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.
The Linux kernel only splits on the first whitespace in the shebang line
(unlike BSD which splits on all whitespace). Which means there can be
only one argument after the path to the program.
Producing man pages is done infrequently (basically just at `make test`
and `make install`) so there isn't any point in writing compiled
byte-code versions of the python modules.
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.
chown completion chown currently uses cat /etc/group to fetch the list of group names. In Cygwin there's no /etc/group file any more (user and group names are fetched directly from the OS), so when a user tries to tab-complete the group name they get an error message:
ASchulma@LZ77E1AASCHULMA ~/d/fish> chown ASchulma🐱 /etc/group: No such file or directory
This change fixes that by using getent group (via __fish_complete_groups) by preference to get the group names, and falling back to /etc/group. This is more portable.