Prevent loading more libraries than necessary, so load WINMM the first
time the bell is used and use the CRT printf functions to avoid loading
USER32 at all.
I was also going to remove MSVCRT, but that turned out to be more
trouble than it's worth. However, a side-effect that I kept is
replacing bsearch with a dedicated search routine.
Some processes just return from the entry point; this only exits the
thread, not the process. It seems that when ANSICON created its flush
thread in DllMain, that became the primary thread, so when the entry
point returned the process was still waiting for the flush thread to
exit. Creating the flush thread the first time it is used avoids this
problem, letting the process exit.
Git's error messages were being truncated. Turns out git used two
threads, one writing to the console and one to file. This caused a
conflict in `IsConsoleHandle` when the cache was updated. Making it a
critical section solves the issue.
Some programs (notably less) rely on the right margin performing the
wrap. Add such programs to the ANSICON_WRAP environment variable to
stop ANSICON suppressing the newline.
Support the entire 256-color palette. When specifying an index or RGB
color, find the nearest match in the console palette. Preserve bold and
underline when setting color by index. Getting all palette entries will
stop at 15 if the initial index is below that (i.e. `0;*` will get 0 to
15 and `16;*` will get 16 to 255).
Turns out testing for an empty buffer outside the critical section
wasn't a good idea (testing in a virtual 10 started the thread between
the test and enter, causing buffer overflow in the small loop).
CR and BS would still be processed during CRM. Fix all the partial CRM
sequences followed by a complete CRM sequence.
It's possible for some text files to have `\r\r\n` endings (Microsoft
converts LF to CRLF even when the CR is already there). Collapse
multiple CRs to a single CR to catch this. It is also necessary to
always delay flushing if the last character is CR, to see if the next
character is CR or LF.
Setting the cursor position on a non-active buffer still displays it on
the active buffer. Hide the cursor, set the position, show the cursor
is a sufficient workaround.
CR will match BS/CUB/HPB, moving back to previous line(s) after a wrap.
I hadn't updated the comment when I switched ANSICON_API from WriteFile
to WriteConsoleA. Mention that is should be deleted when upgrading.
I had intended for margins to be set per process, but during testing I
was wondering why they weren't working, so per console it is.
In changing the above, I realised that `pState` may stay `NULL` when a
process is created without a window. Initialise it to a default state,
updating it when the window becomes available.
Console input is echoed directly by the host, bypassing processing.
This means escape reverts back to a normal character (probably a good
thing) and the bottom margin is ignored (probably not so good).
Rather than flushing immediately after every write, only flush before
accessing the console. This improves the speed, particularly for
programs that write character-by-character (which is basically every
program using Microsoft's printf). Should it go wrong, there's a new
mode to restore the immediate flush: `\e[1+h`.
Margins always use the window, never the buffer; the exception is
`\e[+r` which will remove the margins ('\e[r' will set the margins to
the window). With the margins set, the window will not scroll when the
cursor is at the bottom, outside of the margins. In this case, the
display is not quite right, since I copy the line from another buffer,
rather than actually overwrite the existing line.
Setting IRM will cause characters to be inserted, discarding anything
that goes beyond the edge.
Turn off the wrap flag when the cursor moves.
SM/RM allow more than one parameter.
SGR parameters 90-97 are bright foreground (leaving bold unchanged) and
100-107 are bright background (leaving underline/blink unchanged);
`38;5;#` & `48;5;#` will work for the first 16 colors, setting both
foreground & bold or background & underline (0-7 bold/underline off,
8-15 bold/underline on).
Save/restore the attributes and G0 character set (the ANSI version still
only does the cursor).
Add the comment I missed when adding SCS; remove `DEC` from the sequence
descriptions.
Support setting (HTS & DECST8C) and clearing (TBC) tabs, overriding the
console's own tab processing. I've extended TBC with `\e[8g` to restore
console processing and added an extra parameter to DECST8C to set a
particular tab size.
DECSC (Save Cursor) & DECRC (Restore Cursor) are the same as their
ANSI.sys equivalents (`\e[s` & `\e[u`).
DA (Device Attributes) will respond with `\e[?62;1c` - VT220 with 132
columns.
Setting DECCOLM will size the buffer & window to 132 columns; resetting
will restore the original values (NOT set 80 columns). Setting DECNSCM
will prevent the display from being erased; however, the first time
DECCOLM is used will scroll in a new window, if appropriate.
Recognise the xterm ESC]4 & ESC]104 OSC commands to set/reset colors.
Three color specs are recognised: `#RGB`, `#RRGGBB` and `R,G,B`; in
addition, multiple specs can be given (separated by commas) to
automatically increase the index. I also allow `*` to query this index
and all subsequent ones. Reset will restore the colors from when the
DLL was first loaded, not from the Console Properties.
Since ESC is now preserved for unrecognised sequences, I feel able to
use it to escape control characters in order to display them (e.g.
"\e\e" will display a single escape).
Control mode would not display the recognised controls (i.e. BEL, SO and
SI) and would not work if it was turned off in the same string.
Normally the display uses the window height; adding an intermediate
character of `+` will use the buffer height. Report cursor position
will also output `+R` when used with `+n`.
There are some differences from the VT520: volume is ignored (although
silence is honored); duration is in 1/32 of a second up to and including
48 (1.5 seconds), after which it is in milliseconds (but still a maximum
of 8 seconds); notes are 1..25, anything else is frequency.
Windows 7 uses Beep for the bell, which means if you accidentally view
a binary file, the console freezes until all the bells have finished.
Windows 10 uses PlaySound, which avoids the freeze, but prevents the
sound being played at all if the program immediately exits (in its own
host). This uses PlaySound in its own thread, ignoring additional bells
whilst one is currently playing and waiting for it to finish before
terminating.
There are some instances when ESC should just be a normal character
(e.g. TCC uses it in aliases to clear the current line), so if no
sequence is recognised, pass the ESC through.
If console handles are created as GENERIC_WRITE, add GENERIC_READ in
order to be able to retrieve console information. This fixes#93
(redirecting to CON).
ANSICON switches the standard streams to Unicode, but uses its own
routine to write directly to the console when appropriate. However, the
newlines written by -e/-E/-t/-T were still done by the CRT, so when
output was redirected to CON, "\r\0\n\0" was being written.
The cache is used to speed up detection of console handles, but with the
original three handles I was only thinking of actual console handles,
not general file handles. Five handles implies: stdout, stderr,
CONOUT$, log file and output file.