This was "--authoritative" (and unauthoritative). It was meant to make
fish mark everything that couldn't be generated via the completions as
an error, it was removed years ago and has been a no-op since then.
This behavior matches the way completions are found for `cargo run`,
`cargo test`, etc., and is more robust and correct compared to looking
at filenames.
This program uses the Cobra framework for argument parsing and completion generation.
Just source the completions supplied by upstream.
This works around "go install" not being able to install completions files (only binaries).
Usually local branches have remote branches with the same name, and in
completion they are currently overshadowed by unique remote branches, making
local branches hard to find. Define local branch completion after unique
remote branch completion to show local branches before unique remote branches.
If $xdg_chache_home is empty, this is not a valid fish expression:
[ \( -z \) -o \( ! -d \) ]
and results into an error.
While at it, also use $XDG_CACHE_HOME if that directory does not exist.
This seems better than falling back to $HOME/.cache, which the user has
explicitly overridden via $XDG_CACHE_HOME.
Suggest files to "man -l", but only if the "-l" option is supported
(so not on BSD). Technically we should accept multiple files but this
seems good enough.
Also suggest files when the token-at-cursor contains a slash, because
man will treat arguments as file paths if they contain a /.
git-status --porcelain prints status letter T when a file changed type
between either regular file, symlink or submodule. It can occur in
exactly the same cases as M (modified), so extend the fix for #8311
accordingly.
For submodules, our completions are probably not always correct,
hopefully those cases are rare.
This is weirdly undocumented (as of git 2.33.0), but `git status` prints a "T" state if
the file has its "T"ype changed, e.g. from a regular file to a symlink.
For our purposes that's just another kind of modification.
Fixes#8311.
* Fix ls.fish: add -l option to GNU ls
* Sort alphabetically and remove --lcontext and --scontext (what are these?) on shared and GNU part.
* Revert --lcontext and --scontext options.
The same hack that is used for `pkg remove <foo>` is required here, too.
Due to the massive number of results, we use `head -n 250` to prevent
the completion from hanging or the shell from being overencumbered by
too many possibe completions. However, this would only generate matches
for any of the first 250 packages, rather than printing the first 250
packages that match.
[ci skip]