Doesn't colorize if output is redirected.
This is "fun" and indenting happens to make most of the included
functions display more narrow and fit better into a terminal window.
Doesn't colorize if output is redirected.
This is "fun" and indenting happens to make most of the included
functions display more narrow and fit better into a terminal window.
The previous commit to add a `--with-timestamp` flag to the `history` command
caused me to notice the history function didn't recognize the new long option.
Neither did it recognize the short options for the builtin command. This
change fixes both of those issues.
Improves experience during upgrades, accidentally running
an old fish with a new environment. No errors just from
printing a prompt. Fixes#3057.
Print helpful notice also when launching mismatched fish.
Autoloadable string.fish -- only create function if not builtin.
https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=ssh_config&sektion=5
1. It is possible to add multiple whitespace characters between the keyword (i.e. Host) and the argument(s).
2. It is allowed to have a single = and whitespace between the keyword and the argument(s).
3. It is possible to add multiple host names under a single Host directive by spacing the names apart.
1. and 3. are actual conventions that we use in our team, and I couldn't get auto-complete working for fish without this modification.
Modification explained:
a. The space between Host(?:name)? and the \w.* was replaced by (?:\s+|\s*=\s*) to match any sequence of whitespace characters, or optional whitespaces with a single =, per spec.
b. Result of first replacement is piped through another string replace to switch duplicate whitespace characters to a single space, and then piped to be split by that space. This allows specifying several aliases or host names in a single Host/Hostname definition, also per spec.
https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=ssh_config&sektion=5
1. It is possible to add multiple whitespace characters between the keyword (i.e. Host) and the argument(s).
2. It is allowed to have a single = and whitespace between the keyword and the argument(s).
3. It is possible to add multiple host names under a single Host directive by spacing the names apart.
1. and 3. are actual conventions that we use in our team, and I couldn't get auto-complete working for fish without this modification.
Modification explained:
a. The space between Host(?:name)? and the \w.* was replaced by (?:\s+|\s*=\s*) to match any sequence of whitespace characters, or optional whitespaces with a single =, per spec.
b. Result of first replacement is piped through another string replace to switch duplicate whitespace characters to a single space, and then piped to be split by that space. This allows specifying several aliases or host names in a single Host/Hostname definition, also per spec.
This was causing issues launching fish_config on OS X if fish.app is
renamed to contain a space (noted, but likely not the actual problem,
in issue #3140)
This makes fish_mode_prompt rely on $fish_key_bindings instead.
fish_bind_mode is also set in default mode (only always "default"), so
it can't be used as the indicator.
Closes#3067.
(cherry picked from commit 8ab980b793e80199f61257b1bc46826a93af8413)
This speeds up the common case when IO is slow, e.g. when used with
sshfs.
We only use the short sha for figuring out whether the state is
valid (for which a long sha should also work) and for display when HEAD
is detached (I think that's the correct git-ism).
Working towards #3083.
This potentially leads to an unusable session (when fish_key_bindings is
set in config.fish to a value without corresponding function), so we
should take care.
* Add missing color definitions to __fish_init_1_50_0 reset.
The values where determined by inspecting the values of:
* fish_color_end
* fish_color_user
* fish_color_host
after resetting the color theme via fish_config.
* Add documentation for fish_color_user and fish_color_host.
(cherry picked from commit 08c29727e01a541f54f9161e08cbb10020d9d456)
It's currently too easy for someone to bork their shell by doing something
like `function test; return 0; end`. That's obviously a silly, contrived,
example but the point is that novice users who learn about functions are
prone to do something like that without realizing it will bork the shell. Even
expert users who know about the `test` builtin might forget that, say, `pwd`
is a builtin.
This change adds a `--shadow-builtin` flag that must be specified to
indicate you know what you're doing.
Fixes#3000