Support for space-delimited abbreviations was added to the expansion
parser in fbade198; this commit extends that support to the user-facing
tools, and documents the space-separated behaviour. Equals-delimited
abbreviations are expected to be removed before the next release.
Work on #731.
There is no CTRL-C handler for the default mode in the vi bindings. This makes it difficult to say "never mind" and start a new command line like you can do in bash's vi mode.
There were CTRL-C handlers for insert and visual modes that go back to default mode, but nothing happens in default mode. I copy-pasted the CTRL-C handler from the default key bindings file.
(Ideally, the behaviour of git could be implemented: pipe the input
through a pager iff the length is > window size and in interactive
mode).
Closes#1076.
The terminal width magic that __fish_print_help learned doesn't help
when builtin_print_help runs it in a subshell. Instead, add an
undocumented --tty-width flag to __fish_print_help that's used to pass
the terminal width.
As a result of this rewrite, the output now:
* Expands to fit the terminal width, like `man` does
* Preprocesses the manpage with `tbl` just in case, since `man` does
this, even though I doubt any fish manpages use `tbl` formatting.
* Handle bold/underline with the `ul` command as it was designed for
instead of trying to fake it with `sed`.
* Compresses blank lines as `man` does with the default `less -is`
pager.
The usage is still the same, but it's a lot more robust, and also no
longer assumes $fish_user_abbreviations must be a universal variable.
This also fixes the unexpected error output when calling `abbr -a` with
no existing abbreviations.
Calling `abbr -a` with an abbreviation that already exists now silently
overwrites the abbreviation, just like `function` and `bind` do, instead
of complaining.
This fixes the issue with nonexistant directories (some Linux
distributions put these for local modules), and also fixes the
issue of dot meaning any character instead of simply dot.
# The first commit's message is:
Simplify default fish_prompt
No need for the set_color caching now that it's a builtin.
Also simplify the 3 classic prompts in fish_config's sample_prompts set.
Remove comment that AFAICT is not true anymore.
Ensure someone setting __fish_active_key_bindings as a universal
variable doesn't screw up the initial keybinding load.
All opam subcommands and descriptions are covered, along with
all the flags that are common to all commands. However, only
`opam config` has complete subsubcommand coverage.
Apparently, in zsh, Meta+H can be used to display the manpage for
the current command. This commit adds this zsh feature to fish shell.
The F1 keybinding is left, although it's now secondary according to
fish help, as some terminal emulators don't let the user press F1 key.
Use the new `read -z` flag to complete git aliases better. This approach
won't break if an alias contains a newline.
Also fix stash completion, which was broken on BSD sed.
Setting a non-existant path component to PATH logs an error to stderr.
This is not appropriate for non-interactive temporary modifications,
like the one done by the `sudo` completion helper function.
In the base config.fish, fish_function_path and fish_complete_path have
$__fish_datadir/{functions,completions} added to them if not already
present. For some reason they were replacing the final path component
instead of being added on to the end.
The new --wraps functionality was breaking aliases of the form
`alias foo='bar baz'`. That is, aliases where the body is multiple
words. Extract the first word of the body and use that instead.
Use better errors for aliases with no name or no body.
Add the --wraps option to 'complete' and 'function'. This allows a
command to (recursively) inherit the completions of a wrapped command.
Fixes#393.
When evaluating a completion, we inspect the entire "wrap chain" for a
command, i.e. we follow the sequence of wrapping until we either hit a
loop (which we silently ignore) or the end of the chain. We then
evaluate completions as if the wrapping command were substituted with
the wrapped command. Currently this only works for commands, i.e.
'complete --command gco --wraps git\ checkout' won't work (that would
seem to encroaching on abbreviations anyways). It might be useful to
show an error message for that case.
The commandline builtin reflects the commandline with the wrapped
command substituted in, so e.g. git completions (which inspect the
command line) will just work. This sort of command line munging is
also performed by 'complete -C' so it's not totally without precedent.
'alias will also now mark its generated function as wrapping the
'target.
- Require all requests to use a session path.
- Use a redirect file to avoid exposing the '/start' URL on the
command line, as it contains the cookie value.
Fix for CVE-2014-2914.
Closes#1438.
Currently fish doesn't recognize toor as special. However, it's likely
that on BSD systems, fish shell will be used on toor, not on root (toor
is an intentionally existing account to use more advanced shell on, like
shell).
Use `functions -q` instead of searching the `functiosn -na` list for the
provided word. This may result in an automatically-loaded function being
sourced, but that happens anyway with the default output.
This change means the results of `test -q foo` can be relied upon to
indicate whether `foo` can actually be invoked. Previosly, if `foo` was
the name of an automatically-loaded function file but did not actually
define a function `foo`, and there was no execuable `foo`, then `type -q
foo` would lie and say `foo` can be invoked when it can't.
The --quiet flag is useful when only the exit status matters.
Fix the documentation for the -t flag to no longer claim that `type` can
print "keyword", as it never does that.
Stop printing a blank line for functions/builtins when the -p flag has
been passed. It's just not useful.
Track whether -a and -f have been supplied separately. That way both
`type -a -f command` and `type -f -a command` behaves correctly, as does
`type -a -f foo` where there are multiple executables named `foo` in the
$PATH.
Stop using getopt to parse flags. It's far more expensive than
necessary, and results in long flags not being parsed on OS X. This also
allows args starting with - after the options list to be properly
interpreted as a value to test.
Print the error message to stderr as is appropriate.
Use the new `command -p` functionality when the -a flag has not been
provided (`command` does not have any equivalent to the -a flag),
instead of using `which`. This is faster and also avoids any possible
disagreement between `which` and what fish thinks is valid.
Stop testing every path to see if it's executable, that test has already
been done by `which` or `command -p`.
The end result is `type -P ls` is roughly 250% faster, according to
profiling, on my OS X machine.
* use $XDG_CACHE_HOME for __fish_print_packages completion caches
* when starting fishd, redirect fishd output to /dev/null, not a
predictable path
Fix for CVE-2014-3219.
Closes#1440.
When you chroot in Debian, bash shows the chroot environment in the prompt:
```bash
...
if [ -z "${debian_chroot:-}" ] && [ -r /etc/debian_chroot ]; then
debian_chroot=$(cat /etc/debian_chroot)
fi
PS1='${debian_chroot:+($debian_chroot)}\u@\h:\w\$ '
...
```
This is the effect:
```
(chroot_env) user@host:~#
```
It is useful when chrooting, since usually the hostname remains the same and thus you can't distinguish where you are.
Fix for CVE-2014-2906.
Closes a race condition in funced which would allow execution of
arbitrary code; closes a race condition in psub which would allow
alternation of the data stream.
Note that `psub -f` does not work (#1040); a fix should be committed
separately for ease of maintenance.
Closes#1437
The if statement checking the output of hg bookmarks uses two conditions
joined by the or keyword. However, only the first part was being used.
Wrapping the two statements with begin and end properly combines them.
At some point the non-verbose, non-informative variant of the prompt
(e.g. the variant that looks like the bash prompt) was modified to try
and show the behind/ahead counts the same way the informative prompt
does. Besides being wrong, it also didn't work because behind/ahead
weren't defined.
Before this change, fish config used 0 as its address. However, this
isn't a good idea from security point of view, as web service can be
accessed from everywhere, and do anything on the account it was ran on.
This also deals with firewalls which block the access to 0 even from
the host machine itself. It possibly might fix#673, but I'm not sure.
Previously, fish's command_not_found handler would be installed in
__fish_config_interactive. Errors that occured early in startup (e.g. in
config.fish) or in non-interactive mode would therefore not be reported.
With this change, fish now exposes its default cnf handler as
__fish_default_command_not_found_handler . config.fish then installs a
cnfh that invokes the default. When fish goes interactive, the initial
cnfh is overwritten with a fancier one, that may in turn fall back to
invoking the default.
commit d81ae2665f
Author: Max Gonzih <gonzih@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Feb 2 16:22:18 2014 +0300
Check for command-not-found command on suse
commit 004b794c82
Author: Max Gonzih <gonzih@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Feb 2 14:04:41 2014 +0300
Fix cnf handler for Suse and Fedora
fixes#1208
Presently, `isatty` only works on a handful of keywords. Here it
is rewritten to be able to take any path, device or fd number as
an argument, and eliminates errors printed to stdout.
Per discussion in #1228, using `builtin test -c` within a pipe to
test special file descriptors is not viable, so this implementation
specifcially uses `command test`. Additionally, a note has been
added to the documentation of `test` regarding this potential
aberration from the expected output of the test utility under the
'Standards' section.
Comment out 'o' binding
Add '['/']' bindings to navigate current token history
Fix 'P' to paste indeed
Add "*P/"*p to insert current selection clipboard using xsel
These options will be passed to the bind command.
Now it's possible to call
fish_default_key_bindings -M insert
to set all original bindings to the insert mode
The following normal mode bindings are added:
o, I, A, gg, G, g^, g$, x, X, backspace, d*, D, s, S, c*, C, ~, gu,
gU, J, K, y*, Y, p, P
I was not able to add binding for 'O'
dd now deletes the whole line as vim, while D deletes the line to the
end. c, s, y act the same way
It would be nice if this would work without this hack,
but until then, this has to work. Requires you to reinstall
the prompt using fish configuration system.
Continuation of https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/pull/1195/.
Removes use of --delimiter and --fields with cut(1) as these are GNU
extensions.
Note that a number of completions use these options, but as they are
only for GNU/Linux-specific tools have remained unmodified.
This was a really stupid change that I should have tested more
before pushing. It broke any non-interactive usage, such as SSH,
fish config, or parsing the script output, as config.fish is
loaded for everything.
There are no issues with different terminal emulators, so this
change will be pushed in the future, but only running in interactive
mode. I apologize for any issues caused by this commit.
This reverts commit d61adfbc53.
Some people like to have their terminals claim UTF-8 support when
their terminals actually are set to another encoding. As nobody
appears to understand this, I have made a change to automatically
fix the encoding problems if possible. This uses ISO 2022 sequences
in order to dynamically change the encoding.
Fixes#692. Fixes#895. Fixes possible future issues about this.
* Show color scheme title in preview box
* Show information about setting terminal background color on Apply
button mouse hover
* Added text_color_for_color method in colors controller scope
From the Python webbrowser documentation:
"If text-mode browsers are used, the calling process will block until the user exits the browser."
Running fish_config on an ssh server with no GUI browser will open a CLI browser which blocks and stops the server from handling requests.
Using multiprocess to run the server in the background lets CLI browsers access the page, but the page is unusable.
For now, disable CLI browsers and recommend opening the page in a graphical browser.
In the future, maybe write a CLI utility to change prompts and delete history items.