The `function --on-job-exit caller` feature allows a command substitution
to observe when the parent job exits. This has never worked very well - in
particular it is based on job IDs, so a function that observes this will
run multiple times. Implement it properly.
Do this by having a not-recycled "internal job id".
This is only used by psub, but ensure it works properly none-the-less.
"job_exit" events, despite their name, can only be created via
the '--on-job-exit caller' misfeature of function. Rename it to make it
clear that this event type is specifically for caller-exit.
This one tests a bunch of separate stuff, so we put it into a few
different files.
The main, new one is "slices.fish", which tests various index expressions.
Add the input function undo which is bound to `\c_` (control + / on
some terminals). Redoing the most recent chain of undos is supported,
redo is bound to `\e/` for now.
Closes#1367.
This approach should not have the issues discussed in #5897.
Every single modification to the commandline can be undone individually,
except for adjacent single-character inserts, which are coalesced,
so they can be reverted with a single undo. Coalescing is not done for
space characters, so each word can be undone separately.
When moving between history search entries, only the current history
search entry is reachable via the undo history. This allows to go back
to the original search string with a single undo, or by pressing the
escape key.
Similarly, when moving between pager entries, only the most recent
selection in the pager can be undone.
Same issue occurs here, as in #6270 (and fixed in 611a658 for `__fish_describe_command.fish`). Same reason. I've just copied the same workaround and changed the function name to match.
(cherry picked from commit f7edfba5d7)
Same issue occurs here, as in #6270 (and fixed in 611a658 for `__fish_describe_command.fish`). Same reason. I've just copied the same workaround and changed the function name to match.
Fixes#6556.
Although present since 2006, fish no longer relies on POSIX-compliant tools to the same degree. This
code causes a platform specific change that makes the tests fail, so remove it.
6902459566 was an attempt to not print
$status twice in the prompt. As a result we print $pipestatus but
not $status, which /usually/ is the same as $pipestatus[-1] --- unless
the builtin "not" is used, which inverts the $status of a job (it does
not alter $pipestatus).
As a result, the default prompt prints unexpected status codes:
~ > not false
~ [1]> not true
~ > not true | true
~ > not false | false
~ [1|1]>
This commit reintroduces printing of $status after $pipestatus, but only
if it is different from $pipestatus[-1].
Additionally, we only print anything at all if the $status is nonzero,
to avoid confusing output on `not false | false`
~ > not false
~ > not true
~ [0] 1> not true | true
~ [0|0] 1> not false | false
~ >
I think this is closer to users' expectations for those cases; they should
not have to think about this implementation detail of the not-statement.
This switches bufferfills from using an exclusively-owned thread, to
sharing an fd_monitor. This allows multiple bufferfills to all use the same
thread.
fd_monitor is a new class which can monitor a set of fds, waiting for them
to become readable. When an fd becomes readable, a callback is invoked.
Timeouts are also supported.
This is intended to replace the "bufferfill" threads. Rather than one
thread per bufferfill, we will have a single fd_monitor which can service
multiple bufferfills. This helps today with nested command substitutions,
and will help in the future with concurrent execution.