From the Python webbrowser documentation:
"If text-mode browsers are used, the calling process will block until the user exits the browser."
Running fish_config on an ssh server with no GUI browser will open a CLI browser which blocks and stops the server from handling requests.
Using multiprocess to run the server in the background lets CLI browsers access the page, but the page is unusable.
For now, disable CLI browsers and recommend opening the page in a graphical browser.
In the future, maybe write a CLI utility to change prompts and delete history items.
Prefer the standard library lzma module if available. This change prevents
using the backports-lzma when it is installed for a version of Python that
already has the lzma module in its standard library.
They cannot be used as arguments (Perl thinks it's version check, but
version checks are pointless for oneliners), and Debian puts path
containing version depending directories (like 5.14.2) in Perl path.
There is no need to explicitly check for two arguments and set --bold.
Instead the user can simply "set __fish_git_prompt_color_flags --bold
red".
The current check violates the expectation set by the documentation
that you can use any set_color argument as the current code interprets
"--bold red" as "--bold --bold" instead.
Plus, by passing the full contents of the variable directly, the user
can do more adventurous things like set the background as well.
git.git's git-prompt may not contain a configurable prefix, but it
does display a space before the upstream information when displaying
verbose information. Rather than using a space always or never,
default to a space whenever verbose is in showupstream.
Adds a "name" option to __fish_git_prompt_showupstream that shows an
abbreviated branch name when the upstream type is verbose.
Based on git.git 1f6806c: git-prompt.sh: optionally show upstream
branch name
Add support for bzip2 and lzma/xz compressed man pages. Support for bzip2 is
part of the Python standard library (at least for 2.7 and >=3.2), while lzma/xz
is only in Python >=3.3; however, there is a backports module for Python 2.7 and
3.2.
Closes#479 by piping STDERR to /dev/null.
Also does much less manipulation of the package list; there are no
packages in any of the archives containing the names that are stripped
out as far as I can see.