No big loss -- it just means that ^Z won't work right
if we're run from sh. */
# define EMACS_SET_PROCESS_GROUP(pg)
+#elif defined(__MINGW32__)
+# define EMACS_SEPARATE_PROCESS_GROUP()
#else
/* Under NeXTstep, a process group of 0 is not the same as specifying
your own process ID, so we go ahead and specify it explicitly. */
emacs_tty should contain an element for each parameter struct
that Emacs may change.
- EMACS_GET_TTY (int FD, struct emacs_tty *P) stores the parameters
+ emacs_get_tty (int FD, struct emacs_tty *P) stores the parameters
of the tty on FD in *P. Return zero if all's well, or -1 if we ran
into an error we couldn't deal with.
- EMACS_SET_TTY (int FD, struct emacs_tty *P, int flushp)
+ emacs_set_tty (int FD, struct emacs_tty *P, int flushp)
sets the parameters of the tty on FD according to the contents of
*P. If flushp is non-zero, we discard queued input to be
written before making the change.
#endif /* HAVE_TCHARS */
#endif /* HAVE_TERMIOS */
};
-\f
-/* Define EMACS_GET_TTY and EMACS_SET_TTY,
- the macros for reading and setting parts of `struct emacs_tty'.
-
- These got pretty unmanageable (huge macros are hard to debug), and
- finally needed some code which couldn't be done as part of an
- expression, so we moved them out to their own functions in sysdep.c. */
-#define EMACS_GET_TTY(fd, p) emacs_get_tty (fd, p)
-#define EMACS_SET_TTY(fd, p, waitp) emacs_set_tty (fd, p, waitp)
+
+int emacs_get_tty (int fd, struct emacs_tty *settings);
+int emacs_set_tty (int fd, struct emacs_tty *settings, int flushp);
\f
/* --------------------------------------------------------- */