On Sun, Sep 17, 2006 at 05:41:45PM -0400, cga2000 wrote:
> I frequently issue a Ctrl-R to reload web pages and once in a while I
> miss the R key and hit the "4" key -- just above the "E" and "R" keys
> on a US keyboard.
> 
> What happens is that:
> 
> 1. I still see the original web page but it is overwritten by a shell
>    prompt -- about 20% down the page.  As far as I can tell, in this
>    instance, "CTRL-4" is equivalent to some form of SIGKILL, terminating
>    the ELinks process and bypassing the "Do you really want to exit
>    ELinks" popup screen.

Actually, CTRL-4 (also known as ^\) sends SIGQUIT. This is like ^C
(SIGINT), except that it leaves a core file.

> 2. The shell session I end up in is frozen and does not accept a refresh
>    screen command (Ctrl-L).  
> 
> 3. If I hit <Enter> after hitting Ctrl-L the screen is cleared but
>    hitting <Enter> again displays a second prompt on the same line as
>    the first one .. etc. ad Nauseam Aeternam ..
> 
> 4. If I try to use this shell session and issue commands such as "ls"
>    .. "top" .. etc. they behave normally after I hit enter but the
>    commands that I type are no longer echoed back to the terminal. 
> 
> 5. I need to issue a blind "reset" command to get the terminal to work
>    normally again.
> 
> Has anyone seen this?

I haven't seen that behaviour, but it is understandable that ELinks
leaves the terminal in a strange state. If you press Ctrl-C, ELinks
catches the SIGINT signal and returns the terminal to its state from
before ELinks was started, but since ELinks doesn't catch a SIGQUIT,
it doesn't have the chance to clean up.

> Is there any way I could deactivate this annoying "Ctrl-4" key combo? 

On a POSIX system, you can disable the key with the stty(1) utility:

   stty quit ''

ELinks could catch the signal, but that would defeat the purpose of
having the key, don't you think?

> I have checked the "Keybinding manager" and the screen configuration
> file but I haven't found anything.
> 
> Also it only seems to affect ELinks:
> 
> I checked a few other ncurses applications as well as a bare bash shell
> and when I hit Ctrl-4 nothing happened.

How odd. Apparantly, everybody else thinks that it is fine to ignore the
signal.

> Well..  hopefully someone will have run into this and knows the whys and
> the wherefores of this peculiar phenomenon and perhaps have found a
> workaround .. 
> 
> I would much appreciate any pointers in the right direction since it
> always happens under the worse circumstances and it's both a time waster
> and source of aggravation to lose a session with a dozen tabs open right
> when you're in the middle of something.

See Setup -> Options manager -> User interface -> Periodic snapshotting.

HTH,

-- 
Miciah Masters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> / <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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