Add support for bracketed paste

This is a terminal feature where pastes will be "bracketed" in
\e\[200~ and \e\[201~.

It is more of a "security" measure (since particularly copying from a
browser can copy text different from what the user sees, which might
be malicious) than a performance optimization.

Work towards #967.
This commit is contained in:
Fabian Homborg 2017-02-25 14:42:52 +01:00
parent 3444fe87fb
commit db63be7909
3 changed files with 55 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -3,6 +3,7 @@
- The `export` command now supports colon-separated `PATH`, `CDPATH` and `MANPATH`.
- The `read` command now has a default limit of 10 MiB. If a line is longer than that it will fail with $status set to 122 and the var will be empty. You can set a different limit by setting the FISH_READ_BYTE_LIMIT variable.
- The \cl binding no longer deletes the scrollback buffer with ncurses >= 6.0 (#2855).
- fish now supports "bracketed paste". Note that this is more of a security measure, the `fish_clipboard_paste` function (bound to \cv by default) still has a few advantages.
---

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@ -232,6 +232,23 @@ function __fish_config_interactive -d "Initializations that should be performed
# Load key bindings
__fish_reload_key_bindings
if not set -q FISH_UNIT_TESTS_RUNNING
# Enable bracketed paste before every prompt (see __fish_shared_bindings for the bindings).
# Disable it for unit tests so we don't have to add the sequences to bind.expect
function __fish_enable_bracketed_paste --on-event fish_prompt
printf "\e[?2004h"
end
# Disable BP before every command because that might not support it.
function __fish_disable_bracketed_paste --on-event fish_preexec
printf "\e[?2004l"
end
# Tell the terminal we support BP. Since we are in __f_c_i, the first fish_prompt
# has already fired.
__fish_enable_bracketed_paste
end
function __fish_winch_handler --on-signal WINCH -d "Repaint screen when window changes size"
commandline -f repaint
end

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@ -105,4 +105,41 @@ function __fish_shared_key_bindings -d "Bindings shared between emacs and vi mod
# The [meta-e] and [meta-v] keystrokes invoke an external editor on the command buffer.
bind \ee edit_command_buffer
bind \ev edit_command_buffer
# Support for "bracketed paste"
# The way it works is that we acknowledge our support by printing
# \e\[?2004h
# then the terminal will "bracket" every paste in
# \e\[200~ and \e\[201~
# Every character in between those two will be part of the paste and should not cause a binding to execute (like \n executing commands).
#
# We enable it after every command and disable it before (in __fish_config_interactive.fish)
#
# Support for this seems to be ubiquitous - emacs enables it unconditionally (!) since 25.1 (though it only supports it since then,
# it seems to be the last term to gain support).
# TODO: Should we disable this in older emacsen?
#
# NOTE: This is more of a "security" measure than a proper feature.
# The better way to paste remains the `fish_clipboard_paste` function (bound to \cv by default).
# We don't disable highlighting here, so it will be redone after every character (which can be slow),
# and it doesn't handle "paste-stop" sequences in the paste (which the terminal needs to strip, but KDE konsole doesn't).
#
# See http://thejh.net/misc/website-terminal-copy-paste. The second case will not be caught in KDE konsole.
# Bind the starting sequence in every bind mode, even user-defined ones.
# HACK: We introspect `bind` here to list all modes.
# Re-running `bind` multiple times per mode is still faster than trying to make the list unique,
# even without calling `sort -u` or `uniq`, for the vi-bindings.
# TODO: This can be solved better once #3872 is implemented.
set -l allmodes default
set allmodes $allmodes (bind -a | string match -r -- '-M \w+' | string replace -- '-M ' '')
for mode in $allmodes
bind -M $mode -m paste \e\[200~ 'set -g __fish_last_bind_mode $fish_bind_mode'
end
# This sequence ends paste-mode and returns to the previous mode we have saved before.
bind -M paste \e\[201~ 'set fish_bind_mode $__fish_last_bind_mode; commandline -f force-repaint'
# In paste-mode, everything self-inserts except for the sequence to get out of it
bind -M paste "" self-insert
# Without this, a \r will overwrite the other text, rendering it invisible - which makes the exercise kinda pointless.
# TODO: Test this in windows (\r\n line endings)
bind -M paste \r "commandline -i \n"
end