Before defining fallback functions of wcsdup(), wcscasecmp() and
wcsncasecmp(), use the std:: namespace functions instead if they exist.
0019c12af3 fixed the build on Solaris 10, but broke it on Solaris 11.
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.
I'm starting to wonder if IWYU is worth the effort. Nonetheless, this
makes it lint clean on macOS and reduces the number of warnings on
FreeBSD and Linux.
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
The shell was doing a log of signal blocking/unblocking that hurts
performance and can be avoided. This reduced the elapsed time for a
simple benchmark by 25%.
Partial fix for #2007
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
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
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
Tests that exercise error paths may result in output to
stderr. This may make it look like the test failed when it did
not. Introduce should_suppress_stderr_for_tests() to suppress
this output so the test output looks clean.
On Solaris, some standard wide character functions are only contained in
the std:: namespace. The configure script now checks for these, enabling
the appropriate `uses` statements in src/common.h.
The checks are handwritten, because Autoconf's AC_CHECK_FUNC macro
always uses C linkage, but the problem only appears under C++ linkage.
Work on #3340.
Switch from a linear to a binary search when looking for a matching
string in an enum map. Testing shows this is a little more than twice as
fast when searching for keywords in the sixteen entry keyword_map array.
This speedup doesn't matter much when searching for subbcommands but any
slow down in the parser is unacceptable.
I'm going to use the same mechanism elsewhere such as token_type_map
in src/parse_tree.cpp. But this change only affects the recently
introduce subcommand handling for the history and status commands.
The template has different behavior around interpreting
non-decimal sequences. This doesn't seem to have been intended.
This reverts commit f843eb3d31.
Both GNU and BSD have bugs regarding the classification of
non-characters and private use area characters. Provide wrappers around
iswalnum(), iswalpha(), and isgraph() to provide a consistent
experience. We don't bother to autoconf the use of these wrappers for
several reasons. Including the fact that a binary built for one distro
release should behave correctly on another release (e.g., FreeBSD 10
does the right thing while FreeBSD 11 and 12 do not with respect to
iswalnum() of code points in the range 0xFDD0..0xFDFF).
Also move a few functions from common.* to wutil.* because they are wide
char specific and really belong in the latter module.
Fixes#3050
* Adds a template to parse integers easily.
It's not enough to use intmax_t and check for empty strings: there are
limits. Adds a template to make it easy to parse an integer of any type.
Adds a compiler flag to flag existing dangers.
* nix warning, include <limits>, fix namespace error.
on MacOS `xcodebuild -quiet` will flag these intmax_t -> * conversions,
just use that if you want to find them.
Just use static_cast directly instead of inscrutible "shortcut"
macro.
It was not always used and doesn't seem to do much besides scramble
things up; encountering CAST_INIT() in the code seems likely to lead
to head scratching due to the transformation taking place.
It was added to save folks typing the type twice, now with 100
columns available, let's roll that convenience macro back.
sockaddr_dl:
Perform reinterpret_cast<sockaddr_dl> conversion. The cast affected
alignment and looks fishy to a compiler (but it's fine). Ditch
C-style cast and communicate we're doing that on purpose.
Where we already manage to cover an enum entirely in a switch
statement such that default: cannot be reached, help ensure
it stays that way by condemning that route.
Also adjust a 'const' I came across that is ignored.
This fixes several problems with how the builtin `history` command handles
arguments. It now complains and refuses to do anything if the user specifies
incompatible actions (e.g., `--search` and `--clear`). It also fixes a
regression introduced by previous changes with regard to invocations that
don't explicitly specify `--search` or a search term.
Enhances the history man page to clarify the behavior of various options.
This change is already far larger than I like so unit tests will be added
in a separate commit.
Fixes#3224.
Note: This fixes only a couple problems with the interactive `history
--delete` command in the `history` function. The main problem will be
dealt with via issue #31.
There is no conceivable way in which timef()'s invocation of gettimeofday()
can fail where it makes sense to continue running. Yes, one such,
legitimate, failure mode is a 32-bit kernel and the date is greater than
2038-01-19 03:14:07. If you're running a fish binary on such a system
it's time to upgrade. Otherwise, either the hardware or OS is broken.
Fixes#3167.
The tty device timestamps on MS Windows aren't usable because they're always
the current time. So fish can't use them to decide if the entire prompt needs
to be repainted.
Fixes#2859
Fix test setup bogosities. Specifically, they weren't hermetic with respect to
locale env vars.
Rewrite the handling of locale vars to simplify the code and make it more like
the pattern most programs employ.
Fixes#3110
Cppcheck was complaining about the `return val.c_str()` at the end of the
`wgettext()` function. That would normally a bug since the lifetime of
`val` ends when the function returns. In this particular case that's not
true because the string is interned in a cache. Nonetheless, rather than
suppress the lint warning I decided to modify the API to be more idiomatic.
In the process of fixing the aforementioned lint warning I fixed several other
lint errors in that module.
This required making our copy of `wgetopt()` compatible with the rest of
the fish code. Specifically, by removing its local definitions of the
"_" macro so it uses the same macro used everywhere else in the fish
code. The sooner we kill the use of wide chars the better.
This change does several things. First, and most important, it allows
dumping the "n" most recent stack frames on each debug() call. Second,
it demangles the C++ symbols. Third, it prepends each debug() message
with the debug level.
Unrelated to the above I've replaced all `assert(!is_forked_child());`
statements with `ASSERT_IS_NOT_FORKED_CHILD()` for consistency.
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
Cppcheck has identified a lot of unused functions. This removes funcs that
are unlikely to ever be used. Others that might be useful for debugging I've
commented out with "#if 0".