fish-shell/tests/checks/function.fish
Johannes Altmanninger 8bf8b10f68 Extended & human-friendly keys
See the changelog additions for user-visible changes.

Since we enable/disable terminal protocols whenever we pass terminal ownership,
tests can no longer run in parallel on the same terminal.

For the same reason, readline shortcuts in the gdb REPL will not work anymore.
As a remedy, use gdbserver, or lobby for CSI u support in libreadline.

Add sleep to some tests, otherwise they fall (both in CI and locally).

There are two weird failures on FreeBSD remaining, disable them for now
https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/10359/checks?check_run_id=23330096362

Design and implementation borrows heavily from Kakoune.

In future, we should try to implement more of the kitty progressive
enhancements.

Closes #10359
2024-04-02 14:35:16 +02:00

171 lines
5.0 KiB
Fish

#RUN: %fish %s | %filter-ctrlseqs
function t --argument-names a b c
echo t
end
set -g foo 'global foo'
set -l foo 'local foo'
set bar one 'two 2' \t '' 3
set baz
function frob -V foo -V bar -V baz
set --show foo bar baz
end
frob
#CHECK: $foo: set in local scope, unexported, with 1 elements
#CHECK: $foo[1]: |local foo|
#CHECK: $foo: set in global scope, unexported, with 1 elements
#CHECK: $foo[1]: |global foo|
#CHECK: $bar: set in local scope, unexported, with 5 elements
#CHECK: $bar[1]: |one|
#CHECK: $bar[2]: |two 2|
#CHECK: $bar[3]: |\t|
#CHECK: $bar[4]: ||
#CHECK: $bar[5]: |3|
#CHECK: $bar: set in global scope, unexported, with 5 elements
#CHECK: $bar[1]: |one|
#CHECK: $bar[2]: |two 2|
#CHECK: $bar[3]: |\t|
#CHECK: $bar[4]: ||
#CHECK: $bar[5]: |3|
#CHECK: $baz: set in local scope, unexported, with 0 elements
#CHECK: $baz: set in global scope, unexported, with 0 elements
set foo 'bad foo'
set bar 'bad bar'
set baz 'bad baz'
frob
#CHECK: $foo: set in local scope, unexported, with 1 elements
#CHECK: $foo[1]: |local foo|
#CHECK: $foo: set in global scope, unexported, with 1 elements
#CHECK: $foo[1]: |global foo|
#CHECK: $bar: set in local scope, unexported, with 5 elements
#CHECK: $bar[1]: |one|
#CHECK: $bar[2]: |two 2|
#CHECK: $bar[3]: |\t|
#CHECK: $bar[4]: ||
#CHECK: $bar[5]: |3|
#CHECK: $bar: set in global scope, unexported, with 1 elements
#CHECK: $bar[1]: |bad bar|
#CHECK: $baz: set in local scope, unexported, with 0 elements
#CHECK: $baz: set in global scope, unexported, with 1 elements
#CHECK: $baz[1]: |bad baz|
# This sequence of tests originally verified that functions `name2` and
# `name4` were created. See issue #2068. That behavior is not what we want.
# The function name must always be the first argument of the `function`
# command. See issue #2827.
function name1 -a arg1 arg2
echo hello
end
function -a arg1 arg2 name2
end
#CHECKERR: {{.*}}checks/function.fish (line {{\d+}}): function: -a: invalid function name
#CHECKERR: function -a arg1 arg2 name2
#CHECKERR: ^
function name3 --argument-names arg1 arg2
echo hello
echo goodbye
end
function --argument-names arg1 arg2 name4
end
#CHECKERR: {{.*}}checks/function.fish (line {{\d+}}): function: --argument-names: invalid function name
#CHECKERR: function --argument-names arg1 arg2 name4
#CHECKERR: ^
function name5 abc --argument-names def
end
#CHECKERR: {{.*}}checks/function.fish (line {{\d+}}): function: abc: unexpected positional argument
#CHECKERR: function name5 abc --argument-names def
#CHECKERR: ^
functions -q name1; and echo "Function name1 found"
functions -q name2; or echo "Function name2 not found as expected"
functions -q name3; and echo "Function name3 found"
functions -q name4; or echo "Function name4 not found as expected"
#CHECK: Function name1 found
#CHECK: Function name2 not found as expected
#CHECK: Function name3 found
#CHECK: Function name4 not found as expected
functions -c name1 name1a
functions --copy name3 name3a
functions -q name1a
or echo "Function name1a not found as expected"
functions -q name3a
or echo "Function name3a not found as expected"
# Poor man's diff because on some systems diff defaults to unified output, but that prints filenames.
#
set -l name1 (functions name1)
set -l name1a (functions name1a)
set -l name3 (functions name3)
set -l name3a (functions name3a)
# First two lines for the copied and non-copied functions are different. Skip it for now.
test "$name1[3..-1]" = "$name1a[3..-1]"; and echo "1 = 1a"
#CHECK: 1 = 1a
test "$name3[3..-1]" = "$name3a[3..-1]"; and echo "3 = 3a"
#CHECK: 3 = 3a
# Test the first two lines.
string join \n -- $name1[1..2]
#CHECK: # Defined in {{(?:(?!, copied).)*}}
#CHECK: function name1 --argument arg1 arg2
string join \n -- $name1a[1..2]
#CHECK: # Defined in {{.*}}, copied in {{.*}}
#CHECK: function name1a --argument arg1 arg2
string join \n -- $name3[1..2]
#CHECK: # Defined in {{(?:(?!, copied).)*}}
#CHECK: function name3 --argument arg1 arg2
string join \n -- $name3a[1..2]
#CHECK: # Defined in {{.*}}, copied in {{.*}}
#CHECK: function name3a --argument arg1 arg2
function test
echo banana
end
#CHECKERR: {{.*}}checks/function.fish (line {{\d+}}): function: test: cannot use reserved keyword as function name
#CHECKERR: function test
#CHECKERR: ^
functions -q; or echo False
#CHECK: False
# See that we don't count a file with an empty function name,
# or directories
set -l tmpdir (mktemp -d)
touch $tmpdir/.fish
mkdir $tmpdir/directory.fish
touch $tmpdir/actual_function.fish
begin
set -l fish_function_path $tmpdir
functions
end
# CHECK: actual_function
# these are functions defined either in this file,
# or eagerly in share/config.fish.
# I don't know of a way to ignore just them.
#
# CHECK: bg
# CHECK: disown
# CHECK: fg
# CHECK: fish_command_not_found
# CHECK: fish_sigtrap_handler
# CHECK: frob
# CHECK: kill
# CHECK: name1
# CHECK: name1a
# CHECK: name3
# CHECK: name3a
# CHECK: t
# CHECK: wait
rm -r $tmpdir
function foo -p bar; end
# CHECKERR: {{.*}}function.fish (line {{\d+}}): function: bar: invalid process id
# CHECKERR: function foo -p bar; end
# CHECKERR: ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^
exit 0