The CMake `cargo test` integration was broken if Rust_CARGO_TARGET were used
with `CARGO_FLAGS` set to `-Zbuild-std` (e.g. to target i586 under i686 without
the i586 toolchain installed).
This would fail the FreeBSD tests whenever we merge or push multiple
times in quick succession.
Basically:
- Commits up to ABCDEF are pushed, which triggers a CI run
- Cirrus starts up, but takes a while - it knows to use commit ABCDEF
- More commits are pushed up to 123456
- Cirrus does a shallow clone, only has 123456
- Cirrus tries to check out ABCDEF, but doesn't know it - instant failure
Instead, let's use 100 commits, which should be enough
We require 3.19
This also makes skipped tests visible, which showed that the
print-help test was never run because the REQUIRES line was off.
In sh-mode, bash's `command -v` returns true if *all* commands exist.
The special input functions self-insert, self-insert-not-first, and
and or used to be handled by inputter_t::readch, but they aren't
anymore with `commandline -f`.
I am unsure if these *would* have worked, I can't come up with a use.
So, for now, do nothing instead of panicking.
This would crash if you ran `commandline -f backward-jump`.
The C++ version would read a char (but badly), this doesn't anymore.
So, at least instead of crashing, just do nothing.
One issue with fish_add_path at the moment is that it is sometimes a bit too intransparent.
You'll try to add a path, but it won't appear - was that because it wasn't a directory,
or because it doesn't exist, or because it was already included?
If it isn't usable after, did fish_add_path not add it because of something or did something *else* remove it?
So we give more explanations - "skipping this because it's a file", "not setting anything because no paths are left to add", ...
fish_add_path can be used either interactively, in the commandline,
or in config.fish. That's its greatest strength, it's a very
DWIM-style command.
One of the compromises that entails, however, is that it can't really
be very loud about what it does. If it skips a path, it can't write a
warning because it might be used in config.fish.
But it *can* if it's used interactively. So we try to detect that case
and enable verbose mode automatically.
That means if you do
```fish
fish_add_path /opt/mytool/bin/mytool
```
it may tell you "Skipping path because it is a file instead of a
directory:".
The check isn't perfect, it goes through status current-command and
isatty, but it should be good for most cases (and be false in config.fish).