Happy New Year#
Tue, 07 Jan 2003 17:48:13 +0000
Happy New Year. Probably.
Much shuffling of web site stuff around
- the Local Food Directory got another round of hacking - a
side-effect of which is that other Cliki-based sites get summaries
showing the matched text in search result
pages
- metacircles got
vigorously spring-cleaned, to the point that I'm no longer
completely ashamed of it
- and cliki
changes too: the long-requested "create a new page unlinked from
anywhere" button. Needs javascript, because I'm too lazy to do it
server-side
The good news is that I got a call today from Carphone Warehouse to
say that my phone is back from having been away to get fixed.
I haven't picked it up yet, though. I hope this time they've actually
repaired it properly.
Current TODO: VAT return, and release new packages of cliki and all
its dependent stuff.
I started writing this entry the other day, but it was killed due to a#
Sat, 11 Jan 2003 04:43:03 +0000
I started writing this entry the other day, but it was killed due to a
kernel problem.
My phone didn't come back, as such. Instead they gave me a new
one, so that really ought to fix the problem. Thank you, Botley Road
Oxford branch of Carphone Warehouse
All things considered, less done this week than I might have hoped
to do. Having got the phone back, I obviously needed to get the
numbers back into it - having cut and pasted the first two into cu, I
decided to write a short perl program to do the rest automatically.
Whee. Flashing caps lock light time. OK, let's do (almost) what I
should have done instead and write it in lisp (I say "almost" because
it's actually a shell script starting #!/usr/bin/clisp).
Flash bang wallop #2. Hmm. Some poking around reveals that the
device objects to having close() called, but as the oops is actually a
full-blown kernel panic (in sched.c) and even stuff like magic sysrq
only just about works, it's not going to be easy to get a log for.
(Some IRC people did recommend a serial console. Well, yes, but .
If I had a serial port, I'd have plugged the phone in there in the
first place and wouldn't need to be screwing around with USB.)
So I (forward ported to 2.4.21-pre3, wrote debian init scripts for,
and) installed LKCD to get some
kind of crash dump I could actually use. That seems to fixed things
all by itself - at least, now I cannot replicate the problem.
The upside of all this is that 2.4.21-pre3 has some kind of sane
memory usage patterns and once again I have a laptop that doesn't
thrash itself for tens of seconds at a time on simple operations. My
spies tell me that these days -ac kernels are using some variant of
the rmap VM, and non-ac kernels are not. So, probably going to blame
rmap. Maybe it's badly tuned. I still have LKCD installed for
when I do manage to crash the machine using USB serial, but
let's upload this diary entry first, shall we?
Yay#
Sun, 12 Jan 2003 01:03:44 +0000
Yay! Common sense prevails
Bcc: dan#
Sun, 12 Jan 2003 04:13:25 +0000
Bcc: dan
To: lispweb@red-bean.com
Subject: New (betaish) releases of araneida, cliki, db-sockets
--text follows this line--
- CLiki is the collaborative community content creation system that
most people here have probably heard of already.
- Araneida is the web server it runs on
- db-sockets is the socket library that Araneida uses
SBCL and CMUCL (the latter untested recently) are the implementations
this all runs on
New versions of the asterisked items are all (at last) now
available from cCLan, or will be as soon as the mirrors propagate.
See https://ww.telent.net/cclan-choose-mirror for your nearest.
These are labelled `betaish' because, although the basic code they
contain has been running on the real CLiki site for some time, there
may be packaging, portability and other issues that prevent them from
actually working out of the box. Any bugs you do find are either
known or probably trivial, though. Feedback sought.
Happy New Year, if you mark the occasion at or around this time. I
wish you a happy next 12 months anyway, even if you don't.
[ updated for elisp syntax error, 13:01:52 GMT ]#
Tue, 14 Jan 2003 07:55:15 +0000
[ updated for elisp syntax error, 13:01:52 GMT ]
This is what I mean by a scriptable user interface...
So, it's not completely unheard of for me to write "Please find
attached ..." in an email message, then forget to actually attach the
file. Apparently I'm not the only
person this happens to, either. SO, the other day I decided to
sit down and sort it out.
I use Gnus for my email and news reading. Gnus, I happen to know,
uses the default message composer in Emacs, which is known as Message.
What I want is for something to run when I attempt to send mail, that
warns me when I send a mail using the word "attach" if I haven't
actually added an attachment.
- Enter The Dragon^Wscratch buffer
- Emacs has hooks everywhere. Probability is that there's a hook
that runs just before a message is sent. We can find out with
apropos:
(apropos "message.+hook") C-j
...
message-send-hook
Variable: Hook run before sending messages.
Plist: standard-value variable-documentation custom-options custom-type custom-requests
Looks good to me
- Middle-clicking on Variable tells me I can customize
this. Middle-clicking on that gets me the Customize buffer. There's
nothing on the hook at the moment, but apparently I could add
ispell-message if I wanted to. Putting the cursor on ispell-message
and pressing C-h f (describe function) tells me
Check the spelling of a mail message or news post.
Don't check spelling of message headers except the Subject field.
Don't check included messages.To abort spell checking of a message region and send the message anyway,
use the `x' command. (Any subsequent regions will be checked.)
The `X' command aborts the message send so that you can edit the buffer.
- Not exactly what I want to do, but close enough that I can be
pretty sure that what I do want to do (check for the string "attach",
check for an attachment, query whether to send if a but not b found,
abort sending if user says no) is implementable.
- Following the link to "ispell" takes me directly to the
function's source code. Now, let's play with it. Copy and paste the
entire ispell-message function into scratch, change its name to,
say, check-attachments-attached, and start hacking it about a bit.
Here's what I ended up with
(defun check-attachments-attached ()
(interactive)
(save-excursion
(goto-char (point-min))
(let* (
;; Nil when message came from outside (eg calling emacs as editor)
;; Non-nil marker of end of headers.
(internal-messagep
(re-search-forward
(concat "^" (regexp-quote mail-header-separator) "$") nil t))
(end-of-headers ; Start of body.
(copy-marker
(or internal-messagep
(re-search-forward "^$" nil t)
(point-min))))
(limit
(or (re-search-forward "^-- $" nil t)
(point-max)))
(old-case-fold-search case-fold-search))
(unwind-protect
(progn
(goto-char end-of-headers)
(when (search-forward "attach" limit t)
(goto-char end-of-headers)
;; the word 'attach' has been used, can we find an
;; attachment?
(unless
(or (re-search-forward "^<#/" limit t)
(y-or-n-p
"Found the word `attach' but no MIME attachment: send anyway?"
)
(error "Aborted send")))))
(set-marker end-of-headers nil)))))
- and add it to the hook:
(add-hook 'message-send-hook 'check-attachments-attached)
Points of note -
First off, we didn't need to restart emacs. In fact, we didn't
even need to load any files. All of this was done on the fly.
Second, we didn't at any point have to read an info manual, fiddle
around in the filesystem, or search a web site to get to the
documentation for anything. We had a little help from customize to
tell us that ispell-message was a suitable function for this hook, but
aside from that, all we needed to know was in function and variable
docstrings. And when we went to look for the source code to
ispell-message, there it was, one mouse-click away. No cvs trees to
check out, no source packages to download and puzzle over the
autobreak incantations for.
The function is a hack. That's the difference between scripting
and programming. If I were doing it properly, then instead of looking
for that funny <#/ string I'd read the appropriate bits of
whatever MIME attachment stuff I'm using (that's right, I don't
actually know) and find out what it does to detect the presence
of attachments.
The whole exercise took under an hour. Although I consider myself
a competent Lisp programmer, that's Common Lisp, not elisp. I touch
emacs customization about once a year on average - I may have a head
start over someone whose programming experience is entirely with, say,
C or Perl, but I'm by no means a guru.
This is what I mean by a scriptable user interface. This is
the opportunity that GNOME (as far as I can determine) missed. This
is the opportunity that Mozilla, as far as I can see, missed. (This
is the opportunity that presently-mythical-environment-based-on-McCLIM
had damned well better not miss).
People believe they're being funny when they compare Emacs to an
operating system. Frankly, they're nearer the truth than they think:
it may not have a pre-emptive scheduler, but it's still a better
desktop environment than anything else I've used.
:; cu -l /dev/ttyUSB0
Connected.
AT+CLIP?
+CLIP: 0,1OK
AT+CLIP=1
OK
RING
+CLIP: "01865423320",129
RING
+CLIP: "01865423320",129
Next up, maybe, mobile phone book/BBDB integration, with caller id on
incoming calls.
I was going to send a pointer to the preceding (lexically following)#
Tue, 14 Jan 2003 08:48:47 +0000
I was going to send a pointer to the preceding (lexically following)
entry to David Mason, long-time
Emacs user and (former?) GNOME project person. But his web site's
been replaced by a "coming soon" page, and his Livejournal site (to
get the url of which I had to dig his previous web site out of Google
cache) doesn't display his email address anywhere. I'd try his old
Red Hat address, but I think it's a matter of principle now.
On the genreal subject of hiding email addresses, ifile has now
classified 81550 non-spam messages and 637 spam messages. It gets
about a couple wrong each day - almost always spam that it lets
through into non-spam. This is a massively better result than
spamassassin already. So far so good.
OK, a single session transcript doesn't really capture the kewlness#
Fri, 17 Jan 2003 02:17:22 +0000
OK, a single session transcript doesn't really capture the kewlness
aspect of this, so, my turn to put some Lisp
pr0n up. Caution: actually not that visually stimulating after
all. Also, it's a big (as in, 1280x960 pixels) picture.
Clockwise from top right:
- The initial toplevel window, chock full of important debugging
printf. Observe, though, that it's in the break loop, and that this
has not stopped the other threads from running
- an xterm showing ps output with lots of sbcl processes in it
- a window on the emacs shell1 buffer, which is attached to a
thread that incfs the global variable global every second
- a window on the emacs shell buffer, which is displaying a
message referring to said global once a second.
Well, I think it's cool. I'm not about to start producing
mpegs, though; you may just have to take my word for it that all of
this is updating at once.
(Or you could check the cvs branch out and try it yourself, of
course)
Again, the new machine comes with Red Hat, and after ascertaining that#
Wed, 29 Jan 2003 15:17:51 +0000
Again, the new machine comes with Red Hat, and after ascertaining that
it boots using grub and an initrd I really don't fancy replacing it
with Debian remotely. But nor, to be honest, do I want to continue
depending on a probably-soon-to-be-unsupported Red Hat version for
anything beyond a bare minimum set of services.
Some slightly cool URLs :
and another useless error message for the collection:
Jan 29 15:16:52 eval sshd[878]: PAM rejected by account configuration[9]: Authentication service cannot retrieve authentication info.
(In this case, it turns out to mean "when you renamed the user
you're trying to ssh in as, you forgot to update the shadow
file")
Most of my time lately has been wrestling with posix job control
stuff, so that multithreaded SBCL behaves somewhat less than
completely stupidly when two threads want to read from the same tty at
once. Not incredibly exciting, although I might some time soon be
persuaded to write a few words about the xterm -S option before I
forget how it works again.