Turns out the process-exit is only ever used in conjunction with
`%self`. Make that explicit by just adding a new "fish_exit" event,
and deprecate the general process-exit machinery.
Fixes#4700.
No longer using RAII wrappers around pthread_mutex_t and pthread_cond_t
in favor of the C++11 std::mutex, std::recursive_mutex, and
std::condition_variable data types.
Internally fish should store vars as a vector of elements. The current
flat string representation is a holdover from when the code was written
in C.
Fixes#4200
It's bugged me forever that the scope is the second arg to `env_get()`
but not `env_set()`. And since I'll be introducing some helper functions
that wrap `env_set()` now is a good time to change the order of its
arguments.
My previous change to eliminate `class var_entry_t` caused me to notice
that `env_get()` turned a set but empty var into a missing var. Which
is wrong. Fixing that brought to light several other pieces of code that
were wrong as a consequence of the aforementioned bug.
Another step to fixing issue #4200.
PR #3691 made most calls to `signal_block()` and `signal_unblock()`
no-ops unless a magic env var is set when fish starts running. It's
been seven months since that change was made and no problems have been
reported. This finishes that work by removing those no-op function calls
and support for the magic env var in our next major release (which won't
happen till at least six months from now).
This is the first step in implementing a better abstraction for handling
fish script vars in the C++ code. It implements a new function (with two
signatures) to provide a standard method for construct the flag string
representation of a fish script array.
Partial fix for #4200
In order to allow the execution of commands before dropping to an
interactive prompt, a new switch, '-C' or '--init-command' has been
added to those switches that we accept.
The documentation has been updated correspondingly.
The original code only supported a single command list to be executed,
and this command list terminates the shell when it completes. To allow
the new command list to preceed the original one, both have been
wrapped in a new container class 'command_line_switches_t'. This is
then passed around in place of the list of strings we used previously.
I had considered moving the interactive, login and other command line
switch states into this container, but doing so would change far more
of the code, moving the structure to be available globally, and I
wasn't confident of the impact. However, this might be a useful thing
to do in the future.
A new function, run_command_list, was lifted from the prior execution
code, and re-used for both the initial command and the regular command
execution.
This implements `status is-breakpoint` that returns true if the current
shell prompt is displayed in the context of a `breakpoint` command.
This also fixes several bugs. Most notably making `breakpoint` a no-op if
the shell isn't interactive. Also, typing `breakpoint` at an interactive
prompt should be an error rather than creating a new nested debugging
context.
Partial fix for #1310
This primarily replaces "STATUS_BUILTIN_OK" with "STATUS_CMD_OK" and
"STATUS_BUILTIN_ERROR" with "STATUS_CMD_ERROR". That is because we want
to make it clear these status codes are applicable to fish functions as
well as builtins. Future changes will make it easier to use these
symbols and values in functions.
This is the next step in determining whether we can disable blocking
signals without a good reason to do so. This makes not blocking signals
the default behavior. If someone finds a problem they can add this to
their ~/config/fish/config.fish file:
set FISH_NO_SIGNAL_BLOCK 0
Alternatively set that env var before starting fish. I won't be surprised
if people report problems. Till now we have relied on people opting in
to this behavior to tell us whether it causes problems. This makes the
experimental behavior the default that has to be opted out of. This will
give us a lot more confidence this change doesn't cause problems before
the next minor release.
Note that there are still a few places where we force blocking of
signals. Primarily to keep SIGTSTP from interfering with the shell in
response to manipulating the controlling tty. Bash is more selective
in the signals it blocks around the problematic syscalls (c.f., its
`git_terminal_to()` function). However, I don't see any value in that
refinement.
There should be just one place that calls `setupterm()`. While refactoring
the code I also decided to not make initializing the curses subsystem a
fatal error. We now try two fallback terminal names ("ansi" and "dumb")
and if those can't be used we still end up with a usable shell.
Fixes#3850
This reverts commit e30f3fee88.
Not sure why I didn't notice this before merging it but the change I'm
reverting makes it impossible to start a login shell.
This is the next step in determining whether we can disable blocking
signals without a good reason to do so. This makes not blocking signals
the default behavior. If someone finds a problem they can add this to
their ~/config/fish/config.fish file:
set FISH_NO_SIGNAL_BLOCK 0
Alternatively set that env var before starting fish. I won't be surprised
if people report problems. Till now we have relied on people opting in
to this behavior to tell us whether it causes problems. This makes the
experimental behavior the default that has to be opted out of. This will
give is a lot more confidence this change doesn't cause major problems
prior to the next minor release.
I recently upgraded the software on my macOS server and was dismayed to
see that cppcheck reported a huge number of format string errors due to
mismatches between the format string and its arguments from calls to
`assert()`. It turns out they are due to the macOS header using `%lu`
for the line number which is obviously wrong since it is using the C
preprocessor `__LINE__` symbol which evaluates to a signed int.
I also noticed that the macOS implementation writes to stdout, rather
than stderr. It also uses `printf()` which can be a problem on some
platforms if the stream is already in wide mode which is the normal case
for fish.
So implement our own `assert()` implementation. This also eliminates
double-negative warnings that we get from some of our calls to
`assert()` on some platforms by oclint.
Also reimplement the `DIE()` macro in terms of our internal
implementation.
Rewrite `assert(0 && msg)` statements to `DIE(msg)` for clarity and to
eliminate oclint warnings about constant expressions.
Fixes#3276, albeit not in the fashion I originally envisioned.
I'm starting to wonder if IWYU is worth the effort. Nonetheless, this
makes it lint clean on macOS and reduces the number of warnings on
FreeBSD and Linux.
This puts a hard upper bound of 10 MiB on the amount of data that read
will consume. This is to avoid having the shell consume an unreasonable
amount of memory, possibly causing the system to enter a OOM condition,
if the user does something non-sensical.
Fixes#3712
The shell was doing a log of signal blocking/unblocking that hurts
performance and can be avoided. This reduced the elapsed time for a
simple benchmark by 25%.
Partial fix for #2007
This fixes some of the IWYU and cppcheck lint warnings. And only on
macOS (formerly OS X). Fixing these types of warnings on a broader set
of platforms should be done but this is a baby step to making `make
lint-all` have few, if any, warnings. This reduces the number of lines
in the `make lint-all` output on macOS by over 500 lines.
If one does a make fish; ./fish - don't use the make-installed paths.
Also, remove huge chunk of nearly duplicated code #ifdef'd __APPLE__
for relocatable dirs in fish.app: the directories under Resources
in the bundle followed by the changes I made around here a few months
ago now are not different enough that they require a special case.
This works fine for fish.app.
I was surprised fish_indent was running from /usr/local/bin
instead of the git checkout when I ran ./fish
after building fish there. This was more easily noticable after my last
commit. I added some debug lines which probably fish could have been
doing already when looking into that.
This is a pretty major thing during fish initialization, commit it for
everyone.
A user reported that fish was dying from a SIGSEGV when launched by the
sjterm terminal app. This was traced to a bug in sjterm passing an empty
argv array to the shell. Which, while technically legal, is very unusual
and a bad practice.
Fixes#3269
The tty device timestamps on MS Windows aren't usable because they're always
the current time. So fish can't use them to decide if the entire prompt needs
to be repainted.
Fixes#2859
Fix test setup bogosities. Specifically, they weren't hermetic with respect to
locale env vars.
Rewrite the handling of locale vars to simplify the code and make it more like
the pattern most programs employ.
Fixes#3110
This change does several things. First, and most important, it allows
dumping the "n" most recent stack frames on each debug() call. Second,
it demangles the C++ symbols. Third, it prepends each debug() message
with the debug level.
Unrelated to the above I've replaced all `assert(!is_forked_child());`
statements with `ASSERT_IS_NOT_FORKED_CHILD()` for consistency.
The fork (create new process) related debugging messages rely on an
undocumented env var and use `printf()` rather than `debug()`. There are
also errors in how the fork count is tracked that this fixes.
Fixes#2995
Remove the "make iwyu" build target. Move the functionality into the
recently introduced lint.fish script. Fix a lot, but not all, of the
include-what-you-use errors. Specifically, it fixes all of the IWYU errors
on my OS X server but only removes some of them on my Ubuntu 14.04 server.
Fixes#2957
The readlink() function does not null terminate the path it returns.
Remove the OS X code that deals with a path buffer that is too short. For
one thing a loop isn't needed since we're told how big of a buffer
is required if the first _NSGetExecutablePath() call fails. But more
important it is so unlikely that the path will be longer than PATH_MAX
that if it is we should just give up.
Fixes 2931.
I just noticed that depending on the state of your working tree there can be
one or more spaces after the modification token and the file name. If there is
more than one space that causes the `string split` to produce unexpected
output.
When explicitly asking for the fish version string the information
should go to stdout rather than stderr. Also, there is no reason to use
exit_without_destructors() rather than exit() in that code path. We
actually want the side-effects of exit() such as flushing stdout and
there aren't any threads or other things that could cause a normal exit
to fail when that function is run.
The early return skipped all cleanup.
This problem is a case for the classic "goto fail" paradigm, but this
change instead makes a few adjustments to take advantage of a previously
unused level of indentation to conditionally execute the success path.
The error message now prints the filename instead of "open",
which should be more idiomatic.
Tip:
This patch makes sense if viewed with `git show --ignore-space-change`.
There is no longer a good reason to detect whether or not getopt_long()
is available. All UNIX implementations we're likely to run on have it. And
if we ever find one that doesn't the right thing to do is not fallback to
getopt() but to include the getopt_long() source in our package like we
do with the pcre2 library. Since it's licensed under LGPL we can legally
do so if it becomes necessary.
This partially addresses issue #2790.
This narrows the range of Unicode codepoints fish reserves for its own
use from U+E000 thru U+F8FE (6399 codepoints) to U+F600 thru U+F73F (320
codepoints). This is still not ideal since fish shouldn't be using any
Unicode private-use codepoints but it's a step in the right direction.
This partially addresses issue #2684.
All versions of fish prior to this change silently discarded anything written
to stderr while source a config.fish file. Apparently just to avoid having
the source command display an error if the file did not exist. This can mask
real problems. So instead this change explicitly checks whether the file is
readable and silently skips sourcing it if it isn't.
Resolves issue #2702.
Before this change, `fish ./test.fish` would fully resolve the
relative paths and symlinks of test.fish, as reported by `status -f`.
However `source` would not. With this change, both cases return relative
paths. `realpath` may be used by scripts to resolve them.
Fixes#2643
While investigating issue #2619 my first thought was that the problem
had something to do with the "is_interactive_session" global variable.
That preliminary conclusion appears to be wrong (i.e., the problem
lies elsewhere). However, that hypothesis caused me to look at function
"fish_parse_opt" and other mentions of "is_interactive_session".
I decided to take the opportunity to simplify and improve the style of
"fish_parse_opt" since I just spent an hour reviewing the code that
references "is_interactive_session". For example, the "has_cmd" variable
isn't really needed. And there is inconsistent whitespace not to mention
confusion about bool's versus int's and zero versus NULL.
This change moves source files into a src/ directory,
and puts object files into an obj/ directory. The Makefile
and xcode project are updated accordingly.
Fixes#1866