This patch fixes an underflow in the jump family of readline commands
when called via `commandline -f` outside of a bind context such as
`commandline -f backward-jump`. To reproduce, run that command at a
prompt and the shell will crash with a buffer underlow.
This happens because the jump commands have non-zero arity, requiring a
character event to be pushed on the function args stack. Pushing the
character event is handled in `function_push_args`, called by
`inputter_t::mapping_execute`, which checks the arity of the function
and enqueues the required number of charcter events. However,
`builtin_commandline` calls `reader_queue_ch`, which in turn calls
`inputter_t::queue_ch`, which immediately enqueues the readline event
without calling `function_push_args`, so the character event is never
pushed on the arg stack.
This patch adds a check in inputter_t::queue_ch which checks if the
character event is a readline event, and if so, calls
`function_push_args`.
fish_git_prompt encloses its output in brackets, however this can be changed by supplying a format string to it, i.e. `fish_git_prompt %s`.
However when using `fish_vcs_prompt` there's no way to pass on the arg to fish_git_prompt, so you need to manually remove it.
fish_hg_prompt doesn't have the same format string support as fish_git_prompt, but I suppose it could be added later if needed.
When sending SIGCONT to a stopped job, this behaves now
a bit more like a job that was continued by the bg builtin;
bg uses job_t::continue_job which seems overkill here.
We don't need to call it if a job was stopped, because in that case
read_i() will fire fish_prompt already, because the newly stopped job
was probably a foreground job.
Fixes#1018
This just produced a spurious "Unknown signal" error on NetBSD and OpenBSD, and
the number picked was arbitrary. So let's just use the maximum that
appears to work everywhere.
(I will hate this if I test it elsewhere and need to reduce it to 62)
(This is a squashed commit, I did indeed hate it when I moved from
NetBSD to OpenBSD)
The default implementation will not print any output in that case, but this provides users with additional flexibility when it comes to customising the shell's behaviour.
This allows users to customise the behaviour of the shell by redefining the function. This is similar to how fish_title or fish_greeting behave, where the default implementation can be easily overridden.
The function receives as arguments the job id, command line, signal name and signal description.