using the relocating allocator routines, then malloc could cause a
relocation, which might (if the strings being searched are in the
ralloc heap) shift the data out from underneath the regexp
- routines. */
+ routines.
+
+ Here's another reason to avoid allocation: Emacs insists on
+ processing input from X in a signal handler; processing X input may
+ call malloc; if input arrives while a matching routine is calling
+ malloc, then we're scrod. But Emacs can't just block input while
+ calling matching routines; then we don't notice interrupts when
+ they come in. So, Emacs blocks input around all regexp calls
+ except the matching calls, which it leaves unprotected, in the
+ faith that they will not malloc. */
/* Normally, this is fine. */
#define MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE
/* But under some circumstances, it's not. */
-#if defined (REL_ALLOC) && defined (C_ALLOCA)
+#if defined (emacs) || (defined (REL_ALLOC) && defined (C_ALLOCA))
#undef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE
#endif