Apparently the grep on FreeBSD doesn't do \s or \t. Since we're
looking for an actual tab, just give it an actual tab.
See https://builds.sr.ht/~faho/job/448496.
This `set -e` had a cartesian product that caused it to remove the
indexes separately, so the later indexes were off - removing the first
and then the second ends up removing the first and then the
old-*third* which is now the second.
Just quote the expansion so it runs in one go.
Fixes#7776
NetBSD's sleep quits when foregrounded sometimes. I'm not entirely
sure *why*, but this is reproducible with the default /bin/sh, so it's
not our fault.
Because this fails our tests, go back to using cat *there*, because we
can't use it on macOS - 4c9d01cab0.
The user may write for example:
echo foo >&5
and fish would try to output to file descriptor 5, within the fish process
itself. This has unpredictable effects and isn't useful. Make this an
error.
Note that the reverse is "allowed" but ignored:
echo foo 5>&1
this conceptually dup2s stdout to fd 5, but since no builtin writes to fd
5 we ignore it.
fish_indent used to increment the indentation level whenever we saw an escaped
newline. This broke because of recent changes to parse_util_compute_indents().
Since parse_util_compute_indents() function already indents continuations
there is not much to do for fish_indent - we can simply query the indentation
level of the newline. Reshuffle the code since we need to pass the offset
of the newline. Maybe this can even be simplified further.
Fixes#7720
This fails on FreeBSD on sr.ht and NetBSD on my own VM, but it works manually.
It also fails on macOS but I have no way to confirm.
I think it might be a problem in pexpect's platform support?
Either way, the test is valuable so just skip it there and solve it later.
Otherwise this would look weird if you had, say, a tab in there.
See #7716.
(note that this doesn't handle e.g. zero-width-joiners, because those
aren't currently escaped. we might want to add an escape mode for
unprintable characters, but for combining codepoints that's tricky!)
After commit 6dd6a57c60, 3 remaining
builtins were affected by uint8_t overflow: `exit`, `return`, and
`functions --query`.
This commit:
- Moves the overflow check from `builtin_set_query` to `builtin_run`.
- Removes a conflicting int -> uint8_t conversion in `builtin_return`.
- Adds tests for the 3 remaining affected builtins.
- Simplifies the wording for the documentation for `set --query`.
- Does not change documentation for `functions --query`, because it does
not state the exit code in its API.
- Updates the CHANGELOG to reflect the change to all builtins.
This was lost in
6bdbe732e40c2e325aa15fcf0f28ad0dedb3a551..c7160d7cb4970c2a03df34547f357721cb5e88db.
Note that we only print a term-support flog message for now, the
warning seems a bit much.
Fixes#7709.
Prior to this fix, if stdin were explicitly closed, then builtins would
silently fail. For example:
count <&-
would just fail with status 1. Remove this limitation and allow each
builtin to handle a closed stdin how it sees fit.
builtin_set_query returns the number of missing variables. Because the
return value passed to the shell is an 8-bit unsigned integer, if the
number of missing variables is a multiple of 256, it would overflow to 0.
This commit saturates the return value at 255 if there are more than 255
missing variables.
Prior to this change, the checks/git.fish test would fail if run from a
git interactive rebase (such as via `git rebase -i --exec 'ninja test'`),
because git itself would inject stuff into the environment. Teach the git
test how to clean up its environment first before running.
This needs to be rewritten, I'm pretty sure we have like 6 of these
kinds of ad-hoc "is this quoted" things lying around.
But for now, at least don't just check if the *previous* character was
a backslash.
Fixes#7685.
This goes to a separate file because that makes option parsing easier
and allows profiling both at the same time.
The "normal" profile now contains only the profile data of the actual
run, which is much more useful - you can now profile a function by
running
fish -C 'source /path/to/thing' --profile /tmp/thefunction.prof -c 'thefunction'
and won't need to filter out extraneous information.
Expansion parses slices like "$PATH[1..2]", but so does "set" when assigning
"set PATH[1..2] . .". Commit be06f842a ("Allow to omit indices in index
range expansions") forgot the latter.
This makes the fish_git_prompt variable handlers kick in, meaning we
see the informative chars.
The big question here is what happens if there's a non-UTF-8 locale in
the test.
Theoretically we set LC_CTYPE, but.....
This used to print a literal DEL character in the output for `bind`,
which wouldn't actually show up and made it hard to figure out what
the key was.
So we just escape it back to how we actually used it - `\x7f`.
Fixes#7631.
A weird interaction between grouped short options and our weird option
parsing that puts unknown options back:
```
echo "-n foo"
```
would see the `-n`, turn off printing newlines, interpret the " " as
another grouped short option, see that there is no short option for
space and put the entire token back on the arguments pile.
So it would print "-n foo" *without a newline*.
Fix this by keeping an old state of the options around and reverting
it when putting options back.
The alternative is *probably* to forbid the " " short option in
wgetopt, then check if an option group contains it and error out, but
this should only really be a problem in `echo` because that is,
AFAICT, the only thing that puts the options back.
Fixes#7614
This adds a test to ensure that if a long running background process is
launched from a command substitution, that process does not cause the
cmdsub to hang. That could easily happen if we just wait for the pipe to
close; this is verifying that we are also checking for the job to complete.
Prior to this change, `fish_private_mode` worked by just suppressing
history outright. With this change, `fish_private_mode` can be toggled on
and off. Commands entered while `fish_private_mode` is set are stored but
in memory only; they are not written to disk.
Fixes#7590Fixes#7589
Don't go into implicit interactive mode without ever executing
anything - not even `exit` or reacting to ctrl-d. That just renders
the shell useless and unquittable.
It was always a bit ridiculous that argparse required `X-longflag` if
that "X" short flag was never actually used anywhere.
Since the short letter is for getopt's benefit, we can hack around
this with our old friend: Unicode Private Use Areas.
We have a counter, starting at 0xE000 and going to 0xF8FF, that counts
up for all options that don't have a short flag and provides one. This
gives us up to 6400 long-only options.
6.4K should be enough for everybody.
Prior to this change, a glob like `**/file.txt` would only match
`file.txt` in subdirectories; the `**` must match at least one directory.
This is historical behavior.
With this change we move a little closer to bash's implementation by
allowing a literal `**` segment to match in the current directory. That
is, `**/foo` will match both `foo` and `bar/foo`, while `b**/foo` will
only match `bar/foo`.
Fixes#7222.
Before running a command, or before importing a command from bash history,
we perform error checking. As part of error checking we expand commands
including variables and globs. If the glob is very large, like `/**`, then
we could hang expanding it.
One fix would be to limit the amount of expansion from the glob, but
instead let's just not expand command globs when performing error checking.
Fixes#7407
This would tell you a function was "Defined in - @ line 1" for every
function defined via `source`.
Really, ideally we'd figure out where the *source* call was, but that'
much more complicated, so we just give a comprehensible message.
This matches what we do in --profile's output:
```
> source /home/alfa/.config/fish/config.fish
--> set -gx XDG_CACHE_HOME /home/alfa/.cache
--> set -gx XDG_CONFIG_HOME /home/alfa/.config
--> set -gx XDG_DATA_HOME /home/alfa/.local/share
```
instead of
```
+ source /home/alfa/.config/fish/config.fish
+++ set -gx XDG_CACHE_HOME /home/alfa/.cache
+++ set -gx XDG_CONFIG_HOME /home/alfa/.config
+++ set -gx XDG_DATA_HOME /home/alfa/.local/share
```
This increases a 100ms timeout to 200ms, because we've hit it on
Github Actions:
```
INPUT 3904.65 ms (Line 223): set -g fish_escape_delay_ms 100\n
OUTPUT +1.74 ms (Line 224): \rprompt 25>
INPUT +0.71 ms (Line 230): echo abc def
INPUT +0.57 ms (Line 231): \x1b
INPUT +0.57 ms (Line 232): t\r
OUTPUT +2.41 ms (Line 234): \r\ndef abc\r\n
OUTPUT +1.63 ms (Line 234): \rprompt 26>
INPUT +0.75 ms (Line 239): echo ghi jkl
INPUT +0.57 ms (Line 240): \x1b
INPUT +134.98 ms (Line 242): t\r
```
In other places it decreases sleeps where we just wait for a timeout to elapse, in which case we don't need much longer than the timeout.
And again clang-format does something I don't like:
- if (found != end && std::strncmp(found->name, name, len) == 0 && found->name[len] == 0) return found;
+ if (found != end && std::strncmp(found->name, name, len) == 0 && found->name[len] == 0)
+ return found;
I *know* this is a bit of a long line. I would still quite like having
no brace-less multi-line if *ever*. Either put the body on the same
line, or add braces.
Blergh
E.g. if we do `string match -q`, and we find a match, nothing about
the input can change anything, so we quit early.
This is mainly useful for performance, but it also allows `string`
with `-q` to be used with infinite input (e.g. `yes`).
Alternative to #7495.
Currently a bit limited, unfortunately printf's `%a` specifier is
absolutely unreadable.
So we add `hex` and `octal` with `0x` and `0` prefixes respectively,
and also take a number but currently only allow 16 and 8.
The output is truncated to integer, so scale values other than 0 are
invalid and 0 is implied.
The docs mention this may change.
The '--import' flag was used for importing named capture groups, but it
was decided to always import them unconditionally. This flag was causing
the tests to fail.
Prior to this fix, when key binding is a script command (i.e. not a
readline command), fish would run that key binding using fish's shell
tty modes. Switch to using the external tty modes. This re-fixes
issue #2214.
With the upcoming fix to place the tty in external-proc mode, add a sleep
which resolves a race between emitting a newline and restoring it to shell
mode.
Prior to this change, when a process resumes because it is brought back
to the foreground, we would reset the terminal attributes to shell mode.
This fixed#2114 but subtly introduced #7483.
This backs out 9fd9f70346, re-introducing #2114 and re-fixing #7483.
A followup fix will re-fix #2114; these are broken out separately for
bisecting purposes.
Fixes#7483.
I *think* this might sometimes (on CI) be eating the prompt, so that the actual `prompt`
part of `expect_prompt` doesn't find anything.
On Github Actions we see things like:
```
Testing file pexpects/generic.py ... Failed to match pattern: prompt 5
generic.py:35: timeout from expect_prompt("echo .history.*")
[...]
OUTPUT +1.08 ms (Line 31): \rprompt 4>
INPUT +0.35 ms (Line 34): echo $history[1]\n
OUTPUT +1.58 ms (Line 35): echo $history[1]\r\necho $history[1]\r\n⏎ \r⏎ \r\rprompt 5>
```
so the prompt *is* printed, it's just not correctly matched.
Apparently on macOS SIGTSTP (from control-Z) causes `read()` to return
EINTR.
This means `cat | cat` will exit as soon as it's backgrounded and
brought back.
So instead we use `sleep`, which won't read(), and therefore is
impervious to these puny attacks.
See discussion in #7447.
The classic mistake: Some of these have a bit of a delay, but it's supposed to
be *under* the timeout, so it needs to be *shorter* not longer to
increase the slack.
We just had the following output on Github Actions:
INPUT +0.94 ms (Line 34): echo ghi jkl
INPUT +0.72 ms (Line 35): \x1b
INPUT +63.12 ms (Line 37): t\r
The default escape delay is 30ms, that had 60ms between an escape and
a tab, so it missed it.
So: We have to increase the delay for CI's benefit. Let's try with
80ms, because otherwise we'd have to bump up other timeouts and the
bind tests take long enough as it is.
Github Action's macOS builds are even more resource-starved (even tho
they use the same provider?) than
Travis, but Travis is unusable to us now, so....
In some cases the completion we come up with may be unexpected, e.g.
if you have files like
/etc/realfile
and
/etc/wrongfile
and enter "/etc/gile", it will accept "wrongfile" because "g" and
"ile" are in there - it's a substring insertion match.
The underlying cause was a typo, so it should be easy to go back.
So we do a bit of magic and let "cancel" undo, but only right after a
completion was accepted via complete or complete-and-search.
That means that just reflexively pressing escape would, by default, get you back to
the old token and let you fix your mistake.
We don't do this when the completion was accepted via the pager,
because 1. there's more of a chance to see the problem there and 2.
it's harder to redo in that case.
Fixes#7433.
This was typically overridden by "too many/few arguments", but it's
actually incorrect:
sin(55
has the correct number of arguments to `sin`, but it's lacking
the closing `)`.
We've heard news of this regressing, so let's add the test that should
have been there already (mea culpa!).
Because we now use POSIX_VDISABLE, this should also work in tandem
with ctrl-space (which sends NUL), but we can't test *that* because
some systems might not have POSIX_VDISABLE.
This switch is no longer necessary when only one command is given.
Internally completions are stored separately for each command,
so we only every print one command name per "complete" line anyway.
These aliases seem to be common, see #7389 and others. This prevents
recursion on that example, so `alias ssh "env TERM=screen ssh"` will just
have the same completions as ssh.
Checking the last token is a heuristic which hopefully works for most
cases. Users are encouraged to use functions instead of aliases.
Ensure that the increment= param is set via keyword, not via positional arg.
This mistake was masking a bug where the "^a b c" match was not being tested,
because it was being set as the value for increment!
This switches the 'increment' param from "after" to "before." Instead
of expect_prompt saying if the next prompt will be incremented, each
call site says if it should have been incremented sinec the last prompt.
I am not sure why this worked, actually.
These tests did not have $fish set anywhere, and on my fresh OpenBSD
VM it ended up calling whatever that calls "fish" (I think it's that
"Go fish!" game?).