Commit graph

649 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
ridiculousfish
1ecf9d013d Port (but do not adopt) signal handling bits in Rust
This ports some signal setup and handling bits to Rust.

The signal handling machinery requires walking over the list of known signals;
that's not supported by the Signal type. Rather than duplicate the list of
signals yet again, switch back to a table, as we had in C++.

This also adds two further pieces which were neglected by the Signal struct:

1. Localize signal descriptions
2. Support for integers as the signal name
2023-04-30 16:22:55 -07:00
Mahmoud Al-Qudsi
6cd2d0ffed Integrate threads.rs w/ legacy C++ code
Largely routine but for the trampolines in iothread.h and iothread.cpp which
were a real PITA to get correct w/ all their variants.

Integration is complete with all old code ripped out and the tests using the
rust version of the code.
2023-04-29 11:02:59 -05:00
Johannes Altmanninger
33f51b45e4 Tease apart parser.eval() overloads
The most common overload takes a string and an io chain so let that one keep
its name.
2023-04-21 13:57:29 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
e4f6169a01 clang-format C++ files
Forgot to run this after the wcstring_list_t -> std::vector<wcstring> rename.
2023-04-19 22:43:36 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
6ede7f8009 Delete wcstring_list_t
We don't want it in Rust. Remove it to smoothen the transition.
2023-04-19 01:03:16 +02:00
Johannes Altmanninger
971d257e67 Port AST to Rust
The translation is fairly direct though it adds some duplication, for example
there are multiple "match" statements that mimic function overloading.

Rust has no overloading, and we cannot have generic methods in the Node trait
(due to a Rust limitation, the error is like "cannot be made into an object")
so we include the type name in method names.

Give clients like "indent_visitor_t" a Rust companion ("IndentVisitor")
that takes care of the AST traversal while the AST consumption remains
in C++ for now.  In future, "IndentVisitor" should absorb the entirety of
"indent_visitor_t".  This pattern requires that "fish_indent" be exposed
includable header to the CXX bridge.

Alternatively, we could define FFI wrappers for recursive AST traversal.

Rust requires we separate the AST visitors for "mut" and "const"
scenarios. Take this opportunity to concretize both visitors:

The only client that requires mutable access is the populator.  To match the
structure of the C++ populator which makes heavy use of function overloading,
we need to add a bunch of functions to the trait. Since there is no other
mutable visit, this seems acceptable.

The "const" visitors never use "will_visit_fields_of()" or
"did_visit_fields_of()", so remove them (though this is debatable).

Like in the C++ implementation, the AST nodes themselves are largely defined
via macros.  Union fields like "Statement" and "ArgumentOrRedirection"
do currently not use macros but may in future.

This commit also introduces a precedent for a type that is defined in one
CXX bridge and used in another one - "ParseErrorList".  To make this work
we need to manually define "ExternType".

There is one annoyance with CXX: functions that take explicit lifetime
parameters require to be marked as unsafe. This makes little sense
because functions that return `&Foo` with implicit lifetime can be
misused the same way on the C++ side.

One notable change is that we cannot directly port "find_block_open_keyword()"
(which is used to compute an error) because it relies on the stack of visited
nodes. We cannot modify a stack of node references while we do the "mut"
walk. Happily, an idiomatic solution is easy: we can tell the AST visitor
to backtrack to the parent node and create the error there.

Since "node_t::accept_base" is no longer a template we don't need the
"node_visitation_t" trampoline anymore.

The added copying at the FFI boundary makes things slower (memcpy dominates
the profile) but it's not unusable, which is good news:

    $ hyperfine ./fish.{old,new}" -c 'source ../share/completions/git.fish'"
    Benchmark 1: ./fish.old -c 'source ../share/completions/git.fish'
      Time (mean ± σ):     195.5 ms ±   2.9 ms    [User: 190.1 ms, System: 4.4 ms]
      Range (min … max):   193.2 ms … 205.1 ms    15 runs

    Benchmark 2: ./fish.new -c 'source ../share/completions/git.fish'
      Time (mean ± σ):     677.5 ms ±  62.0 ms    [User: 665.4 ms, System: 10.0 ms]
      Range (min … max):   611.7 ms … 805.5 ms    10 runs

    Summary
      './fish.old -c 'source ../share/completions/git.fish'' ran
        3.47 ± 0.32 times faster than './fish.new -c 'source ../share/completions/git.fish''

Leftovers:
- Enum variants are still snakecase; I didn't get around to changing this yet.
- "ast_type_to_string()" still returns a snakecase name. This could be
  changed since  it's not user visible.
2023-04-16 17:46:56 +02:00
Eric N. Vander Weele
4ed53d4e3f reader: Apply fish_color_selection fg color and options in vi visual mode
Vi visual mode selection highlighting behaves unexpectedly when the selection
foreground and background in the highlight spec don't match. The following
unexpected behaviors are:

*  The foreground color is not being applied when defined by the
   `fish_color_selection` variable.
* `set_color` options (e.g., `--bold`) would not be applied under the cursor
  when selection begins in the middle of the command line or when the cursor
  moves forward after visually selecting text backward.

With this change, visual selection respects the foreground color and any
`set_color` options are applied consistently regardless of where visual
selection begins and the position of the cursor during selection.
2023-04-08 20:20:58 -07:00
Fabian Boehm
aa268696bf reader: Skip FreeBSD directory hack for stdin
This can be triggered on linux with:

```js
import { spawn } from 'child_process';
const shell = spawn('/home/alfa/dev/fish-shell/build-c++/fish', []);
```

Under node 19.8.1.

*No clue* how that happens, but since this is a workaround we shall
skip it.
2023-03-25 20:47:38 +01:00
ridiculousfish
732f7284d4 Adopt the new termsize
This eliminates the C++ version.
2023-03-19 16:13:41 -07:00
Fabian Boehm
7c91d009c1 reader: Remove assert in history search
This isn't a great use of `assert` because it turns a benign "oh I
need to search again" bug into a crash.

Fixes #9628
2023-03-02 16:29:49 +01:00
Neeraj Jaiswal
f52569a800 abbr: port abbreviation and abbr builtin to rust 2023-02-25 12:24:58 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
39f3c894d7 Port tokenizer.cpp to Rust
In hindsight, I should probably have split this into three different commits.
2023-02-09 00:37:22 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
7f8d247211 Port parse_constants.h to Rust 2023-02-09 00:37:22 +01:00
ridiculousfish
d843b67d2d Initial Rust commit 2023-02-02 19:34:47 -07:00
Eddie Lebow
00692bcdfe Include subsequence matches in history-pager
If a `contains` search yields no results, try again with `contains_subsequence`.
2023-01-22 16:11:46 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
e84f588d11 reader: make Escape during history search restore commandline again
Commit 3b30d92b6 (Commit transient edit when closing pager, 2022-08-31)
inadvertently introduced two regressions to history search:

1. It made Escape keeps the selected history entry,
   instead of restoring the commandline before history search.
2. It made history search commands add undo entries.

Fix both of this issues.
2023-01-17 09:31:04 +01:00
Fabian Boehm
5792e4a12b
Make history pager use more entries (#9458)
Like I mentioned in #9089, 12 entries is a bit few.

So, instead, we do like we do for completions before disclosing and
pick half the screen (but at least X, in this case 12).

This avoids filling the entire screen, and will avoid an unsightly "X
more entries" (which requires scrolling down to fully disclose)
because it matches what the pager does.

Note: For multiline commands we can be pushed further upwards, and in
case of a multi-column layout we could fit more lines. That would
require asking the pager to fit as many as possible and give us back
the index of the last matching entry and rewinding the history search.

That's gonna be left as an exercise for later if it turns out to be necessary.
2023-01-09 21:39:55 +01:00
Johannes Altmanninger
f6db6c41e6 reader: clarify bounds check when probing for cached highlighting
When we insert characters that don't yet have highlighting, we use the
highlighting to the left, unless there is nothing to our left.  The logic to
check if we are the leftmost character uses an overly loose comparison. Let's
make it more specific.
No functional change.
2022-12-17 18:09:54 +01:00
ridiculousfish
01039537b0 Remove abbreviation triggers
Per code review, this does not add enough value to introduce now.
Leaving the feature in history should want want to revisit this
in the future.
2022-12-10 16:15:00 -08:00
ridiculousfish
35a4688650 Rename abbreviation triggers
This renames abbreviation triggers from `--trigger-on entry` and
`--trigger-on exec` to `--on-space` and `--on-enter`. These names are less
precise, as abbreviations trigger on any character that terminates a word
or any key binding that triggers exec, but they're also more human friendly
and that's a better tradeoff.
2022-12-10 15:38:50 -08:00
ridiculousfish
5841e9f712 Remove '--quiet' feature of abbreviations
Per code review, this is too risky to introduce now. Leaving the feature
in history should want want to revisit this in the future.
2022-12-10 15:38:50 -08:00
ridiculousfish
c51a1f1f60 Implement trigger-on for abbreviations
trigger-on enables abbreviations to trigger only on "entry" (anything
which closes a token, like space) or only on "exec" (typically enter key).
2022-12-10 15:38:50 -08:00
ridiculousfish
7118cb1ae1 Implement set-cursor for abbreviations
set-cursor enables abbreviations to specify the cursor location after
expansion, by passing in a string which is expected to be found in the
expansion. For example you may create an abbreviation like `L!`:

    abbr L! --position anywhere --set-cursor ! "! | less"

and the cursor will be positioned where the "!" is after expansion, with
the "| less" appearing to its right.
2022-12-10 15:38:50 -08:00
ridiculousfish
1d205d0bbd Reimplement abbreviation expansion to support quiet abbreviations
This reimplements abbreviation to support quiet abbreviations. Quiet
abbreviations expand "in secret" before execution.
2022-12-10 15:38:46 -08:00
ridiculousfish
8135c52c13 Abbreviations to support functions
This adds support for the `--function` option of abbreviations, so that the
expansion of an abbreviation may be generated dynamically via a fish
function.
2022-12-10 15:29:04 -08:00
ridiculousfish
1402bae7f4 Re-implement abbreviations as a built-in
Prior to this change, abbreviations were stored as fish variables, often
universal. However we intend to add additional features to abbreviations
which would be very awkward to shoe-horn into variables.

Re-implement abbreviations using a builtin, managing them internally.

Existing abbreviations stored in universal variables are still imported,
for compatibility. However new abbreviations will need to be added to a
function. A follow-up commit will add it.

Now that abbr is a built-in, remove the abbr function; but leave the
abbr.fish file so that stale files from past installs do not override
the abbr builtin.
2022-12-10 15:29:03 -08:00
Aaron Gyes
b7593a377a fish_key_reader: stop looping on SIGHUP
Using the machinery in reader.cpp rather than going back to
intalling our own handlerss

(see 89644911a1)

Fixes #9309
2022-10-27 17:17:05 -07:00
Mahmoud Al-Qudsi
7133285c88 Move parser status vars to their own struct
Instead of using an enum + array, just use a struct and drop the getter and
setter methods from `parser_t`.
2022-10-26 12:15:02 -05:00
Mahmoud Al-Qudsi
6ac18defd2 Add status current-commandline
Makes it possible to retrieve the currently executing command line as
opposed to the currently executing command (`status current-command`).

Closes #8905.
2022-10-26 12:15:02 -05:00
Mahmoud Al-Qudsi
e01eb2e615 Add proper way of storing value for status current-command
There should be no functional changes in this commit.

The global variable `$_` set in the parser variables by `reader.cpp` and
read by the `status` builtin was deprecated in fish 2.0 but kept around
internally because there's no good way to store/share/forward parser
variables.

A new enum is added that identifies the status variable and they are
stored in a private array in the parser. There is no need for
synchronization because they are only set during job init and never
thereafter. This is currently asserted via ASSERT_IS_MAIN_THREAD() but
that assert can be dropped in the interest of making the parser possible
to clone and use from worker threads.

The old `$_` global variable is still kept for backwards compatibility,
though it will be dropped in a future release.
2022-10-26 12:15:02 -05:00
Johannes Altmanninger
6667c9f50c highlighter: pass the cursor position to the highlighter
This allows the next commit to correct highlighting based on the cursor
position.
2022-10-26 16:11:00 +02:00
Mahmoud Al-Qudsi
85d4834b35 Make maybe_t safer against accidental misuse
Closes #9240.

Squash of the following commits (in reverse-chronological order):

commit 03b5cab3dc40eca9d50a9df07a8a32524338a807
Author: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
Date:   Sun Sep 25 15:09:04 2022 -0500

    Handle differently declared posix_spawnxxx_t on macOS

    On macOS, posix_spawnattr_t and posix_spawn_file_actions_t are declared as void
    pointers, so we can't use maybe_t's bool operator to test if it has a value.

commit aed83b8bb308120c0f287814d108b5914593630a
Author: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
Date:   Sun Sep 25 14:48:46 2022 -0500

    Update maybe_t tests to reflect dynamic bool conversion

    maybe_t<T> is now bool-convertible only if T _isn't_ already bool-convertible.

commit 2b5a12ca97b46f96b1c6b56a41aafcbdb0dfddd6
Author: Mahmoud Al-Qudsi <mqudsi@neosmart.net>
Date:   Sun Sep 25 14:34:03 2022 -0500

    Make maybe_t a little harder to misuse

    We've had a few bugs over the years stemming from accidental misuse of maybe_t
    with bool-convertible types. This patch disables maybe_t's bool operator if the
    type T is already bool convertible, forcing the (barely worth mentioning) need
    to use maybe_t::has_value() instead.

    This patch both removes maybe_t's bool conversion for bool-convertible types and
    updates the existing codebase to use the explicit `has_value()` method in place
    of existing implicit bool conversions.
2022-10-08 11:56:38 -05:00
Fabian Boehm
ccca5b553f Disable VQUIT for shell modes
This allows binding ctrl+\ by default.

Fixes #9234
2022-09-25 13:27:01 +02:00
ridiculousfish
5f4583b52d Revert "Re-implement macro to constexpr transition"
This reverts commit 3d8f98c395.

In addition to the issues mentioned on the GitHub page for this commit,
it also broke the CentOS 7 build.

Note one can locally test the CentOS 7 build via:

    ./docker/docker_run_tests.sh ./docker/centos7.Dockerfile
2022-09-20 11:58:37 -07:00
Mahmoud Al-Qudsi
3d8f98c395 Re-implement macro to constexpr transition
Be more careful with sign extension issues stemming from the differences in how
an untyped literal is promoted to an integer vs how a typed (and signed) `char`
is promoted to an integer.
2022-09-19 18:10:41 -05:00
Mahmoud Al-Qudsi
7c3e4a7ccb Revert "Convert constant macros to constexpr expressions"
This reverts commit e1626818f7.
2022-09-19 17:42:11 -05:00
Mahmoud Al-Qudsi
e1626818f7 Convert constant macros to constexpr expressions
Also convert some `const[expr] static xxx` to `const[expr] xxx` where it makes
sense to let the compiler deduce on its own whether or not to allocate storage
for a constant variable rather than imposing our view that it should have STATIC
storage set aside for it.

A few call sites were not making use of the `XXX_LEN` definitions and were
calling `strlen(XXX)` - these have been updated to use `const_strlen(XXX)`
instead.

I'm not sure if any toolchains will have raise any issues with these changes...
CI will tell!
2022-09-19 17:17:09 -05:00
Johannes Altmanninger
31f7be3c8d fixup! reader: when updating commandline, also update rendered highlighting 2022-09-16 19:36:58 -05:00
Johannes Altmanninger
6a0bb7d6de reader: when updating commandline, also update rendered highlighting
Whenever the command line changes, we redraw it with the previously computed
syntax highlighting. At the same time we start recomputing highlighting in
a background thread.

On some systems, the highlighting computation is slow, so the stale syntax
highlighting is visible.

The stale highlighting was computed for an old commandline.  When the user
had inserted or deleted some characters in the middle, then the highlighting
is wrong for the characters to the right.  This is because the characters
to the right have shifted but the highlighting hasn't.  Fix this by also
shifting highlighting.

This means that text that was alrady highlighted will use the same
highlighting until a new one is computed. Newly inserted text uses the color
left of the cursor.

This is implemented by giving editable_line_t ownership of the highlighting.
It is able to perfectly sync text and highlighting; they will invariably
have the same length.

Fixes #9180
2022-09-16 19:21:21 -05:00
Johannes Altmanninger
de353d3e04 reader: stop requiring edit_t to be an rvalue reference
While its true that we only ever call this with temporaries, there is no
fundamental reason for this restriction.  Taking by value is simpler and
more flexible. I think it does not change the generated code.

No functional change.
2022-09-16 19:21:21 -05:00
Johannes Altmanninger
be64c53888 reader: inline dangerous function
The idea for this function was that it stands as the one place that modifies
the text without push_edit. In practice I don't think it helps.

No functional change.
2022-09-16 19:21:21 -05:00
Johannes Altmanninger
8b4b24428c reader: make undo history private to editable_line_t
reader handles way too much state itself. Let's move the undo handling to
editable_line_t entirely.

No functional change.
2022-09-16 19:17:04 -05:00
Johannes Altmanninger
0ffb0fb786 reader: move function definition out-of-line
Happily, clangd provides a code action to do this.

No functional change.
2022-09-16 19:17:04 -05:00
ridiculousfish
5cf0778207 Claim the tty unconditionally in reader_data_t::readline
When fish runs with job control enabled, it transfers ownership of the
tty to a child process, and then reclaims the tty after the process
exits. If job control is disabled then fish does not transfer or reclaim
the tty.

It may happen that the child process creates a pgroup and then transfers
the tty to it. In that case fish will not attempt to reclaim the tty, as
fish did not transfer it. Then when fish reads from stdin it will
receive SIGTTIN instead of data.

Fix this by unconditionally claiming the tty in readline().

Fixes #9181
2022-09-09 13:43:29 -07:00
ridiculousfish
331bb9024b clang-format reader.cpp
We had an errant newline incompatible with our format.
2022-09-09 11:35:06 -07:00
Johannes Altmanninger
3b30d92b62 Commit transient edit when closing pager
When selecting items in the pager, only the latest of those items is kept
in the edit history, as so-called transient edit.  Each new transient edit
evicts any old transient edit (via undo).

If the pager is closed by a command that performs another transient edit
(like history-token-search-backward) we thus inadvertently undo (= remove)
the token inserted by the pager.  Fix this by closing a transient edit
session when closing the pager.  Token search will start its own session.

Fixes #9160
2022-08-31 07:49:49 +02:00
Fabian Boehm
4dfcd4cb4e reader: Check bounds for color
This fixes a crash when you open the history pager and then do
history-token-search-backward (e.g. alt+. or alt-up).

It would sometimes crash because the `colors.at(i)` was an
out-of-bounds access.

Note: This might still leave the highlighting offset in some
cases (not quite sure why), but at least it doesn't *crash*, and the
search generally *works*.
2022-08-26 15:02:05 +02:00
ridiculousfish
3eae0a9b6a clang-format all C++ files
This mostly re-sorts headers that got desorted after the IWYU
application in 14d2a6d8ff.
2022-08-21 15:02:19 -07:00
Aaron Gyes
14d2a6d8ff IWYU-guided #include rejiggering.
Let's hope this doesn't causes build failures for e.g. musl: I just
know it's good on macOS and our Linux CI.

It's been a long time.

One fix this brings, is I discovered we #include assert.h or cassert
in a lot of places. If those ever happen to be in a file that doesn't
include common.h, or we are before common.h gets included, we're
unawaringly working with the system 'assert' macro again, which
may get disabled for debug builds or at least has different
behavior on crash. We undef 'assert' and redefine it in common.h.

Those were all eliminated, except in one catch-22 spot for
maybe.h: it can't include common.h. A fix might be to
make a fish_assert.h that *usually* common.h exports.
2022-08-20 23:55:18 -07:00
ridiculousfish
2a0e0d6721 Remove the intern'd strings component
Intern'd strings were intended to be "shared" to reduce memory usage but
this optimization doesn't carry its weight. Remove it. No functional
change expected.
2022-08-13 12:51:36 -07:00