ansicon/makefile

86 lines
2.2 KiB
Makefile
Raw Normal View History

2010-12-12 23:32:22 +10:00
# Makefile for ANSICON.
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
# Jason Hood, 11 March, 2006. Updated 20 June, 2009.
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
# I've used TDM64 (gcc 4.6.1), building the 32-bit version in the x86 directory
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
# and the 64-bit version in the x64 directory. MinGW32 (gcc 3.4.5) will also
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
# build the 32-bit version.
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
2010-11-19 15:50:10 +10:00
# 19 November, 2010:
# explicitly use 64-bit flags, in case the compiler isn't.
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
#
# 13 December, 2011:
# use CMD for file operations, not programs from fileutils.
#
# 23 November, 2012:
# set the base address of the DLLs to AC0000[00] (AnsiCon).
2010-11-19 15:50:10 +10:00
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
CC = gcc
CFLAGS = -O2 -Wall
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
X86OBJS = x86/proctype.o x86/injdll32.o x86/util.o
X64OBJS = x64/proctype.o x64/injdll64.o x64/injdll32.o x64/util.o
2010-12-12 21:58:35 +10:00
x86/%.o: %.c ansicon.h
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
$(CC) -m32 -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
x86/%v.o: %.rc version.h
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
windres -U _WIN64 -F pe-i386 $< $@
x64/%.o: %.c ansicon.h
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
$(CC) -m64 -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
x64/%v.o: %.rc version.h
2010-11-19 15:50:10 +10:00
windres -F pe-x86-64 $< $@
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
all: ansicon32 ansicon64
2010-11-13 14:49:27 +10:00
ansicon32: x86 x86/ansicon.exe x86/ANSI32.dll
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
2013-02-14 18:12:13 +10:00
ansicon64: x64 x64/ansicon.exe x64/ANSI64.dll x64/ANSI32.dll x64/ANSI-LLW.exe
2010-11-13 14:49:27 +10:00
x86:
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
cmd /c "mkdir x86"
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
2010-12-12 21:58:35 +10:00
x86/ansicon.exe: x86/ansicon.o $(X86OBJS) x86/ansiconv.o
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
$(CC) -m32 $+ -s -o $@
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
2010-12-12 21:58:35 +10:00
x86/ANSI32.dll: x86/ANSI.o $(X86OBJS) x86/ansiv.o
$(CC) -m32 $+ -s -o $@ -mdll -Wl,-shared,--image-base,0xAC0000
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
2010-11-13 14:49:27 +10:00
x64:
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
cmd /c "mkdir x64"
2010-11-13 14:49:27 +10:00
2010-12-12 21:58:35 +10:00
x64/ansicon.exe: x64/ansicon.o $(X64OBJS) x64/ansiconv.o
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
$(CC) -m64 $+ -s -o $@
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
2010-12-12 21:58:35 +10:00
x64/ANSI64.dll: x64/ANSI.o $(X64OBJS) x64/ansiv.o
$(CC) -m64 $+ -s -o $@ -mdll -Wl,-shared,--image-base,0xAC000000
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
2012-04-10 15:39:58 +10:00
x64/ANSI32.dll: x64/ANSI32.o x64/proctype32.o x86/injdll32.o x86/util.o x86/ansiv.o
$(CC) -m32 $+ -s -o $@ -mdll -Wl,-shared,--image-base,0xAC0000
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
2013-02-14 18:12:13 +10:00
x64/ANSI-LLW.exe: ANSI-LLW.c
$(CC) -m32 $(CFLAGS) $< -s -o $@
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
x86/ansicon.o: version.h
x86/ANSI.o: version.h
x64/ansicon.o: version.h
x64/ANSI.o: version.h
x86/util.o: version.h
x64/util.o: version.h
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
x86/ansiconv.o: ansicon.rc
x86/ansiv.o: ansi.rc
x64/ansiconv.o: ansicon.rc
x64/ansiv.o: ansi.rc
2012-04-10 15:39:58 +10:00
x64/ANSI32.o: ANSI.c
$(CC) -m32 -DW32ON64 $(CFLAGS) $< -c -o $@
x64/proctype32.o: proctype.c
$(CC) -m32 -DW32ON64 $(CFLAGS) $< -c -o $@
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
# Need two commands, because if the directory doesn't exist, it won't delete
# anything at all.
2010-11-08 15:31:01 +10:00
clean:
Exclude modules from being hooked; hook only selected GUI programs. Added environment variable ANSICON_EXC to specify modules that should not be hooked. This should work around the nvd3d9wrap.dll issue. Since it helps to know what the modules are, logging is now always available, controlled by -l or ANSICON_LOG. A side-effect caused debugstr.c to move to util.c. GUI programs are once again not hooked, unless run by "ansicon" directly or in the ANSICON_GUI environment variable. Since not hooking still leaves ANSICON in the environment, created ANSICON_VER as a dynamic-only variable, which can also serve as a version check. Due to an email requesting a reverse video option, realised I always take the current attributes as default. This means if you turned on reverse and ran a program, it would take the reverse as its default. Created ANSICON_DEF variable to explicitly set the default attribute, using the current if it doesn't exist. The reverse video option is done via a "negative" attribute (e.g. "-m-f0" is reversed black on white, meaning you'll get white on black, with foreground sequences changing the background). (The difference from "\e[7m" is that it won't be reset on "\e[m".) A child program will inherit the parent's modes (but not shift); the parent will read the child's modes on exit (but not unload). The exception is "ansicon", which will always start with the default modes and leave the parent unchanged. Improved the AutoRun entry, only running "ansicon" if ANSICON_VER doesn't exist. The "ansicon" command is always first. Stopped -u implying -p; return the program's exit code; don't restore the original color when just using -p; output error messages to stderr.
2011-12-14 20:53:51 +10:00
-cmd /c "del x86\*.o 2>nul"
-cmd /c "del x64\*.o 2>nul"