macOS 10.5 and earlier do not support the convention of returning
a dynamically allocated string, plus this seems like an unnecessary
malloc. Always allocate a buffer for realpath() to write into.
The POSIX standard specifies that a buffer should be supplied to
getcwd(), not doing so is undefined (or rather, platform-defined)
behavior. This was causing the getcwd errors on illumos (though not seen
on Solaris 11) reported in #3340Closes#3340
Took care of remaining issues preventing fish from building on Solaris.
Mainly caused by some assumptions that certain defines are POSIX when
they are not (`NAME_MAX`).
Moved `NAME_MAX` defines to common.h - for some reason, it was being
defined in a cpp file (`env_universal_common.cpp`) even though it is used
in multiple source files.
Now compiles on Solaris 11 with GNU Make. Still some warnings because
fish was written with GNU getopt in mind and the Solaris version doesn't
use `const char *` but rather just `char *` for getopt values, but it
builds nevertheless.
Assuming this closes#3340
Since we are including XXHash32/64 anyway for the wchar_t* hashing,
we might as well use it.
Use arch-specific hash size and xxhash for all wcstring hashing
Instead of using XXHash64 for all platforms, use the 32-bit version
when running on 32-bit platforms where XXHash64 is significantly slower
than XXHash32 (and the additional precision will not be used).
Additionally, manually specify wcstring_hash as hashing method for
non-const wcstring unordered_set/map instances (the const varieties
don't have an in-library hash and so already use our xxhash-based
specialization when calling std::hash<const wcstring>).
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
Newer versions of GCC and Clang are not satisfied by a cast to void,
this fix is adapted from glibc's solution.
New wrapper function ignore_result should be used when a function with
explicit _unused_attribute_ wrapper is called whose result will not be
handled.
This silences warnings from the compiler about ignoring return value of
‘ssize_t write(int, const void*, size_t)’, declared with attribute
warn_unused_result [-Wunused-result].
Some platforms do not correctly define `struct dirent` so that its
`d_name` member is long enough for the longest file name. Work around
such broken definitions.
Fixes#4030
This is the first step in addressing issue #3965. It renames some of the
functions involved in validating variable and function names to clarify
their purpose. It also augments the documentation to make the rules for
such identifiers clearly documented.
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.
The `test` builtin currently has unexpected behavior with respect to
expressions such as `'' -eq 0`. That currently evaluates to true with a
return status of zero. This change addresses that oddity while also
ensuring that other unusual strings (e.g., numbers with leading and
trailing whitespace) are handled consistently.
Fixes#3346
The existing code is inconsistent, and in a couple of cases wrong, about
dealing with strings that are not valid ints. For example, there are
locations that call wcstol() and check errno without first setting errno
to zero. Normalize the code to a consistent pattern. This is mostly to
deal with inconsistencies between BSD, GNU, and other UNIXes.
This does make some syntax more liberal. For example `echo $PATH[1 .. 3]`
is now valid due to uniformly allowing leading and trailing whitespace
around numbers. Whereas prior to this change you would get a "Invalid
index value" error. Contrast this with `echo $PATH[ 1.. 3 ]` which was
valid and still is.
Builtin commands that validate var names should use a consistent
mechanism. I noticed that builtin_read() had it's own custom code that
differed slightly from wcsvarname().
Fixes#3569
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.
Using a configure check for stat.st_ctime_nsec fixes building on
Android which has that field but does not define STAT_HAVE_NSEC.
Before this change the Android build failed on the st_ctim.tv_nsec
fallback #else clause.
It is believed there are no longer any platforms we support that do not
support passing NULL as the second argument to realpath(). So rather
than duplicating the logic to get reasonable behavior from our
wrealpath() wrapper simply remove the redundant implementation.
After implementing `builtin fish_realpath` it was noticed that it did
not behave like GNU `realpath` without options. Which is super annoying
since that was the whole point of implementing the command. Major
failure on my part since I wrote the unit tests to match the behavior of
the existing `wrealpath()` function that I simply exposed as a builtin
command. Rather than actually verifying it behaved in a manner
compatible with GNU realpath.
Also, while the decision to call the builtin `fish_realpath` seemed to
make sense at the time of the original commit further reflection has
shown that to be a silly, idiosyncratic, thing to have done. So rename
it to simply `realpath`.
Fixes 3400
The use of wcstoimax causes certain out-of-range values
to be silently truncated (e.g. when converted to a pid),
and is incompatible with FreeBSD (see #626)
This reverts commit 6faa2f9866.
Both GNU and BSD have bugs regarding the classification of
non-characters and private use area characters. Provide wrappers around
iswalnum(), iswalpha(), and isgraph() to provide a consistent
experience. We don't bother to autoconf the use of these wrappers for
several reasons. Including the fact that a binary built for one distro
release should behave correctly on another release (e.g., FreeBSD 10
does the right thing while FreeBSD 11 and 12 do not with respect to
iswalnum() of code points in the range 0xFDD0..0xFDFF).
Also move a few functions from common.* to wutil.* because they are wide
char specific and really belong in the latter module.
Fixes#3050
Fixes various spots throughout fish where broken strtoi checks
were converting empty strings to zero. Zero is not a valid pid and
this was causing breakage as well when input.
Nix fish_wcstoi - wcstoimax does the same thing.
Improve comments and some general cleanup.
Cppcheck was complaining about the `return val.c_str()` at the end of the
`wgettext()` function. That would normally a bug since the lifetime of
`val` ends when the function returns. In this particular case that's not
true because the string is interned in a cache. Nonetheless, rather than
suppress the lint warning I decided to modify the API to be more idiomatic.
In the process of fixing the aforementioned lint warning I fixed several other
lint errors in that module.
This required making our copy of `wgetopt()` compatible with the rest of
the fish code. Specifically, by removing its local definitions of the
"_" macro so it uses the same macro used everywhere else in the fish
code. The sooner we kill the use of wide chars the better.
This only eliminates errors reported by `make lint`. It shouldn't cause any
functional changes.
This change does remove several functions that are unused. It also removes the
`desc_arr` variable which is both unused and out of date with reality.
I noticed that the `test_convert()` function was randomly failing when
run on OS X Snow Leopard. I tracked it down to the `mbrtowc()` function on
that OS being broken. Explicitly testing for UTF-8 prefixes that identify
a sequence longer than four bytes (which the Unicode standard made illegal
long ago) keeps us from having encoding errors on those OS's.
This also makes the errors reported by the `test_convert()` function actually
useful and readable.
Lastly, it makes it possible to build fish on OS X Snow Leopard.
For this change I decided to bundle the remaining modules that need to be
resytyled because only two were large enough to warrant doing on their own.
Reduces lint errors from 225 to 162 (-28%). Line count from 3073 to 2465 (-20%).
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
Per discussion in pull-request #2891, it's not available on Linux (we just
fill it with zero), and unless run as root on OS X (or other BSD system) it
will be zero. Remove it from file_id_t. Also fix the initialization of the
file_id_t structure.
Fixes#2891
This fixes all memory leaks found by compiling with
clang++ -g -fsanitize=address and running the tests.
Method:
Ensure that memory is freed by the destructor of its respective container,
either by storing objects directly instead of by pointer, or implementing
the required destructor.