Currently the block stack is just a vector of pointers.
Clients must manually use new() to allocate a block, and then
transfer ownership to the stack (so must NOT delete it).
Give the parser itself responsibility for allocating blocks too,
so that it takes over both allocation and deletion. Use unique_ptr
to make deletion less error-prone.
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
The existing code is inconsistent, and in a couple of cases wrong, about
dealing with strings that are not valid ints. For example, there are
locations that call wcstol() and check errno without first setting errno
to zero. Normalize the code to a consistent pattern. This is mostly to
deal with inconsistencies between BSD, GNU, and other UNIXes.
This does make some syntax more liberal. For example `echo $PATH[1 .. 3]`
is now valid due to uniformly allowing leading and trailing whitespace
around numbers. Whereas prior to this change you would get a "Invalid
index value" error. Contrast this with `echo $PATH[ 1.. 3 ]` which was
valid and still is.
This fixes some of the IWYU and cppcheck lint warnings. And only on
macOS (formerly OS X). Fixing these types of warnings on a broader set
of platforms should be done but this is a baby step to making `make
lint-all` have few, if any, warnings. This reduces the number of lines
in the `make lint-all` output on macOS by over 500 lines.
Implementing the --shadow-builtin flag has proven to be highly controversial.
Revert the introduction of that flag to the `function` command. If someone
shoots themselves in the foot by redefining a builtin as a function that's
their problem and not our responsibility to protect them from doing so.
Fixes#3319
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 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.
It's currently too easy for someone to bork their shell by doing something
like `function test; return 0; end`. That's obviously a silly, contrived,
example but the point is that novice users who learn about functions are
prone to do something like that without realizing it will bork the shell. Even
expert users who know about the `test` builtin might forget that, say, `pwd`
is a builtin.
This change adds a `--shadow-builtin` flag that must be specified to
indicate you know what you're doing.
Fixes#3000
The fork (create new process) related debugging messages rely on an
undocumented env var and use `printf()` rather than `debug()`. There are
also errors in how the fork count is tracked that this fixes.
Fixes#2995
I missed restyling a few "switch" blocks to make them consistent with the rest
of the code base. This fixes that oversight. This should be the final step in
restyling the C++ code to have a consistent style. This also includes a few
trivial cleanups elsewhere.
I also missed restyling the "complete" module when working my way from a to z
so this final change includes restyling that module.
Total lint errors decreased 36%. Cppcheck errors went from 47 to 24. Oclint P2
errors went from 819 to 778. Oclint P3 errors went from 3252 to 1842.
Resolves#2902.
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
When replacing the existing fish process with a new process it is
important to restore the temrinal modes to what they were when fish
started running. We don't want any tweaks done for the benefit of fish
(e.g., disabling ICRNL mode) to bleed thru to an "exec"ed command.
Resolves#2609
If stdio is dead due to EPIPE, there's no great reason to spew a stack dump.
This will still write an error to stderr if stdout dies. This might be
undesirable, but changing that should be considered separately.
This change eliminates global variables like stdout_buffer. Instead we wrap up
the IO information into a new struct io_streams_t, and thread that through
every builtin. This makes the intent clearer, gives us a place to hang new IO
data, and eliminates the ugly global state management like builtin_push_io.
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