If the kernel reports a size of zero for the rows or columns (i.e., what
`stty -a` reports) fall back to the `COLUMNS` and `LINES` variables. If
the resulting values are not reasonable fallback to using 80x24.
Fixes#3740
Refactor `builtin_read()` to split the code that does the actual reading
into separate functions. This introduces the `read_in_chunks()` function
but in this change it is just a clone of `read_one_char_at_a_time()`. It
will be modified to actually read in chunks in the next change.
Partial fix for #2007
The shell was doing a log of signal blocking/unblocking that hurts
performance and can be avoided. This reduced the elapsed time for a
simple benchmark by 25%.
Partial fix for #2007
We should never use stdio functions that use stdout implicitly. Saving a
few characters isn't worth the inconsistency. Too, using the forms such
as `fwprintf()` which take an explicit stream makes it easier to find
the places we write to stdout versus stderr.
Fixes#3728
* Added new function for the default prompt mode
Now fish mode prompt will call fish_default_mode_prompt, this will solve #3641
* Added function description
* Change wording for documentation about default mode prompt
* Finish changes requested in code review
If the tty has been closed (i.e., become invalid) the `ttyname()`
function will return NULL. Passing that NULL to `strstr()` can crash
fish which means it won't kill its child processes and exit cleanly.
Another fix for #3644
mkostemp is not available on some older versions of macOS. In order
for our built binaries to run on them, mkostemp must be weak-linked.
On other systems, we use the autoconf check.
Introduce a function fish_mkstemp_cloexec which uses mkostemp if
it was detected and is available at runtime, else falls back to
mkstemp. This isolates some logic that is currently duplicated in
two places.
See #3138 for more on weak linking.
In order to use C++11 with the standard macOS Xcode toolset,
we must use libc++. This in turn requires using 10.7 as our
MIN_REQUIRED in the availability macros, which in turn marks
certain wide-character functions as strong symbols (since they
were introduced in 10.7).
Redeclare them as weak, so that we can run on 10.6 without link
errors. See #3138 for more.
GNU systems don't allow mixing narrow and wide IO, so some of these
messages were lost since 1621fa43d8.
stderr is also the more logical place for error output to end up.
Fixes#3704.