Unfortunately, there's no standard way to detect support (importantly,
terminfo doesn't encode it), but there's a variety of terminals that
support it that we can detect.
It's better than letting this functionality go to waste.
Check KONSOLE_PROFILE_NAME instead of DBUS_SESSION because Konsole can be compiled without dbus support.
Check ITERM_SESSION_ID's format for 24bit support
This has changed since the last release, just like 24bit support. So if
we check one, we get the other.
If stdio is dead due to EPIPE, there's no great reason to spew a stack dump.
This will still write an error to stderr if stdout dies. This might be
undesirable, but changing that should be considered separately.
It is critical that we ensure our interactive tty modes are in effect at
the earliest possible moment. This achieves that goal and is harmless if
stdin is not tied to a tty. The reason for doing this is to ensure that
\r characters are not converted to \n if we're running on the slave side
of a pty controlled by a program like tmux that is stuffing keystrokes
into the pty before we issue our first prompt.
The special token "normal" should not be in the basic sixteen color table
because a) it is not a color, and b) it is special cased with the result of
resetting the terminal colors (usually via a ANSI X3.64 CSI [0m sequence).
This adds support for the ANSI x3.64 "bright" colors in the basic sixteen
color palette. This is especially useful when trying to use the base colors
as a background color. The "bright" variants tend to be more useful as
background colors compared to the non-bright variants.
This also fixes a bug in so far as palette number 7 is actually grey and
not white whereas palette number 15 is white. At least on the terminal
emulators on which I've tested this change (Ubuntu xterm & uxterm, Mac
OS X Terminal & iTerm2).
Resolves issue #1464.
* Make sure that the `git remote` subcommands are not repeatedly
suggested (that is do not suggest a subcommand if there already is one).
* Add both long and short options to `git remote` subcommands where
appropriate.
Signed-off-by: mr.Shu <mr@shu.io>
This does a number of things:
- Removing trailing space from suggested repos for hg.
- Use the string builtin for hg completions.
- Add more internal merge tools to hg completion.
- Enable completions for abbreviated hg commands.
- Stop completing a deprecated hg branches option.
- Properly match the hg subcommand when preceeded by global switches.
- Stop completing deprecated hg glog.
- Complete hg config instead of showconfig.
- Properly complete when global switches are before the hg command.
- Properly handle the repository switch for hg completions.
- Properly handle the hg global switch cwd.
We identify when the universal variable file has changed out from under us by
comparing a bunch of fields from its stat: inode, device, size, high-precision
timestamp, generation. Linux aggressively reuses inodes, and the size may be
the same by coincidence (which is the case in the tests). Also, Linux
officially has nanosecond precision, but in practice it seems to only uses
millisecond precision for storing mtimes. Thus if there are three or more
updates within a millisecond, every field we check may be the same, and we are
vulnerable to the ABA problem. I believe this explains the occasional test
failures.
The solution is to manually set the nanosecond field of the mtime timestamp to
something unlikely to be duplicated, like a random number, or better yet, the
current time (with nanosecond precision). This is more in the spirit of the
timestamp, and it means we're around a million times less likely to collide.
This seems to fix the tests.
Currently if there is a conflict with two manpages having the same
name, one completion will override the other. But if one can be parsed
and the other can't the one with parsed results will always have a
higher priority.
It seems smart to only let files be parsed that are clearly
manpage files. Other files wouldn't be openend by man so
I think it is safe to guess that only these files are man
pages.