Fish assumed that it could use tparm to emit escapes to set colors
as long as the color was under 16 or max_colors from terminfo was 256::
if (idx < 16 || term256_support_is_native()) {
// Use tparm to emit color escape
writembs(tparm(todo, idx);
If a terminal has max_colors = 8, here is what happenened, except
inside fish:
> env TERM=xterm tput setaf 7 | xxd
00000000: 1b5b 3337 6d .[37m
> env TERM=xterm tput setaf 9 | xxd
00000000: 1b5b 3338 6d .[39m
The first escape is good, that second escape is not valid.
Bright colors should start at \e[90m:
> env TERM=xterm-16color tput setaf 9 | xxd
00000000: 1b5b 3931 6d .[91m
This is what caused "white" not to work in #3176 in Terminal.app, and
obviously isn't good for real low-color terminals either.
So we replace the term256_support_is_native(), which just checked if
max_colors is 256 or not, with a function that takes an argument and
checks terminfo for that to see if tparm can handle it. We only use this
test, because otherwise, tparm should be expected to output garbage:
/// Returns true if we think tparm can handle outputting a color index
static bool term_supports_color_natively(unsigned int c) { return max_colors >= c; }
...
if (term_supports_color_natively(idx) {
And if terminfo can't do it, the "forced" escapes no longer use the fancy
format when handling colors under 16, as this is not going to be compatible with
low color terminals. The code before used:
else {
char buff[16] = "";
snprintf(buff, sizeof buff, "\x1b[%d;5;%dm", is_fg ? 38 : 48, idx);
I added an intermediate format for colors 0-15:
else {
// We are attempting to bypass the term here. Generate the ANSI escape sequence ourself.
char buff[16] = "";
if (idx < 16) {
snprintf(buff, sizeof buff, "\x1b[%dm", ((idx > 7) ? 82 : 30) + idx + !is_fg * 10);
} else {
snprintf(buff, sizeof buff, "\x1b[%d;5;%dm", is_fg ? 38 : 48, idx);
}
Restores harmony to white, brwhite, brblack, black color names.
We don't want "white" to refer to color color #16, but to the
standard color #8. #16 is "brwhite".
Move comments from output.h to output.cpp
Nuke the config.fish set_color hack for linux VTs.
Sync up our various incomplete color lists and fix all color values.
Colors 0-8 are assumed to be brights - e.g. red was FF0000. Perplexing!
Using this table:
<http://www.calmar.ws/vim/256-xterm-24bit-rgb-color-chart.html>
Fixes#3176
We need to actually export the curses/terminfo env vars in order for
`setupterm()` to be able to use them. While fixing this I reworked the
fallback logic implemented by @zanchey in response to issue #1060 in
order to simplify the logic and clarify the error messages.
This does not allow someone to change the curses/terminfo env vars after
the first prompt is displayed (you can but it won't affect the current
fish process). It only makes it possible to set `TERM`, `TERMINFO`, and
`TERMINFO_DIRS` in *config.fish* or similar config file and have them be
honored by fish.
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
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