NOTE: the Free Software Foundation agreed to put this file, and the programs it describes, into the Emacs distribution ONLY on the condition that we would not lift a finger to maintain them! We are willing to *pass along* support for Sun windows, but we are not willing to let it distract us from what we are trying to do. If you have complaints or suggestions about Sun windows support, send them to peck@sun.com, who is the maintainer. The interface between GNU Emacs and Sun windows consists of the program etc/emacstool, the Lisp programs lisp/sun-*.el and lisp/term/sun.el, and the C source file src/sunfns.c. It is documented with a man page, etc/emacstool.1. To enable use of these files and programs, define the configuration switch HAVE_SUN_WINDOWS in src/config.h before compiling Emacs. The definition of HAVE_SUN_WINDOWS must precede the #include m-sun3.h or #include m-sun4.h. If you must change PURESIZE, do so after the #include m-sun3.h This software is based on SunView for Sun UNIX 4.2 Release 3.2, and will not work "as is" on previous releases, eg 3.0 or 3.1. Using Emacstool with GNU Emacs: The GNU Emacs files lisp/term/sun.el, lisp/sun-mouse.el, lisp/sun-fns.el, and src/sunfns.c provide emacs support for the Emacstool and function keys. If your terminal type is SUN (that is, if your environment variable TERM is set to SUN), then Emacs will automatically load the file lisp/term/sun.el. This, in turn, will ensure that sun-mouse.el is autoloaded when any mouse events are detected. It is suggested that sun-mouse and sun-fns be included in your site-init.el file, so that they will always be loaded when running on a Sun workstation. [Increase PURESIZE to 154000]. Support for the Sun function keys requires disconnecting the standard Emacs command Meta-[. Therefore, the function keys are supported only if you do (setq sun-esc-bracket t) in your .emacs file. The file src/sunfns.c defines several useful functions for emacs on the Sun. Among these are procedures to pop-up SunView menus, put and get from the SunView selection [STUFF] buffer, and a procedure for changing the cursor icon. If you want to define cursor icons, try using the functions in lisp/sun-cursors.el. The file lisp/sun-mouse.el includes a mass of software for defining bindings for mouse events. Any function can be called or any form evaluated as a result of a mouse event. If you want a pop-up menu, your function can call sun-menu-evaluate. This will bring up a SunView walking menu of your choice. Use the macro (defmenu menu-name &rest menu-items) to define menu objects. Each menu item is a cons of ("string" . VALUE), VALUE is evaluated when the string item is picked. If VALUE is a menu, then a pullright item is created. This version also includes support for copying to and from the sun-windows "stuff" selection. The keyboard bindings defined in lisp/sun-fns.el let you move the current region to the "STUFF" selection and vice versa. Just set point with the left button, set mark with the middle button, (the region is automatically copied to "STUFF") then switch to a shelltool, and "Stuff" will work. Going the other way, the main right button menu contains a "Stuff Selection" command that works just like in shelltool. [The Get and Put function keys are also assigned to these functions, so you don't need the mouse or even emacstool to make this work.] Until someone write code to read the textsw "Selection Shelf", it is not possible to copy directly from a textsw to emacs, you must go through the textsw "STUFF" selection. The Scroll-bar region is not a SunView scrollbar. It really should be called the "Right-Margin" region. The scroll bar region is basically the rightmost five columns (see documentation on variable scrollbar-width). Mouse hits in this region can have special bindings, currently those binding effect scrolling of the window, and so are referred to as the "Scroll-bar" region. For information on what mouse bindings are in effect, use the command M-x Describe-mouse-bindings, or the quick pop-up menu item "Mouse-Help". GNU Emacs EXAMPLES: See definitions in lisp/sun-fns.el for examples. You can redefine the cursor that is displayed in the emacs window. On initialization, it is set to a right arrow. See lisp/sun-cursors.el for additional cursors, how to define them, how to edit them. BUGS: It takes a few milliseconds to create a menu before it pops up. Someone who understands the GNU Garbage Collector might see if it is possible for defmenu to create a SunView menu struct that does not get destroyed by Garbage Collection. An outline of the files used to support Sun Windows and the mouse. etc/SUN-SUPPORT. This document. etc/emacstool.1: Added: an nroff'able man page for emacstool. etc/emacstool.c: Encodes all the function keys internally, and passes non-window system arguments to emacs. etc/emacs.icon: The "Kitchen Sink" GNU Emacs icon. src/sunfns.c: This contains the auxiliary functions that allow elisp code to interact with the sunwindows, selection, and menu functions. lisp/sun-mouse.el: Defines the lisp function which is called when a mouse hit is found in the input queue. This handler decodes the mouse hit via a keymap-like structure sensitive to a particular window and where in the window the hit occurred (text-region, right-margin, mode-line). Three variables are bound (*mouse-window* *mouse-x* *mouse-y*) and the selected function is called. See documentation on "define-mouse" or look at lisp/sun-fns.el to see how this is done. Defines two functions to pass between region and sun-selection Defines functions for interfacing with the Menu. During menu evaluation, the variables *menu-window* *menu-x* *menu-y* are bound. lisp/sun-fns.el The definition of the default menu and mouse function bindings. lisp/sun-cursors.el Defines a number of alternate cursors, and an editor for them. The editor is also a demonstration of mouse/menu utilization. lisp/term/sun.el Sets up the keymap to make the sun function keys do useful things. Also includes the setup/initialization code for running under emacstool, which makes "\C-Z" just close the emacstool window (-WI emacs.icon). Jeff Peck, Sun Microsystems, Inc Subject: Making multi-line scrolling really work: In your .defaults file, include the line: /Tty/Retained "Yes" That way, the terminal emulator can do text moves using bitblt, instead of repaint. If that's not enough for you, then tell unix and emacs that the sun terminal supports multi-line and multi-character insert/delete. Add this patch to your /etc/termcap file: *** /etc/termcap.~1~ Mon Sep 15 12:34:23 1986 --- /etc/termcap Mon Feb 9 17:34:08 1987 *************** *** 32,39 **** --- 32,40 ---- Mu|sun|Sun Microsystems Workstation console:\ :am:bs:km:mi:ms:pt:li#34:co#80:cl=^L:cm=\E[%i%d;%dH:\ :ce=\E[K:cd=\E[J:so=\E[7m:se=\E[m:rs=\E[s:\ :al=\E[L:dl=\E[M:im=:ei=:ic=\E[@:dc=\E[P:\ + :AL=\E[%dL:DL=\E[%dM:IC=\E[%d@:DC=\E[%dP:\ :up=\E[A:nd=\E[C:ku=\E[A:kd=\E[B:kr=\E[C:kl=\E[D:\ :k1=\E[224z:k2=\E[225z:k3=\E[226z:k4=\E[227z:k5=\E[228z:\ :k6=\E[229z:k7=\E[230z:k8=\E[231z:k9=\E[232z: M-|sun-nic|sune|Sun Microsystems Workstation console without insert character:\ If you don't have the program "patch", just add the line: :AL=\E[%dL:DL=\E[%dM:IC=\E[%d@:DC=\E[%dP:\ casetek@crvax.sri.com says: Those of you using GNU Emacs on Sun workstations under 3.2 may be interested in reducing memory utilization in the emacstool via the Sun toolmerge facility. The technique is described in the Release 3.2 Manual starting on page 71. The following is a summary of how it would apply to merging emacstool into the basetools. 1) Change the main procedure declaration in emacstool.c to: #ifdef SUN_TOOLMERGE emacstool_main (argc, argv); #else main (argc, argv) #endif This will allow creation of either standard or toolmerge versions. 2) Copy emacstool.o into directory /usr/src/sun/suntool. 3) make CFLAGS="-g -DSUN_TOOLMERGE" emacstool.o 4) Add the following line to basetools.h "emacstool",emacstool_main, 5) Add the following line to toolmerge.c. extern emacstool_main(); 6) make basetools MOREOBJS="emacstool.o" 7) make install_bins To invoke the toolmerged version, you must exit suntools and re-start it. Make sure that /usr/bin occurs before the directory in which you installed the standard (non-toolmerged) version.