fish reads the tty modes at startup, and tries to restore them to the
original values on exit, to be polite. However this causes problems when
fish is run in a pipeline with another process which also messes with the
tty modes. Example:
fish -c 'echo foo' | vim -
Here vim's manipulation of the tty would race with fish, and often vim
would end up with broken modes.
Only restore the tty if we are interactive. Fixes#8705.
A history search ends when you move the cursor, but the commandline inserted by
history search is still marked as transient. This means that the next history
search will clear the transient commandline. This means we are dropping an undo
point, for example:
echo 11
echo 1
echo autosuggestion
echo^P # commandline is "echo 1"
^A # stop history search
^P # commandline is "echo 11"
^Z # Bug: commandline goes back to "echo", but it should be "echo 1"
In the worst case, we are switching from line-search to token-search (see
the attached test case). Clearing the transient edit means the line is gone
and only the token is left on the command line.
fish outputs the result of fish_title inside an escape sequence, which
happens to be terminated by \a (BEL). It may happen that the initial
output is interrupted; fish then emits the closing BEL and that makes an
annoying beep. Output the fish_title all at once, even if a signal is
delivered (so we don't get "stuck inside" the sequence).
This is related to #8628 in that it's a "torn escape sequence."
`read` allows specifying the initial command line text. This was
text got accidentally ignored starting in a32248277f. Fix this
regression and add a test.
Fixes#8633
Cygwin tests are failing because cygwin has a low limit of only 64 fds in
select(). Extend select_wrapper_t to also support using poll(), according to
a FISH_USE_POLL new define. All systems now use poll() except for Mac.
Rename select_wrapper_t to fd_readable_set_t since now it may not wrap
select().
This allows the deep-cmdsub.fish test to pass on Cygwin.
Use the remaining_to_disclose count to determine if all completions
are shown (allows consistent behavior between short and long completion
lists).
Closes#8485
On a commandline like "ls arg" (cursor at end) we do not expand
abbrevations on enter. OTOH, on "ls " we do expand. This can be
frustrating because it means that the two obvious ways to suppress
abbrevation expansion (C-Space or post-expansion C-Z) cannot be used to
suppress expansion of a command without arguments. (One workaround is
"ls #".)
Only expand-on-execute if the cursor is at the command name (no space
in between).
This is a strict improvement for realistic scenarios, because if there
is a space, the user has already expressed the intent to not expand
the abbreviation. (I hope no one is using recursive abbreviations.)
Closes#8423
This allows to disable autosuggestions in config or with
fish -C 'set -g fish_autosuggestion_enabled 0'
instead of only in existing interactive sessions.
I'm not sure if passing the env var table is actually necessary here,
since we already have a reader.
This adds a variable, $fish_autosuggestion_enabled.
When set to 0, it will turn off autosuggestions/highlighting.
Setting it to anything else will enable it (which also
means this remains enabled by default).
Fixes#8232.
Note that this needed to have expect_prompt used in the pexpect test -
we might want to add a "catchup" there so you can just ignore the
prompt counter for a bit and pick it back up later.
Today the reader exposes its internals directly, e.g. to the commandline
builtin. This is of course not thread safe. For example in concurrent
execution, running `commandline` twice in separate threads would cause a
race and likely a crash.
Fix this by factoring all the commandline state into a new type
'commandline_state_t'. Make it a singleton (there is only one command
line
after all) and protect it with a lock.
No user visible change here.
No functional change here; this migrates the fix ensuring that history
items are available in the builtin interactive read command into the
reader itself, in preparation for removing reader_get_history().
When the user presses control-C, fish marks a cancellation signal which
prevents fish script from running, allowing it to properly unwind.
Prior to this commit, the signal was cleared in the reader. However this
missed the case where a binding would set $fish_bind_mode which would
trigger event handlers: the event handlers would be skipped because of
the cancellation flag was still set. This is similar to #6937.
Let's clear the flag earlier, as soon as we it's set, in inputter_t.
Fixes#8125.
This crashed on Fedora with the rpm packages, but not when building
from source, so some compiler option triggers it.
But the root cause is us running `text.front()` on an empty string,
which isn't something you should do.
Fixes#8009.
This simply checks if the parser requested exit after running any
binding scripts (in read_normal_chars).
I think this means we no longer need the `exit` bind function.
Fixes#7967.
This concerns the problem of "injecting" fancy fish bits like job reaping
into the "common" input stuff which is also used by fish_key_reader.
Instead of providing a callback, make the input event queue a base class
with virtual functions. This allows for a richer interface and simplifies
some memory management issues.
select_wrapper_t wraps up the annoying bits of using select(): keeping
track of the max fd, passing null for boring parameters, and
constructing the timeout. Introduce a wrapper struct for this and
replace the existing uses of select() with the wrapper.
When a terminal in a tiling WM starts, it might start the shell before
it has reached its "final" size. So we get the terminal width,
then the terminal would be resized (to appease the tiling logic),
and then we would print the abandon line with the omitted newline
char, only if the size got smaller (likely!), we would overflow the
line and land on the next.
So what we do is a bit of a hack: We don't abandon the first line.
This means that `printf %s foo; fish` will overwrite the `foo`, but
that's a super small problem and I don't see another way around this.
Fixes#7893.
The bell is a mechanism for important notifications. Not having things
to do in response to a keypress isn't important enough, especially
because we're already flashing and the bell might actually be a bell.
Fixes#7875.
This fixes the following problem: if a command is entered while the
previous command is still executing, fish will see it all at once and
execute it before syntax highlighting as a chance to start. So the
command will appear wrong on the terminal. Fix this by detecting this
case and performing a fast no-io highlight.
An example of how to reproduce this:
run `sleep 3` and then type `echo foo` while the sleep is still running.
013a563ed0 made it so we only try to
adjust terminal modes if we are in the terminal pgroup, but that's not
enough.
Fish starts background jobs in events inside its own pgroup, so
function on-foo --on-event foo
fish -c 'sleep 3' &
end
would have the backgrounded fish try to fiddle with the terminal and
succeed.
Instead, only fiddle with the terminal if we're interactive (this
should probably be extended to other bits, but this is the particular
problematic part)
Fixes#7842.