Prior to this change, if we saw more than one repaint readline command in
a row, we would try to ignore the second one. However this was never the
right thing to do since sometimes we really do need to repaint twice in a
row (e.g. the user hits Ctrl+L twice). Previously we were saved by the
buginess of this mechanism but with the repainting refactoring we see
missing redraws.
Remove the coalescing logic and add a test. Fixes#7280.
If you expand an abbreviation by executing the command, fish uses a
synchronous mode of syntax highlighting that performs no I/O, because we
want to highlight the abbreviation but don't know if it's valid or not
without doing I/O. However we were doing this too aggressively, after
every command regardless of whether it contained an abbreviation. Only
do this for commands with abbreviations.
When typing into the command line, some actions should trigger repainting,
others should kick off syntax highlighting or autosuggestions, etc. Prior
to this change, these were all triggered in an ad-hoc manner. Each
possible
This change centralizes the logic around repainting. After each readline
command or text change, we compute the difference between what we would
draw and what was last drawn, and use that to decide whether to repaint
the screen.
This is a fairly involved change. Bugs here would show up as failing to
redraw, not reacting to a keypress, etc. However it better factors the
readline command handling from the drawing.
Prior to this fix, the `exit` command would set a global variable in the
reader, which parse_execution would check. However in concurrent mode you
may have multiple scripts being sourced at once, and 'exit' should only
apply to the current script.
Switch to using a variable in the parser's libdata instead.
This used to be used to determine which token contained the cursor, so
as to highlight potential paths. But now we highlight all potential paths,
so we can remove the field.
In practice we didn't use the cache for anything. Always compute it on
demand.
This eliminates the 'indents' variable which had to be manually kept in
sync with the command line.
This can be used to determine whether the previous command produced a real status, or just carried over the status from the command before it. Backgrounded commands and variable assignments will not increment status_generation, all other commands will.
Have the reader accept a constant configuration object, which controls
whether autosuggestions, etc. are enabled. These things don't change
dynamically.
Prior to this fix, if you invoked fish with --private and then used
`read --silent` to read something sensitive, the variable would be
stored in history, with the plain text available through up-arrow.
Fix it to not store items in silent mode.
Note the item was never written to disk; it was only stored in memory.
Fixes#7230
The prefix has already been case-corrected at this point and the remaining
completions are for the suffix only.
Fixes#7211
Introduced in
28d67c8f Show completion list on Tab also if a common prefix was inserted
When fish receives a "cancellation inducing" signal (SIGINT in particular)
it has to unwind execution - for example while loops or whatever else that
is executing. There are two ways this may come about:
1. The fish process received the signal
2. A child process received the signal
An example of the second case is:
some_command | some_function
Here `some_command` is the tty owner and so will receive control-C, but
then fish has to cancel function execution.
Prior to this change, these were handled uniformly: both would just set a
cancellation signal inside the parser. However in the future we will have
multiple parsers and it may not be obvious which one to set the flag in.
So instead distinguish these cases: if a process receives SIGINT we mark
the signal in its job group, and if fish receives it we set a global
variable.
We were previously aborting the main event loop before calling fish_exit
in the event of a SIGHUP. This patch causes the SIGHUP to be stored in a
separate state variable from a regular "must exit" condition so the
associated event can be fired before we terminate the loop.
All streams are redirected before the event is called to prevent a
SIGTTIN/SIGTTOU due to the user script reading/writing from a disposed
tty.
Closes#7014
When selectiong a large completion entry in the pager, it would clobber the
prompt. To reproduce, first run this command
complete -c : -xa '(
# completion entries that, when applied to the commandline
# need one, two, or three lines respectively
echo 1
echo 2(string repeat -n (math $COLUMNS - 5) x)
echo 3(string repeat -n $COLUMNS x)
printf %s\n n(seq $LINES)
)'
then type ": " and hit Tab repeatedly. When cycling through completion
entries, observe that fish always tries to render the pager with the same
size, even though the number of lines occupied by the command line buffer
changes due to soft wrapping.
Fix this by rendering the pager after the command line has been rendered, so
we know how many lines we have left.
Prior to this commit, fish used NUL ('\0') to disable control
functions (for example, the function that generates SIGTSTP).
However NUL may in fact be bindable and is on macOS via
control-space.
Use instead _POSIX_VDISABLE if defined and not -1.
This was always awkward as fish script, and had problems with
interrupting the autoloading.
Note that we still leave the old function intact to facilitate easier
upgrading for now.
Fixes#7145.
Page-Down seems to deactivate history search, so trying to undo
would leave the command line in an inconsistent state.
Fixes#7162 which was introduced in
12a9cb29 Fix assertion failure on page up / page down
It is used exclusively as vector at the moment since we only ever append
at the end. Making it a deque would be useful when allowing to edit the
search string and subsequently resume the search at an arbitrary position
in the history.
When editing a multiline command line and pressing "up" with the cursor at the
first line, fish attempts a hsitory search. If the search fails, don't move
the cursor to the end of the multiline command because this can be annoying
when the user does not actually want to perform a history search.
I really kinda hate how insistent clang-format is to have line
breaks *IFF THE LINE IS TOO LONG*.
Like... lemme just add a break if it looks better, will you?
But it is the style at this time, so we shall tie an onion to our
belt.
This makes binding \cz possible.
We already ignore the SIGTSTP signal it sends, so until now it was useless.
(also STOP and START for good measure, but since we disable flow
control in fish anyway these already shouldn't have been sent)
Fixes#7152
These control the disambiguation between ctrl-j and ctrl-m.
This can cause the enter key to send a ctrl-m, which programs might be
unprepared for.
(This is why you need to do `stty sane<ctrl-j>`)
In #7133, neovim crashing caused "OPOST" to be turned off, which
caused a weird staircase display.
So we just force a set of settings that don't seem useful to change to
avoid breaking the terminal with something like that.
Fixes#7133.
Finish the transition to termsize.h. Remove the scary termsize bits
from common.cpp, which can throw off events at arbitrary calls and are
dangerously reentrant. Migrate everyone to the new termsize.h.
Prior to this fix, s_reset would attempt to reset the screen, optionally
using the PROMPT_SP hack to go to the next line. This in turn required
passing in the screen width even if it wasn't needed (because we were
not going to abandon the line). Factor this into two functions:
- s_reset_line which does not apply the hack
- s_reset_abandoning_line which applies the PROMPT_SP hack
common_get_width will "lazily" decide the screen width, which means
changing the environment variable stack. This is a surprising thing
to do from the middle of screen rendering.
Switch to passing in widths explicitly to screen.
This allows tools like `stty` to set the terminal modes and fish will
honor them, for external commands.
The modes for fish are kept as they are.
Until now, the only change fish would do to the external modes is to
disable flow control *every time*, this changes it to only disabling
it on startup.
After that we don't apply *any* changes to the external modes (no
checks or validation or...), because we've never done that (other than
flow control), and it's not been a problem.
Fixes#2315.
If a readline command is bound to a key sequence which also sends a
signal, then fish will set the cancel flag in addition to handling the
command. But this cancel flag is then persistent. Ensure it gets cleared
after each command.
Fixes#6937
* Fire fish_postexec event after tokenization error
This is a fix for issue #6816 "shell integration with tokenization error"
* Pass command-line to fish_postexec on tokenization error
* Rename and move event for tokenization error
For the last 15 years the space was only skipped when the completion
ended in one of "/=@:". Add ".," since they are also sometimes used to
separate independent words within a token.
Fixes#6928
Improves on #6833
This updates the behavior of tilde to match the behavior found in vim.
In vim, tilde toggles the case of the character under the cursor and
advances one character. In visual mode, the case of each selected
character is toggled, the cursor position moves to the beginning of
the selection, and the mode is changed to normal. In fish, tilde
capitalizes the current letter and advances one word. There is no
current tilde command for visual mode in fish.
This patch adds the readline commands `togglecase-letter` and
`togglecase-selection` to match the behavior of vim more closely. The
only difference is that in visual mode, the cursor is not modified.
Modifying the cursor in visual mode would require either moving it in
`togglecase-selection`, which seems outside its scope or adding
something like a `move-to-selection-start` readline command.
Currently we do not add such command lines to the history, so there
won't be a suggestion from history anyway.
Fixes#6763 which occurs because midnight commander feeds fish commands
like this one (note the loading space)
` cd (printf '%b' '\0057home\0057johannes\0057git\0057fish\0055shell\0057build')`
This teaches the reader fast-path to use self-insert-notfirst, allowing
it to handle spaces. This greatly increases the performance of paste by
reducing redraws.
Fixes#6603. Somewhat improves #6704
This adds basic support for self-insert-notfirst. When we see a
self-insert-nonempty char event, we kick it back to the outer loop,
which only inserts the character if the cursor is not at the beginning.
This adds a new readline command self-insert-notfirst, which is
analogous to self-insert, except that it does nothing if the cursor
is at the beginning. This will serve as a higher-performance implementation
for stripping leading spaces on paste.
Which happened when starting the selection at the end of the commandline.
In this case, selections still interact weirdly with autosuggestions (the
first character of the suggestion appears to be part of the selection
when it's not).
Fixes#6680
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.
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.
Previously, the block stack was a true stack. However in most cases, you
want to traverse the stack from the topmost frame down. This is awkward
to do with range-based for loops.
Switch it to pushing new blocks to the front of the block list.
This simplifies some traversals.
This adds support for `fish_trace`, a new variable intended to serve the
same purpose as `set -x` as in bash. Setting this variable to anything
non-empty causes execution to be traced. In the future we may give more
specific meaning to the value of the variable.
The user's prompt is not traced unless you run it explicitly. Events are
also not traced because it is noisy; however autoloading is.
Fixes#3427
Previously, tab-completion would move the cursor to the end of the current token, even
if no completion is inserted. This commit defers moving the cursor until we insert a completion.
Fixes#4124
Fish completes parts of words split by the separators, so things like
`dd if=/dev/sd<TAB>` work.
This commit improves interactive completion if completion strings legitimately
contain '=' or ':'. Consider this example where completion will suggest
a🅰️1 and other files in the cwd in addition to a:1
touch a:1; complete -C'ls a:'
This behavior remains unchanged, but this commit allows to quote or escape
separators, so that e.g. `ls "a:<TAB>` and `ls a\:<TAB>` successfully complete
the filename.
This also makes the completion insert those escapes automatically unless
already quoted.
So `ls a<TAB>` will give `ls a\:1`.
Both changes match bash's behavior.
This exitted if the cursor was at the end of the line as well (i.e. if
delete-char failed). That's a bit too eager.
Also documentation, which should have already been included.
We used to have a global notion of "is the shell interactive" but soon we
will want to have multiple independent execution threads, only some of
which may be interactive. Start tracking this data per-parser.
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.