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.
This had a bunch of "do_{backward,forward}" movements that differed
only in one argument.
Just keep them together, so it's less code, and less needs to be
changed.
If fish detects that it was started with a pgrp of 0 (which appears to
oddly be the case when run under firejail), create new process group for
fish and give it control of the terminal.
This selectively reverts 55b3c45 in cases where an invalid pgrp is
detected. Note that this is known to cause problems in other cases, such
as #3805 and Microsoft/WSL#1653, although the former may have been
ameliorated or even addressed by the recent job control overhaul, so
that's why we are careful to only assign fish to its own pgroup if an
invalid pgroup was detected and not as the normal case.
This was introduced in 1b1bc28c0a but did
not cause any problems until the job control refactor, which caused it
to attempt to signal the calling `exec` builtin's own (invalid) pgrp
with SIGHUP.
Also improved debugging for `j->signal()` failures by printing the
signal we tried sending in case of error, rename the function to
`hup_background_jobs`, and move it from `reader.h`/`reader.cpp` to
`proc.h`/`proc.cpp`.
* Convert JOB_* enums to scoped enums
* Convert standalone job_is_* functions to member functions
* Convert standalone job_{promote, signal, continue} to member functions
* Convert standolen job_get{,_from_pid} to `job_t` static functions
* Reduce usage of JOB_* enums outside of proc.cpp by using new
`job_t::is_foo()` const helper methods instead.
This patch is only a refactor and should not change any functionality or
behavior (both observed and unobserved).
* Instead of reaping all child processes when we receive a SIGCHLD, try
reaping only processes belonging to process groups from fully-
constructed jobs, which should eliminate the need for the keepalive
process entirely (WSL's lack of zombies not withstanding) as now
completed processes are not reaped until the job has been fully
constructed (i.e. all processes launched), which means their process
group should still be around for new processes to join.
* When `tcgetpgrp()` calls return 0, attempt to `tcsetpgrp()` before
invoking failure handling code.
* When forking a builtin and not running interactively, do not bail if
unable to set/restore terminal attributes.
Fixes#4178. Fixes#3805. Fixes#5210.
This reverts commit 3f820f0edf.
While the premise described by @nbuwe is sound in #4505, we are now
apparently relying on this behavior is some places (although
inadvertently as there doesn't seem to be a deliberate acknowledgement
of that anywhere).
Turning off ONLCR causes things like indented multiline commands to not
appear correct at the tty (subsequent lines appear both at column 0 and
again indented).
Per @nbuwe's excellent explanation in #4505, we can save on output
to the tty by maintaining column location after NL by disabling the
ONLCR terminal mode.
Closes#4505.
`exec` now exhibits the same behavior as `exit` and prompts the user to
confirm their intention to end the current process if there are
background jobs running. Running `exec` again immediately thereafter
will force the exec to go through.
Additionally, background jobs are reaped upon exec to prevent process
leaking (same as `exit`).
- Add support for:
- Jumping to the character before a target.
- Repeating the previous jump (same direction, same precision).
- Repeating the previous jump in the reverse order.
- Enhance vi bindings.
Factor the history search fields into a new class.
As a side effect, this shares the deduplication logic, so that token search
no longer returns duplicates.
Fixes#4795
While supported by gcc and clang, \e is a gcc-specific extension and not
formally defined in the C or C++ standards.
See [0] for a list of valid escapes.
[0]: https://stackoverflow.com/a/10220539/17027
The prompt is a fallback that is overridden via a function file
anyway.
Do that with the title as well, so we can use just builtins.
This removes error messages when $fish_function_path is borked.
This allows prompts to react to $COLUMNS by e.g. omitting some parts.
We still fallback to a ">" prompt if that's still not short enough,
but now the user has a way of making a nicer prompt.
Fixes#904.
Fixes#4381.
Properly escape literal tildes in tab completion results. Currently we
always escape tildes in unquoted arguments; in the future we may escape
only leading tildes.
Fixes#2274
When the pager wants to use the full screen to show many options, it reserves
space at the top to see the command. Previously it pretended the command was a
prompt and engaged the prompt layout mechanism to compute these lines. Instead
let's juts count newlines since escape sequences within commands are very rare.
Prior to this fix, if the user typed normal characters while the
completion pager was shown, it would begin searching. This feature was
not well liked, so we are going to instead just append the characters as
normal and disable paging. Control-S can be used to toggle the search
field.
Fixes#2249
As discussed in #3805, this patch disables assigning fish to its own
process group at startup. This was trialled in #4349 alongside other
pgrp fixes which introduced additional problems, but this particular fix
seems to be OK.
Fixes#3805 and works around Microsoft/BashOnWindows#1653
This eliminates the "missing" notion of env_var_t. Instead
env_get returns a maybe_t<env_var_t>, which forces callers to
handle the possibility that the variable is missing.
Internally fish should store vars as a vector of elements. The current
flat string representation is a holdover from when the code was written
in C.
Fixes#4200
Newer versions of GCC and Clang are not satisfied by a cast to void,
this fix is adapted from glibc's solution.
New wrapper function ignore_result should be used when a function with
explicit _unused_attribute_ wrapper is called whose result will not be
handled.
It's bugged me forever that the scope is the second arg to `env_get()`
but not `env_set()`. And since I'll be introducing some helper functions
that wrap `env_set()` now is a good time to change the order of its
arguments.
This is the first step to implementing issue #4200 is to stop subclassing
env_var_t from wcstring. Not too surprisingly doing this identified
several places that were incorrectly treating env_var_t and wcstring as
interchangeable types. I'm not talking about those places that passed
an env_var_t instance to a function that takes a wcstring. I'm talking
about doing things like assigning the former to the latter type, relying
on the implicit conversion, and thus losing information.
We also rename `env_get_string()` to `env_get()` for symmetry with
`env_set()` and to make it clear the function does not return a string.
This silences warnings from the compiler about ignoring return value of
‘ssize_t write(int, const void*, size_t)’, declared with attribute
warn_unused_result [-Wunused-result].
PR #3691 made most calls to `signal_block()` and `signal_unblock()`
no-ops unless a magic env var is set when fish starts running. It's
been seven months since that change was made and no problems have been
reported. This finishes that work by removing those no-op function calls
and support for the magic env var in our next major release (which won't
happen till at least six months from now).
Using the FISH_HISTFILE variable will let people customise the session
to use for the history file. The resulting history file is:
`$XDG_DATA_HOME/fish/name_history`
Where `name` is the name of the session. The default value is `fish`
which results in the current history file.
If it's set to an empty string, the history will not be stored to a
file.
Fixes#102
This is another step to resolving issue #1310. It makes
`fish_breakpoint_prompt` a replacement for `fish_prompt` if it is defined
and we're presenting a prompt in the context of a `breakpoint` command.
This does several things. It fixes `builtin_function()` so that errors it
emits are displayed. As part of doing that I've removed the unnecessary
`out_err` parameter to make the interface like every other builtin.
This also fixes a regression introduced by #4000 which was attempting to
fix a bug introduced by #3649.
Fixes#4139
The Haiku stdio library has a bug. If we set stdout to unbuffered and it
is attached to a tty it discards wide output. Given how we interact with
the tty it should be safe to replace the problematic `fputwc()` calls
with simple `write()` calls. This does depend on the rest of the fish
code that writes to the tty to ultimately call write() which is true at
this time and should remain true in the future.
Fixes#4100
The problem was overlooking a `break` statement when refactoring a
`switch` block into a simpler `if...else...` block. This fixes the
behavior of the `history-token-search-backward` function and its forward
searching analog.
Fixes#4065
There should be just one place that calls `setupterm()`. While refactoring
the code I also decided to not make initializing the curses subsystem a
fatal error. We now try two fallback terminal names ("ansi" and "dumb")
and if those can't be used we still end up with a usable shell.
Fixes#3850
I recently upgraded the software on my macOS server and was dismayed to
see that cppcheck reported a huge number of format string errors due to
mismatches between the format string and its arguments from calls to
`assert()`. It turns out they are due to the macOS header using `%lu`
for the line number which is obviously wrong since it is using the C
preprocessor `__LINE__` symbol which evaluates to a signed int.
I also noticed that the macOS implementation writes to stdout, rather
than stderr. It also uses `printf()` which can be a problem on some
platforms if the stream is already in wide mode which is the normal case
for fish.
So implement our own `assert()` implementation. This also eliminates
double-negative warnings that we get from some of our calls to
`assert()` on some platforms by oclint.
Also reimplement the `DIE()` macro in terms of our internal
implementation.
Rewrite `assert(0 && msg)` statements to `DIE(msg)` for clarity and to
eliminate oclint warnings about constant expressions.
Fixes#3276, albeit not in the fashion I originally envisioned.
If the kernel reports a size of zero for the rows or columns (i.e., what
`stty -a` reports) fall back to the `COLUMNS` and `LINES` variables. If
the resulting values are not reasonable fallback to using 80x24.
Fixes#3740
If the tty has been closed (i.e., become invalid) the `ttyname()`
function will return NULL. Passing that NULL to `strstr()` can crash
fish which means it won't kill its child processes and exit cleanly.
Another fix for #3644
A third-party plugin noticed that using `$CMD_DURATION` in the prompt
causes problems when combined with the recent changes to tighten up
parsing of strings meant to be integer values. This fixes the problem by
ensuring the var is defined before the first interactive command is run.
See https://github.com/fisherman/dartfish/issues/7
On some platforms, notably GNU libc, you cannot mix narrow and wide
stdio functions on a stream like stdout or stderr. Doing so will drop
the output of one or the other. This change makes all output to the
stderr stream consistently use the wide forms.
This change also converts some fprintf(stderr,...) calls to debug()
calls where appropriate.
Fixes#3692
Using `\e` is clearer and shorter than `\x1b`. It's also consistent with how
we write related control chars; e.g., we don't write `\x0a` we write '\n'.
There are several places that use writestr() which should instead be
using fwprintf() or equivalent. Also, clarify the documentation for why
writestr() and writechr() exist so they aren't used inappropriately
again.
Fixes#3657
Commit 8d27f81a to change how background jobs are handled (killed rather
than left running) when the shell is exited did not correctly handle
the nested interactive context created by the `breakpoint` command. This
fixes that mistake. Now any background jobs that already existed, or were
created within the `breakpoint` context, are left running when exiting
that context.
Fish is not consistent with other shells like bash and zsh when exiting
an interactive shell with background jobs. While it is true that fish
explicitly claims no compatibility with POSIX 1003.1 this is an area
where deviation from the established practice adds negative value.
The reason for the current behavior seems to be due to two users who did
not understand why interactive shells managed background jobs as they
did and were not aware of tools like `nohup` or `disown`. See issue
There is also a fairly significant bug present due to a misunderstanding of
what a true value from `reader_exit_forced()` means. This change corrects
that misunderstanding.
Fixes#3497
If an interactive shell has its tty invalidated attempts to write to
stdout or stderr can trigger this bug:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20632
Avoid that by reopening the stdio streams on /dev/null if we're getting
an ENOTTY error when trying to do things like give or take ownership of
the tty.
This includes some unrelated style cleanups but including them seems
reasonable.
Fixes#3644
After 'x' is used to delete a character at the end of a line the cursor
should be repositioned at the last character, i.e. repeatedly pressing
'x' in normal mode should delete the entire string.
In the C/POSIX locale EOF on the tty wasn't handled correctly due to a change
a few months ago to fix an unrelated problem with that locale. What is
surprising is that the core fish code doesn't explicitly depend on
input_common_readch returning WEOF if a character isn't seen within
`wait_on_escape_ms` after an escape.
Fixes#3214
The recent change to reconcile the history builtin command and function
broke an undocumented behavior of `history --delete`. This change
reinstates that behavior. It also adds an explicit `--exact` search mode
for the `--search` and `--delete` subcommands.
Fixes#3270
The issue here is that when inserting a common prefix for e.g. a
substring match, we increase the amount of available candidates again to
things the user didn't want.
An example is in share/functions - a completion for "inter" would
previously expand to "__fish_" because it matched:
- __fish_config_interactive.fish
- __fish_print_interfaces.fish
- __fish_print_lpr_printers.fish
The completion afterwards would then show 189 possible matches, only
three of which (the above) actually matched the original "inter".
Fixes#3089.
Configure the tty driver to ignore the lnext (\cV) and werase (\cW) characters
so they can be bound to fish functions.
Correct the `fish_key_bindings` program to initialize the tty in the same
manner as the `fish` program.
Fixes#3064
I'm doing this as part of fixing issue #2980. The code for managing tty modes
and job control is a horrible mess. This is a very tiny step towards improving
the situation.
fish_title currently outputs some escaped text, which can confuse
the line driver (#2453). Issue a carriage return so the line driver
knows we are at the beginning of the line, unless we are writing
the title as part of the prompt. In that case, we may have text from
the previous command still on the line and we don't want to move the
cursor.
Fixes#2453
Remove the "make iwyu" build target. Move the functionality into the
recently introduced lint.fish script. Fix a lot, but not all, of the
include-what-you-use errors. Specifically, it fixes all of the IWYU errors
on my OS X server but only removes some of them on my Ubuntu 14.04 server.
Fixes#2957
The swap-selection-start-stop function goes to the other end of the highlighted text, the equivalent of `o' for vim visual mode.
Add binding to the swap-selection-start-stop function, `o' when in visual
mode.
Document swap-selection-start-stop, begin-selection, end-selection, kill-selection.
This narrows the range of Unicode codepoints fish reserves for its own
use from U+E000 thru U+F8FE (6399 codepoints) to U+F600 thru U+F73F (320
codepoints). This is still not ideal since fish shouldn't be using any
Unicode private-use codepoints but it's a step in the right direction.
This partially addresses issue #2684.
Prior to this fix, read_ni would use parse_util_detect_errors
to lint the script to run, and then parser_t::eval() to execute it.
Both functions would parse the script into a parse tree. This allows
us to re-use the parse tree, improving perfomance.
My PR #2578 had the unexpected side-effect of altering the tty modes of
commands run via "fish -c command" or "fish scriptname". This change fixes
that; albeit incompletely. The correct solution is to unconditionally set
shell tty modes if stdin is attached to a tty and restore the appropriate
modes whenever an external command is run -- regardless of the path used to
run the external command. The proper fix should be done as part of addressing
issues #2315 and #1041.
Resolves issue #2619
It is critical that we ensure our interactive tty modes are in effect at
the earliest possible moment. This achieves that goal and is harmless if
stdin is not tied to a tty. The reason for doing this is to ensure that
\r characters are not converted to \n if we're running on the slave side
of a pty controlled by a program like tmux that is stuffing keystrokes
into the pty before we issue our first prompt.
New implementation of migration code within the history_t class will
copy the contents of the old fish_history found in the config directory
to its new location in the data directory. The old file is left intact.
This is done only in the event that a fish_history is not already found in
the data directory ($XDG_DATA_HOME/fish or ~/.local/share/fish).
This change moves source files into a src/ directory,
and puts object files into an obj/ directory. The Makefile
and xcode project are updated accordingly.
Fixes#1866