This makes the following changes:
1. Events in background threads are executed in those threads, instead of
being silently dropped
2. Blocked events are now per-parser instead of global
3. Events are posted in builtin_set instead of within the environment stack
The last one means that we no longer support event handlers for implicit
sets like (example) argv. Instead only the `set` builtin (and also `cd`)
post variable-change events.
Events from universal variable changes are still not fully rationalized.
Now that our interactive signal handlers are a strict superset of
non-interactive ones, there is no reason to "reset" signals or take action
when becoming non-interactive. Clean up how signal handlers get installed.
is_interactive_read is a suspicious flag which prevents a call to
parser_t::skip_all_blocks from a ^C signal handler. However we end
up skipping the blocks later when we exit the read loop.
This flag seems unnecessary. Bravely remove it.
Otherwise we'd undo the history search when you press e.g. execute,
which means you'd execute the search term.
Only `cancel` should walk it back, like it previously did hardcoded to
escape.
Fixes#5891.
We previously checked if fish_mode_prompt existed as a function, but
that's a bad change for those who already set it to an empty function
to have a mode display elsewhere.
This runs build_tools/style.fish, which runs clang-format on C++, fish_indent on fish and (new) black on python.
If anything is wrong with the formatting, we should fix the tools, but automated formatting is worth it.
This was a sort of side channel that was only used to propagate redraws
after universal variable changes. We can eliminate it and handle these
more directly.
This set the term modes to the shell-modes, including disabling
ICRNL (translating \cm to \cj) and echo.
The rationale given was that `reader_interactive_init()` would only be
called >= 250ms later, which I _highly_ doubt considering fish's total
startup time is 8ms for me.
The main idea was that this would stop programs like tmuxinator that
send shortcuts early from failing _iff_ the shortcut was \cj, which
also seems quite unusual.
This works both with `rm -i` and `read` in config.fish, because `read`
explicitly calls `reader_push`, which then initializes the shell modes.
The real fix would involve reordering our init so we set up the
modesetting first, but that's quite involved and the remaining issue
should barely happen, while it's fairly common to have issues with a
prompt in config.fish, and the workaround for the former is simpler, so let's leave it for now.
Partially reverts #2578.
Fixes#2980.
If we switch the bind mode, we add a "force-repaint" there just to
redraw the mode indicator.
That's quite wasteful and annoying, considering that sometimes the prompt can take
half a second.
So we add a "repaint-mode" function that just reexecutes the
mode-prompt and uses the cached values for the others.
Fixes#5783.
* Add "expand-abbr" bind function
This can be used to explictly allow expanding abbreviations.
* Make expanding abbr explicit
NOTE: This accepts them for space only, we currently also do it for \n
and \r.
* Remove now dead code
We no longer trigger an abbr implicitly, so we can remove the code
that does it.
* Fix comment
[ci skip]
Directly access the job list without the intermediate job_iterator_t,
and remove functions that are ripe for abuse by modifying a local
enumeration of the same list instead of operating on the iterators
directly (e.g. proc.cpp iterates jobs, and mid-iteration calls
parser::job_remove(j) with the job (and not the iterator to the job),
causing an invisible invalidation of the pre-existing local iterators.
C++11 provides std::min/std::max which we're using all over,
obviating the need for our own templates for this.
util.h now only provides two things: get_time and wcsfilecmp.
This commit removes everything that includes it which doesn't
use either; most because they no longer need mini or maxi from
it but some others were #including it unnecessarily.
Prior to this fix, the wait command used waitpid() directly. Switch it to
calling process_mark_finished_children() along with the rest of the job
machinery. This centralizes the waitpid call to a single location.
This is another case where we used pid when we meant pgroup.
Since 55b3c45f95, the assumption that
both are the same no longer holds in all cases, so this check was wrong.
Might fix#5663.
`fish_title` as invoked by fish itself is not running in an interactive
context, and attempts to read from the input fd (e.g. via `read`) cause
fish to segfault, go into an infinite loop, or hang at the read prompt
depending on the exact command line and fish version.
This patch addresses that by explicitly closing the input fd when
invoking `fish_title`.
Reported by @floam in #5629. May close that issue, but situation is
unclear.
There was a bogus check for is_interactive_session. But if we are in
reader_readline we are necessarily interactive (even if we are not in
an interactive session, i.e. a fish script invoked some interactive
functionality).
Remove this check.
Fixes#5519
This requires threading environment_t through many places, such as completions
and history. We introduce null_environment_t for when the environment isn't
important.
This reverts commit 1cb8b2a87b.
argv[0] has the full path in it for a user when he executes it
out of $PATH. This is really annoying in the title which uses $_.
... rather than hard code it to "fish". This affects
what is found in $_ and improves the errors:
For example, if fish was ran with ./fish, instead of
something like:
fish: Expected 3 surprises, only got 2 surprises
we'll see:
./fish: Expected 3 surprises, only got 2 surprises
like most other shell utilities. It's just a tiny bit
of detail that can avoid confusion.