macOS `mktemp -d` likes to return symlinks. Guard against that possibility.
That allows the test to succeed when run directly, instead of through the
build target.
It was possible to start the new job and execute `jobs` again before
the job died (or we noticed it did), so the test would fail.
To properly test, we need to ensure the job has been removed. `wait`
should do it.
complete -C'echo $HOM ' would complete $HOM instead of a new token.
Fixes another regression introduced in
6fb7f9b6b - Fix completion for builtins with subcommands
It's now good enough to do so.
We don't allow grid-alignment:
```fish
complete -c foo -s b -l barnanana -a '(something)'
complete -c foo -s z -a '(something)'
```
becomes
```fish
complete -c foo -s b -l barnanana -a '(something)'
complete -c foo -s z -a '(something)'
```
It's just more trouble than it is worth.
The one part I'd change:
We align and/or'd parts of an if-condition with the in-block code:
```fish
if true
and false
dosomething
end
```
becomes
```fish
if true
and false
dosomething
end
```
but it's not used terribly much and if we ever fix it we can just
reindent.
for-loops that were not inside a function could overwrite global
and universal variables with the loop variable. Avoid this by making
for-loop-variables local variables in their enclosing scope.
This means that if someone does:
set a global
for a in local; end
echo $a
The local $a will shadow the global one (but not be visible in child
scopes). Which is surprising, but less dangerous than the previous
behavior.
The detection whether the loop is running inside a function was failing
inside command substitutions. Remove this special handling of functions
alltogether, it's not needed anymore.
Fixes#6480
Store the entire function declaration, not just its job list.
This allows us to extract the body of the function complete with any
leading comments and indents.
Fixes#5285
In particular, this allows `true && time true`, or `true; and time true`,
and both `time not true` as well as `not time true` (like bash).
time is valid only as job _prefix_, so `true | time true` could call
`/bin/time` (same in bash)
See discussion in #6442
Extend the commit 8e17d29e04 to block processes, for example:
begin ; stuff ; end
or if/while blocks as well.
Note there's an existing optimization where we do not create a job for a
block if it has no redirections.
job_promote attempts to bring the most recently "touched" job to the front
of the job list. It did this via:
std::rotate(begin, job, end)
However this has the effect of pushing job-1 to the end. That is,
promoting '2' in [1, 2, 3] would result in [2, 3, 1].
Correct this by replacing it with:
std::rotate(begin, job, job+1);
now we get the desired [2, 1, 3].
Also add a test.
It looks like the last status already contains the signal that cancelled
execution.
Also make `fish -c something` always return the last exit status of
"something", instead of hardcoded 127 if exited or signalled.
Fixes#6444
This was previously required so that, if there was a redirection to a
file, we would fork a process to create the file even if there was no
output. For example `echo -n >/tmp/file.txt` would have to create
file.txt even though it would be empty.
However now we open the file before fork, so we no longer need special
logic around this.
Do this only when splitting on IFS characters which usually contains
whitespace characters --- read --delimiter is unchanged; it still
consumes no more than one delimiter per variable. This seems better,
because it allows arbitrary delimiters in the last field.
Fixes#6406
This adds a test for the obscure case where an fd is redirected to
itself. This is tricky because the dup2 will not clear the CLO_EXEC bit.
So do it manually; also posix_spawn can't be used in this case.
The IO cleanup left file redirections open in the child. For example,
/bin/cmd < file.txt would redirect stdin but also leave the file open.
Ensure these get closed properly.
Prior to this fix, a job would hold onto any IO redirections from its
parent. For example:
begin
echo a
end < file.txt
The "echo a" job would hold a reference to the I/O redirection.
The problem is that jobs then extend the life of pipes until the job is
cleaned up. This can prevent pipes from closing, leading to hangs.
Fix this by not storing the block IO; this ensures that jobs do not
prolong the life of pipes.
Fixes#6397
(command pwd) uses the system's implementation of pwd. At least the GNU
coreutils implementation defaults to -P, which resulted in symlinks being
expanded when switching between directories with nextd/prevd.
This did some weird unescaping to try to extract the first word.
So we're now more likely to be *correct*, and the alias benchmark is
about 20% *faster*.
Call it a win-win.
This splits a string into variables according to the shell's
tokenization rules, considering quoting, escaping etc.
This runs an automatic `unescape` on the string so it's presented like
it would be passed to the command. E.g.
printf '%s\n' a\ b
returns the tokens
printf
%s\n
a b
It might be useful to add another mode "--tokenize-raw" that doesn't
do that, but this seems to be the more useful of the two.
Fixes#3823.
This added the function offset *again*, but it's already included in
the line for the current file.
And yes, I have explicitly tested a function file with a function
defined at a later line.
Fixes#6350
Since #6287, bare variable assignments do not parse, which broke
the "Unsupported use of '='" error message.
This commit catches parse errors that occur on bare variable assignments.
When a statement node fails to parse, then we check if there is at least one
prefixing variable assignment. If so, we emit the old error message.
See also #6347
This adds initial support for statements with prefixed variable assignments.
Statments like this are supported:
a=1 b=$a echo $b # outputs 1
Just like in other shells, the left-hand side of each assignment must
be a valid variable identifier (no quoting/escaping). Array indexing
(PATH[1]=/bin ls $PATH) is *not* yet supported, but can be added fairly
easily.
The right hand side may be any valid string token, like a command
substitution, or a brace expansion.
Since `a=* foo` is equivalent to `begin set -lx a *; foo; end`,
the assignment, like `set`, uses nullglob behavior, e.g. below command
can safely be used to check if a directory is empty.
x=/nothing/{,.}* test (count $x) -eq 0
Generic file completion is done after the equal sign, so for example
pressing tab after something like `HOME=/` completes files in the
root directory
Subcommand completion works, so something like
`GIT_DIR=repo.git and command git ` correctly calls git completions
(but the git completion does not use the variable as of now).
The variable assignment is highlighted like an argument.
Closes#6048