This implements the primary environment stack, and other environments such
as the null and snapshot environments, in Rust. These are used to implement
the push and pop from block scoped commands such as `for` and `begin`, and
also function calls.
Let's hope this doesn't causes build failures for e.g. musl: I just
know it's good on macOS and our Linux CI.
It's been a long time.
One fix this brings, is I discovered we #include assert.h or cassert
in a lot of places. If those ever happen to be in a file that doesn't
include common.h, or we are before common.h gets included, we're
unawaringly working with the system 'assert' macro again, which
may get disabled for debug builds or at least has different
behavior on crash. We undef 'assert' and redefine it in common.h.
Those were all eliminated, except in one catch-22 spot for
maybe.h: it can't include common.h. A fix might be to
make a fish_assert.h that *usually* common.h exports.
These were changed in fish 3.0 in December 2018.
This means upgrading from fish 2.7.1 or earlier to the next fish
version will require users to set their universal variable again.
The clang warning for pending_signals_t was about the operator=
return type being wrong (misc-unconventional-assign-operator).
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
env_universal_t locking discipline is now managed by env.cpp.
That is, the shared instance of env_universal_t is managed by a lock.
We no longer need to have an internal lock, so remove it.
Previously an instance of env_universal_t had to be created with a file
path. Switch to allowing it to be created as empty, and later initialized
with the file path. This will help simplify the case where universal
variables are not used; they may simply be not initialized and so just
appear empty.
If fish launches a program and that program marks stdin as O_ASYNC, then
fish will start receiving SIGIO events on Mac. This occurs even though
the file descriptor itself does not have the O_ASYNC flag set.
SIGIO is reported as interrupting select which then breaks multiple-key
bindings, especially in vi-mode.
As the SIGIO based universal notifier is disabled, remove it and the
SIGIO handler itself. This allows fish to ignore properly ignore SIGIO.
Fixes#7853
fds.h will centralize logic around working with file descriptors. In
particular it will be the new home for logic around moving fds to high
unused values, replacing the "avoid conflicts" logic.
Introduce a new strategy for notifying other fish processes of universal
variable changes, as a planned replacement for the complex
strategy_named_pipe. The new strategy still uses a named pipe, but instead
of select() on it, it arranges for SIGIO to be delivered when data is
available. If a SIGIO has been seen since the last check, it means the file
needs to be re-read.
Universal exported variables (created by `set -xU`) used to show up
both as universal and global variable in child instances of fish.
As a result, when changing an exported universal variable, the
new value would only be visible after a new login (or deleting the
variable from global scope in each fish instance).
Additionally, something like `set -xU EDITOR vim -g` would be imported
into the global scope as a single word resulting in failures to
execute $EDITOR in fish.
We cannot simply give precedence to universal variables, because
another process might have exported the same variable. Instead, we
only skip importing a variable when it is equivalent to an exported
universal variable with the same name. We compare their values after
joining with spaces, hence skipping those imports does not change the
environment fish passes to its children. Only the representation in
fish is changed from `"vim -g"` to `vim -g`.
Closes#5258.
This eliminates the issue #5348 for universal variables.
Because an exported universal variable must be exported in all variable
stacks, explicit invalidation is infeasible. Switch the universal variables
to a generation count.
This sets the explicit path to the default one, which should be okay,
since the default path never changes (not even if $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
does).
Then it saves a narrow version of that, which saves most of the time
needed to `sync` in most cases.
Fixes#5905.
@ridiculousfish had introduced this in 3a45cad12e
to work around an issue with Coverity Scan where it couldn't tell the
mutex was correctly locked, but even with the `fish_mutex_t` hack, it
still emits the same warnings, so there's no pointing in keeping it.
This switches the universal variables file from a machine-specific
name to the fixed '.config/fish/fish_universal_variables'. The old file
name is migrated if necessary.
Fixes#1912
The value is not electrified or tied and is read-only. It isn't cached
in the get_hostname_identifier() function as the ENV_GLOBAL $hostname
will cache it for its duration.
Add a fish-specific wrapper around std::mutex that records whether it is
locked in a bool. This is to make ASSERT_IS_LOCKED() simpler (it can just
check the boolean instead of relying on try_lock) which will make Coverity
Scan happier.
Some details: Coverity Scan was complaining about an apparent double-unlock
because it's unaware of the semantics of try_lock(). Specifically fish
asserts that a lock is locked by asserting that try_lock fails; if it
succeeds fish prints an error and then unlocks the lock (so as not to leave
it locked). This unlock is of course correct, but it confused Coverity Scan.
This eliminates the "missing" notion of env_var_t. Instead
env_get returns a maybe_t<env_var_t>, which forces callers to
handle the possibility that the variable is missing.
This commit backs out certain optimizations around setting environment
variables, and replaces them with move semantics. env_set accepts a
list, by value, permitting callers to use std::move to transfer
ownership.
Make setting fish vars more efficient by avoiding creating a
wcstring_list_t for the case where we're setting one value. For the case
where we're passing a list of values swap it with the list in the var
rather than copying it. This makes the benchmark in #4200 approximately
6% faster.
Since we are including XXHash32/64 anyway for the wchar_t* hashing,
we might as well use it.
Use arch-specific hash size and xxhash for all wcstring hashing
Instead of using XXHash64 for all platforms, use the 32-bit version
when running on 32-bit platforms where XXHash64 is significantly slower
than XXHash32 (and the additional precision will not be used).
Additionally, manually specify wcstring_hash as hashing method for
non-const wcstring unordered_set/map instances (the const varieties
don't have an in-library hash and so already use our xxhash-based
specialization when calling std::hash<const wcstring>).
commit 50f414a45d58fcab664ff662dd27befcfa0fdd95
Author: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
Date: Sat Aug 19 13:43:35 2017 -0500
Converted file_id_t set to unordered_set with custom hash
commit 83ef2dd7cc1bc3e4fdf0b2d3546d6811326cc3c9
Author: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
Date: Sat Aug 19 13:43:14 2017 -0500
Converted remaining set<wcstring> to unordered_set<wcstring>
commit 053da88f933f27505b3cf4810402e2a2be070203
Author: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
Date: Sat Aug 19 13:29:21 2017 -0500
Switched function sets to unordered_set
commit d469742a14ac99599022a9258cda8255178826b5
Author: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
Date: Sat Aug 19 13:21:32 2017 -0500
Converted list of modified variables to an unordered set
commit 5c06f866beeafb23878b1a932c7cd2558412c283
Author: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
Date: Sat Aug 19 13:15:20 2017 -0500
Convert const_string_set_t to std::unordered_set
As it is a readonly-list of raw character pointer strings (not
wcstring), this necessitated the addition of a hashing function since
the C++ standard library does not come with a char pointer hash
function.
To that end, a zlib-licensed [0] port of the excellent, lightweight
XXHash family of 32- and 64-bit hashing algorithms in the form of a C++
header-only include library has been included. XXHash32/64 is pretty
much universally the fastest hashing library for general purpose
applications, and has been thoroughly vetted and is used in countless
open source projects. The single-header version of this library makes it
a lot simpler to include in the fish project, and the license
compatibility with fish' GPLv2 and the zero-lib nature should make it an
easy decision.
std::unordered_set brings a massive speedup as compared to the default
std::set, and the further use of the fast XXHash library to provide the
string hashing should make all forms of string lookups in fish
significantly faster (to a user-noticeable extent).
0: http://create.stephan-brumme.com/about.html
commit 30d7710be8f0c23a4d42f7e713fcb7850f99036e
Author: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
Date: Sat Aug 19 12:29:39 2017 -0500
Using std::unordered_set for completions backing store
While the completions shown to the user are sorted, their storage in
memory does not need to be since they are re-sorted before they are
shown in completions.cpp.
commit 695e83331d7a60ba188e57f6ea0d9b6da54860c6
Author: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
Date: Sat Aug 19 12:06:53 2017 -0500
Updated is_loading to use unordered_set
No longer using RAII wrappers around pthread_mutex_t and pthread_cond_t
in favor of the C++11 std::mutex, std::recursive_mutex, and
std::condition_variable data types.