If I run "sleep 3", type a command and hit enter, then there is no
obvious way to cancel or edit the imminent command other than ctrl-c
but that also cancels sleep, and doesn't allow editing. (ctrl-z sort
of works, but also doesn't allow editing).
Let's try to limit ourselves to inserting the buffered command
(translating enter to a newline), and only execute once the user
actually presses enter after the previous command is done.
Hide it behind a new feature flag for now.
By making things less scary, this might be more user-friendly, at
the risk of breaking expectations in some cases.
This also fixes a class of security issues where a command like
`cat malicious-file.txt` might output escape sequences, causing
the terminal to echo back a malicious command; such files can still
insert into the command line but at least not execute it directly.
(Since it's only fixed partially I'm not really sure if the security
issue is a good enough motivation for this particular change.)
Note that bracketed paste probably has similar motivation as this feature.
Part of #10987Closes#10991
Commit 1c4e5cadf2 (Autosuggestions in multi-line
command lines, 2024-12-15) accidentally passed an empty
"commandline_before_suggestion" to compute_layout() when there is
no autosuggestion.
Closes#10996
Before 1c4e5cadf2 (Autosuggestions in multi-line command lines,
2024-12-15), the completion code path in the autosuggestion performer
used to do something weird: it used to request completions for the
entire command line (with the implied cursor at end) but try to apply
the same completion at the actual cursor.
That commit changed this to request completions only up to the cursor
position, which could in theory make us produce valid completions even
if the cursor is not at end of the line. However, that doesn't really
work since autosuggestions can only be rendered at the end of the line.
And the worst of it, that commit tries to compute
line_at_cursor(&full_line, search_string_range.end)
which crashes as out-of-bounds if the completion needs to replace the token
(like a case-correcting completion does).
Let's apply completions to the end, matching how autosuggestions work
in general.
This is somewhat subtle:
The #RUN line in a littlecheck file will be run by a posix shell,
which means the substitutions will also be mangled by it.
Now, we *have* shell-quoted them, but unfortunately what we need is to
quote them for inside a pre-existing layer of quotes, e.g.
# RUN: fish -C 'set -g fish %fish'
here, %fish can't be replaced with `'path with spaces/fish'`, because
that ends up as
# RUN: fish -C 'set -g fish 'path with spaces/fish''
which is just broken.
So instead, we pass it as a variable to that fish:
# RUN: fish=%fish fish...
In addition, we need to not mangle the arguments in our test_driver.
For that, because we insist on posix shell, which has only one array,
and we source a file, we *need* to stop having that file use
arguments.
Which is okay - test_env.sh could previously be used to start a test,
and now it no longer can because that is test_*driver*.sh's job.
For the interactive tests, it's slightly different:
pexpect.spawn(foo) is sensitive to shell metacharacters like space.
So we shell-quote it.
But if you pass any args to pexpect.spawn, it no longer uses a shell,
and so we cannot shell-quote it.
There could be a better way to fix this?
We:
1. Set up a nice TMPDIR for our tests to use
2. Immediately `cd` to the directory containing the test runner.
So instead we don't do (2), and stay in the temp directory, and
explicitly use all the things from the test runner directory.
I am fairly certain that cmake papered over this by adding a second
layer of temp dir.
As soon as we start processing a scrollback-push readline command, we
pause execution of all other readline commands until scrollback-push
retires. This means that we never get into a situation with two
active scrollback-push commands -- unless we are executing readline
commands via a script running "commandline -f":
since the first part of scrollback-push handling returns immediately,
the script will proceed before scrollback-push retires.
A second scrollback-push fails an assertion. Work around that for now.
In future, scrollback-push should block when invoked by such a script,
just like it does when invoked from bindings.
On ctrl-l we send `\e[2J` (Erase in Display). Some terminals interpret
this to scroll the screen content instead of clearing it. This happens
on VTE-based terminals like gnome-terminal for example.
The traditional behavior of ctrl-l erasing the screen (but not the
rest of the scrollback) is weird because:
1. `ctrl-l` is the easiest and most portable way to push the prompt
to the top (and repaint after glitches I guess). But it's also a
destructive action, truncating scrollback. I use it for scrolling
and am frequently surprised when my scroll back is missing
information.
2. the amount of lines erased depends on the window size.
It would be more intuitive to erase by prompts, or erase the text
in the terminal selection.
Let's use scrolling behavior on all terminals.
The new command could also be named "push-to-scrollback", for
consistency with others. But if we anticipate a want to add other
scrollback-related commands, "scrollback-push" is better.
This causes tests/checks/tmux-history-search.fish to fail; that test
seems pretty broken; M-d (alt-d) is supposed to delete the current
search match but there is a rogue "echo" that is supposed to invalidate
the search match. I'm not sure how that ever worked.
Also, pexepect doesn't seem to support cursor position reporting,
so work around that.
Ref: https://codeberg.org/dnkl/foot/wiki#how-do-i-make-ctrl-l-scroll-the-content-instead-of-erasing-it
as of wiki commit b57489e298f95d037fdf34da00ea60a5e8eafd6d
Closes#10934
If base directories (e.g. $HOME/.config/fish) need to be created,
create them with mode 0700 (i.e. restricted to the owner).
This both keeps the behavior of old fish versions (e.g. 3.7.1) and is
compliant with the XDG Base Directory Specification.
See: https://specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/0.8/#referencing
This is allowed
time a=b echo 123
but -- due to an oversight in 3de95038b0 (Make "time" a job prefix,
2019-12-21) -- this is not allowed:
not time a=b echo 123
Instead, this one one works:
not a=b time echo 123
which is weird because without the "not" this would run "/bin/time".
It seems wrong that "not" is not like the others. Swap the order
for consistency.
Note that unlike "not", "time" currently needs to come before variable
assignments, so "a=b time true" is disallowed. This matches zsh. POSIX
shells call "/bin/time" here. Since it's ambiguous, erroring out seems
fine. It's weird that we're inconsistent with not here but I guess
"command not" is not expected to have subtly different behavior.
Closes#10890
Commit 29dc30711 (Insert some completions with quotes instead of
backslashes, 2024-04-13) wrongly copmletes
$ cat ~/space
to
$ cat '~/path with spaces'
Today completions can be either replacing or appending. We never quote
(but backslash-escape) appending completions (unless they "append"
to an empty token). We always quote replacing completions. The
assumption in this part of the code is that replacing completions
can be quoted without changing meaning.
This assumption is wrong for tildes. For the backslash-escaping code
path, we take care of this edge case via a special DONT_ESCAPE_TILDES
flag. However that flag does not take effect when using quotes for
escaping. Fix that.
Unfortunately, e97a4fab7 (Escape : and = in file completions,
2024-04-19) introduced a (hopefully temporary) code clone in
escape_separators, which made added an extra step to debugging here.
This now allows:
- Same argument (`random 5 5`)
- Swapped ends (`random 10 2`)
- One possibility (`random 0 5 4`)
This makes it easier to use with numbers generated elsewhere instead
of hard-coded, so you don't need to check as much before running it.
Fixes#10879
These are another way to spell the same thing that doesn't match what
`bind` would print.
They're also not documented and tested thoroughly.
Since they are just small shortcuts and unreleased we can just remove
them.
Fixes#10845
Given "printf %18446744073709551616s", we parse the number only in
the printf crate, which tells us that we overflowed somwhere (but
not where exactly).
Render the command line buffer only until the last line we can fit
on the screen.
If the cursor pushes the viewport such that neither the prompt nor
the first line of the command line buffer are visible, then we are
"scrolled". In this case we need to make sure to erase any leftover
prompt, so add a hack to disable the "shared_prefix" optimization
that tries to minimize redraws.
Down-arrow scrolls down only when on the last line, and up-arrow always
scrolls up as much as possible. This is somewhat unconventional;
probably we should change the up-arrow behavior but I guess it's a
good idea to show the prompt whenever possible. In future we could
solve that in a different way: we could keep the prompt visible even
if we're scrolled. This would work well because at least the left
prompt lives in a different column from the command line buffer.
However this assumption breaks when the first line in the command
line buffer is soft-wrapped, so keep this approach for now.
Note that we're still broken when complete-and-search or history-pager
try to draw a pager on top of an overfull screen. Will try to fix
this later.
Closes#7296
Commit ba67d20b7 (Refresh TTY timestamps after nextd/prevd, 2024-10-13)
wasn't quite right because it also needs to fix it for arbitrary commands.
While at it, do this only when needed:
1. It seems to be only relevant for multiline prompts.
Note that we can wait until after evaluation to check if the prompt is
multiline, because repaint events go through the queue, see 5ba21cd29
(Send repaint requests through the input queue again, 2024-04-19).
2. When the binding doesn't execute any external command, we probably don't
need to fix up whatever the user printed. If they actually wanted to show
output and print another prompt, they should currently use "__fish_echo",
to properly support multiline prompts. Bindings should produce no other
output. What distinguishes external programs is that they can trigger this
issue even if they don't produce any output that remains visible in fish,
namely by using the terminal's alternate screen.
Would be nice if we could get rid of __fish_echo; I'm not yet sure how.
Fixes#10800
Completion on ": {*," used to work but nowadays our attempt to wildcard-expand
it fails with a syntax error and we do nothing. This behavior probably only
makes sense for the overflow case, so do that.
Commit a91bf6d88 (builtin.c: builtin_source now checks that its argument is
a file., 2005-12-16) fixed an infinite loop for commands like "source /"
where the argument is a directory.
It did so by erroring out early unless the filename argument is a regular file.
This is too restrictive; it disallows reading from special files like /dev/null
and fifos.
Today we get a sensible error without this check, so remove it.
This fixes a macOS-specific bug. See 390b40e02 (Fix regression not refreshing
TTY timestamps after external command from binding, 2024-05-29) and 8a7c3ceec
(Don't abandon line after writing control sequences, 2024-04-06).
Fixes#10779
OSC 133 was added to tmux 3.4.
Also fix the test on macOS where we do have 3.5a in CI; for some reason we
get copy_cursor_y=6 there. I didn't investigate yet but at least that's
not the same bug this test was made to fix.
For multi-line prompts, we start each leading line with a clr_eol. Immediately
before printing these prompt lines we emit the OSC 133 prompt start marker.
Some terminals such as tmux interpret make clr_eol delete such markers,
hence prompt navigation is broken.
Fix this by printing the marker only after clr_eol.
The scenario where this triggers is quite odd. I haven't looked into why
the problem doesn't exist if I remove the recursive repaint request.
See https://github.com/tmux/tmux/issues/4183Closes#10776
This should make the sort have a strict weak ordering, which rust
requires since 1.81 (or it will panic).
Note: This changes the order, but that's *fine* since the current
order is random weirdness anyway.
Fixes#10763
This gave a weird error when you did e.g. `math Foo / 6`:
"Missing Operator" and only the "F" marked.
Adding an operator here anywhere won't help, so calling this an
"Unknown function" is closer to the truth. We also get nicer markings
because we know the extent of the identifier.