This concerns what happens if the user types e.g. `grep --i` and grep or
its completions have not yet been loaded. Previously we would "bounce to
the main thread" from within the autosuggestion thread to load grep's
completions. However under concurrent execution, this may deadlock as the
main thread is waiting for something else.
In the new implementation, complete simply records the commands that it
would autoload, and returns them back to the caller, where the caller can
decide how to handle them.
In general iothread_perform_on_main risks deadlock under concurrent
execution and we should try to get rid of it.
There should be no user-visible change from this fix.
The last remnant of the old debug system, this was only used in
show_stackframe.
Because that's only ever called with an "E" level currently I've
removed the level argument entirely. If it's needed we'd have to pass
a flog category here.
The fix for #3481 caused us to save the screen status after external
commands were run, fixing an unnecessary abandon-line when switching
modes. But we may also run commands not directly as part of a binding,
but instead via an on-variable event, e.g. for fish_bind_mode.
Extend this fix to all bindings, guarded by changes to exec_count. Now
any time an external command runs as part of a binding we should pick up
changes to the tty and not abandon the line.
Fixes#3481 again.
In b0084c3fc4, we refactored out event handlers get removed. But this
also caused us to remove "one-shot" handlers even if they have not yet
been fired. Fix this.
This concerns running a key binding which invokes a command. If that
command modifies the tty, then fish will spot the modification later and
then react to it by redrawing the prompt. However tty modifications may
be benign or desirable; for example switching the cursor from a line to
a block. Fix this by re-fstating the tty after running external
commands.
Fixes#3481
Previously, `kill-whole-line` kills the line and its following
newline. This is insufficient when we are on the last line, because
it would not actually clear the line. The cursor would stay on the
line, which is not the correct behavior for bindings like `dd`.
Also, `cc` in vi-mode used `kill-whole-line`, which is not correct
because it should not remove any newlines. We have to introduce
another special input function (`kill-inner-line`) to fix this.
When the user adds a completion for a command, we push it to the front
of the completion list so it appears first; for that reason we don't
want to use a vector. However we can do better than std::list; try using
std::forward_list which is singly linked. No functional change here (but
we will see if this breaks any old platforms in which case it's fine to
revert this).
Prior to this change, the list of completions was stored as a
std::unordered_set, using some funny comparators and suspicious
const_cast to make it map-like. Use a real map instead, simplifying
the code. No functional change here.
Prior to this commit, setting a universal variable may trigger syncing
against the file which will modify other universal variables. But if we
want to support multiple environments we need the parser to decide when to
sync uvars. Shift the decision of when to sync to the parser itself. When a
universal variable is modified, now we just set a flag and it's up to the
(main) parser when to pick it up. This is hopefully just a refactoring with
no user-visible changes.
This makes it so `complete -c foo -n test1 -n test2` registers *both*
conditions, and when it comes time to check the candidate, tries both,
in that order. If any fails it stops, if all succeed the completion is offered.
The reason for this is that it helps with caching - we have a
condition cache, but conditions like
```fish
test (count (commandline -opc)) -ge 2; and contains -- (commandline -opc)[2] length
test (count (commandline -opc)) -ge 2; and contains -- (commandline -opc)[2] sub
```
defeats it pretty easily, because the cache only looks at the entire
script as a string - it can't tell that the first `test` is the same
in both.
So this means we separate it into
```fish
complete -f -c string -n "test (count (commandline -opc)) -ge 2; and contains -- (commandline -opc)[2] length" -s V -l visible -d "Use the visible width, excluding escape sequences"
+complete -f -c string -n "test (count (commandline -opc)) -ge 2" -n "contains -- (commandline -opc)[2] length" -s V -l visible -d "Use the visible width, excluding escape sequences"
```
which allows the `test` to be cached.
In tests, this improves performance for the string completions by 30%
by reducing all the redundant `test` calls.
The `git` completions can also greatly benefit from this.
This adds a path builtin to deal with paths.
It offers the following subcommands:
filter to go through a list of paths and only print the ones that pass some filter - exist, are a directory, have read permission, ...
is as a shortcut for filter -q to only return true if one of the paths passed the filter
basename, dirname and extension to print certain parts of the path
change-extension to change the extension to a different one (as a string operation)
normalize and resolve to canonicalize the paths in various flavors
sort to sort paths, also only using the basename or dirname as a key
The definition of "extension" here was carefully considered and should line up with how extensions are actually used - ~/.bashrc doesn't have an extension, but ~/.conf.d does (".d").
These subcommands all compose well - they can read from arguments or stdin (like string), they can use null-delimited input or output (input is autodetected - if a NULL happens in the first PATH_MAX bytes it switches automatically).
It is both a failglob exception (so like set if a glob passed to it fails it just doesn't get any arguments for it instead of triggering an error), and passes output to command substitution buffers explicitly split (like string split0) so newlines are easy to handle.
This would still remove non-existent paths, which isn't a strict
inversion and contradicts the docs.
Currently, to only allow paths that exist but don't pass a type check,
you'd have to filter twice:
path filter -Z foo bar | path filter -vfz
If a shortcut for this becomes necessary we can add it later.
This is now added to the two commands that definitely deal with
relative paths.
It doesn't work for e.g. `path basename`, because after removing the
dirname prepending a "./" doesn't refer to the same file, and the
basename is also expected to not contain any slashes.
Because we now count the extension including the ".", we print an
empty entry.
This makes e.g.
```fish
set -l base (path change-extension '' $somefile)
set -l ext (path extension $somefile)
echo $base$ext
```
reconstruct the filename, and makes it easier to deal with files with
no extension.
This means "../" components are cancelled out even after non-existent
paths or files.
(the alternative is to error out, but being able to say `path resolve
/path/to/file/../../` over `path resolve (path dirname
/path/to/file)/../../` seems worth it?)
This sorts paths by basename, dirname or full path - in future
possibly size or age.
It takes --invert to invert the sort and "--what=basename|dirname|..."
to specify what to sort
This can be used to implement better conf.d sorting, with something
like
```fish
set -l sourcelist
for file in (path sort --what=basename $__fish_config_dir/conf.d/*.fish $__fish_sysconf_dir/conf.d/*.fish $vendor_confdirs/*.fish)
```
which will iterate over the files by their basename. Then we keep a
list of their basenames to skip over anything that was already
sourced, like before.
The recent change to skip the newline for `string` changed this, and
it also hit builtin path (which is in development separately, so it's
not like it broke master).
Let's pick a good default here.
This just goes back until it finds an existent path, resolves that,
and adds the normalized rest on top.
So if you try
/bin/foo/bar////../baz
and /bin exists as a symlink to /usr/bin, it would resolve that, and
normalize the rest, giving
/usr/bin/foo/baz
(note: We might want to add this to realpath as well?)
This includes the "." in what `path extension` prints.
This allows distinguishing between an empty extension (just `.`) and a
non-existent extension (no `.` at all).
These are short flags for "--perm=read" and "--type=link" and such.
Not every type or permission has a shorthand - we don't want "-s" for
"suid". So just the big three each get one.
This is needed because you might feasibly give e.g. `path filter`
globs to further match, and they might already present no results.
It's also well-handled since path simply does nothing if given no paths.
These were officially called "--null-input", but I just used
"--null-in" everywhere, which worked because getopt allows unambiguous abbreviations.
But since *I* couldn't keep it straight and the "put" is just
superfluous, let's remove it.
This is theoretically sound, because a path can only be PATH_MAX - 1
bytes long, so at least the PATH_MAXest byte needs to be a NULL.
The one case this could break is when something has a NULL-output mode
but doesn't bother printing the NULL for only one path, and that path
contains a newline. So we leave --null-in there, to force it on.
This adds a "path" builtin that can handle paths.
Implemented so far:
- "path filter PATHS", filters paths according to existence and optionally type and permissions
- "path base" and "path dir", run basename and dirname, respectively
- "path extension PATHS", prints the extension, if any
- "path strip-extension", prints the path without the extension
- "path normalize PATHS", normalizes paths - removing "/./" components
- and such.
- "path real", does realpath - i.e. normalizing *and* link resolution.
Some of these - base, dir, {strip-,}extension and normalize operate on the paths only as strings, so they handle nonexistent paths. filter and real ignore any nonexistent paths.
All output is split explicitly, so paths with newlines in them are
handled correctly. Alternatively, all subcommands have a "--null-input"/"-z" and "--null-output"/"-Z" option to handle null-terminated input and create null-terminated output. So
find . -print0 | path base -z
prints the basename of all files in the current directory,
recursively.
With "-Z" it also prints it null-separated.
(if stdout is going to a command substitution, we probably want to
skip this)
All subcommands also have a "-q"/"--quiet" flag that tells them to skip output. They return true "when something happened". For match/filter that's when a file passed, for "base"/"dir"/"extension"/"strip-extension" that's when something about the path *changed*.
Filtering
---------
`filter` supports all the file*types* `test` has - "dir", "file", "link", "block"..., as well as the permissions - "read", "write", "exec" and things like "suid".
It is missing the tty check and the check for the file being non-empty. The former is best done via `isatty`, the latter I don't think I've ever seen used.
There currently is no way to only get "real" files, i.e. ignore links pointing to files.
Examples
--------
> path real /bin///sh
/usr/bin/bash
> path extension foo.mp4
mp4
> path extension ~/.config
(nothing, because ".config" isn't an extension.)
This teaches `--on-signal SIGINT` (and by extension `trap cmd SIGINT`)
to work properly in scripts, not just interactively. Note any such
function will suppress the default behavior of exiting. Do this for
SIGTERM as well.
s_observed_signals is used to inform the signal handler which signals may
have --on-signal functions attached to them, as an optimization. Prior to
this change it was latched: once we started observing a signal we assume we
will keep observing that signal. Make it properly increment and decrement,
in preparation for making trap work non-interactively.
Like `set` and `read` before it, `eval` can be used to set variables,
and so it can't be shadowed by a function without loss of
functionality.
So this forbids it.
Incidentally, this means we will no longer try to autoload an
`eval.fish` file that's left over from an old version, which would
have helped with #8963.
This concerns what happens if one event handler removes another, when
both are responding to the same event. Previously we had a "double lock"
where we would traverse the list twice. Now track directly in the
handler when it is removed; this simplifies the code a lot. No
functional changes expected here.
Hitting tab on "echo **" will often result in more than 256 matches.
Commit 143757e8c (Expand wildcards on tab, 2021-11-27) describes this scenario
> If the expansion would produce more than 256 items, we flash the command
> line and do nothing, since it would make the commandline overfull.
Yet we actually erase the "**" token, which seems wrong since we already
flash the command line. Fix this, at the cost of making the code a bit uglier.
I tried to write a test in tests/pexpects/wildcard_tab.py but that doesn't
seem to work because pexpect provides only a "dumb" terminal. I wonder if we
can test what we write to the screen without depending on a terminal emulator.
c4fb857dac (in 3.4.1) introduced a regression where process_exit
events would only fire once the job itself is complete. Allow
process_exit events to fire before that. Fixes#8914.
This is after we've tried to find the interpreter, so we would already
have complained about e.g. /usr/bin/pthyon not existing.
Realistically the most common case here is things that don't start
with a shebang like ELFs. Writing special extraction code here is
overkill, and I can't see a good function to do it for us.
But this should point you in the right direction.
Fixes#8938
This gets the passwd entry for $USER (if it is set). If that gives the
same uid that geteuid() gives us, we assume the data is correct.
If not, we reset $USER (and $HOME if it's empty) from the passwd value for our UID.
This allows using $USER in a prompt even if you've `su`d. Bash gets around this by having a special escape in its $PS1 DSL that checks passwd instead.
Fixes#8583
This reverts commit ccb6cb1abe.
CI fails with
/home/runner/work/fish-shell/fish-shell/src/autoload.cpp:148:1: error: function ‘autoload_t::autoload_t(autoload_t&&)’ defaulted on its redeclaration with an exception-specification that differs from the implicit exception-specification ‘’
148 | autoload_t::autoload_t(autoload_t &&) noexcept = default;
| ^~~~~~~~~~
make[2]: *** [CMakeFiles/fishlib.dir/build.make:96: CMakeFiles/fishlib.dir/src/autoload.cpp.o] Error 1
make[1]: *** [CMakeFiles/Makefile2:369: CMakeFiles/fishlib.dir/all] Error 2
make: *** [Makefile:139: all] Error 2
Not sure what's wrong - it compiles fine on my machine. Will check later.
Even though we disable exceptions, we use noexcept in some
places to enable certain optimizations in std::vector, see
https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/utility/move_if_noexcept.
Some methods have noexcept only at their declaration (or only at the
definition). This will be an error when compiling with "g++ -std=c++17". Make
both signatures match.
This cleans up the path_get_path function which is used to resolve a
command name against $PATH, by removing the dependence on errno and
being explicit about which error is returned.
Should be no user-visible change here.
Curses variables like `enter_italics_mode` are secretly defined to
dereference through the `cur_term` variable. Be sure we do not read or
write these curses variables if cur_term is NULL. See #8873, #8875.
Add a regression test.
Apple's terminfo has missing support for enter_italics_mode,
exit_italics_mode, and enter_dim_mode. Previously we would hack in such
support in set_color; migrate that to init_curses so we do it up-front
instead of opportunistically.