The prefix has already been case-corrected at this point and the remaining
completions are for the suffix only.
Fixes#7211
Introduced in
28d67c8f Show completion list on Tab also if a common prefix was inserted
These are events that have been queued but not yet fired. There's no
reason to modify the events after creating them. Mark them as const
to ensure that doesn't happen.
Assigning the tty is really a function of a job group, not an individual
job. Reflect that in terminal_maybe_give_to_job_group and also
terminal_return_from_job_group.
In practice this means that, if fish ever gets multiple variable stacks,
we will only incorporate environment variable changes from other fish
instances on the "main thread."
This reverts commit 3a5585df95.
This reverts a change that removed a lock. It's indeed true that in master,
fish script is bound to the main thread. But I'm working to remove that
limitation and these locks are important in that future.
When switching to the new ast, commands that were not decorated
statements (like function declarations) would be rejected from
autosuggestion validation because we could not find a command. Stop
rejecting them.
The owning locks were added after the original code and decorated with
comments indicating they are thread-safe, even though they're only ever
used from the main thread. Presuming the intent was to make future
manipulation of the code safer rather than to actually make use of any
thread safety guarantees, these have been wrapped in a new
`thread_exclusive` type which always calls ASSERT_IS_MAIN_THREAD.
The benefit is that this does not perform a syscall to lock a mutex
each time the variables are accessed.
When executed interactively and not piped, `functions` adds a comma as a
separator between each result. This removes the separator after the last
item.
highlight.cpp was blindly calling path_get_path for each head command
typed at the prompt which triggers a lot of syscalls via waccess.
It's still going to do that while commands are being composed, but now
it won't if we can make a cheap lookup to the builtins/functions hash
table and can determine that it's a valid command before inspecting the
filesystem.
When fish receives a "cancellation inducing" signal (SIGINT in particular)
it has to unwind execution - for example while loops or whatever else that
is executing. There are two ways this may come about:
1. The fish process received the signal
2. A child process received the signal
An example of the second case is:
some_command | some_function
Here `some_command` is the tty owner and so will receive control-C, but
then fish has to cancel function execution.
Prior to this change, these were handled uniformly: both would just set a
cancellation signal inside the parser. However in the future we will have
multiple parsers and it may not be obvious which one to set the flag in.
So instead distinguish these cases: if a process receives SIGINT we mark
the signal in its job group, and if fish receives it we set a global
variable.
We were previously aborting the main event loop before calling fish_exit
in the event of a SIGHUP. This patch causes the SIGHUP to be stored in a
separate state variable from a regular "must exit" condition so the
associated event can be fired before we terminate the loop.
All streams are redirected before the event is called to prevent a
SIGTTIN/SIGTTOU due to the user script reading/writing from a disposed
tty.
Closes#7014
This error only happens on recent versions of gcc, see previous
commit e6bb7fc973 for more info.
Instead of using `ignore_result()` here, I've added a `system_assert`
function/macro that mimics the behavior of all the other `system()`
calls in the file.
Previously fish weak-linked wcsdup, wcsncasecmp, and wcscasecmp.
This enabled fish to be used on 10.6. However the minimum Mac version
is now 10.9, where these symbols are available.
This reworks the "a=" detection to be simpler.
If we detect a variable assignment that produces an error,
simply consume it.
We also take the opportunity to not highlight it as an error,
and add some tests.
Original commit is 1ca05d32d3.
Typing that command in an interactive prompt would make the highlighter thread
eat up CPU and memory. Probably not the right fix; I think the token should
already have been consumed when the error is detected, then there is no need
to consume it when unwinding.
When selectiong a large completion entry in the pager, it would clobber the
prompt. To reproduce, first run this command
complete -c : -xa '(
# completion entries that, when applied to the commandline
# need one, two, or three lines respectively
echo 1
echo 2(string repeat -n (math $COLUMNS - 5) x)
echo 3(string repeat -n $COLUMNS x)
printf %s\n n(seq $LINES)
)'
then type ": " and hit Tab repeatedly. When cycling through completion
entries, observe that fish always tries to render the pager with the same
size, even though the number of lines occupied by the command line buffer
changes due to soft wrapping.
Fix this by rendering the pager after the command line has been rendered, so
we know how many lines we have left.
This switches fish_indent from parsing with parse_tree
to the new ast.
This is the most difficult transition because the new ast retains less
lexical information than the old parse tree. The strategy is:
1. Use parse_util_compute_indents to compute indenting for each token.
2. Compute the "gap text" between the text of significant tokens. This
contains whitespace, comments, etc.
3. "Fix up" the gap text while leaving the significant tokens alone.