
152 (@pxref{Abbrev Files, abbrev-file-name}). This is not done if the
153 option @samp{--batch} was specified.
154
155 @item
156 If @code{package-enable-at-startup} is non-@code{nil}, it calls the
157 function @code{package-initialize} to activate any optional Emacs Lisp
158 package that has been installed. @xref{Packaging Basics}.
159
160 @vindex after-init-time
161 @item
162 It sets the variable @code{after-init-time} to the value of
163 @code{current-time}. This variable was set to @code{nil} earlier;
164 setting it to the current time signals that the initialization phase
165 is over, and, together with @code{before-init-time}, provides the
166 measurement of how long it took.
167
168 @item
169 It runs the normal hook @code{after-init-hook}.
170
171 @item
172 If the buffer @file{*scratch*} exists and is still in Fundamental mode
173 (as it should be by default), it sets its major mode according to
174 @code{initial-major-mode}.
175
176 @item
177 If started on a text terminal, it loads the terminal-specific
178 Lisp library (@pxref{Terminal-Specific}), and runs the hook
179 @code{tty-setup-hook}. This is not done
180 in @code{--batch} mode, nor if @code{term-file-prefix} is @code{nil}.
181
182 @c Now command-line calls command-line-1.
183
184 @item
185 It displays the initial echo area message, unless you have suppressed
186 that with @code{inhibit-startup-echo-area-message}.
187
188 @item
189 It processes any command-line options that were not handled earlier.
190
191 @c This next one is back in command-line, but the remaining bits of
192 @c command-line-1 are not done if noninteractive.
193 @item
194 It now exits if the option @code{--batch} was specified.
195
196 @item
197 If the @file{*scratch*} buffer exists and is empty, it inserts
198 @code{initial-scratch-message} into that buffer.
199
200 @item
201 If @code{initial-buffer-choice} is a string, it visits the file (or
202 directory) with that name. If it is a function, it calls the function
203 with no arguments and selects the buffer that it returns. If one file
204 is given as a command line argument, that file is visited and its
205 buffer displayed alongside @code{initial-buffer-choice}. If more than
206 one file is given, all of the files are visited and the @file{*Buffer
207 List*} buffer is displayed alongside @code{initial-buffer-choice}.
208
209 @ignore
210 @c I do not think this should be mentioned. AFAICS it is just a dodge
211 @c around inhibit-startup-screen not being settable on a site-wide basis.
212 If it is @code{t}, it selects the @file{*scratch*} buffer.
213 @end ignore
214
215 @c To make things nice and confusing, the next three items can be
216 @c called from two places. If displaying a startup screen, they are
217 @c called in command-line-1 before the startup screen is shown.
218 @c inhibit-startup-hooks is then set and window-setup-hook set to nil.
219 @c If not displaying a startup screen, they are are called in
220 @c normal-top-level.
221 @c FIXME? So it seems they can be called before or after the
222 @c daemon/session restore step?
223
224 @item
225 It runs @code{emacs-startup-hook}.
226
227 @item
228 It calls @code{frame-notice-user-settings}, which modifies the
229 parameters of the selected frame according to whatever the init files
230 specify.
231
232 @item
233 It runs @code{window-setup-hook}. The only difference between this
234 hook and @code{emacs-startup-hook} is that this one runs after the
235 previously mentioned modifications to the frame parameters.
236
237 @item
238 @cindex startup screen
239 It displays the @dfn{startup screen}, which is a special buffer that
240 contains information about copyleft and basic Emacs usage. This is
241 not done if @code{inhibit-startup-screen} or @code{initial-buffer-choice}
242 are non-@code{nil}, or if the @samp{--no-splash} or @samp{-Q} command-line
243 options were specified.
244
245 @c End of command-line-1.
246
247 @c Back to command-line from command-line-1.
248
249 @c This is the point at which we actually exit in batch mode, but the
250 @c last few bits of command-line-1 are not done in batch mode.
251
252 @item
253 If the option @code{--daemon} was specified, it calls
254 @code{server-start}, and on Posix systems also detaches from the
255 controlling terminal. @xref{Emacs Server,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs
256 Manual}.
257
258 @item
259 If started by the X session manager, it calls
260 @code{emacs-session-restore} passing it as argument the ID of the
261 previous session. @xref{Session Management}.
262
263 @c End of command-line.
264
265 @c Back to normal-top-level from command-line.
266
267 @end enumerate
268
269 @noindent
270 The following options affect some aspects of the startup sequence.
271
272 @defopt inhibit-startup-screen
273 This variable, if non-@code{nil}, inhibits the startup screen. In
274 that case, Emacs typically displays the @file{*scratch*} buffer; but
275 see @code{initial-buffer-choice}, below.
276
277 Do not set this variable in the init file of a new user, or in a way
278 that affects more than one user, as that would prevent new users from
279 receiving information about copyleft and basic Emacs usage.
280
281 @vindex inhibit-startup-message
282 @vindex inhibit-splash-screen
283 @code{inhibit-startup-message} and @code{inhibit-splash-screen} are
284 aliases for this variable.
285 @end defopt
286
287 @defopt initial-buffer-choice
288 If non-@code{nil}, this variable is a string that specifies a file or
289 directory for Emacs to display after starting up, instead of the
290 startup screen.
291 If its value is a function, Emacs calls that function which must
292 return a buffer which is then displayed.
293 If its value is @code{t}, Emacs displays the @file{*scratch*} buffer.
294 @end defopt
295
296 @defopt inhibit-startup-echo-area-message
297 This variable controls the display of the startup echo area message.
298 You can suppress the startup echo area message by adding text with this
299 form to your init file:
300
301 @example
302 (setq inhibit-startup-echo-area-message
303 "@var{your-login-name}")
304 @end example
305
306 Emacs explicitly checks for an expression as shown above in your init
307 file; your login name must appear in the expression as a Lisp string
308 constant. You can also use the Customize interface. Other methods of
309 setting @code{inhibit-startup-echo-area-message} to the same value do
310 not inhibit the startup message. This way, you can easily inhibit the
311 message for yourself if you wish, but thoughtless copying of your init
312 file will not inhibit the message for someone else.
313 @end defopt
314
315 @defopt initial-scratch-message
316 This variable, if non-@code{nil}, should be a string, which is
317 inserted into the @file{*scratch*} buffer when Emacs starts up. If it
318 is @code{nil}, the @file{*scratch*} buffer is empty.
319 @end defopt
320
321 @noindent
322 The following command-line options affect some aspects of the startup
323 sequence. @xref{Initial Options,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
324
325 @table @code
326 @item --no-splash
327 Do not display a splash screen.
328
329 @item --batch
330 Run without an interactive terminal. @xref{Batch Mode}.
331
332 @item --daemon
333 Do not initialize any display; just start a server in the background.
334
335 @item --no-init-file
336 @itemx -q
337 Do not load either the init file, or the @file{default} library.
338
339 @item --no-site-file
340 Do not load the @file{site-start} library.
341
342 @item --quick
343 @itemx -Q
344 Equivalent to @samp{-q --no-site-file --no-splash}.
345 @c and --no-site-lisp, but let's not mention that here.
346 @end table
347
348
349 @node Init File
350 @subsection The Init File
351 @cindex init file
352 @cindex @file{.emacs}
353 @cindex @file{init.el}
354
355 When you start Emacs, it normally attempts to load your @dfn{init
356 file}. This is either a file named @file{.emacs} or @file{.emacs.el}
357 in your home directory, or a file named @file{init.el} in a
358 subdirectory named @file{.emacs.d} in your home directory.
359 @ignore
360 Whichever place you use, you can also compile the file (@pxref{Byte
361 Compilation}); then the actual file loaded will be @file{.emacs.elc}
362 or @file{init.elc}.
363 @end ignore
364
365 The command-line switches @samp{-q}, @samp{-Q}, and @samp{-u}
366 control whether and where to find the init file; @samp{-q} (and the
367 stronger @samp{-Q}) says not to load an init file, while @samp{-u
368 @var{user}} says to load @var{user}'s init file instead of yours.
369 @xref{Entering Emacs,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. If neither
370 option is specified, Emacs uses the @env{LOGNAME} environment
371 variable, or the @env{USER} (most systems) or @env{USERNAME} (MS
372 systems) variable, to find your home directory and thus your init
373 file; this way, even if you have su'd, Emacs still loads your own init
374 file. If those environment variables are absent, though, Emacs uses
375 your user-id to find your home directory.
376
377 @cindex default init file
378 An Emacs installation may have a @dfn{default init file}, which is a
379 Lisp library named @file{default.el}. Emacs finds this file through
380 the standard search path for libraries (@pxref{How Programs Do
381 Loading}). The Emacs distribution does not come with this file; it is
382 intended for local customizations. If the default init file exists,
383 it is loaded whenever you start Emacs. But your own personal init
384 file, if any, is loaded first; if it sets @code{inhibit-default-init}
385 to a non-@code{nil} value, then Emacs does not subsequently load the
386 @file{default.el} file. In batch mode, or if you specify @samp{-q}
387 (or @samp{-Q}), Emacs loads neither your personal init file nor
388 the default init file.
389
390 Another file for site-customization is @file{site-start.el}. Emacs
391 loads this @emph{before} the user's init file. You can inhibit the
392 loading of this file with the option @samp{--no-site-file}.
393
394 @defopt site-run-file
395 This variable specifies the site-customization file to load before the
396 user's init file. Its normal value is @code{"site-start"}. The only
397 way you can change it with real effect is to do so before dumping
398 Emacs.
399 @c So why even mention it here. I imagine it is almost never changed.
400 @end defopt
401
402 @xref{Init Examples,, Init File Examples, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for
403 examples of how to make various commonly desired customizations in your
404 @file{.emacs} file.
405
406 @defopt inhibit-default-init
407 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it prevents Emacs from loading the
408 default initialization library file. The default value is @code{nil}.
409 @end defopt
410
411 @defvar before-init-hook
412 This normal hook is run, once, just before loading all the init files
413 (@file{site-start.el}, your init file, and @file{default.el}).
414 (The only way to change it with real effect is before dumping Emacs.)
415 @end defvar
416
417 @defvar after-init-hook
418 This normal hook is run, once, just after loading all the init files
419 (@file{site-start.el}, your init file, and @file{default.el}),
420 before loading the terminal-specific library (if started on a text
421 terminal) and processing the command-line action arguments.
422 @end defvar
423
424 @defvar emacs-startup-hook
425 This normal hook is run, once, just after handling the command line
426 arguments. In batch mode, Emacs does not run this hook.
427 @end defvar
428
429 @defvar window-setup-hook
430 This normal hook is very similar to @code{emacs-startup-hook}.
431 The only difference is that it runs slightly later, after setting
432 of the frame parameters. @xref{Startup Summary, window-setup-hook}.
433 @end defvar
434
435 @defvar user-init-file
436 This variable holds the absolute file name of the user's init file. If the
437 actual init file loaded is a compiled file, such as @file{.emacs.elc},
438 the value refers to the corresponding source file.
439 @end defvar
440
441 @defvar user-emacs-directory
442 This variable holds the name of the @file{.emacs.d} directory. It is
443 @file{~/.emacs.d} on all platforms but MS-DOS.
444 @end defvar
445
446 @node Terminal-Specific
447 @subsection Terminal-Specific Initialization
448 @cindex terminal-specific initialization
449
450 Each terminal type can have its own Lisp library that Emacs loads when
451 run on that type of terminal. The library's name is constructed by
452 concatenating the value of the variable @code{term-file-prefix} and the
453 terminal type (specified by the environment variable @env{TERM}).
454 Normally, @code{term-file-prefix} has the value @code{"term/"};
455 changing this is not recommended. If there is an entry matching
456 @env{TERM} in the @code{term-file-aliases} association list,
457 Emacs uses the associated value in place of @env{TERM}.
458 Emacs finds the file in the normal manner, by searching the
459 @code{load-path} directories, and trying the @samp{.elc} and
460 @samp{.el} suffixes.
461
462 @cindex Termcap
463 The usual role of a terminal-specific library is to enable special
464 keys to send sequences that Emacs can recognize. It may also need to
465 set or add to @code{input-decode-map} if the Termcap or Terminfo entry
466 does not specify all the terminal's function keys. @xref{Terminal Input}.
467
468 When the name of the terminal type contains a hyphen or underscore,
469 and no library is found whose name is identical to the terminal's
470 name, Emacs strips from the terminal's name the last hyphen or
471 underscore and everything that follows
472 it, and tries again. This process is repeated until Emacs finds a
473 matching library, or until there are no more hyphens or underscores in the name
474 (i.e., there is no terminal-specific library). For example, if the
475 terminal name is @samp{xterm-256color} and there is no
476 @file{term/xterm-256color.el} library, Emacs tries to load
477 @file{term/xterm.el}. If necessary, the terminal library can evaluate
478 @code{(getenv "TERM")} to find the full name of the terminal type.
479
480 Your init file can prevent the loading of the terminal-specific
481 library by setting the variable @code{term-file-prefix} to @code{nil}.
482
483 You can also arrange to override some of the actions of the
484 terminal-specific library by using @code{tty-setup-hook}. This is
485 a normal hook that Emacs runs after initializing a new text terminal.
486 You could use this hook to define initializations for terminals that do not
487 have their own libraries. @xref{Hooks}.
488
489 @defopt term-file-prefix
490 @cindex @env{TERM} environment variable
491 If the value of this variable is non-@code{nil}, Emacs loads a
492 terminal-specific initialization file as follows:
493
494 @example
495 (load (concat term-file-prefix (getenv "TERM")))
496 @end example
497
498 @noindent
499 You may set the @code{term-file-prefix} variable to @code{nil} in your
500 init file if you do not wish to load the
501 terminal-initialization file.
502
503 On MS-DOS, Emacs sets the @env{TERM} environment variable to @samp{internal}.
504 @end defopt
505
506 @defopt term-file-aliases
507 This variable is an an association list mapping terminal types to
508 their aliases. For example, an element of the form @code{("vt102"
509 . "vt100")} means to treat a terminal of type @samp{vt102} like one of
510 type @samp{vt100}.
511 @end defopt
512
513 @defvar tty-setup-hook
514 This variable is a normal hook that Emacs runs after initializing a
515 new text terminal. (This applies when Emacs starts up in non-windowed
516 mode, and when making a tty @command{emacsclient} connection.) The
517 hook runs after loading your init file (if applicable) and the
518 terminal-specific Lisp file, so you can use it to adjust the
519 definitions made by that file.
520
521 For a related feature, @pxref{Init File, window-setup-hook}.
522 @end defvar
523
524 @node Command-Line Arguments
525 @subsection Command-Line Arguments
526 @cindex command-line arguments
527
528 You can use command-line arguments to request various actions when
529 you start Emacs. Note that the recommended way of using Emacs is to
530 start it just once, after logging in, and then do all editing in the same
531 Emacs session (@pxref{Entering Emacs,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
532 For this reason, you might not use command-line arguments very often;
533 nonetheless, they can be useful when invoking Emacs from session
534 scripts or debugging Emacs. This section describes how Emacs
535 processes command-line arguments.
536
537 @defun command-line
538 This function parses the command line that Emacs was called with,
539 processes it, and (amongst other things) loads the user's init file and
540 displays the startup messages.
541 @end defun
542
543 @defvar command-line-processed
544 The value of this variable is @code{t} once the command line has been
545 processed.
546
547 If you redump Emacs by calling @code{dump-emacs} (@pxref{Building
548 Emacs}), you may wish to set this variable to @code{nil} first in
549 order to cause the new dumped Emacs to process its new command-line
550 arguments.
551 @end defvar
552
553 @defvar command-switch-alist
554 @cindex switches on command line
555 @cindex options on command line
556 @cindex command-line options
557 This variable is an alist of user-defined command-line options and
558 associated handler functions. By default it is empty, but you can
559 add elements if you wish.
560
561 A @dfn{command-line option} is an argument on the command line, which
562 has the form:
563
564 @example
565 -@var{option}
566 @end example
567
568 The elements of the @code{command-switch-alist} look like this:
569
570 @example
571 (@var{option} . @var{handler-function})
572 @end example
573
574 The @sc{car}, @var{option}, is a string, the name of a command-line
575 option (not including the initial hyphen). The @var{handler-function}
576 is called to handle @var{option}, and receives the option name as its
577 sole argument.
578
579 In some cases, the option is followed in the command line by an
580 argument. In these cases, the @var{handler-function} can find all the
581 remaining command-line arguments in the variable
582 @code{command-line-args-left} (see below). (The entire list of
583 command-line arguments is in @code{command-line-args}.)
584
585 The command-line arguments are parsed by the @code{command-line-1}
586 function in the @file{startup.el} file. See also @ref{Emacs
587 Invocation, , Command Line Arguments for Emacs Invocation, emacs, The
588 GNU Emacs Manual}.
589 @end defvar
590
591 @defvar command-line-args
592 The value of this variable is the list of command-line arguments passed
593 to Emacs.
594 @end defvar
595
596 @defvar command-line-args-left
597 @vindex argv
598 The value of this variable is the list of command-line arguments that
599 have not yet been processed.
600 @c Don't mention this, since it is a "bad name for a dynamically bound variable"
601 @c @code{argv} is an alias for this.
602 @end defvar
603
604 @defvar command-line-functions
605 This variable's value is a list of functions for handling an
606 unrecognized command-line argument. Each time the next argument to be
607 processed has no special meaning, the functions in this list are called,
608 in order of appearance, until one of them returns a non-@code{nil}
609 value.
610
611 These functions are called with no arguments. They can access the
612 command-line argument under consideration through the variable
613 @code{argi}, which is bound temporarily at this point. The remaining
614 arguments (not including the current one) are in the variable
615 @code{command-line-args-left}.
616
617 When a function recognizes and processes the argument in @code{argi}, it
618 should return a non-@code{nil} value to say it has dealt with that
619 argument. If it has also dealt with some of the following arguments, it
620 can indicate that by deleting them from @code{command-line-args-left}.
621
622 If all of these functions return @code{nil}, then the argument is treated
623 as a file name to visit.
624 @end defvar
625
626 @node Getting Out
627 @section Getting Out of Emacs
628 @cindex exiting Emacs
629
630 There are two ways to get out of Emacs: you can kill the Emacs job,
631 which exits permanently, or you can suspend it, which permits you to
632 reenter the Emacs process later. (In a graphical environment, you can
633 of course simply switch to another application without doing anything
634 special to Emacs, then switch back to Emacs when you want.)
635
636 @menu
637 * Killing Emacs:: Exiting Emacs irreversibly.
638 * Suspending Emacs:: Exiting Emacs reversibly.
639 @end menu
640
641 @node Killing Emacs
642 @subsection Killing Emacs
643 @cindex killing Emacs
644
645 Killing Emacs means ending the execution of the Emacs process.
646 If you started Emacs from a terminal, the parent process normally
647 resumes control. The low-level primitive for killing Emacs is
648 @code{kill-emacs}.
649
650 @deffn Command kill-emacs &optional exit-data
651 This command calls the hook @code{kill-emacs-hook}, then exits the
652 Emacs process and kills it.
653
654 If @var{exit-data} is an integer, that is used as the exit status of
655 the Emacs process. (This is useful primarily in batch operation; see
656 @ref{Batch Mode}.)
657
658 If @var{exit-data} is a string, its contents are stuffed into the
659 terminal input buffer so that the shell (or whatever program next reads
660 input) can read them.
661 @end deffn
662
663 @cindex SIGTERM
664 @cindex SIGHUP
665 @cindex SIGINT
666 @cindex operating system signal
667 The @code{kill-emacs} function is normally called via the
668 higher-level command @kbd{C-x C-c}
669 (@code{save-buffers-kill-terminal}). @xref{Exiting,,, emacs, The GNU
670 Emacs Manual}. It is also called automatically if Emacs receives a
671 @code{SIGTERM} or @code{SIGHUP} operating system signal (e.g., when the
672 controlling terminal is disconnected), or if it receives a
673 @code{SIGINT} signal while running in batch mode (@pxref{Batch Mode}).
674
675 @defvar kill-emacs-hook
676 This normal hook is run by @code{kill-emacs}, before it kills Emacs.
677
678 Because @code{kill-emacs} can be called in situations where user
679 interaction is impossible (e.g., when the terminal is disconnected),
680 functions on this hook should not attempt to interact with the user.
681 If you want to interact with the user when Emacs is shutting down, use
682 @code{kill-emacs-query-functions}, described below.
683 @end defvar
684
685 When Emacs is killed, all the information in the Emacs process,
686 aside from files that have been saved, is lost. Because killing Emacs
687 inadvertently can lose a lot of work, the
688 @code{save-buffers-kill-terminal} command queries for confirmation if
689 you have buffers that need saving or subprocesses that are running.
690 It also runs the abnormal hook @code{kill-emacs-query-functions}:
691
692 @defvar kill-emacs-query-functions
693 When @code{save-buffers-kill-terminal} is killing Emacs, it calls the
694 functions in this hook, after asking the standard questions and before
695 calling @code{kill-emacs}. The functions are called in order of
696 appearance, with no arguments. Each function can ask for additional
697 confirmation from the user. If any of them returns @code{nil},
698 @code{save-buffers-kill-emacs} does not kill Emacs, and does not run
699 the remaining functions in this hook. Calling @code{kill-emacs}
700 directly does not run this hook.
701 @end defvar
702
703 @node Suspending Emacs
704 @subsection Suspending Emacs
705 @cindex suspending Emacs
706
707 On text terminals, it is possible to @dfn{suspend Emacs}, which
708 means stopping Emacs temporarily and returning control to its superior
709 process, which is usually the shell. This allows you to resume
710 editing later in the same Emacs process, with the same buffers, the
711 same kill ring, the same undo history, and so on. To resume Emacs,
712 use the appropriate command in the parent shell---most likely
713 @code{fg}.
714
715 @cindex controlling terminal
716 Suspending works only on a terminal device from which the Emacs
717 session was started. We call that device the @dfn{controlling
718 terminal} of the session. Suspending is not allowed if the
719 controlling terminal is a graphical terminal. Suspending is usually
720 not relevant in graphical environments, since you can simply switch to
721 another application without doing anything special to Emacs.
722
723 @c FIXME? Are there any systems Emacs still supports that do not
724 @c have SIGTSTP?
725 @cindex SIGTSTP
726 Some operating systems (those without @code{SIGTSTP}, or MS-DOS) do
727 not support suspension of jobs; on these systems, ``suspension''
728 actually creates a new shell temporarily as a subprocess of Emacs.
729 Then you would exit the shell to return to Emacs.
730
731 @deffn Command suspend-emacs &optional string
732 This function stops Emacs and returns control to the superior process.
733 If and when the superior process resumes Emacs, @code{suspend-emacs}
734 returns @code{nil} to its caller in Lisp.
735
736 This function works only on the controlling terminal of the Emacs
737 session; to relinquish control of other tty devices, use
738 @code{suspend-tty} (see below). If the Emacs session uses more than
739 one terminal, you must delete the frames on all the other terminals
740 before suspending Emacs, or this function signals an error.
741 @xref{Multiple Terminals}.
742
743 If @var{string} is non-@code{nil}, its characters are sent to Emacs's
744 superior shell, to be read as terminal input.
745 @c FIXME? It seems to me that shell does echo STRING.
746 The characters in @var{string} are not echoed by the superior shell;
747 only the results appear.
748
749 Before suspending, @code{suspend-emacs} runs the normal hook
750 @code{suspend-hook}. After the user resumes Emacs,
751 @code{suspend-emacs} runs the normal hook @code{suspend-resume-hook}.
752 @xref{Hooks}.
753
754 The next redisplay after resumption will redraw the entire screen,
755 unless the variable @code{no-redraw-on-reenter} is non-@code{nil}.
756 @xref{Refresh Screen}.
757
758 Here is an example of how you could use these hooks:
759
760 @smallexample
761 @group
762 (add-hook 'suspend-hook
763 (lambda () (or (y-or-n-p "Really suspend? ")
764 (error "Suspend canceled"))))
765 @end group
766 (add-hook 'suspend-resume-hook (lambda () (message "Resumed!")
767 (sit-for 2)))
768 @end smallexample
769 @c The sit-for prevents the @code{nil} that suspend-emacs returns
770 @c hiding the message.
771
772 Here is what you would see upon evaluating @code{(suspend-emacs "pwd")}:
773
774 @smallexample
775 @group
776 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
777 Really suspend? @kbd{y}
778 ---------- Buffer: Minibuffer ----------
779 @end group
780
781 @group
782 ---------- Parent Shell ----------
783 bash$ /home/username
784 bash$ fg
785 @end group
786
787 @group
788 ---------- Echo Area ----------
789 Resumed!
790 @end group
791 @end smallexample
792
793 @c FIXME? AFAICS, it is echoed.
794 Note that @samp{pwd} is not echoed after Emacs is suspended. But it
795 is read and executed by the shell.
796 @end deffn
797
798 @defvar suspend-hook
799 This variable is a normal hook that Emacs runs before suspending.
800 @end defvar
801
802 @defvar suspend-resume-hook
803 This variable is a normal hook that Emacs runs on resuming
804 after a suspension.
805 @end defvar
806
807 @defun suspend-tty &optional tty
808 If @var{tty} specifies a terminal device used by Emacs, this function
809 relinquishes the device and restores it to its prior state. Frames
810 that used the device continue to exist, but are not updated and Emacs
811 doesn't read input from them. @var{tty} can be a terminal object, a
812 frame (meaning the terminal for that frame), or @code{nil} (meaning
813 the terminal for the selected frame). @xref{Multiple Terminals}.
814
815 If @var{tty} is already suspended, this function does nothing.
816
817 @vindex suspend-tty-functions
818 This function runs the hook @code{suspend-tty-functions}, passing the
819 terminal object as an argument to each function.
820 @end defun
821
822 @defun resume-tty &optional tty
823 This function resumes the previously suspended terminal device
824 @var{tty}; where @var{tty} has the same possible values as it does
825 for @code{suspend-tty}.
826
827 @vindex resume-tty-functions
828 This function reopens the terminal device, re-initializes it, and
829 redraws it with that terminal's selected frame. It then runs the
830 hook @code{resume-tty-functions}, passing the terminal object as an
831 argument to each function.
832
833 If the same device is already used by another Emacs terminal, this
834 function signals an error. If @var{tty} is not suspended, this
835 function does nothing.
836 @end defun
837
838 @defun controlling-tty-p &optional tty
839 This function returns non-@code{nil} if @var{tty} is the
840 controlling terminal of the Emacs session; @var{tty} can be a
841 terminal object, a frame (meaning the terminal for that frame), or
842 @code{nil} (meaning the terminal for the selected frame).
843 @end defun
844
845 @deffn Command suspend-frame
846 This command @dfn{suspends} a frame. For GUI frames, it calls
847 @code{iconify-frame} (@pxref{Visibility of Frames}); for frames on
848 text terminals, it calls either @code{suspend-emacs} or
849 @code{suspend-tty}, depending on whether the frame is displayed on the
850 controlling terminal device or not.
851 @end deffn
852
853 @node System Environment
854 @section Operating System Environment
855 @cindex operating system environment
856
857 Emacs provides access to variables in the operating system environment
858 through various functions. These variables include the name of the
859 system, the user's @acronym{UID}, and so on.
860
861 @defvar system-configuration
862 This variable holds the standard GNU configuration name for the
863 hardware/software configuration of your system, as a string. For
864 example, a typical value for a 64-bit GNU/Linux system is
865 @samp{"x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"}.
866 @end defvar
867
868 @cindex system type and name
869 @defvar system-type
870 The value of this variable is a symbol indicating the type of operating
871 system Emacs is running on. The possible values are:
872
873 @table @code
874 @item aix
875 IBM's AIX.
876
877 @item berkeley-unix
878 Berkeley BSD and its variants.
879
880 @item cygwin
881 Cygwin, a Posix layer on top of MS-Windows.
882
883 @item darwin
884 Darwin (Mac OS X).
885
886 @item gnu
887 The GNU system (using the GNU kernel, which consists of the HURD and Mach).
888
889 @item gnu/linux
890 A GNU/Linux system---that is, a variant GNU system, using the Linux
891 kernel. (These systems are the ones people often call ``Linux'', but
892 actually Linux is just the kernel, not the whole system.)
893
894 @item gnu/kfreebsd
895 A GNU (glibc-based) system with a FreeBSD kernel.
896
897 @item hpux
898 Hewlett-Packard HPUX operating system.
899
900 @item irix
901 Silicon Graphics Irix system.
902
903 @item ms-dos
904 Microsoft's DOS@. Emacs compiled with DJGPP for MS-DOS binds
905 @code{system-type} to @code{ms-dos} even when you run it on MS-Windows.
906
907 @item usg-unix-v
908 AT&T Unix System V.
909
910 @item windows-nt
911 Microsoft Windows NT, 9X and later. The value of @code{system-type}
912 is always @code{windows-nt}, e.g., even on Windows 7.
913
914 @end table
915
916 We do not wish to add new symbols to make finer distinctions unless it
917 is absolutely necessary! In fact, we hope to eliminate some of these
918 alternatives in the future. If you need to make a finer distinction
919 than @code{system-type} allows for, you can test
920 @code{system-configuration}, e.g., against a regexp.
921 @end defvar
922
923 @defun system-name
924 This function returns the name of the machine you are running on, as a
925 string.
926 @end defun
927
928 @c FIXME seems like this section is not the best place for this option?
929 @defopt mail-host-address
930 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it is used instead of
931 @code{system-name} for purposes of generating email addresses. For
932 example, it is used when constructing the default value of
933 @code{user-mail-address}. @xref{User Identification}. (Since this is
934 done when Emacs starts up, the value actually used is the one saved when
935 Emacs was dumped. @xref{Building Emacs}.)
936 @c FIXME sounds like should probably give this a :set-after and some
937 @c custom-initialize-delay voodoo.
938 @end defopt
939
940 @deffn Command getenv var &optional frame
941 @cindex environment variable access
942 This function returns the value of the environment variable @var{var},
943 as a string. @var{var} should be a string. If @var{var} is undefined
944 in the environment, @code{getenv} returns @code{nil}. It returns
945 @samp{""} if @var{var} is set but null. Within Emacs, a list of environment
946 variables and their values is kept in the variable @code{process-environment}.
947
948 @example
949 @group
950 (getenv "USER")
951 @result{} "lewis"
952 @end group
953 @end example
954
955 The shell command @code{printenv} prints all or part of the environment:
956
957 @example
958 @group
959 bash$ printenv
960 PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin
961 USER=lewis
962 @end group
963 @group
964 TERM=xterm
965 SHELL=/bin/bash
966 HOME=/home/lewis
967 @end group
968 @dots{}
969 @end example
970 @end deffn
971
972 @deffn Command setenv variable &optional value substitute
973 This command sets the value of the environment variable named
974 @var{variable} to @var{value}. @var{variable} should be a string.
975 Internally, Emacs Lisp can handle any string. However, normally
976 @var{variable} should be a valid shell identifier, that is, a sequence
977 of letters, digits and underscores, starting with a letter or
978 underscore. Otherwise, errors may occur if subprocesses of Emacs try
979 to access the value of @var{variable}. If @var{value} is omitted or
980 @code{nil} (or, interactively, with a prefix argument), @code{setenv}
981 removes @var{variable} from the environment. Otherwise, @var{value}
982 should be a string.
983
984 @c FIXME: Document 'substitute-env-vars'? --xfq
985 If the optional argument @var{substitute} is non-@code{nil}, Emacs
986 calls the function @code{substitute-env-vars} to expand any
987 environment variables in @var{value}.
988
989 @code{setenv} works by modifying @code{process-environment}; binding
990 that variable with @code{let} is also reasonable practice.
991
992 @code{setenv} returns the new value of @var{variable}, or @code{nil}
993 if it removed @var{variable} from the environment.
994 @end deffn
995
996 @defvar process-environment
997 This variable is a list of strings, each describing one environment
998 variable. The functions @code{getenv} and @code{setenv} work by means
999 of this variable.
1000
1001 @smallexample
1002 @group
1003 process-environment
1004 @result{} ("PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin"
1005 "USER=lewis"
1006 @end group
1007 @group
1008 "TERM=xterm"
1009 "SHELL=/bin/bash"
1010 "HOME=/home/lewis"
1011 @dots{})
1012 @end group
1013 @end smallexample
1014
1015 If @code{process-environment} contains ``duplicate'' elements that
1016 specify the same environment variable, the first of these elements
1017 specifies the variable, and the other ``duplicates'' are ignored.
1018 @end defvar
1019
1020 @defvar initial-environment
1021 This variable holds the list of environment variables Emacs inherited
1022 from its parent process when Emacs started.
1023 @end defvar
1024
1025 @defvar path-separator
1026 This variable holds a string that says which character separates
1027 directories in a search path (as found in an environment variable). Its
1028 value is @code{":"} for Unix and GNU systems, and @code{";"} for MS systems.
1029 @end defvar
1030
1031 @defun parse-colon-path path
1032 This function takes a search path string such as the value of
1033 the @env{PATH} environment variable, and splits it at the separators,
1034 returning a list of directory names. @code{nil} in this list means
1035 the current directory. Although the function's name says
1036 ``colon'', it actually uses the value of @code{path-separator}.
1037
1038 @example
1039 (parse-colon-path ":/foo:/bar")
1040 @result{} (nil "/foo/" "/bar/")
1041 @end example
1042 @end defun
1043
1044 @defvar invocation-name
1045 This variable holds the program name under which Emacs was invoked. The
1046 value is a string, and does not include a directory name.
1047 @end defvar
1048
1049 @defvar invocation-directory
1050 This variable holds the directory from which the Emacs executable was
1051 invoked, or @code{nil} if that directory cannot be determined.
1052 @end defvar
1053
1054 @defvar installation-directory
1055 If non-@code{nil}, this is a directory within which to look for the
1056 @file{lib-src} and @file{etc} subdirectories. In an installed Emacs,
1057 it is normally @code{nil}. It is non-@code{nil}
1058 when Emacs can't find those directories in their standard installed
1059 locations, but can find them in a directory related somehow to the one
1060 containing the Emacs executable (i.e., @code{invocation-directory}).
1061 @end defvar
1062
1063 @defun load-average &optional use-float
1064 This function returns the current 1-minute, 5-minute, and 15-minute
1065 system load averages, in a list. The load average indicates the
1066 number of processes trying to run on the system.
1067
1068 By default, the values are integers that are 100 times the system load
1069 averages, but if @var{use-float} is non-@code{nil}, then they are
1070 returned as floating-point numbers without multiplying by 100.
1071
1072 If it is impossible to obtain the load average, this function signals
1073 an error. On some platforms, access to load averages requires
1074 installing Emacs as setuid or setgid so that it can read kernel
1075 information, and that usually isn't advisable.
1076 @c FIXME which platforms are these? Are they still relevant?
1077
1078 If the 1-minute load average is available, but the 5- or 15-minute
1079 averages are not, this function returns a shortened list containing
1080 the available averages.
1081
1082 @example
1083 @group
1084 (load-average)
1085 @result{} (169 48 36)
1086 @end group
1087 @group
1088 (load-average t)
1089 @result{} (1.69 0.48 0.36)
1090 @end group
1091 @end example
1092
1093 The shell command @code{uptime} returns similar information.
1094 @end defun
1095
1096 @defun emacs-pid
1097 This function returns the process @acronym{ID} of the Emacs process,
1098 as an integer.
1099 @end defun
1100
1101 @defvar tty-erase-char
1102 This variable holds the erase character that was selected
1103 in the system's terminal driver, before Emacs was started.
1104 @c FIXME? Seems untrue since 23.1. For me, it is 0.
1105 @c The value is @code{nil} if Emacs is running under a window system.
1106 @end defvar
1107
1108 @node User Identification
1109 @section User Identification
1110 @cindex user identification
1111
1112 @defvar init-file-user
1113 This variable says which user's init files should be used by
1114 Emacs---or @code{nil} if none. @code{""} stands for the user who
1115 originally logged in. The value reflects command-line options such as
1116 @samp{-q} or @samp{-u @var{user}}.
1117
1118 Lisp packages that load files of customizations, or any other sort of
1119 user profile, should obey this variable in deciding where to find it.
1120 They should load the profile of the user name found in this variable.
1121 If @code{init-file-user} is @code{nil}, meaning that the @samp{-q},
1122 @samp{-Q}, or @samp{-batch} option was used, then Lisp packages should
1123 not load any customization files or user profile.
1124 @end defvar
1125
1126 @defopt user-mail-address
1127 This holds the nominal email address of the user who is using Emacs.
1128 Emacs normally sets this variable to a default value after reading your
1129 init files, but not if you have already set it. So you can set the
1130 variable to some other value in your init file if you do not
1131 want to use the default value.
1132 @end defopt
1133
1134 @defun user-login-name &optional uid
1135 This function returns the name under which the user is logged in.
1136 It uses the environment variables @env{LOGNAME} or @env{USER} if
1137 either is set. Otherwise, the value is based on the effective
1138 @acronym{UID}, not the real @acronym{UID}.
1139
1140 If you specify @var{uid} (a number), the result is the user name that
1141 corresponds to @var{uid}, or @code{nil} if there is no such user.
1142 @end defun
1143
1144 @defun user-real-login-name
1145 This function returns the user name corresponding to Emacs's real
1146 @acronym{UID}. This ignores the effective @acronym{UID}, and the
1147 environment variables @env{LOGNAME} and @env{USER}.
1148 @end defun
1149
1150 @defun user-full-name &optional uid
1151 This function returns the full name of the logged-in user---or the value
1152 of the environment variable @env{NAME}, if that is set.
1153
1154 If the Emacs process's user-id does not correspond to any known user (and
1155 provided @code{NAME} is not set), the result is @code{"unknown"}.
1156
1157 If @var{uid} is non-@code{nil}, then it should be a number (a user-id)
1158 or a string (a login name). Then @code{user-full-name} returns the full
1159 name corresponding to that user-id or login name. If you specify a
1160 user-id or login name that isn't defined, it returns @code{nil}.
1161 @end defun
1162
1163 @vindex user-full-name
1164 @vindex user-real-login-name
1165 @vindex user-login-name
1166 The symbols @code{user-login-name}, @code{user-real-login-name} and
1167 @code{user-full-name} are variables as well as functions. The functions
1168 return the same values that the variables hold. These variables allow
1169 you to ``fake out'' Emacs by telling the functions what to return. The
1170 variables are also useful for constructing frame titles (@pxref{Frame
1171 Titles}).
1172
1173 @cindex UID
1174 @defun user-real-uid
1175 This function returns the real @acronym{UID} of the user.
1176 The value may be floating point, in the (unlikely) event that
1177 the UID is too large to fit in a Lisp integer.
1178 @end defun
1179
1180 @defun user-uid
1181 This function returns the effective @acronym{UID} of the user.
1182 The value may be floating point.
1183 @end defun
1184
1185 @cindex GID
1186 @defun group-gid
1187 This function returns the effective @acronym{GID} of the Emacs process.
1188 The value may be floating point.
1189 @end defun
1190
1191 @defun group-real-gid
1192 This function returns the real @acronym{GID} of the Emacs process.
1193 The value may be floating point.
1194 @end defun
1195
1196 @defun system-users
1197 This function returns a list of strings, listing the user names on the
1198 system. If Emacs cannot retrieve this information, the return value
1199 is a list containing just the value of @code{user-real-login-name}.
1200 @end defun
1201
1202 @cindex user groups
1203 @defun system-groups
1204 This function returns a list of strings, listing the names of user
1205 groups on the system. If Emacs cannot retrieve this information, the
1206 return value is @code{nil}.
1207 @end defun
1208
1209
1210 @node Time of Day
1211 @section Time of Day
1212 @cindex time of day
1213
1214 This section explains how to determine the current time and time
1215 zone.
1216
1217 @cindex epoch
1218 Most of these functions represent time as a list of four integers
1219 @code{(@var{sec-high} @var{sec-low} @var{microsec} @var{picosec})}.
1220 This represents the number of seconds from the @dfn{epoch} (January
1221 1, 1970 at 00:00 UTC), using the formula:
1222 @ifnottex
1223 @var{high} * 2**16 + @var{low} + @var{micro} * 10**@minus{}6 +
1224 @var{pico} * 10**@minus{}12.
1225 @end ifnottex
1226 @tex
1227 $high*2^{16} + low + micro*10^{-6} + pico*10^{-12}$.
1228 @end tex
1229 The return value of @code{current-time} represents time using this
1230 form, as do the timestamps in the return values of other functions
1231 such as @code{file-attributes} (@pxref{Definition of
1232 file-attributes}). In some cases, functions may return two- or
1233 three-element lists, with omitted @var{microsec} and @var{picosec}
1234 components defaulting to zero.
1235
1236 @cindex time value
1237 Function arguments, e.g., the @var{time} argument to
1238 @code{current-time-string}, accept a more-general @dfn{time value}
1239 format, which can be a list of integers as above, or a single number
1240 for seconds since the epoch, or @code{nil} for the current time. You
1241 can convert a time value into a human-readable string using
1242 @code{current-time-string} and @code{format-time-string}, into a list
1243 of integers using @code{seconds-to-time}, and into other forms using
1244 @code{decode-time} and @code{float-time}. These functions are
1245 described in the following sections.
1246
1247 @defun current-time-string &optional time zone
1248 This function returns the current time and date as a human-readable
1249 string. The format does not vary for the initial part of the string,
1250 which contains the day of week, month, day of month, and time of day
1251 in that order: the number of characters used for these fields is
1252 always the same, so you can reliably
1253 use @code{substring} to extract them. You should count
1254 characters from the beginning of the string rather than from the end,
1255 as the year might not have exactly four digits, and additional
1256 information may some day be added at the end.
1257
1258 The argument @var{time}, if given, specifies a time to format,
1259 instead of the current time. The optional argument @var{zone}
1260 defaults to the current time zone rule.
1261
1262 @example
1263 @group
1264 (current-time-string)
1265 @result{} "Wed Oct 14 22:21:05 1987"
1266 @end group
1267 @end example
1268 @end defun
1269
1270 @defun current-time
1271 This function returns the current time, represented as a list of four
1272 integers @code{(@var{sec-high} @var{sec-low} @var{microsec} @var{picosec})}.
1273 These integers have trailing zeros on systems that return time with
1274 lower resolutions. On all current machines @var{picosec} is a
1275 multiple of 1000, but this may change as higher-resolution clocks
1276 become available.
1277 @end defun
1278
1279 @defun float-time &optional time
1280 This function returns the current time as a floating-point number of
1281 seconds since the epoch. The optional argument @var{time}, if
1282 given, specifies a time to convert instead of the current time.
1283
1284 @emph{Warning}: Since the result is floating point, it may not be
1285 exact. Do not use this function if precise time stamps are required.
1286
1287 @code{time-to-seconds} is an alias for this function.
1288 @end defun
1289
1290 @defun seconds-to-time time
1291 This function converts a time value to list-of-integer form.
1292 For example, if @var{time} is a number, @code{(time-to-seconds
1293 (seconds-to-time @var{time}))} equals the number unless overflow
1294 or rounding errors occur.
1295 @end defun
1296
1297 @defun current-time-zone &optional time zone
1298 @cindex time zone, current
1299 This function returns a list describing the time zone that the user is
1300 in.
1301
1302 The value has the form @code{(@var{offset} @var{name})}. Here
1303 @var{offset} is an integer giving the number of seconds ahead of UTC
1304 (east of Greenwich). A negative value means west of Greenwich. The
1305 second element, @var{name}, is a string giving the name of the time
1306 zone. Both elements change when daylight saving time begins or ends;
1307 if the user has specified a time zone that does not use a seasonal time
1308 adjustment, then the value is constant through time.
1309
1310 If the operating system doesn't supply all the information necessary to
1311 compute the value, the unknown elements of the list are @code{nil}.
1312
1313 The argument @var{time}, if given, specifies a time value to
1314 analyze instead of the current time. The optional argument @var{zone}
1315 defaults to the current time zone rule.
1316 @end defun
1317
1318 @vindex TZ, environment variable
1319 The default time zone is determined by the @env{TZ} environment
1320 variable. @xref{System Environment}. For example, you can tell Emacs
1321 to default to universal time with @code{(setenv "TZ" "UTC0")}. If
1322 @env{TZ} is not in the environment, Emacs uses system wall clock time,
1323 which is a platform-dependent default time zone.
1324
1325 @cindex time zone rule
1326 Functions that convert to and from local time accept an optional
1327 @dfn{time zone rule} argument, which specifies the conversion's time
1328 zone and daylight saving time history. If the time zone rule is
1329 omitted or @code{nil}, the conversion uses Emacs's default time zone.
1330 If it is @code{t}, the conversion uses Universal Time. If it is
1331 @code{wall}, the conversion uses the system wall clock time. If it is
1332 a string, the conversion uses the time zone rule equivalent to setting
1333 @env{TZ} to that string.
1334
1335 @node Time Conversion
1336 @section Time Conversion
1337 @cindex calendrical information
1338 @cindex time conversion
1339
1340 These functions convert time values (@pxref{Time of Day}) into
1341 calendrical information and vice versa.
1342
1343 Many 32-bit operating systems are limited to system times containing
1344 32 bits of information in their seconds component; these systems
1345 typically handle only the times from 1901-12-13 20:45:52 UTC through
1346 2038-01-19 03:14:07 UTC@. However, 64-bit and some 32-bit operating
1347 systems have larger seconds components, and can represent times far in
1348 the past or future.
1349
1350 Time conversion functions always use the Gregorian calendar, even
1351 for dates before the Gregorian calendar was introduced. Year numbers
1352 count the number of years since the year 1 B.C., and do not skip zero
1353 as traditional Gregorian years do; for example, the year number
1354 @minus{}37 represents the Gregorian year 38 B.C@.
1355
1356 @defun decode-time &optional time zone
1357 This function converts a time value into calendrical information. If
1358 you don't specify @var{time}, it decodes the current time, and similarly
1359 @var{zone} defaults to the current time zone rule. The return
1360 value is a list of nine elements, as follows:
1361
1362 @example
1363 (@var{seconds} @var{minutes} @var{hour} @var{day} @var{month} @var{year} @var{dow} @var{dst} @var{utcoff})
1364 @end example
1365
1366 Here is what the elements mean:
1367
1368 @table @var
1369 @item seconds
1370 The number of seconds past the minute, as an integer between 0 and 59.
1371 On some operating systems, this is 60 for leap seconds.
1372 @item minutes
1373 The number of minutes past the hour, as an integer between 0 and 59.
1374 @item hour
1375 The hour of the day, as an integer between 0 and 23.
1376 @item day
1377 The day of the month, as an integer between 1 and 31.
1378 @item month
1379 The month of the year, as an integer between 1 and 12.
1380 @item year
1381 The year, an integer typically greater than 1900.
1382 @item dow
1383 The day of week, as an integer between 0 and 6, where 0 stands for
1384 Sunday.
1385 @item dst
1386 @code{t} if daylight saving time is effect, otherwise @code{nil}.
1387 @item utcoff
1388 An integer indicating the UTC offset in seconds, i.e., the number of
1389 seconds east of Greenwich.
1390 @end table
1391
1392 @strong{Common Lisp Note:} Common Lisp has different meanings for
1393 @var{dow} and @var{utcoff}.
1394 @end defun
1395
1396 @defun encode-time seconds minutes hour day month year &optional zone
1397 This function is the inverse of @code{decode-time}. It converts seven
1398 items of calendrical data into a list-of-integer time value. For the
1399 meanings of the arguments, see the table above under
1400 @code{decode-time}.
1401
1402 Year numbers less than 100 are not treated specially. If you want them
1403 to stand for years above 1900, or years above 2000, you must alter them
1404 yourself before you call @code{encode-time}.
1405
1406 The optional argument @var{zone} defaults to the current time zone rule.
1407 In addition to the usual time zone rule values, it can also be a list
1408 (as you would get from @code{current-time-zone}) or an integer (as
1409 from @code{decode-time}), applied without any further alteration for
1410 daylight saving time.
1411
1412 If you pass more than seven arguments to @code{encode-time}, the first
1413 six are used as @var{seconds} through @var{year}, the last argument is
1414 used as @var{zone}, and the arguments in between are ignored. This
1415 feature makes it possible to use the elements of a list returned by
1416 @code{decode-time} as the arguments to @code{encode-time}, like this:
1417
1418 @example
1419 (apply 'encode-time (decode-time @dots{}))
1420 @end example
1421
1422 You can perform simple date arithmetic by using out-of-range values for
1423 the @var{seconds}, @var{minutes}, @var{hour}, @var{day}, and @var{month}
1424 arguments; for example, day 0 means the day preceding the given month.
1425
1426 The operating system puts limits on the range of possible time values;
1427 if you try to encode a time that is out of range, an error results.
1428 For instance, years before 1970 do not work on some systems;
1429 on others, years as early as 1901 do work.
1430 @end defun
1431
1432 @node Time Parsing
1433 @section Parsing and Formatting Times
1434 @cindex time parsing
1435 @cindex time formatting
1436 @cindex formatting time values
1437
1438 These functions convert time values to text in a string, and vice versa.
1439 Time values are lists of two to four integers (@pxref{Time of Day}).
1440
1441 @defun date-to-time string
1442 This function parses the time-string @var{string} and returns the
1443 corresponding time value.
1444 @end defun
1445
1446 @defun format-time-string format-string &optional time zone
1447
1448 This function converts @var{time} (or the current time, if
1449 @var{time} is omitted) to a string according to
1450 @var{format-string}. The conversion uses the time zone rule @var{zone}
1451 (or the current time zone rule, if omitted). The argument
1452 @var{format-string} may contain @samp{%}-sequences which say to
1453 substitute parts of the time. Here is a table of what the
1454 @samp{%}-sequences mean:
1455
1456 @table @samp
1457 @item %a
1458 This stands for the abbreviated name of the day of week.
1459 @item %A
1460 This stands for the full name of the day of week.
1461 @item %b
1462 This stands for the abbreviated name of the month.
1463 @item %B
1464 This stands for the full name of the month.
1465 @item %c
1466 This is a synonym for @samp{%x %X}.
1467 @item %C
1468 This has a locale-specific meaning. In the default locale (named C), it
1469 is equivalent to @samp{%A, %B %e, %Y}.
1470 @item %d
1471 This stands for the day of month, zero-padded.
1472 @item %D
1473 This is a synonym for @samp{%m/%d/%y}.
1474 @item %e
1475 This stands for the day of month, blank-padded.
1476 @item %h
1477 This is a synonym for @samp{%b}.
1478 @item %H
1479 This stands for the hour (00--23).
1480 @item %I
1481 This stands for the hour (01--12).
1482 @item %j
1483 This stands for the day of the year (001--366).
1484 @item %k
1485 This stands for the hour (0--23), blank padded.
1486 @item %l
1487 This stands for the hour (1--12), blank padded.
1488 @item %m
1489 This stands for the month (01--12).
1490 @item %M
1491 This stands for the minute (00--59).
1492 @item %n
1493 This stands for a newline.
1494 @item %N
1495 This stands for the nanoseconds (000000000--999999999). To ask for
1496 fewer digits, use @samp{%3N} for milliseconds, @samp{%6N} for
1497 microseconds, etc. Any excess digits are discarded, without rounding.
1498 @item %p
1499 This stands for @samp{AM} or @samp{PM}, as appropriate.
1500 @item %r
1501 This is a synonym for @samp{%I:%M:%S %p}.
1502 @item %R
1503 This is a synonym for @samp{%H:%M}.
1504 @item %S
1505 This stands for the seconds (00--59).
1506 @item %t
1507 This stands for a tab character.
1508 @item %T
1509 This is a synonym for @samp{%H:%M:%S}.
1510 @item %U
1511 This stands for the week of the year (01--52), assuming that weeks
1512 start on Sunday.
1513 @item %w
1514 This stands for the numeric day of week (0--6). Sunday is day 0.
1515 @item %W
1516 This stands for the week of the year (01--52), assuming that weeks
1517 start on Monday.
1518 @item %x
1519 This has a locale-specific meaning. In the default locale (named
1520 @samp{C}), it is equivalent to @samp{%D}.
1521 @item %X
1522 This has a locale-specific meaning. In the default locale (named
1523 @samp{C}), it is equivalent to @samp{%T}.
1524 @item %y
1525 This stands for the year without century (00--99).
1526 @item %Y
1527 This stands for the year with century.
1528 @item %Z
1529 This stands for the time zone abbreviation (e.g., @samp{EST}).
1530 @item %z
1531 This stands for the time zone numerical offset (e.g., @samp{-0500}).
1532 @end table
1533
1534 You can also specify the field width and type of padding for any of
1535 these @samp{%}-sequences. This works as in @code{printf}: you write
1536 the field width as digits in the middle of a @samp{%}-sequences. If you
1537 start the field width with @samp{0}, it means to pad with zeros. If you
1538 start the field width with @samp{_}, it means to pad with spaces.
1539
1540 For example, @samp{%S} specifies the number of seconds since the minute;
1541 @samp{%03S} means to pad this with zeros to 3 positions, @samp{%_3S} to
1542 pad with spaces to 3 positions. Plain @samp{%3S} pads with zeros,
1543 because that is how @samp{%S} normally pads to two positions.
1544
1545 The characters @samp{E} and @samp{O} act as modifiers when used between
1546 @samp{%} and one of the letters in the table above. @samp{E} specifies
1547 using the current locale's ``alternative'' version of the date and time.
1548 In a Japanese locale, for example, @code{%Ex} might yield a date format
1549 based on the Japanese Emperors' reigns. @samp{E} is allowed in
1550 @samp{%Ec}, @samp{%EC}, @samp{%Ex}, @samp{%EX}, @samp{%Ey}, and
1551 @samp{%EY}.
1552
1553 @samp{O} means to use the current locale's ``alternative''
1554 representation of numbers, instead of the ordinary decimal digits. This
1555 is allowed with most letters, all the ones that output numbers.
1556
1557 If @var{universal} is non-@code{nil}, that means to describe the time as
1558 Universal Time; @code{nil} means describe it using what Emacs believes
1559 is the local time zone (see @code{current-time-zone}).
1560
1561 This function uses the C library function @code{strftime}
1562 (@pxref{Formatting Calendar Time,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
1563 Manual}) to do most of the work. In order to communicate with that
1564 function, it first encodes its argument using the coding system
1565 specified by @code{locale-coding-system} (@pxref{Locales}); after
1566 @code{strftime} returns the resulting string,
1567 @code{format-time-string} decodes the string using that same coding
1568 system.
1569 @end defun
1570
1571 @defun format-seconds format-string seconds
1572 This function converts its argument @var{seconds} into a string of
1573 years, days, hours, etc., according to @var{format-string}. The
1574 argument @var{format-string} may contain @samp{%}-sequences which
1575 control the conversion. Here is a table of what the
1576 @samp{%}-sequences mean:
1577
1578 @table @samp
1579 @item %y
1580 @itemx %Y
1581 The integer number of 365-day years.
1582 @item %d
1583 @itemx %D
1584 The integer number of days.
1585 @item %h
1586 @itemx %H
1587 The integer number of hours.
1588 @item %m
1589 @itemx %M
1590 The integer number of minutes.
1591 @item %s
1592 @itemx %S
1593 The integer number of seconds.
1594 @item %z
1595 Non-printing control flag. When it is used, other specifiers must be
1596 given in the order of decreasing size, i.e., years before days, hours
1597 before minutes, etc. Nothing will be produced in the result string to
1598 the left of @samp{%z} until the first non-zero conversion is
1599 encountered. For example, the default format used by
1600 @code{emacs-uptime} (@pxref{Processor Run Time, emacs-uptime})
1601 @w{@code{"%Y, %D, %H, %M, %z%S"}} means that the number of seconds
1602 will always be produced, but years, days, hours, and minutes will only
1603 be shown if they are non-zero.
1604 @item %%
1605 Produces a literal @samp{%}.
1606 @end table
1607
1608 Upper-case format sequences produce the units in addition to the
1609 numbers, lower-case formats produce only the numbers.
1610
1611 You can also specify the field width by following the @samp{%} with a
1612 number; shorter numbers will be padded with blanks. An optional
1613 period before the width requests zero-padding instead. For example,
1614 @code{"%.3Y"} might produce @code{"004 years"}.
1615
1616 @emph{Warning:} This function works only with values of @var{seconds}
1617 that don't exceed @code{most-positive-fixnum} (@pxref{Integer Basics,
1618 most-positive-fixnum}).
1619 @end defun
1620
1621 @node Processor Run Time
1622 @section Processor Run time
1623 @cindex processor run time
1624 @cindex Emacs process run time
1625
1626 Emacs provides several functions and primitives that return time,
1627 both elapsed and processor time, used by the Emacs process.
1628
1629 @deffn Command emacs-uptime &optional format
1630 @cindex uptime of Emacs
1631 This function returns a string representing the Emacs
1632 @dfn{uptime}---the elapsed wall-clock time this instance of Emacs is
1633 running. The string is formatted by @code{format-seconds} according
1634 to the optional argument @var{format}. For the available format
1635 descriptors, see @ref{Time Parsing, format-seconds}. If @var{format}
1636 is @code{nil} or omitted, it defaults to @code{"%Y, %D, %H, %M,
1637 %z%S"}.
1638
1639 When called interactively, it prints the uptime in the echo area.
1640 @end deffn
1641
1642 @defun get-internal-run-time
1643 This function returns the processor run time used by Emacs as a list
1644 of four integers: @code{(@var{sec-high} @var{sec-low} @var{microsec}
1645 @var{picosec})}, using the same format as @code{current-time}
1646 (@pxref{Time of Day}).
1647
1648 Note that the time returned by this function excludes the time Emacs
1649 was not using the processor, and if the Emacs process has several
1650 threads, the returned value is the sum of the processor times used up
1651 by all Emacs threads.
1652
1653 If the system doesn't provide a way to determine the processor run
1654 time, @code{get-internal-run-time} returns the same time as
1655 @code{current-time}.
1656 @end defun
1657
1658 @deffn Command emacs-init-time
1659 This function returns the duration of the Emacs initialization
1660 (@pxref{Startup Summary}) in seconds, as a string. When called
1661 interactively, it prints the duration in the echo area.
1662 @end deffn
1663
1664 @node Time Calculations
1665 @section Time Calculations
1666 @cindex time calculations
1667 @cindex comparing time values
1668 @cindex calendrical computations
1669
1670 These functions perform calendrical computations using time values
1671 (@pxref{Time of Day}).
1672
1673 @defun time-less-p t1 t2
1674 This returns @code{t} if time value @var{t1} is less than time value
1675 @var{t2}.
1676 @end defun
1677
1678 @defun time-subtract t1 t2
1679 This returns the time difference @var{t1} @minus{} @var{t2} between
1680 two time values, as a time value.
1681 @end defun
1682
1683 @defun time-add t1 t2
1684 This returns the sum of two time values, as a time value.
1685 One argument should represent a time difference rather than a point in time.
1686 Here is how to add a number of seconds to a time value:
1687
1688 @example
1689 (time-add @var{time} @var{seconds})
1690 @end example
1691 @end defun
1692
1693 @defun time-to-days time-value
1694 This function returns the number of days between the beginning of year
1695 1 and @var{time-value}.
1696 @end defun
1697
1698 @defun time-to-day-in-year time-value
1699 This returns the day number within the year corresponding to @var{time-value}.
1700 @end defun
1701
1702 @defun date-leap-year-p year
1703 This function returns @code{t} if @var{year} is a leap year.
1704 @end defun
1705
1706 @node Timers
1707 @section Timers for Delayed Execution
1708 @cindex timer
1709
1710 You can set up a @dfn{timer} to call a function at a specified
1711 future time or after a certain length of idleness.
1712
1713 Emacs cannot run timers at any arbitrary point in a Lisp program; it
1714 can run them only when Emacs could accept output from a subprocess:
1715 namely, while waiting or inside certain primitive functions such as
1716 @code{sit-for} or @code{read-event} which @emph{can} wait. Therefore, a
1717 timer's execution may be delayed if Emacs is busy. However, the time of
1718 execution is very precise if Emacs is idle.
1719
1720 Emacs binds @code{inhibit-quit} to @code{t} before calling the timer
1721 function, because quitting out of many timer functions can leave
1722 things in an inconsistent state. This is normally unproblematical
1723 because most timer functions don't do a lot of work. Indeed, for a
1724 timer to call a function that takes substantial time to run is likely
1725 to be annoying. If a timer function needs to allow quitting, it
1726 should use @code{with-local-quit} (@pxref{Quitting}). For example, if
1727 a timer function calls @code{accept-process-output} to receive output
1728 from an external process, that call should be wrapped inside
1729 @code{with-local-quit}, to ensure that @kbd{C-g} works if the external
1730 process hangs.
1731
1732 It is usually a bad idea for timer functions to alter buffer
1733 contents. When they do, they usually should call @code{undo-boundary}
1734 both before and after changing the buffer, to separate the timer's
1735 changes from user commands' changes and prevent a single undo entry
1736 from growing to be quite large.
1737
1738 Timer functions should also avoid calling functions that cause Emacs
1739 to wait, such as @code{sit-for} (@pxref{Waiting}). This can lead to
1740 unpredictable effects, since other timers (or even the same timer) can
1741 run while waiting. If a timer function needs to perform an action
1742 after a certain time has elapsed, it can do this by scheduling a new
1743 timer.
1744
1745 If a timer function calls functions that can change the match data,
1746 it should save and restore the match data. @xref{Saving Match Data}.
1747
1748 @deffn Command run-at-time time repeat function &rest args
1749 This sets up a timer that calls the function @var{function} with
1750 arguments @var{args} at time @var{time}. If @var{repeat} is a number
1751 (integer or floating point), the timer is scheduled to run again every
1752 @var{repeat} seconds after @var{time}. If @var{repeat} is @code{nil},
1753 the timer runs only once.
1754
1755 @var{time} may specify an absolute or a relative time.
1756
1757 Absolute times may be specified using a string with a limited variety
1758 of formats, and are taken to be times @emph{today}, even if already in
1759 the past. The recognized forms are @samp{@var{xxxx}},
1760 @samp{@var{x}:@var{xx}}, or @samp{@var{xx}:@var{xx}} (military time),
1761 and @samp{@var{xx}am}, @samp{@var{xx}AM}, @samp{@var{xx}pm},
1762 @samp{@var{xx}PM}, @samp{@var{xx}:@var{xx}am},
1763 @samp{@var{xx}:@var{xx}AM}, @samp{@var{xx}:@var{xx}pm}, or
1764 @samp{@var{xx}:@var{xx}PM}. A period can be used instead of a colon
1765 to separate the hour and minute parts.
1766
1767 To specify a relative time as a string, use numbers followed by units.
1768 For example:
1769
1770 @table @samp
1771 @item 1 min
1772 denotes 1 minute from now.
1773 @item 1 min 5 sec
1774 denotes 65 seconds from now.
1775 @item 1 min 2 sec 3 hour 4 day 5 week 6 fortnight 7 month 8 year
1776 denotes exactly 103 months, 123 days, and 10862 seconds from now.
1777 @end table
1778
1779 For relative time values, Emacs considers a month to be exactly thirty
1780 days, and a year to be exactly 365.25 days.
1781
1782 Not all convenient formats are strings. If @var{time} is a number
1783 (integer or floating point), that specifies a relative time measured in
1784 seconds. The result of @code{encode-time} can also be used to specify
1785 an absolute value for @var{time}.
1786
1787 In most cases, @var{repeat} has no effect on when @emph{first} call
1788 takes place---@var{time} alone specifies that. There is one exception:
1789 if @var{time} is @code{t}, then the timer runs whenever the time is a
1790 multiple of @var{repeat} seconds after the epoch. This is useful for
1791 functions like @code{display-time}.
1792
1793 The function @code{run-at-time} returns a timer value that identifies
1794 the particular scheduled future action. You can use this value to call
1795 @code{cancel-timer} (see below).
1796 @end deffn
1797
1798 A repeating timer nominally ought to run every @var{repeat} seconds,
1799 but remember that any invocation of a timer can be late. Lateness of
1800 one repetition has no effect on the scheduled time of the next
1801 repetition. For instance, if Emacs is busy computing for long enough
1802 to cover three scheduled repetitions of the timer, and then starts to
1803 wait, it will immediately call the timer function three times in
1804 immediate succession (presuming no other timers trigger before or
1805 between them). If you want a timer to run again no less than @var{n}
1806 seconds after the last invocation, don't use the @var{repeat} argument.
1807 Instead, the timer function should explicitly reschedule the timer.
1808
1809 @defopt timer-max-repeats
1810 This variable's value specifies the maximum number of times to repeat
1811 calling a timer function in a row, when many previously scheduled
1812 calls were unavoidably delayed.
1813 @end defopt
1814
1815 @defmac with-timeout (seconds timeout-forms@dots{}) body@dots{}
1816 Execute @var{body}, but give up after @var{seconds} seconds. If
1817 @var{body} finishes before the time is up, @code{with-timeout} returns
1818 the value of the last form in @var{body}. If, however, the execution of
1819 @var{body} is cut short by the timeout, then @code{with-timeout}
1820 executes all the @var{timeout-forms} and returns the value of the last
1821 of them.
1822
1823 This macro works by setting a timer to run after @var{seconds} seconds. If
1824 @var{body} finishes before that time, it cancels the timer. If the
1825 timer actually runs, it terminates execution of @var{body}, then
1826 executes @var{timeout-forms}.
1827
1828 Since timers can run within a Lisp program only when the program calls a
1829 primitive that can wait, @code{with-timeout} cannot stop executing
1830 @var{body} while it is in the midst of a computation---only when it
1831 calls one of those primitives. So use @code{with-timeout} only with a
1832 @var{body} that waits for input, not one that does a long computation.
1833 @end defmac
1834
1835 The function @code{y-or-n-p-with-timeout} provides a simple way to use
1836 a timer to avoid waiting too long for an answer. @xref{Yes-or-No
1837 Queries}.
1838
1839 @defun cancel-timer timer
1840 This cancels the requested action for @var{timer}, which should be a
1841 timer---usually, one previously returned by @code{run-at-time} or
1842 @code{run-with-idle-timer}. This cancels the effect of that call to
1843 one of these functions; the arrival of the specified time will not
1844 cause anything special to happen.
1845 @end defun
1846
1847 @node Idle Timers
1848 @section Idle Timers
1849 @cindex idle timers
1850
1851 Here is how to set up a timer that runs when Emacs is idle for a
1852 certain length of time. Aside from how to set them up, idle timers
1853 work just like ordinary timers.
1854
1855 @deffn Command run-with-idle-timer secs repeat function &rest args
1856 Set up a timer which runs the next time Emacs is idle for @var{secs}
1857 seconds. The value of @var{secs} may be a number or a value of the type
1858 returned by @code{current-idle-time}.
1859
1860 If @var{repeat} is @code{nil}, the timer runs just once, the first time
1861 Emacs remains idle for a long enough time. More often @var{repeat} is
1862 non-@code{nil}, which means to run the timer @emph{each time} Emacs
1863 remains idle for @var{secs} seconds.
1864
1865 The function @code{run-with-idle-timer} returns a timer value which you
1866 can use in calling @code{cancel-timer} (@pxref{Timers}).
1867 @end deffn
1868
1869 @cindex idleness
1870 Emacs becomes @dfn{idle} when it starts waiting for user input, and
1871 it remains idle until the user provides some input. If a timer is set
1872 for five seconds of idleness, it runs approximately five seconds after
1873 Emacs first becomes idle. Even if @var{repeat} is non-@code{nil},
1874 this timer will not run again as long as Emacs remains idle, because
1875 the duration of idleness will continue to increase and will not go
1876 down to five seconds again.
1877
1878 Emacs can do various things while idle: garbage collect, autosave or
1879 handle data from a subprocess. But these interludes during idleness do
1880 not interfere with idle timers, because they do not reset the clock of
1881 idleness to zero. An idle timer set for 600 seconds will run when ten
1882 minutes have elapsed since the last user command was finished, even if
1883 subprocess output has been accepted thousands of times within those ten
1884 minutes, and even if there have been garbage collections and autosaves.
1885
1886 When the user supplies input, Emacs becomes non-idle while executing the
1887 input. Then it becomes idle again, and all the idle timers that are
1888 set up to repeat will subsequently run another time, one by one.
1889
1890 Do not write an idle timer function containing a loop which does a
1891 certain amount of processing each time around, and exits when
1892 @code{(input-pending-p)} is non-@code{nil}. This approach seems very
1893 natural but has two problems:
1894
1895 @itemize
1896 @item
1897 It blocks out all process output (since Emacs accepts process output
1898 only while waiting).
1899
1900 @item
1901 It blocks out any idle timers that ought to run during that time.
1902 @end itemize
1903
1904 @noindent
1905 Similarly, do not write an idle timer function that sets up another
1906 idle timer (including the same idle timer) with @var{secs} argument
1907 less than or equal to the current idleness time. Such a timer will
1908 run almost immediately, and continue running again and again, instead
1909 of waiting for the next time Emacs becomes idle. The correct approach
1910 is to reschedule with an appropriate increment of the current value of
1911 the idleness time, as described below.
1912
1913 @defun current-idle-time
1914 If Emacs is idle, this function returns the length of time Emacs has
1915 been idle, as a list of four integers: @code{(@var{sec-high}
1916 @var{sec-low} @var{microsec} @var{picosec})}, using the same format as
1917 @code{current-time} (@pxref{Time of Day}).
1918
1919 When Emacs is not idle, @code{current-idle-time} returns @code{nil}.
1920 This is a convenient way to test whether Emacs is idle.
1921 @end defun
1922
1923 The main use of @code{current-idle-time} is when an idle timer
1924 function wants to ``take a break'' for a while. It can set up another
1925 idle timer to call the same function again, after a few seconds more
1926 idleness. Here's an example:
1927
1928 @example
1929 (defvar my-resume-timer nil
1930 "Timer for `my-timer-function' to reschedule itself, or nil.")
1931
1932 (defun my-timer-function ()
1933 ;; @r{If the user types a command while @code{my-resume-timer}}
1934 ;; @r{is active, the next time this function is called from}
1935 ;; @r{its main idle timer, deactivate @code{my-resume-timer}.}
1936 (when my-resume-timer
1937 (cancel-timer my-resume-timer))
1938 ...@var{do the work for a while}...
1939 (when @var{taking-a-break}
1940 (setq my-resume-timer
1941 (run-with-idle-timer
1942 ;; Compute an idle time @var{break-length}
1943 ;; more than the current value.
1944 (time-add (current-idle-time) @var{break-length})
1945 nil
1946 'my-timer-function))))
1947 @end example
1948
1949 @node Terminal Input
1950 @section Terminal Input
1951 @cindex terminal input
1952
1953 This section describes functions and variables for recording or
1954 manipulating terminal input. See @ref{Display}, for related
1955 functions.
1956
1957 @menu
1958 * Input Modes:: Options for how input is processed.
1959 * Recording Input:: Saving histories of recent or all input events.
1960 @end menu
1961
1962 @node Input Modes
1963 @subsection Input Modes
1964 @cindex input modes
1965 @cindex terminal input modes
1966
1967 @defun set-input-mode interrupt flow meta &optional quit-char
1968 This function sets the mode for reading keyboard input. If
1969 @var{interrupt} is non-@code{nil}, then Emacs uses input interrupts.
1970 If it is @code{nil}, then it uses @sc{cbreak} mode. The default
1971 setting is system-dependent. Some systems always use @sc{cbreak} mode
1972 regardless of what is specified.
1973
1974 When Emacs communicates directly with X, it ignores this argument and
1975 uses interrupts if that is the way it knows how to communicate.
1976
1977 If @var{flow} is non-@code{nil}, then Emacs uses @sc{xon/xoff}
1978 (@kbd{C-q}, @kbd{C-s}) flow control for output to the terminal. This
1979 has no effect except in @sc{cbreak} mode.
1980
1981 The argument @var{meta} controls support for input character codes
1982 above 127. If @var{meta} is @code{t}, Emacs converts characters with
1983 the 8th bit set into Meta characters. If @var{meta} is @code{nil},
1984 Emacs disregards the 8th bit; this is necessary when the terminal uses
1985 it as a parity bit. If @var{meta} is neither @code{t} nor @code{nil},
1986 Emacs uses all 8 bits of input unchanged. This is good for terminals
1987 that use 8-bit character sets.
1988
1989 If @var{quit-char} is non-@code{nil}, it specifies the character to
1990 use for quitting. Normally this character is @kbd{C-g}.
1991 @xref{Quitting}.
1992 @end defun
1993
1994 The @code{current-input-mode} function returns the input mode settings
1995 Emacs is currently using.
1996
1997 @defun current-input-mode
1998 This function returns the current mode for reading keyboard input. It
1999 returns a list, corresponding to the arguments of @code{set-input-mode},
2000 of the form @code{(@var{interrupt} @var{flow} @var{meta} @var{quit})} in
2001 which:
2002 @table @var
2003 @item interrupt
2004 is non-@code{nil} when Emacs is using interrupt-driven input. If
2005 @code{nil}, Emacs is using @sc{cbreak} mode.
2006 @item flow
2007 is non-@code{nil} if Emacs uses @sc{xon/xoff} (@kbd{C-q}, @kbd{C-s})
2008 flow control for output to the terminal. This value is meaningful only
2009 when @var{interrupt} is @code{nil}.
2010 @item meta
2011 is @code{t} if Emacs treats the eighth bit of input characters as
2012 the meta bit; @code{nil} means Emacs clears the eighth bit of every
2013 input character; any other value means Emacs uses all eight bits as the
2014 basic character code.
2015 @item quit
2016 is the character Emacs currently uses for quitting, usually @kbd{C-g}.
2017 @end table
2018 @end defun
2019
2020 @node Recording Input
2021 @subsection Recording Input
2022 @cindex recording input
2023
2024 @defun recent-keys
2025 This function returns a vector containing the last 300 input events from
2026 the keyboard or mouse. All input events are included, whether or not
2027 they were used as parts of key sequences. Thus, you always get the last
2028 300 input events, not counting events generated by keyboard macros.
2029 (These are excluded because they are less interesting for debugging; it
2030 should be enough to see the events that invoked the macros.)
2031
2032 A call to @code{clear-this-command-keys} (@pxref{Command Loop Info})
2033 causes this function to return an empty vector immediately afterward.
2034 @end defun
2035
2036 @deffn Command open-dribble-file filename
2037 @cindex dribble file
2038 This function opens a @dfn{dribble file} named @var{filename}. When a
2039 dribble file is open, each input event from the keyboard or mouse (but
2040 not those from keyboard macros) is written in that file. A
2041 non-character event is expressed using its printed representation
2042 surrounded by @samp{<@dots{}>}. Be aware that sensitive information
2043 (such as passwords) may end up recorded in the dribble file.
2044
2045 You close the dribble file by calling this function with an argument
2046 of @code{nil}.
2047 @end deffn
2048
2049 See also the @code{open-termscript} function (@pxref{Terminal Output}).
2050
2051 @node Terminal Output
2052 @section Terminal Output
2053 @cindex terminal output
2054
2055 The terminal output functions send output to a text terminal, or keep
2056 track of output sent to the terminal. The variable @code{baud-rate}
2057 tells you what Emacs thinks is the output speed of the terminal.
2058
2059 @defopt baud-rate
2060 This variable's value is the output speed of the terminal, as far as
2061 Emacs knows. Setting this variable does not change the speed of actual
2062 data transmission, but the value is used for calculations such as
2063 padding.
2064
2065 It also affects decisions about whether to scroll part of the
2066 screen or repaint on text terminals. @xref{Forcing Redisplay},
2067 for the corresponding functionality on graphical terminals.
2068
2069 The value is measured in baud.
2070 @end defopt
2071
2072 If you are running across a network, and different parts of the
2073 network work at different baud rates, the value returned by Emacs may be
2074 different from the value used by your local terminal. Some network
2075 protocols communicate the local terminal speed to the remote machine, so
2076 that Emacs and other programs can get the proper value, but others do
2077 not. If Emacs has the wrong value, it makes decisions that are less
2078 than optimal. To fix the problem, set @code{baud-rate}.
2079
2080 @defun send-string-to-terminal string &optional terminal
2081 This function sends @var{string} to @var{terminal} without alteration.
2082 Control characters in @var{string} have terminal-dependent effects.
2083 This function operates only on text terminals. @var{terminal} may be
2084 a terminal object, a frame, or @code{nil} for the selected frame's
2085 terminal. In batch mode, @var{string} is sent to @code{stdout} when
2086 @var{terminal} is @code{nil}.
2087
2088 One use of this function is to define function keys on terminals that
2089 have downloadable function key definitions. For example, this is how (on
2090 certain terminals) to define function key 4 to move forward four
2091 characters (by transmitting the characters @kbd{C-u C-f} to the
2092 computer):
2093
2094 @example
2095 @group
2096 (send-string-to-terminal "\eF4\^U\^F")
2097 @result{} nil
2098 @end group
2099 @end example
2100 @end defun
2101
2102 @deffn Command open-termscript filename
2103 @cindex termscript file
2104 This function is used to open a @dfn{termscript file} that will record
2105 all the characters sent by Emacs to the terminal. It returns
2106 @code{nil}. Termscript files are useful for investigating problems
2107 where Emacs garbles the screen, problems that are due to incorrect
2108 Termcap entries or to undesirable settings of terminal options more
2109 often than to actual Emacs bugs. Once you are certain which characters
2110 were actually output, you can determine reliably whether they correspond
2111 to the Termcap specifications in use.
2112
2113 @example
2114 @group
2115 (open-termscript "../junk/termscript")
2116 @result{} nil
2117 @end group
2118 @end example
2119
2120 You close the termscript file by calling this function with an
2121 argument of @code{nil}.
2122
2123 See also @code{open-dribble-file} in @ref{Recording Input}.
2124 @end deffn
2125
2126 @node Sound Output
2127 @section Sound Output
2128 @cindex sound
2129
2130 To play sound using Emacs, use the function @code{play-sound}. Only
2131 certain systems are supported; if you call @code{play-sound} on a
2132 system which cannot really do the job, it gives an error.
2133
2134 @c FIXME: Add indexes for Au and WAV? --xfq
2135 The sound must be stored as a file in RIFF-WAVE format (@samp{.wav})
2136 or Sun Audio format (@samp{.au}).
2137
2138 @defun play-sound sound
2139 This function plays a specified sound. The argument, @var{sound}, has
2140 the form @code{(sound @var{properties}...)}, where the @var{properties}
2141 consist of alternating keywords (particular symbols recognized
2142 specially) and values corresponding to them.
2143
2144 Here is a table of the keywords that are currently meaningful in
2145 @var{sound}, and their meanings:
2146
2147 @table @code
2148 @item :file @var{file}
2149 This specifies the file containing the sound to play.
2150 If the file name is not absolute, it is expanded against
2151 the directory @code{data-directory}.
2152
2153 @item :data @var{data}
2154 This specifies the sound to play without need to refer to a file. The
2155 value, @var{data}, should be a string containing the same bytes as a
2156 sound file. We recommend using a unibyte string.
2157
2158 @item :volume @var{volume}
2159 This specifies how loud to play the sound. It should be a number in the
2160 range of 0 to 1. The default is to use whatever volume has been
2161 specified before.
2162
2163 @item :device @var{device}
2164 This specifies the system device on which to play the sound, as a
2165 string. The default device is system-dependent.
2166 @end table
2167
2168 Before actually playing the sound, @code{play-sound}
2169 calls the functions in the list @code{play-sound-functions}.
2170 Each function is called with one argument, @var{sound}.
2171 @end defun
2172
2173 @deffn Command play-sound-file file &optional volume device
2174 This function is an alternative interface to playing a sound @var{file}
2175 specifying an optional @var{volume} and @var{device}.
2176 @end deffn
2177
2178 @defvar play-sound-functions
2179 A list of functions to be called before playing a sound. Each function
2180 is called with one argument, a property list that describes the sound.
2181 @end defvar
2182
2183 @node X11 Keysyms
2184 @section Operating on X11 Keysyms
2185 @cindex X11 keysyms
2186
2187 To define system-specific X11 keysyms, set the variable
2188 @code{system-key-alist}.
2189
2190 @defvar system-key-alist
2191 This variable's value should be an alist with one element for each
2192 system-specific keysym. Each element has the form @code{(@var{code}
2193 . @var{symbol})}, where @var{code} is the numeric keysym code (not
2194 including the ``vendor specific'' bit,
2195 @ifnottex
2196 @minus{}2**28),
2197 @end ifnottex
2198 @tex
2199 $-2^{28}$),
2200 @end tex
2201 and @var{symbol} is the name for the function key.
2202
2203 For example @code{(168 . mute-acute)} defines a system-specific key (used
2204 by HP X servers) whose numeric code is
2205 @ifnottex
2206 @minus{}2**28
2207 @end ifnottex
2208 @tex
2209 $-2^{28}$
2210 @end tex
2211 + 168.
2212
2213 It is not crucial to exclude from the alist the keysyms of other X
2214 servers; those do no harm, as long as they don't conflict with the ones
2215 used by the X server actually in use.
2216
2217 The variable is always local to the current terminal, and cannot be
2218 buffer-local. @xref{Multiple Terminals}.
2219 @end defvar
2220
2221 You can specify which keysyms Emacs should use for the Meta, Alt, Hyper, and Super modifiers by setting these variables:
2222
2223 @defvar x-alt-keysym
2224 @defvarx x-meta-keysym
2225 @defvarx x-hyper-keysym
2226 @defvarx x-super-keysym
2227 The name of the keysym that should stand for the Alt modifier
2228 (respectively, for Meta, Hyper, and Super). For example, here is
2229 how to swap the Meta and Alt modifiers within Emacs:
2230 @lisp
2231 (setq x-alt-keysym 'meta)
2232 (setq x-meta-keysym 'alt)
2233 @end lisp
2234 @end defvar
2235
2236 @node Batch Mode
2237 @section Batch Mode
2238 @cindex batch mode
2239
2240 The command-line option @samp{-batch} causes Emacs to run
2241 noninteractively. In this mode, Emacs does not read commands from the
2242 terminal, it does not alter the terminal modes, and it does not expect
2243 to be outputting to an erasable screen. The idea is that you specify
2244 Lisp programs to run; when they are finished, Emacs should exit. The
2245 way to specify the programs to run is with @samp{-l @var{file}}, which
2246 loads the library named @var{file}, or @samp{-f @var{function}}, which
2247 calls @var{function} with no arguments, or @samp{--eval @var{form}}.
2248
2249 Any Lisp program output that would normally go to the echo area,
2250 either using @code{message}, or using @code{prin1}, etc., with @code{t}
2251 as the stream, goes instead to Emacs's standard error descriptor when
2252 in batch mode. Similarly, input that would normally come from the
2253 minibuffer is read from the standard input descriptor.
2254 Thus, Emacs behaves much like a noninteractive
2255 application program. (The echo area output that Emacs itself normally
2256 generates, such as command echoing, is suppressed entirely.)
2257
2258 @defvar noninteractive
2259 This variable is non-@code{nil} when Emacs is running in batch mode.
2260 @end defvar
2261
2262 @node Session Management
2263 @section Session Management
2264 @cindex session manager
2265
2266 Emacs supports the X Session Management Protocol, which is used to
2267 suspend and restart applications. In the X Window System, a program
2268 called the @dfn{session manager} is responsible for keeping track of
2269 the applications that are running. When the X server shuts down, the
2270 session manager asks applications to save their state, and delays the
2271 actual shutdown until they respond. An application can also cancel
2272 the shutdown.
2273
2274 When the session manager restarts a suspended session, it directs
2275 these applications to individually reload their saved state. It does
2276 this by specifying a special command-line argument that says what
2277 saved session to restore. For Emacs, this argument is @samp{--smid
2278 @var{session}}.
2279
2280 @defvar emacs-save-session-functions
2281 @cindex session file
2282 Emacs supports saving state via a hook called
2283 @code{emacs-save-session-functions}. Emacs runs this hook when the
2284 session manager tells it that the window system is shutting down. The
2285 functions are called with no arguments, and with the current buffer
2286 set to a temporary buffer. Each function can use @code{insert} to add
2287 Lisp code to this buffer. At the end, Emacs saves the buffer in a
2288 file, called the @dfn{session file}.
2289
2290 @findex emacs-session-restore
2291 Subsequently, when the session manager restarts Emacs, it loads the
2292 session file automatically (@pxref{Loading}). This is performed by a
2293 function named @code{emacs-session-restore}, which is called during
2294 startup. @xref{Startup Summary}.
2295
2296 If a function in @code{emacs-save-session-functions} returns
2297 non-@code{nil}, Emacs tells the session manager to cancel the
2298 shutdown.
2299 @end defvar
2300
2301 Here is an example that just inserts some text into @file{*scratch*} when
2302 Emacs is restarted by the session manager.
2303
2304 @example
2305 @group
2306 (add-hook 'emacs-save-session-functions 'save-yourself-test)
2307 @end group
2308
2309 @group
2310 (defun save-yourself-test ()
2311 (insert "(save-current-buffer
2312 (switch-to-buffer \"*scratch*\")
2313 (insert \"I am restored\"))")
2314 nil)
2315 @end group
2316 @end example
2317
2318 @node Desktop Notifications
2319 @section Desktop Notifications
2320 @cindex desktop notifications
2321 @cindex notifications, on desktop
2322
2323 Emacs is able to send @dfn{notifications} on systems that support the
2324 freedesktop.org Desktop Notifications Specification. In order to use
2325 this functionality, Emacs must have been compiled with D-Bus support,
2326 and the @code{notifications} library must be loaded. @xref{Top, ,
2327 D-Bus,dbus,D-Bus integration in Emacs}.
2328
2329 @defun notifications-notify &rest params
2330 This function sends a notification to the desktop via D-Bus,
2331 consisting of the parameters specified by the @var{params} arguments.
2332 These arguments should consist of alternating keyword and value pairs.
2333 The supported keywords and values are as follows:
2334
2335 @table @code
2336 @item :bus @var{bus}
2337 The D-Bus bus. This argument is needed only if a bus other than
2338 @code{:session} shall be used.
2339
2340 @item :title @var{title}
2341 The notification title.
2342
2343 @item :body @var{text}
2344 The notification body text. Depending on the implementation of the
2345 notification server, the text could contain HTML markups, like
2346 @samp{"<b>bold text</b>"}, hyperlinks, or images. Special HTML
2347 characters must be encoded, as @samp{"Contact
2348 &lt;postmaster@@localhost&gt;!"}.
2349
2350 @item :app-name @var{name}
2351 The name of the application sending the notification. The default is
2352 @code{notifications-application-name}.
2353
2354 @item :replaces-id @var{id}
2355 The notification @var{id} that this notification replaces. @var{id}
2356 must be the result of a previous @code{notifications-notify} call.
2357
2358 @item :app-icon @var{icon-file}
2359 The file name of the notification icon. If set to @code{nil}, no icon
2360 is displayed. The default is @code{notifications-application-icon}.
2361
2362 @item :actions (@var{key} @var{title} @var{key} @var{title} ...)
2363 A list of actions to be applied. @var{key} and @var{title} are both
2364 strings. The default action (usually invoked by clicking the
2365 notification) should have a key named @samp{"default"}. The title can
2366 be anything, though implementations are free not to display it.
2367
2368 @item :timeout @var{timeout}
2369 The timeout time in milliseconds since the display of the notification
2370 at which the notification should automatically close. If @minus{}1, the
2371 notification's expiration time is dependent on the notification
2372 server's settings, and may vary for the type of notification. If 0,
2373 the notification never expires. Default value is @minus{}1.
2374
2375 @item :urgency @var{urgency}
2376 The urgency level. It can be @code{low}, @code{normal}, or @code{critical}.
2377
2378 @item :action-items
2379 When this keyword is given, the @var{title} string of the actions is
2380 interpreted as icon name.
2381
2382 @item :category @var{category}
2383 The type of notification this is, a string. See the
2384 @uref{http://developer.gnome.org/notification-spec/#categories,
2385 Desktop Notifications Specification} for a list of standard
2386 categories.
2387
2388 @item :desktop-entry @var{filename}
2389 This specifies the name of the desktop filename representing the
2390 calling program, like @samp{"emacs"}.
2391
2392 @item :image-data (@var{width} @var{height} @var{rowstride} @var{has-alpha} @var{bits} @var{channels} @var{data})
2393 This is a raw data image format that describes the width, height,
2394 rowstride, whether there is an alpha channel, bits per sample,
2395 channels and image data, respectively.
2396
2397 @item :image-path @var{path}
2398 This is represented either as a URI (@samp{file://} is the only URI
2399 schema supported right now) or a name in a freedesktop.org-compliant
2400 icon theme from @samp{$XDG_DATA_DIRS/icons}.
2401
2402 @item :sound-file @var{filename}
2403 The path to a sound file to play when the notification pops up.
2404
2405 @item :sound-name @var{name}
2406 A themable named sound from the freedesktop.org sound naming
2407 specification from @samp{$XDG_DATA_DIRS/sounds}, to play when the
2408 notification pops up. Similar to the icon name, only for sounds. An
2409 example would be @samp{"message-new-instant"}.
2410
2411 @item :suppress-sound
2412 Causes the server to suppress playing any sounds, if it has that
2413 ability.
2414
2415 @item :resident
2416 When set the server will not automatically remove the notification
2417 when an action has been invoked. The notification will remain resident
2418 in the server until it is explicitly removed by the user or by the
2419 sender. This hint is likely only useful when the server has the
2420 @code{:persistence} capability.
2421
2422 @item :transient
2423 When set the server will treat the notification as transient and
2424 by-pass the server's persistence capability, if it should exist.
2425
2426 @item :x @var{position}
2427 @itemx :y @var{position}
2428 Specifies the X, Y location on the screen that the
2429 notification should point to. Both arguments must be used together.
2430
2431 @item :on-action @var{function}
2432 Function to call when an action is invoked. The notification @var{id}
2433 and the @var{key} of the action are passed as arguments to the
2434 function.
2435
2436 @item :on-close @var{function}
2437 Function to call when the notification has been closed by timeout or
2438 by the user. The function receive the notification @var{id} and the closing
2439 @var{reason} as arguments:
2440
2441 @itemize
2442 @item @code{expired} if the notification has expired
2443 @item @code{dismissed} if the notification was dismissed by the user
2444 @item @code{close-notification} if the notification was closed by a call to
2445 @code{notifications-close-notification}
2446 @item @code{undefined} if the notification server hasn't provided a reason
2447 @end itemize
2448 @end table
2449
2450 Which parameters are accepted by the notification server can be
2451 checked via @code{notifications-get-capabilities}.
2452
2453 This function returns a notification id, an integer, which can be used
2454 to manipulate the notification item with
2455 @code{notifications-close-notification} or the @code{:replaces-id}
2456 argument of another @code{notifications-notify} call. For example:
2457
2458 @example
2459 @group
2460 (defun my-on-action-function (id key)
2461 (message "Message %d, key \"%s\" pressed" id key))
2462 @result{} my-on-action-function
2463 @end group
2464
2465 @group
2466 (defun my-on-close-function (id reason)
2467 (message "Message %d, closed due to \"%s\"" id reason))
2468 @result{} my-on-close-function
2469 @end group
2470
2471 @group
2472 (notifications-notify
2473 :title "Title"
2474 :body "This is <b>important</b>."
2475 :actions '("Confirm" "I agree" "Refuse" "I disagree")
2476 :on-action 'my-on-action-function
2477 :on-close 'my-on-close-function)
2478 @result{} 22
2479 @end group
2480
2481 @group
2482 A message window opens on the desktop. Press "I agree"
2483 @result{} Message 22, key "Confirm" pressed
2484 Message 22, closed due to "dismissed"
2485 @end group
2486 @end example
2487 @end defun
2488
2489 @defun notifications-close-notification id &optional bus
2490 This function closes a notification with identifier @var{id}.
2491 @var{bus} can be a string denoting a D-Bus connection, the default is
2492 @code{:session}.
2493 @end defun
2494
2495 @defun notifications-get-capabilities &optional bus
2496 Returns the capabilities of the notification server, a list of
2497 symbols. @var{bus} can be a string denoting a D-Bus connection, the
2498 default is @code{:session}. The following capabilities can be
2499 expected:
2500
2501 @table @code
2502 @item :actions
2503 The server will provide the specified actions to the user.
2504
2505 @item :body
2506 Supports body text.
2507
2508 @item :body-hyperlinks
2509 The server supports hyperlinks in the notifications.
2510
2511 @item :body-images
2512 The server supports images in the notifications.
2513
2514 @item :body-markup
2515 Supports markup in the body text.
2516
2517 @item :icon-multi
2518 The server will render an animation of all the frames in a given image
2519 array.
2520
2521 @item :icon-static
2522 Supports display of exactly 1 frame of any given image array. This
2523 value is mutually exclusive with @code{:icon-multi}.
2524
2525 @item :persistence
2526 The server supports persistence of notifications.
2527
2528 @item :sound
2529 The server supports sounds on notifications.
2530 @end table
2531
2532 Further vendor-specific caps start with @code{:x-vendor}, like
2533 @code{:x-gnome-foo-cap}.
2534 @end defun
2535
2536 @defun notifications-get-server-information &optional bus
2537 Return information on the notification server, a list of strings.
2538 @var{bus} can be a string denoting a D-Bus connection, the default is
2539 @code{:session}. The returned list is @code{(@var{name} @var{vendor}
2540 @var{version} @var{spec-version})}.
2541
2542 @table @var
2543 @item name
2544 The product name of the server.
2545
2546 @item vendor
2547 The vendor name. For example, @samp{"KDE"}, @samp{"GNOME"}.
2548
2549 @item version
2550 The server's version number.
2551
2552 @item spec-version
2553 The specification version the server is compliant with.
2554 @end table
2555
2556 If @var{spec_version} is @code{nil}, the server supports a
2557 specification prior to @samp{"1.0"}.
2558 @end defun
2559
2560 @node File Notifications
2561 @section Notifications on File Changes
2562 @cindex file notifications
2563 @cindex watch, for filesystem events
2564
2565 Several operating systems support watching of filesystems for changes
2566 of files. If configured properly, Emacs links a respective library
2567 like @file{gfilenotify}, @file{inotify}, or @file{w32notify}
2568 statically. These libraries enable watching of filesystems on the
2569 local machine.
2570
2571 It is also possible to watch filesystems on remote machines,
2572 @pxref{Remote Files,, Remote Files, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}
2573 This does not depend on one of the libraries linked to Emacs.
2574
2575 Since all these libraries emit different events on notified file
2576 changes, there is the Emacs library @code{filenotify} which provides a
2577 unique interface.
2578
2579 @defun file-notify-add-watch file flags callback
2580 Add a watch for filesystem events pertaining to @var{file}. This
2581 arranges for filesystem events pertaining to @var{file} to be reported
2582 to Emacs.
2583
2584 The returned value is a descriptor for the added watch. Its type
2585 depends on the underlying library, it cannot be assumed to be an
2586 integer as in the example below. It should be used for comparison by
2587 @code{equal} only.
2588
2589 If the @var{file} cannot be watched for some reason, this function
2590 signals a @code{file-notify-error} error.
2591
2592 Sometimes, mounted filesystems cannot be watched for file changes.
2593 This is not detected by this function, a non-@code{nil} return value
2594 does not guarantee that changes on @var{file} will be notified.
2595
2596 @var{flags} is a list of conditions to set what will be watched for.
2597 It can include the following symbols:
2598
2599 @table @code
2600 @item change
2601 watch for file changes
2602 @item attribute-change
2603 watch for file attribute changes, like permissions or modification
2604 time
2605 @end table
2606
2607 If @var{file} is a directory, changes for all files in that directory
2608 will be notified. This does not work recursively.
2609
2610 When any event happens, Emacs will call the @var{callback} function
2611 passing it a single argument @var{event}, which is of the form
2612
2613 @lisp
2614 (@var{descriptor} @var{action} @var{file} [@var{file1}])
2615 @end lisp
2616
2617 @var{descriptor} is the same object as the one returned by this
2618 function. @var{action} is the description of the event. It could be
2619 any one of the following symbols:
2620
2621 @table @code
2622 @item created
2623 @var{file} was created
2624 @item deleted
2625 @var{file} was deleted
2626 @item changed
2627 @var{file} has changed
2628 @item renamed
2629 @var{file} has been renamed to @var{file1}
2630 @item attribute-changed
2631 a @var{file} attribute was changed
2632 @end table
2633
2634 @var{file} and @var{file1} are the name of the file(s) whose event is
2635 being reported. For example:
2636
2637 @example
2638 @group
2639 (require 'filenotify)
2640 @result{} filenotify
2641 @end group
2642
2643 @group
2644 (defun my-notify-callback (event)
2645 (message "Event %S" event))
2646 @result{} my-notify-callback
2647 @end group
2648
2649 @group
2650 (file-notify-add-watch
2651 "/tmp" '(change attribute-change) 'my-notify-callback)
2652 @result{} 35025468
2653 @end group
2654
2655 @group
2656 (write-region "foo" nil "/tmp/foo")
2657 @result{} Event (35025468 created "/tmp/.#foo")
2658 Event (35025468 created "/tmp/foo")
2659 Event (35025468 changed "/tmp/foo")
2660 Event (35025468 deleted "/tmp/.#foo")
2661 @end group
2662
2663 @group
2664 (write-region "bla" nil "/tmp/foo")
2665 @result{} Event (35025468 created "/tmp/.#foo")
2666 Event (35025468 changed "/tmp/foo") [2 times]
2667 Event (35025468 deleted "/tmp/.#foo")
2668 @end group
2669
2670 @group
2671 (set-file-modes "/tmp/foo" (default-file-modes))
2672 @result{} Event (35025468 attribute-changed "/tmp/foo")
2673 @end group
2674 @end example
2675
2676 Whether the action @code{renamed} is returned, depends on the used
2677 watch library. It can be expected, when a directory is watched, and
2678 both @var{file} and @var{file1} belong to this directory. Otherwise,
2679 the actions @code{deleted} and @code{created} could be returned in a
2680 random order.
2681
2682 @example
2683 @group
2684 (rename-file "/tmp/foo" "/tmp/bla")
2685 @result{} Event (35025468 renamed "/tmp/foo" "/tmp/bla")
2686 @end group
2687
2688 @group
2689 (file-notify-add-watch
2690 "/var/tmp" '(change attribute-change) 'my-notify-callback)
2691 @result{} 35025504
2692 @end group
2693
2694 @group
2695 (rename-file "/tmp/bla" "/var/tmp/bla")
2696 @result{} ;; gfilenotify
2697 Event (35025468 renamed "/tmp/bla" "/var/tmp/bla")
2698
2699 @result{} ;; inotify
2700 Event (35025504 created "/var/tmp/bla")
2701 Event (35025468 deleted "/tmp/bla")
2702 @end group
2703 @end example
2704 @end defun
2705
2706 @defun file-notify-rm-watch descriptor
2707 Removes an existing file watch specified by its @var{descriptor}.
2708 @var{descriptor} should be an object returned by
2709 @code{file-notify-add-watch}.
2710 @end defun
2711
2712 @node Dynamic Libraries
2713 @section Dynamically Loaded Libraries
2714 @cindex dynamic libraries
2715
2716 A @dfn{dynamically loaded library} is a library that is loaded on
2717 demand, when its facilities are first needed. Emacs supports such
2718 on-demand loading of support libraries for some of its features.
2719
2720 @defvar dynamic-library-alist
2721 This is an alist of dynamic libraries and external library files
2722 implementing them.
2723
2724 Each element is a list of the form
2725 @w{@code{(@var{library} @var{files}@dots{})}}, where the @code{car} is
2726 a symbol representing a supported external library, and the rest are
2727 strings giving alternate filenames for that library.
2728
2729 Emacs tries to load the library from the files in the order they
2730 appear in the list; if none is found, the Emacs session won't have
2731 access to that library, and the features it provides will be
2732 unavailable.
2733
2734 Image support on some platforms uses this facility. Here's an example
2735 of setting this variable for supporting images on MS-Windows:
2736
2737 @example
2738 (setq dynamic-library-alist
2739 '((xpm "libxpm.dll" "xpm4.dll" "libXpm-nox4.dll")
2740 (png "libpng12d.dll" "libpng12.dll" "libpng.dll"
2741 "libpng13d.dll" "libpng13.dll")
2742 (jpeg "jpeg62.dll" "libjpeg.dll" "jpeg-62.dll"
2743 "jpeg.dll")
2744 (tiff "libtiff3.dll" "libtiff.dll")
2745 (gif "giflib4.dll" "libungif4.dll" "libungif.dll")
2746 (svg "librsvg-2-2.dll")
2747 (gdk-pixbuf "libgdk_pixbuf-2.0-0.dll")
2748 (glib "libglib-2.0-0.dll")
2749 (gobject "libgobject-2.0-0.dll")))
2750 @end example
2751
2752 Note that image types @code{pbm} and @code{xbm} do not need entries in
2753 this variable because they do not depend on external libraries and are
2754 always available in Emacs.
2755
2756 Also note that this variable is not meant to be a generic facility for
2757 accessing external libraries; only those already known by Emacs can
2758 be loaded through it.
2759
2760 This variable is ignored if the given @var{library} is statically
2761 linked into Emacs.
2762 @end defvar