This error only happens on recent versions of gcc, see previous
commit e6bb7fc973 for more info.
Instead of using `ignore_result()` here, I've added a `system_assert`
function/macro that mimics the behavior of all the other `system()`
calls in the file.
This reworks the "a=" detection to be simpler.
If we detect a variable assignment that produces an error,
simply consume it.
We also take the opportunity to not highlight it as an error,
and add some tests.
Original commit is 1ca05d32d3.
This switches parse_util_compute_indents from parsing with parse_tree to
the new ast.
It also reworks the parse_util_compute_indents tests, because
parse_util_compute_indents will be the backing for fish_indent.
fish's handling of terminal sizes is currently rather twisted. The
essential problem is that the terminal size may change at any point from a
SIGWINCH, and common_get_{width,height} may modify it and post variable
change events from arbitrary locations.
Tighten up the semantics. Assign responsibility for managing the tty size
to a new class, `termsize_container_t`. Rationalize locking and reentrancy.
Explicitly nail down the relationship between $COLUMNS/$LINES and the tty
size. The new semantics are: whatever changed most recently takes
precendence.
Prior to this change, if the user's prompt was wider than the terminal, we
would reduce it to just `> `. With this change, attempt to truncate the
prompt.
For each line of the prompt, calculate its width. If the width exceeds
COLUMNS, prepend ellipsis to that line, and start removing characters
until it fits. Escape sequences are skipped.
Fixes#904
The prefix 'haha' is short enough, (and phonetic enough), that it could collide with an existing user on the system where the tests are running, causing the test to fail.
1. When the wall time and cpu time rows has different units
e.x. running multiple cores
2. When duration is around 1E3 or 1E6 microseconds
printf("%6.2F", 999.995) gives 1000.00 which is 7 digits
debounce_t will be used to limit thread creation from background highlighting
and autosuggestion scenarios. This is a one-element queue backed by a
single thread. New requests displace any existing queued request; this
reflects the fact that autosuggestions and highlighting only care about
the most recent result.
A timeout allows for abandoning hung threads, which may happen if you
attempt to e.g. access a dead hard-mounted NFS server. We don't want
this to defeat autosuggestions and highlighting permanently, so allow
spawning a new thread after the timeout (here 500 ms).
Add the input function undo which is bound to `\c_` (control + / on
some terminals). Redoing the most recent chain of undos is supported,
redo is bound to `\e/` for now.
Closes#1367.
This approach should not have the issues discussed in #5897.
Every single modification to the commandline can be undone individually,
except for adjacent single-character inserts, which are coalesced,
so they can be reverted with a single undo. Coalescing is not done for
space characters, so each word can be undone separately.
When moving between history search entries, only the current history
search entry is reachable via the undo history. This allows to go back
to the original search string with a single undo, or by pressing the
escape key.
Similarly, when moving between pager entries, only the most recent
selection in the pager can be undone.
fd_monitor is a new class which can monitor a set of fds, waiting for them
to become readable. When an fd becomes readable, a callback is invoked.
Timeouts are also supported.
This is intended to replace the "bufferfill" threads. Rather than one
thread per bufferfill, we will have a single fd_monitor which can service
multiple bufferfills. This helps today with nested command substitutions,
and will help in the future with concurrent execution.
Prior to this fix, the cancellation C++ test would mark the parser as
interactive in an effort to install interactive signal handling (so that,
for example, SIGINT would stop the job and return control to the user).
However this flag would also cause fish to attempt to save and restore tty modes
across the job. This would fail since there is no tty, and so the job would fail
with an unexpected error code.
We don't need to mark the parser as interactive, we can just remove that line.
Fixes#6539.
Prior to this fix, fish was rather inconsistent in when $status gets set
in response to an error. For example, a failed expansion like "$foo["
would not modify $status.
This makes the following inter-related changes:
1. String expansion now directly returns the value to set for $status on
error. The value is always used.
2. parser_t::eval() now directly returns the proc_status_t, which cleans
up a lot of call sites.
3. We expose a new function exec_subshell_for_expand() which ignores
$status but returns errors specifically related to subshell expansion.
4. We reify the notion of "expansion breaking" errors. These include
command-not-found, expand syntax errors, and others.
The upshot is we are more consistent about always setting $status on
errors.
This commit recognizes an existing pattern: many operations need some
combination of a set of variables, a way to detect cancellation, and
sometimes a parser. For example, tab completion needs a parser to execute
custom completions, the variable set, should cancel on SIGINT. Background
autosuggestions don't need a parser, but they do need the variables and
should cancel if the user types something new. Etc.
This introduces a new triple operation_context_t that wraps these concepts
up. This simplifies many method signatures and argument passing.
Empty items are used as sentinels to indicate that we've reached the end of
history, so they should not be added as actual items. Enforce this.
Fixes#6032
user_supplied was used to distinguish IO redirections which were
explicit, vs those that came about through "transmogrphication." But
transmogrification is no more. Remove the flag.