NetBSD/gnu/usr.bin/gdb/readline/history.h

112 lines
4.1 KiB
C

/* History.h -- the names of functions that you can call in history.
$Id: history.h,v 1.2 1993/08/02 17:40:37 mycroft Exp $
*/
typedef struct _hist_entry {
char *line;
char *data;
} HIST_ENTRY;
/* For convenience only. You set this when interpreting history commands.
It is the logical offset of the first history element. */
extern int history_base;
/* Begin a session in which the history functions might be used. This
just initializes the interactive variables. */
extern void using_history ();
/* Place STRING at the end of the history list.
The associated data field (if any) is set to NULL. */
extern void add_history ();
/* Returns the number which says what history element we are now
looking at. */
extern int where_history ();
/* Set the position in the history list to POS. */
int history_set_pos ();
/* Search for STRING in the history list, starting at POS, an
absolute index into the list. DIR, if negative, says to search
backwards from POS, else forwards.
Returns the absolute index of the history element where STRING
was found, or -1 otherwise. */
extern int history_search_pos ();
/* A reasonably useless function, only here for completeness. WHICH
is the magic number that tells us which element to delete. The
elements are numbered from 0. */
extern HIST_ENTRY *remove_history ();
/* Stifle the history list, remembering only MAX number of entries. */
extern void stifle_history ();
/* Stop stifling the history. This returns the previous amount the
history was stifled by. The value is positive if the history was
stifled, negative if it wasn't. */
extern int unstifle_history ();
/* Add the contents of FILENAME to the history list, a line at a time.
If FILENAME is NULL, then read from ~/.history. Returns 0 if
successful, or errno if not. */
extern int read_history ();
/* Append the current history to FILENAME. If FILENAME is NULL,
then append the history list to ~/.history. Values returned
are as in read_history (). */
extern int write_history ();
/* Make the history entry at WHICH have LINE and DATA. This returns
the old entry so you can dispose of the data. In the case of an
invalid WHICH, a NULL pointer is returned. */
extern HIST_ENTRY *replace_history_entry ();
/* Return the history entry at the current position, as determined by
history_offset. If there is no entry there, return a NULL pointer. */
HIST_ENTRY *current_history ();
/* Back up history_offset to the previous history entry, and return
a pointer to that entry. If there is no previous entry, return
a NULL pointer. */
extern HIST_ENTRY *previous_history ();
/* Move history_offset forward to the next item in the input_history,
and return the a pointer to that entry. If there is no next entry,
return a NULL pointer. */
extern HIST_ENTRY *next_history ();
/* Return a NULL terminated array of HIST_ENTRY which is the current input
history. Element 0 of this list is the beginning of time. If there
is no history, return NULL. */
extern HIST_ENTRY **history_list ();
/* Search the history for STRING, starting at history_offset.
If DIRECTION < 0, then the search is through previous entries,
else through subsequent. If the string is found, then
current_history () is the history entry, and the value of this function
is the offset in the line of that history entry that the string was
found in. Otherwise, nothing is changed, and a -1 is returned. */
extern int history_search ();
/* Expand the string STRING, placing the result into OUTPUT, a pointer
to a string. Returns:
0) If no expansions took place (or, if the only change in
the text was the de-slashifying of the history expansion
character)
1) If expansions did take place
-1) If there was an error in expansion.
If an error ocurred in expansion, then OUTPUT contains a descriptive
error message. */
extern int history_expand ();
/* Extract a string segment consisting of the FIRST through LAST
arguments present in STRING. Arguments are broken up as in
the shell. */
extern char *history_arg_extract ();