Some terminals send the focus-in sequences ("^[I") whenever focus reporting is
enabled. We enable focus reporting whenever we are finished running a command.
If we run two commands without reading in between, the focus sequences
will show up on the terminal.
Fix this by enabling focus-reporting as late as possible.
This fixes the problem with `^[I` showing up when running "cat" in
gnome-terminal https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10411.
This begs the question if we should do the same for CSI u and bracketed paste.
It's difficult to answer that; let's hope we find motivating test cases.
If we enable CSI u too late, we might misinterpret key presses, so for now
we still enable those as early as possible.
Also, since we now read immediately after enabling focus events, we can get
rid of the hack where we defer enabling them until after the first prompt.
When I start a fresh terminal, the ^[I no longer shows up.
It's not clear whether builtin read should be able to do everything
that the normal prompt does but I guess we haven't found a problem yet.
Given that read could be used to read a single character at a type,
it's a bit odd to toggle terminal protocols all the time.
But that's not the typical case (at least not for when stdin is a TTY),
and it seems fine.
Teste with
bind ctrl-4 'echo yay'
Regressed in 8164855b7 (Disable terminal protocols throughout evaluation,
2024-04-02).
Apparently VTE terminals send the "focus in" event whenever we re-enable
focus reporting. That's probably a sensible thing to do.
Anyway, our problem is simply that we accidentally end history search on these
focus events which are implemented as anonymous (unmappable) readline cmds.
Perhaps there should be a separate cmd category.
Focus events show up as key::Invalid which is a weird private use code point;
probably we can get rid of this key..
Fixes#10411
Similar to 20bbdb68f (Set terminal title unconditionally, 2024-03-30).
While at it, get rid of a few unnecessary guards (we are never called from
a command substitution, so the check only adds confusion).
I'm not sure if it's worth supporting a terminal that mishandles unknown OSC
and CSI sequences. Better to fix the terminal. Note that there are Emacs
terminals available that don't have this problems; for example "vterm".
See the changelog additions for user-visible changes.
Since we enable/disable terminal protocols whenever we pass terminal ownership,
tests can no longer run in parallel on the same terminal.
For the same reason, readline shortcuts in the gdb REPL will not work anymore.
As a remedy, use gdbserver, or lobby for CSI u support in libreadline.
Add sleep to some tests, otherwise they fall (both in CI and locally).
There are two weird failures on FreeBSD remaining, disable them for now
https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/10359/checks?check_run_id=23330096362
Design and implementation borrows heavily from Kakoune.
In future, we should try to implement more of the kitty progressive
enhancements.
Closes#10359
To do so add an ad-hoc "commandline --search-field" to operate on pager
search field.
This is primarily motivated because a following commit reuses the
fish_clipboard_paste logic for bracketed paste. This avoids a regression.
Terminal titles are set with an OSC 0 sequence. I don't think we want to
support terminals that react badly to unknown OSC (or CSI) sequences.
So let's remove our feature detection.
This will fix future false negatives along the lines of
https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/10037