While working on making the history command support case-sensitive and
insensitive searches I noticed that entering "all" when interactively
deleting history entries resulted in an error. That's because the
history builtin currently only supports `--exact` so we need to loop
over the matching entries and delete them one at a time.
Fixes#3448
My previous change to avoid creating a *.pyc file when running
create_manpage_completions.py was wrong because I put the
`sys.dont_write_bytecode = True` on the wrong line. Rather than simply
move that statement make the simpler, cleaner, fix that removes the need
for `eval` where that program is invoked.
After implementing `builtin fish_realpath` it was noticed that it did
not behave like GNU `realpath` without options. Which is super annoying
since that was the whole point of implementing the command. Major
failure on my part since I wrote the unit tests to match the behavior of
the existing `wrealpath()` function that I simply exposed as a builtin
command. Rather than actually verifying it behaved in a manner
compatible with GNU realpath.
Also, while the decision to call the builtin `fish_realpath` seemed to
make sense at the time of the original commit further reflection has
shown that to be a silly, idiosyncratic, thing to have done. So rename
it to simply `realpath`.
Fixes 3400
This adds a flag to the `history search` command to limit the number of
matching entries to the first "n". The default is unlimited. This is
mostly useful in conjunction with aliases (i.e., functions) that are
intended to report the "n" most recent matching history entries without
piping the result through the user's pager.
Fixes#3244
Don't wrap fish_indent at all if the version in $PATH matches
$FISH_VERSION.
When we do wrap it, resolve the path once, and use that via alias
machinery instead of doing an eval each time.
In both cases, `type fish_indent` can tell us what it's actually going
to do now.
clarity aside, it's faster if we only eval the one time.
eval is not only evil, but slow.
> for h in $history[1..100]; echo $h | fish_indent --no-indent; end
before: CMD_DURATION = 1005
if fish_indent is kosher in PATH: 549
if not, using alias: 687
these modern terminals both compose a nicer title if we don't try to provide a custom one (no path in title twice, "fish" in title twice) - and the user can configure which components they'd like in their terminal inside the terminal preferences.
Also make test "$VTE_VERSION" -ge .. work once I commit `test` strtoi
fix - the trick is to add a zero before it so the numeric comparison
works even if it's empty.
Fixes#107
This deprecates the use of long options for history sub-commands (e.g.,
`history --delete`) in favor of proper sub-commands (e.g., `history
delete`). It also eliminates the short options for those sub-commands.
Also change option processing to allow options anywhere on the command
line to match how the vast majority of fish builtins handle flags.
Replace --with-time with --show-time.
Fixes#3367
* Use 'grealpath' if installed for realpath fallback
See discussion in #3370
* fish_realpath: filter out dangerous options
Per feedback do not use aliases to declare wrapped functions.
This has the same name and path as ubuntu's, but takes less arguments.
So we need to actually find if the distro thinks it is suse, and then
use it.
Fixes#3366.
Adds a color reset thing, to ensure fish tries to use hard colors during
testing.
Also, work on a discrepancy (not introduced by my changes, afaik) when
with some combinations of color settings, and usage of --bold, caused super
flakey color paninting in the pager. Downwards movements that trigger
scrolling vs. upwards movement in the pager would only apply bold to
selections when moving upwards. The bold state of the command completions in
the pager was flipping flops on and off, depending on if there is a description
on the preceding line.
Implement a lame fix by reseting the color to normal and applying a
different style on the rightmost ')' which seems to be what was influencing it.
Makes fish use terminfo for coloring the newline glich char.
The previous solution would not erase the previous bindings if
fish_vi_key_bindings was called with a mode argument. So if the user
switched to vi with a different initial mode, they'd keep their previous
bindings also.
Supersedes e89057b.
Some of these were defined in the shared bindings, some (like \cy yank)
were just literally duplicate in the same files.
This should _not_ change anything. In particular this does not remove
hardcoding of sequences (because terminfo might be wrong or the term
might need smkx).
Found with
```
function bind
set -l binds (builtin bind)
builtin bind $argv
set -l newbinds (builtin bind)
if set -q argv[1]; and not test "$argv[1]" = "--erase"
if test "$binds" = "$newbinds"
echo "Duplicate: " (string escape -- $argv)
end
end
end
```
The vi-bindings function would unconditionally erase all bindings,
making it impossible to call it last. This would disable the
mode-indicator (and in future also the cursor).
Make it so any argument to fish_vi_key_bindings stops it from erasing
bindings.
It would also be possible to demand an argument to erase (or to erase as
a separate step). but the usual case seems to be _switching_ to a set of bindings.
This didn't work on platforms where tput exists but can never accept
terminfo names. This includes the current versions of FreeBSD - it
used to do both, now it doesn't. So, fall back to the old termcap names
by (tput smso; or tput so). Add check for the tput program before we
even try.
The extra things `eval` does are all for code that runs
interactively. Because we just define a function, we don't need it.
This improves alias' performance by about 20-25% (0.783608s to 0.585585s
on about 500 aliases) and avoids triggering #3345.
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
It's not ideal since we can't get the real result so we just assume it's
"0". That triggers the easier path, which still might display the wrong
thing, but we have to pick something.
Possible fix for #3321.
The recent change to reconcile the history builtin command and function
broke an undocumented behavior of `history --delete`. This change
reinstates that behavior. It also adds an explicit `--exact` search mode
for the `--search` and `--delete` subcommands.
Fixes#3270
Only on the OS X travis build.
I can't reproduce it but I figure it's something to do
with test -e vs test -x or the echo -n in command substitution.
Oops.
This was erroneously omitted from the previous commit.
Now backspace in insert mode does backward-delete-char, in default mode
backward-char (i.e. no deleting, just moving). This is consistent with vim.
This undoes the inheritance since it shared too much.
The idea here is to share bindings that aren't something the editors we're inspired by do - there's no "execute" in vi.
The basic editing and moving bindings are now vi-style in vi-mode and emacs-style in default mode.
Only one file belonging to fish-shell had DOS/bogus line endings,
with `git add' picking up changes after updating .gitattributes:
hostname.fish.
Unsurprisingly, it has code to support cygwin and was likely
worked on by a user on a Windows machine. This will help
such cases in the future.
Also, in pcre2-10.21/, there was RunTest.bat which was (correctly)
CRLF formatted. We don't use this batch script at all, so rather
than LF it or add an exception, blast it away like the other pcre2
files omitted from the repo.
A common problem for users is that fish doesn't get a locale. This often
happens if systemd is used with getty and fish as login shell.
Fixes#277
Note that I (@krader) made editorial changes before merging this. For
example, running `make style` and otherwise changing long statements to a
series of shorter statements. So if there are any problems it is possible
I introduced them.
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
This is a regression introduced by 834ebef53c
Bolster with a check for only login sessions too -- hopefully makes it
less annooying on subshells in general.
Fixes#3261
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.
We don't seem to mention in the documentation that we were forcing
-t for all interactive uses. If we want to do that we should apply
that in the builtin.
history.fish reimplementing every option and doing things kind of
differently is a real pain and it's not clear if the docs are
referring to the or the wrapper script or both.
Someone running fish in an unusual locale reported that an `assert()` was
firing when they typed `pkill c`. I traced it to two bugs. First, the
__fish_make_completion_signals command was producing a weird result. Second,
the builtin `complete` command wasn't adequately verifying its arguments.
Fixes#3129
Doesn't colorize if output is redirected.
This is "fun" and indenting happens to make most of the included
functions display more narrow and fit better into a terminal window.
Doesn't colorize if output is redirected.
This is "fun" and indenting happens to make most of the included
functions display more narrow and fit better into a terminal window.