From now on, any changes to the help texts will be visible in PR diffs,
which will make it very easy to review, and very hard to accidentally
miss changes to help texts.
If a contributor makes a change to help texts, the `cargo test` failure
text they will see contains instructions on how to update the blessed
help texts:
error: expect test failed
--> ../doc/long-help.txt
You can update all `expect!` tests by running:
env UPDATE_EXPECT=1 cargo test
In short, to update blessed help texts, one simply does
env UPDATE_EXPECT=1 cargo test
Do not run the tests if the `git` feature is missing, since then
`--diff` will be missing from `--help`. And do not run the tests on
Windows, because then the help text will contain the term `.exe`.
Move man page step to after cargo doc step so that the man page exists
when we look for it.
This reverts commit 8174e02279. Turns out
it is needed for a common use case, see
https://github.com/sharkdp/bat/issues/2307.
It is not a clean revert, because I adjust CHANGELOG.md and also add a
comment to the test. I also had to resolve a small `use` conflict.
* Strip BOM from output in interactive mode
* Strip BOM when not loop_through, add regression tests
* Update CHANGELOG.md
* Only strip BOM from beginning of first line
* Fix integration test on macOS that relied on color scheme
* Fix integration test on Windows that relied on detected terminal width
* Fix syntax test that was failing due to a previously wrong (now fixed) highlighting
Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
Co-authored-by: Martin Nordholts <enselic@gmail.com>
* Make the default macOS theme depend on Dark Mode
We frequently get complaints from macOS users that bat does not work on
their default macOS terminal background, which is white.
Pay the price of slightly increased startup time to get a better default
on macOS. To avoid the slightly increased startup time, simply specify a
theme explicitly via `--theme`, `BAT_THEME`, or `~/.config/bat`.
Note that if there is an error when we check if Dark Mode is enabled, we
behave the same as on Windows and Linux; assume that the terminal
background is dark. This harmonizes behavior across platforms, and makes
bat behave the same as before, when Dark Mode was always assumed to be
enabled.
* src/assets.rs: Fix typo
* Update CHANGELOG.md
* Add a --style=default option
* Added --style=default test and CHANGELOG entry
* Format CHANGELOG.md options with quotes
Co-authored-by: Martin Nordholts <enselic@gmail.com>
* Update help text for '--style'
* Make --style=default the default option
* Update style descriptions: "basic" -> "recommended"
* Add integration test for --style=default as default
* Update clap long help for --style
There is now a new stage in the CICD workflow present, which will build
`bat` with the `BAT_SYSTEM_CONFIG_PREFIX` set to load the config file
from `/tests/examples/system_config/bat/config`, plus a basic set of
tests, to ensure the feature is working as expected. By default the
tests are set to ignored, as they need special setup before they can be
run.
* git global config - lookup $XDG_CONFIG_HOME faithfully
* Use `bool::then`
* Cover both `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME` & `$HOME/.config`
* Remove unused import
* Global git config tests
* Added trailing newline
* Fix git config test
* Wrote to changelog
* Revert change of `Result::ok` to `Result::unwrap`
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Martin Nordholts <enselic@gmail.com>
* Guard against empty `$HOME`
Co-authored-by: Martin Nordholts <enselic@gmail.com>
The text that is printed is generated when building assets, by analyzing LICENSE
and NOTICE files that comes with syntaxes and themes.
We take this opportunity to also add a NOTICE file as defined by Apache License 2.0.
We want to make sure that all of our test environments are clean from
possible outside modification. This consolidates the list of used
environment variables in Rust-based and Python-based integration tests.
Note that there is also a similar list in `src/bin/bat/main.rs` which
is even more exhaustive (for bug report collection). However, some
of these variables can not possibly have an effect on test environments.