I noticed that if I've previous done `make test` that a subsequent `make
style-all` attempts to restyle all the fish scripts in the *test* directory.
Those files are transient and not part of the git repository. Limit restyling
all fish scripts just to those in the *share* directory tree. There are a
couple elsewhere in the repo (e.g., *build_tools*) but they can be handled on
an individual basis.
Now that the IWYU cleanup has been merged compile all, not just a couple, of
the builtin modules independent of builtin.cpp. That is, no longer `#include
builtin_NAME.cpp` in builtin.cpp. This is more consistent, more in line with
what developers expect, and is likely to reduce mistakes.
Reduces lint errors from 384 to 336 (-13%). Line count from 6307 to 4988 (-21%).
Another step in resolving issue #2902.
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
If there are uncommitted changes use `git-clang-format` to limit the style
fixups to the lines being modified.
Refuse to do a `make style-all` if there are uncommitted changes.
Include a fix for the parsing of `git status` output that was recently
incorporated into the lint.fish script.
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.
Include information about how to deal with lint warnings and suppress
`clang-format` reformatting of blocks of code.
Move information only relevant to developers from the README.md to the
CONTRIBUTING.md document.
Closes#2901
This changes implements two new make targets: `style` and `style-all`. These
make it easy to ensure that a change conforms to the project style guides for
C++ and fish code.
Fixes#571
Teach Xcode to run new script xcode_version_gen.sh before building
the fish_shell and fish_indent targets. The script generates file
fish-build-version.h for inclusion by fish_version.cpp.
Note that Xcode always runs the script because of the phony target
named force-fish-build-version.h, but fish-build-version.h is only
touched if the contents of FISH-BUILD-VERSION-FILE change.
Fixes#890
When calculating the version, we don't need to test for the presence of
.git before running `git describe`. This lets us work properly in a
detached work tree if GIT_DIR is set.
Note: if you have previously cloned the repository, the tags for
previous versions have been edited. Use `git fetch --tags` to
synchronise your local copy.
Include config.h.in as well as configure.
Also sets correct owner, group and mode for all appended files.
Update the mtime of all appended files so that configure and config.h.in
are always newer than configure.ac.
(Fixes many problems introduced by 5023ade7, and makes the commit
message actually true.)
For the next release, this means that `autoconf` is no longer required
if building from the tarball. The website and documentation should be
updated accordingly at that time.
This commit hooks the Makefile up to generate a FISH_BUILD_VERSION
symbol and kills off PACKAGE_VERSION in .cpp files.
It also modifies the tarball generation script to add the necessary
version file for releases.
- etc/config.fish and share/config.fish are now "universal" and no longer reference install paths or need to be touched by autotools. They've been removed from config.fish.in to config.fish.
- fish now attempts to determine __fish_datadir and __fish_sysconfdir relative to the path of the fish executable itself (typically by walking up one directory). This means that you can copy the directory hierarchy around and things will still work. The compiled-in paths are used as a backup.
- The fish Xcode project now can build fish natively, without needing autotools.
- Version bumped to 2.0