Since smartcase, we could land in a situation where we offer one
option in the pager, which is awkward.
So detect this and just insert the option directly, we can add any
more smartness later.
Fixes#7738.
fish maintains two tty modes: one for itself and one for external
commands. The external command mode is also used when executing
fish-script key bindings, which was added in 5f16a299a7 (note that
commit had the wrong issue, the correct issue is #2114).
Prior to this fix, when switching to external modes, we would also reset
the tty's foreground color. This bumped tty's timestamp, causing us to
believe that the tty had been modified, and then repainting the prompt. If
the prompt were multi-line, we would repaint the whole prompt starting
from its second line, leaving a trailing line above it.
It would be reasonable to save the tty timestamp after resetting the
color, but given that using external modes for keybindings is new, it's
better to instead not reset the color in this case. So migrate the color
resetting to only when we run external commands.
Fixes#7722
Since, unlike e.g. OPOST, this can sometimes be useful, just copy
whatever flow control settings the terminal ends up with.
We still *default* flow control to off (because it's an awful default
and allows us to bind ctrl-s), but if the user decides to enable it so
be it.
Note that it's _possible_ flow control ends up enabled accidentally, I
doubt this happens much and it won't render the shell unusable (and
good terminals might even tell you you've stopped the app).
Fixes#7704
Fish was previously oblivious to the existence of mouse-tracking ANSI
escapes; this was mostly OK because they're disabled by default and we
don't enable them, but if a TUI application that turned on mouse
reporting crashed or exited without turning mouse reporting off, fish
would be left in an unusable state as all mouse reporting CSI sequences
would be posted to the prompt.
This can be tested by executing `printf '\x1b[?1003h'` at the prompt,
then clicking with any mouse button anywhere within the terminal window.
Previously, this would have resulted in seeming garbage being spewed to
the prompt; now, fish detects the mouse tracking CSIs posted to stdin by
the terminal emulator and a) ignores them to prevent invalid input, as
well as b) posts the CSI needed to disable future mouse tracking events
from being emitted on subsequent mouse interactions (until re-enabled).
Note that since we respond to a mouse tracking CSI rather than
pre-emptively disable mouse reporting, we do not need to do any sort of
feature detection to determine whether or not the terminal supports
mouse reporting (otherwise, if it didn't support it and we posted the
CSI anyway, we'd end up with exactly the kind of cruft posted to the
prompt that we're trying to avoid).
Fixes#4873
Now that we have multiple clients of count_preceding_backslashes, factor
it out from fish_indent into wcstringutil.h, and then use the shared
implementation.
Just like OPOST this just breaks output for anything not prepared for
it. Fish itself might work with it (and #4505 recommends it), but external commands are broken.
You'll see output like
foo
⏎
from `echo foo`.
Fixes#4873.
Continuation of #7133.
Prior to this change, histories were immortal and allocated with either
unique_ptr or just leaked via new. But this can result in races in the
path detection test, as the destructor races with the pointer-captured
history. Switch to using shared_ptr.
When adding a command to history, we first expand its arguments to see
if any arguments are paths which refer to files. If so, we will only
autosuggest that command from history if the files are still valid. For
example, if the user runs `rm ./file.txt` then we will remember that
`./file.txt` referred to a file, and then only autosuggest that if the file
is present again.
Prior to this change we only performed simple expansion relative to the
working directory. This change extends it to variables and tilde
expansion. For example we will now apply the same hinting for
`rm ~/file.txt`
Fixes#7582
This allows for multiple edits to be undone/redone in one go, as if they
were one edit.
Useful when a function is editing the commandline buffer via scripted
changes or via a keybinding so the internal changes to the buffer can be
abstracted away.
(Having extreme difficulty getting pexpect to play nice with the concept
of undo/redo...)
Currently binding `exit` to a key checks too late that it's exitted,
so it leaves the shell hanging around until the user does an execute
or similar.
As I understand it, the `exit` builtin is supposed to only exit the
current "thread" (once that actually becomes a thing), and the
bindings would probably run in a dedicated one, so the simplest
solution here is to just add an `exit` bind function.
Fixes#7604.
Prior to this change, `fish_private_mode` worked by just suppressing
history outright. With this change, `fish_private_mode` can be toggled on
and off. Commands entered while `fish_private_mode` is set are stored but
in memory only; they are not written to disk.
Fixes#7590Fixes#7589
Commands that start with a space should not be written to the history
file. Prior to this change, that was implemented by simply not adding them
to history. Items with leading spaces were simply dropped.
With this change, we add a 'history_persistence_mode_t' to
history_item_t, which tracks how the item persists. Items with leading
spaces are now marked as "ephemeral": they can be recovered via up arrow,
until the user runs another command, or types a space and hits return.
This matches zsh's HIST_IGNORE_SPACE feature.
Fixes#1383
If the user types something like `/**`, prior to this change we would
attempt to expand it in the background for both highlighting and
autosuggestions. This could thrash your disk and also consume a lot of
memory.
Add a a field to operation_context_t to allow specifying a limit, and add
a "default background" limit of 512 items.
Prior to this change, if fish were launched connected to a tty but not as
pgroup leader, it would attempt to become pgroup leader only if
--interactive is explicitly passed. But bash will unconditionally attempt
to become pgroup leader if launched interactively. This can result in
scenarios where fish is running interactively but in another pgroup. The
most obvious impact is that control-C will result in the pgroup leader
(not fish) exiting and make fish orphaned.
Switch to matching the bash behavior here - we will always try to become
pgroup leader if interactive.
Fixes#7060.
And again clang-format does something I don't like:
- if (found != end && std::strncmp(found->name, name, len) == 0 && found->name[len] == 0) return found;
+ if (found != end && std::strncmp(found->name, name, len) == 0 && found->name[len] == 0)
+ return found;
I *know* this is a bit of a long line. I would still quite like having
no brace-less multi-line if *ever*. Either put the body on the same
line, or add braces.
Blergh
The pager cleanup missed that the existing token could already include active (as in unescaped) expansions, and just escaped them all.
This means things like `ls ~/<TAB>` would escape the `~`, which is obviously wrong and makes it awkward to use.
This reverts commit b38a23a46d.
I fully expect that we'll try again, but there's no use in keeping master broken while that happens.
Fixes#7526.
This is an attempt to simplfy some completion logic. It mainly refactors
reader_data_t::handle_completions such that all completions have the token
prepended; this attempts to simplify the logic since now all completions
replace the token. It also changes how the pager prefix works. Previously
the pager prefix was an extra string that was prepended to all
completions. In the new model the completions already have the prefix
prepended and the prefix is used only for certain width calculations.
This is a somewhat frightening change in an interactive component with
low test coverage. It tweaks things like how long completions are
ellipsized. Buckle in!
In preparation for introducing "smart case", refactor string fuzzy
matching. Specifically split out the case folding and match type into
separate fields, so that we can introduce more case folding types without
a combinatoric explosion.
When fish presents an autosuggestion, there is some logic around whether
to retain it or discard it as the user types "into" it. Prior to this
change, we would retain the autosuggestion if the user's input text is a
case-insensitive prefix of the autosuggestion. This is reasonable for
certain case-insensitive autosuggestions like files, but it is confusing
especially for history items, e.g. `git branch -d ...` and `git branch -D
...` should not be considered a match.
With this change, when we compute the autosuggestion we record whether it
is "icase", and that controls whether the autosuggestion permits a
case-insensitive extension.
This addresses part of #3978.
The code to override the `(status current-command) was present`, but not
handled in either the default `fish_title` function or the fallback.
Closes#7444.
Prior to this change, we would run fish_prompt and then afterwards set
the shell modes. For users with an initially slow prompt, this would
mean that characters would be echoed to the tty until after the prompt
completes.
Reorder these so that we set the tty mode first. This implies we will
run the prompt in shell mode, but this was already the case up until
2a3677b386.
Fixes#7489. Note that the prior commit e0cedd4ad2 is also necessary
here, as that fixed an extra prompt execution.
Prior to this fix, when key binding is a script command (i.e. not a
readline command), fish would run that key binding using fish's shell
tty modes. Switch to using the external tty modes. This re-fixes
issue #2214.
Prior to this change, for bindings which have script commands, the
inputter would execute them directly. However an upcoming fix for #7483
will require more integration with the reader. Switch to a new model where
the reader passes in a function to use for executing script commands.
It may happen that the user types an abbreviation and then hits return.
Prior to this commit, we would perform a form of syntax highlighting
that does not require I/O, so as to not block the user. However this
could cause invalid commands to be colored as valid.
More generally if the user has e.g a slow NFS mount, then syntax
highlighting may lag behind the user's typing, and be incorrect at the
time the user hits return. This is an unavoidable race, since proper
syntax highlighting may take arbitrarily long.
Introduce a new function `finish_highlighting_before_exec`, which waits
for any outstanding syntax highlighting to complete, BUT has a timeout
(250 milliseconds). After this, it falls back to the no-I/O variant, which
colors all commands as valid and nothing as paths.
Fixes#7418Fixes#5912
In some cases the completion we come up with may be unexpected, e.g.
if you have files like
/etc/realfile
and
/etc/wrongfile
and enter "/etc/gile", it will accept "wrongfile" because "g" and
"ile" are in there - it's a substring insertion match.
The underlying cause was a typo, so it should be easy to go back.
So we do a bit of magic and let "cancel" undo, but only right after a
completion was accepted via complete or complete-and-search.
That means that just reflexively pressing escape would, by default, get you back to
the old token and let you fix your mistake.
We don't do this when the completion was accepted via the pager,
because 1. there's more of a chance to see the problem there and 2.
it's harder to redo in that case.
Fixes#7433.
It is apparently possible to launch fish such that its pid owns the tty,
but its pid is in a different pgroup. In that case, do not attempt to stop
with SIGTTIN; instead simply attempt to place fish in its own pgroup.
Fixes#7388