get_current_winsize() is intended to be lazy. It does the following:
1. Gets the termsize from the kernel
2. Compares it against the current value
3. If changed, sets COLUMNS and LINES variables
Upon setting these variables, we notice that the termsize has changed
and invalidate the termsize. Thus we were doing this work multiple times
on every screen repaint.
Put back an old hack that just marked the termsize as valid at the end
of get_current_winsize().
This just sets some special characters that we use in the reader, so
it only needs to be done before the reader is set up.
Which, as it stands, is in env_init().
This stops trying to see if the previous line is wider if it is a
prefix of the current one.
Which turns out to be true often enough that it's a net benefit.
This passes character width as an argument for a few functions.
In particular, it hardcodes a width of "1" for a space literal.
There's no reason to compute wcwidth for the length of the prompt.
This measured *all* the characters on the commandline, and saved all
of them in another wcstring_list_t, just to then do... nothing with
that info.
Also, it did wcslen for something that we already have as wcstring,
reserved a vector and did a bunch of work for autosuggestions that
isn't necessary if we have more than one line.
Instead, we do what we need, which is to figure out if we are
multiline and how wide the first line is.
Fixes#5866.
line_shared_prefix explains in its comment that
> If the prefix ends on a combining character, do not include the
previous character in the prefix.
But that's not what it does.
Instead, what it appears to do is to return idx for *every* combining
mark. This seems wrong to begin with, and it also requires checking
wcwidth for *every* character.
So instead we don't do that. If we find the mismatch, we check if it's
a combining mark, and then go back to the previous character (i.e. the
one before the one that the combining mark is for).
My tests found no issues with this, other than a 20% reduction in
pasting time.
The old commit #3f820f0 "Disable ONLCR mapping of NL output to CR-NL"
incorrectly used c_iflag instead of c_oflag, and I copied that error
in my patch. Fixed that. However, there seems to be other problems
trying to use "\x1B[A", which I have not tried to debug, so comment that out.
(However, #3f820f0 seems to mostly work if we fix it to use c_oflag.)
This read something like `o=!_validate_int`, and the flag modifier
reading kept the pointer after the `!`, so it created a long flag
called `_validate_int`, which meant it would not only error out form
```fish
argparse 'i=!_validate_int' 'o=!_validate_int' -- $argv
```
with "Long flag '_validate_int' already defined", but also set
$_flag_validate_int.
Fixes#5864.
As mentioned in #2900, something like
```fish
test -n "$var"; and set -l foo $var
```
is sufficiently idiomatic that it should be allowable.
Also fixes some additional weirdness with semicolons.
This runs build_tools/style.fish, which runs clang-format on C++, fish_indent on fish and (new) black on python.
If anything is wrong with the formatting, we should fix the tools, but automated formatting is worth it.
This removes semicolons at the end of the line and collapses
consecutive ones, while replacing meaningful semicolons with newlines.
I.e.
```fish
echo;
```
becomes
```fish
echo
```
but
```fish
echo; echo
```
becomes
```fish
echo
echo
```
Fixes#5859.
This was a sort of side channel that was only used to propagate redraws
after universal variable changes. We can eliminate it and handle these
more directly.
tsan does funny things to signals, preventing signals from being delivered
in a blocking read. Switch the topic monitor to non-blocking reads under
tsan.
This keeps all unknown options in $argv, so
```fish
argparse -i a/alpha -- -a banana -o val -w
```
results in $_flag_a set to banana, and $argv set to `-o val -w`.
This allows users to use multiple argparse passes, or to simply avoid
specifying all options e.g. in completions - `systemctl` has 46 of
them, most not having any effect on the completions.
Fixes#5367.
This cleans up how functions are stored and autoloaded. It eliminates the
recursive lock. Instead there is a single normal owning_lock that protects
the entirety of the function data. Autoloading is re-implemented via the
new autoloader_t.
autoloader_t will be the reimplementation of autoloading. Crucically it no
longer manages any locking or loading itself; instead all locking and loading
is performed by clients. This makes it easier to test and helps limit its
responsibilities.
autoloading has a "feature" where functions are removed in an LRU-fashion.
But there's hardly any benefit in removing autoloaded functions. Just stop
doing it.
This is a long-standing issue with how `complete --do-complete` does
its argument parsing: It takes an optional argument, so it has to be
attached to the token like `complete --do-complete=foo` or (worse)
`complete -Cfoo`.
But since `complete` doesn't take any bare arguments otherwise (it
would error with "too many arguments" if you did `complete -C foo`) we
can just take one free argument as the argument to `--do-complete`.
It's more of a command than an option anyway, since it entirely
changes what the `complete` call _does_.
* Some comment fixes and renaming of is_iterm2_escape_seq.
The comment for is_iterm2_escape_seq incorrectly says "CSI followed by ]".
This is wrong, because CSI is ESC followed by [ (or the seldom-used 0x9b).
The procedure actually matches Operating System Command (OSC) escape codes.
Since there is nothing iterm2-specific about OSC, is_osc_escape_seq
would be a better name.
Also s_desired_append_char documents a non-existent parameter.
* Update broken iterm2 url in comment.
This was added in 04a96f6 but not strictly required to fix#5803
(verified), with the intention of hiding invisible background jobs
(created by invoking a function within a pipeline) from the user, but
that also broke intentionally created jobs from displaying as well.
I'm thinking it can't be done without keeping track of caller context vs
job context.
Closes#5824.
env_scoped_t lives between environment_t and env_stack_t.
It represents the read-only logic of env_stack_t and will be used to back
the new environment snapshot implementation.
These tests used raw, unescaped parentheses to perform `test` logical
grouping, but the test failures weren't caught because the parser
evaluation errors were not being propagated (fixed in bdbd173e).
It was unconditionally returning `parse_execution_success`. This was
causing certain parser errors to incorrectly return after evaluation
with `$status` equal to `0`, as reported after `eval`, `source`, or
sub-`fish` execution.
Prior to this change, fish used a global flag to decide if we should check
for changes to universal variables. This flag was then checked at arbitrary
locations, potentially triggering variable updates and event handlers for
those updates; this was very hard to reason about.
Switch to triggering a universal variable update at a fixed location,
after running an external command. The common case is that the variable
file has not changed, which we can identify with just a stat() call, so
this is pretty cheap.
This reverts commit cdce8511a1.
This change was unsafe. The prior version (now restored) took the lock and
then copied the data. By returning a reference, the caller holds a
reference to data outside of the lock.
This function isn't worth optimizing. Hardly any functions use this
facility, and for those that do, they typically just capture one or two
variables.
* Convert `function_get_inherit_vars()` to return a reference to the
(possibly) existing map, rather than a copy;
* Preallocate and reuse a static (read-only) map for the (very) common
case of no inherited vars;
* Pass references to the inherit vars map around thereafter, never
triggering the map copy (or even move) constructor.
NB: If it turns out the reference is unsafe, we can switch the inherit vars
to be a shared_ptr and return that instead.
I did not realize builtins could safely call into the parser and inject
jobs during execution. This is much cleaner than hacking around the
required shape of a plain_statement.
- fix the carat position expanding e.g. `command $,`
- improve the error reporting for not-allowed command subtitutions
by figuring out where the expansion failed instead of using
SOURCE_LOCATION_UNKNOWN
- allow nullptr for parse_util_licate_brackets_range() out_string
argument if we don't need it to do any work.
Fixes#5812
`eval` has always been implemented as a function, which was always a bit
of a hack that caused some issues such as triggering the creation of a
new scope. This turns `eval` into a decorator.
The scoping issues with eval prevented it from being usable to actually
implement other shell components in fish script, such as the problems
described in #4442, which should now no longer be the case.
Closes#4443.
While `eval` is still a function, this paves the way for changing that
in the future, and lets the proc/exec functions detect when an eval is
used to allow/disallow certain behaviors and optimizations.
This adds an option --print-rusage-self to the fish executable. When set,
this option prints some getrusage stats to the console in a human-readable
way. This will be used by upcoming benchmarking support.
Followup to 394623b.
Doing it in the parser meant only top-level jobs would be reaped after
being `disown`ed, as subjobs aren't directly handled by the parser.
This is also much cleaner, as now job removal is centralized in
`process_clean_after_marking()`.
Closes#5803.
This prevents the `disown` builtin from directly removing jobs out of
the jobs list to prevent sanity issues, as `disown` may be called within
the context of a subjob (e.g. in a function or block) in which case the
parent job might not yet be done with the reference to the child job.
Instead, a flag is set and the parser removes the job from the list only
after the entire execution chain has completed.
Closes#5720.
When popping a scope from the environment stack, we currently do a lot of
nonsense like looking for changed curses variables. We want to centralize
this in env_stack_t so that it can be migrated to the env_dispatch logic.
Move this logic up one level in preparation for doing that.
This new file is supposed to encapsulate all of the logic around
reacting to variable changes, as opposed to the environment core.
This is to help break up the env.cpp monolith.
Prior to this fix, a job would only inherit a pgrp from its parent if the
first command were external. There seems to be no reason for this
restriction and this causes tcsetgrp() churn, potentially cuasing SIGTTIN.
Switch to unconditionally inheriting a pgrp from parents.
This should fix most of #5765, the only remaining question is
tcsetpgrp from builtins.
Prior to this fix, in every call to job_continue, fish would reclaim the
foreground pgrp. This would cause other jobs in the pipeline (which may
have another pgrp) to receive SIGTTIN / SIGTTOU.
Only reclaim the foreground pgrp if it was held at the point of job_continue.
This partially addresses #5765
In tests we would like to arrange for an executable to invoke certain
system calls, e.g. to claim or relinquish control of the terminal. This is
annoying to do portably via e.g. perl. fish_test_helper is a little
program where we can add custom commands to make it act in certain ways.
This set the term modes to the shell-modes, including disabling
ICRNL (translating \cm to \cj) and echo.
The rationale given was that `reader_interactive_init()` would only be
called >= 250ms later, which I _highly_ doubt considering fish's total
startup time is 8ms for me.
The main idea was that this would stop programs like tmuxinator that
send shortcuts early from failing _iff_ the shortcut was \cj, which
also seems quite unusual.
This works both with `rm -i` and `read` in config.fish, because `read`
explicitly calls `reader_push`, which then initializes the shell modes.
The real fix would involve reordering our init so we set up the
modesetting first, but that's quite involved and the remaining issue
should barely happen, while it's fairly common to have issues with a
prompt in config.fish, and the workaround for the former is simpler, so let's leave it for now.
Partially reverts #2578.
Fixes#2980.
Putting larger members before smaller ones will reduce structure
sizes. bools are 1 byte. on 64bit systems I think they reduced:
wgetopt.h:46: 64 to 56 bytes
builtin_history.cpp:30: 48 to 32 bytes
builtin_status.cpp:91: 32 to 24 bytes
tinyexpr.cpp:69: 40 to 32 bytes
The data stored in these containers is small enough that it is worth
creating distinct sets for each lookup.
In a microbenchmark of these changes, the single-lookup version of the
function with lookups gated on the length of input (bypassed entirely if
the input is longer than the longest key in the container) provided a
1.5x-3.5x speedup over the previous implementation.
Additionally, as the collections are static and their contents are never
modified after startup, it makes no sense to continously calculate the
location of and allocate an iterator for the `!= foo.end()` comparison;
the end iterator is now statically cached.
I'm not expecting massive speed gains out of this change, but the parser
does perform enough of these to make it worth optimizing in this way.
This reverts commit 7a74198aa3.
Believe it or not this commit actually increased copying. When accepting
a value you know you're going to take ownership of, just accept it by
value; then temporaries can invoke the move ctor and blah blah blah.
We really need a lightweight refcounted pass-by-value string to make this
less error prone.
If we switch the bind mode, we add a "force-repaint" there just to
redraw the mode indicator.
That's quite wasteful and annoying, considering that sometimes the prompt can take
half a second.
So we add a "repaint-mode" function that just reexecutes the
mode-prompt and uses the cached values for the others.
Fixes#5783.
As it turns out it didn't work much better, and it fell behind in
support when it comes to things that wcwidth traditionally can't
express like variation selectors and hangul combining characters, but
also simply $fish_*_width.
I've had to tell a few people now to rebuild with widecharwidth after
sending them on a fool's errand to set X variable.
So keeping this option is doing our users a disservice.
* Add "expand-abbr" bind function
This can be used to explictly allow expanding abbreviations.
* Make expanding abbr explicit
NOTE: This accepts them for space only, we currently also do it for \n
and \r.
* Remove now dead code
We no longer trigger an abbr implicitly, so we can remove the code
that does it.
* Fix comment
[ci skip]
Directly access the job list without the intermediate job_iterator_t,
and remove functions that are ripe for abuse by modifying a local
enumeration of the same list instead of operating on the iterators
directly (e.g. proc.cpp iterates jobs, and mid-iteration calls
parser::job_remove(j) with the job (and not the iterator to the job),
causing an invisible invalidation of the pre-existing local iterators.
This printed weird things like
```fish
$ functions -x
functions: Unknown option '-x'
(Type 'help functions' for related documentation)
```
Instead, let's make it
```fish
$ functions -x
functions: Unknown option '-x'
(Type 'help functions' for related documentation)
```
This was printed basically everywhere.
The user knows what they executed on standard input.
A good example:
```fish
set c (subme 513)
```
used to print
```
fish: Too much data emitted by command substitution so it was discarded
set -l x (string repeat -n $argv x)
^
in function 'subme'
called on standard input
with parameter list '513'
in command substitution
called on standard input
```
and now it is
```
fish: Too much data emitted by command substitution so it was discarded
set -l x (string repeat -n $argv x)
^
in function 'subme' with arguments '513'
in command substitution
```
See #5434.
Now:
```
cd: Unknown option '-r'
~/dev/fish-shell/share/functions/cd.fish (line 40):
builtin cd $argv
^
in function 'cd' with arguments '-r'
in function 'f'
in function 'd'
in function 'b' with arguments '-1q --wurst'
in function 'a'
called on standard input
```
See #5434.
This printed things like
```
in function 'f'
called on standard input
in function 'd'
called on standard input
in function 'b'
called on standard input
in function 'a'
called on standard input
```
As a first step, it removes the empty lines so it's now
```
in function 'f'
called on standard input
in function 'd'
called on standard input
in function 'b'
called on standard input
in function 'a'
called on standard input
```
See #5434.
This switches env_var_t to be an immutable value type, and stores its
contents via a shared_ptr. This eliminates string copying when fetching
env_var_t values.
If a function process is deferred, allow it to be unbuffered.
This permits certain simple cases where functions are piped to external
commands to execute without buffering.
This is a somewhat-hacky stopgap measure that can't really be extended
to more general concurrent processes. However it is overall an improvement
in user experience that might help flush out some bugs too.
In a job, a deferred process is the last fish internal process which pipes
to an external command. Execute the deferred process last; this will allow
for streaming its output.
I believe this was selected to be artificially low for the sake
of it displaying well in prompts. But people should expect to get
the same output as can be gotten from `hostname`.
Fixes#5758
The code already allowed for variable width (multicell) *display* of the
newline omitted character, but there was no way to define it as being
more than one `wchar_t`.
This lets us use a string on console sessions (^J aka newline feed)
instead of an ambiguous character like `@` (used in some versions of
vim for ^M) or `~` (what we were using).
The system version of `wcwidth()` reflects the capabilities of the
system's own virtual terminal's view of the width of the character in
question, while fish's enhanced version (`widechar_wcwidth`) is much too
smart for most login terminals, which generally barely support anything
beyond ASCII text.
If, at startup, it is detected that we are running under a physical
console rather than within a terminal emulator running in a desktop
environment, take that as a hint to use the system-provided `wcwidth`.
The commit began passing the length of the wide string rather than the
length of the narrowed string after conversion via `wcstombs`. We *do*
have the actual length, but it's not (necessarily) the same as the
original value. We need to pass the result of `wcstombs` instead.
POSIX dictates here that incomplete conversions, like in
printf %d\n 15.2
or
printf %d 14g
are still printed along with any error.
This seems alright, as it allows users to silence stderr to accept incomplete conversions.
This commit implements it, but what's a bit weird is the ordering between stdout and stderr,
causing the error to be printed _after_, like
15
14
15.1: value not completely converted
14,2: value not completely converted
but that seems like a general issue with how we buffer the streams.
(I know that nonfatal_error is a copy of most of fatal_error - I tried
differently, and va_* is weird)
Fixes#5532.
Before this change, - was sorted with other punctuation before
A-Z. Now, it sorts above the rest of the characters.
This has a practical effect on completions, where when there are
both -s and --long with the same description, the short option
is now before the long option in the pager, which is what is now
selected when navigating `foo -<TAB>`. The long options can be
picked out with `foo --<TAB>`. Before, short options which
duplicated a long option literally could not be selected by
any means from the pager.
Fixes#5634
This tweaks wcsfilecmp such that certain punctuation characters will
come after A-Z.
A big win with `set <TAB>` - the __prefixed fish junk now comes
after the stuff users should care about.
This disables an extra round of escaping in the `string replace -r`
replacement string.
Currently, to add a backslash to an a or b (to "escape" it):
string replace -ra '([ab])' '\\\\\\\$1' a
7 backslashes!
This removes one of the layers, so now 3 or 4 works (each one escaped
for the single-quotes, so pcre receives two, which it reads as one literal):
string replace -ra '([ab])' '\\\\$1' a
This is backwards-incompatible as replacement strings will change
meaning, so we put it behind a feature flag.
The name is kinda crappy, though.
Fixes#5474.
As a simple replacement for `wc -l`.
This counts both lines on stdin _and_ arguments.
So if "file" has three lines, then `count a b c < file` will print 6.
And since it counts newlines, like wc, `echo -n foo | count` prints 0.
Mostly related to usage _(L"foo"), keeping in mind the _
macro does a wcstring().c_str() already.
And a smattering of other trivial micro-optimizations certain
to not help tangibly.
C++11 provides std::min/std::max which we're using all over,
obviating the need for our own templates for this.
util.h now only provides two things: get_time and wcsfilecmp.
This commit removes everything that includes it which doesn't
use either; most because they no longer need mini or maxi from
it but some others were #including it unnecessarily.
Hangul uses three codepoints to combine to one glyph. The first has a
width of 2 (like the final glyph), but the second and third were
assigned a width of 1, which seems to match EastAsianWidth.txt:
> 1160..11FF;N # Lo [160] HANGUL JUNGSEONG FILLER..HANGUL JONGSEONG SSANGNIEUN
Instead, we override that and treat the middle and end codepoint as combiners,
always, because there's no way to figure out what the terminal will
think and that's the way it's supposed to work.
If they stand by themselves or in another combination, they'll indeed
show up with a width of 1 so we'll get it wrong, but that's less
likely and not expressible with wcwidth().
Fixes#5729.
This only did prefix matching, which is generally less useful.
All existing users _should_ be okay with this since they want to
provide completions.
Fixes#5467.
Fixes#2318.
This addresses a few places where -Wswitch-enum showed one or two missing
case's for enum values.
It did uncover and fix one apparent oversight:
$ function asd -p 100
echo foo
end
$ functions --handlers-type exit
Event exit
asd
It looks like this should be showing a PID before 'asd' just like
job_exit handlers show the job id. It was falling
through to default: which just printed the function name.
$ functions --handlers-type exit
Event exit
100 asd
This tried to skip conversion if the locale had MB_CUR_MAX == 1, but
in doing so it just entered an infinite recursion (because
writestr(wchar_t*) called writestr(wchar_t*)).
Instead, just let wcstombs handle it.
Fixes#5724.
Since Unicode 9, the width of some characters changed to 2.
Depending on the system, it might have support for it, or it might
not.
Instead of hardcoding specific glibc etc versions, we check what the
system wcwidth says to "😃", U+1F603 "Grinning Face With Big Eyes".
The intention is to, in most cases, make setting $fish_emoji_width
unnecessary, but since it sets the "guessed_emoji_width", that variable still takes precedence if it is set.
Unfortunately this approach has some caveats:
- It relies on the locale being set to a unicode-supporting one.
(C.UTF-8 is unfortunately not standard, so we can't use it)
- It relies on the terminal's wcwidth having unicode9 support IFF the
system wcwidth does.
This is like #5722, but at runtime.
The additional caveat is that we don't try to achieve a unicode
locale, but since we re-run the heuristic when the locale changes (and
we try to get a unicode locale), we should still often get the correct
value.
Plus if you use a C locale and your terminal still displays emoji,
you've misconfigured your system.
Fixes#5722.
Prior to this fix, the wait command used waitpid() directly. Switch it to
calling process_mark_finished_children() along with the rest of the job
machinery. This centralizes the waitpid call to a single location.
It turns out that `string split0` didn't actually ever do any
splitting. The arg_iterator_t already split stdin on NUL, and split0 just
performed an additional search that could never succeed (since
arguments from argv already can't contain NUL).
Let the arg_iterator_t not perform any splitting if asked, and then
let split0 split in 0.
One slight wart is that split0 ignores a trailing NUL, which normal
split doesn't.
Fixes#5701.
This is another case where we used pid when we meant pgroup.
Since 55b3c45f95, the assumption that
both are the same no longer holds in all cases, so this check was wrong.
Might fix#5663.
In fish we play fast and loose with status codes as set directly (e.g. on
failed redirections), vs status codes returned from waitpid(), versus the
value $status. Introduce a new value type proc_status_t to encapsulate
this logic.
prettify_node_recursive is replaced with prettify_node_nrecursive
explicite stack is used instead.
Signed-off-by: Janczar Kurek <janczar.kurek@student.uj.edu.pl>
fish's signal handlers are now sufficiently innocuous that there should
be no reason to block signals (outside of temporarily, when creating a
thread and we need to manipulate the signal mask).
Prior to this fix, an "event" was used as both a predicate on which events
to match, and also as the event itself. Re-express these concepts
distinctly: an event is something that happened, an event_handler is the
predicate and name of the function to execute.
Prior to this fix, fish had a signal_list_t that accumulated signals.
Signals were added to an array of integers, with an overflow flag.
The event machinery would attempt to atomically "swap in" the other list.
After this fix, there is a single list of pending signal events, as an array
of atomic booleans. The signal handler sets the boolean corresponding to its
signal.
In a galaxy far, far away, event_blockage_t was intended to block only cetain
events. But it always just blocked everything. Eliminate the event block
mask.
As it turns out, NetBSD's rand(3) is awful - it's possible that in any
given run it'll only return odd numbers, which means
while (rand() % 10)
will never stop.
Since random(3) is also standardized and works, let's use that!
Now that we use an internal process to perform builtin output, simplify the
logic around how it is performed. In particular we no longer have to be
careful about async-safe functions since we do not fork.
Also fix a bunch of comments that no longer apply.
This uses the new internal process mechanism to write output for builtins.
After this the only reason fish ever forks is to execute external processes.
This introduces "internal processes" which are backed by a pthread instead
of a normal process. Internal processes are reaped using the topic
machinery, plugging in neatly alongside the sigchld topic; this means that
process_mark_finished_children() can wait for internal and external
processes simultaneously.
Initially internal processes replace the forked process that fish uses to
write out the output of blocks and functions.
This adds an "in-process" interpretation of dup2s, allowing for fish to
output directly to the correct file descriptor without having to perform
an in-kernel dup2 sequence.
The sigchld generation expresses the idea that, if we receive a sigchld
signal, the generation will be different than when we last recorded it. A
process cannot exit before it has launched, so check the generation count
before process launch. This is an optimization that reduces failing
waitpid calls.
This is a big change to how process reaping works, reimplenting it using
topics. The idea is to simplify the logic in
process_mark_finished_children around blocking, and also prepare for
"internal processes" which do not correspond to real processes.
Before this change, fish would use waitpid() to wait for a process group,
OR would individually poll processes if the process group leader was
unreapable.
After this change, fish no longer ever calls blocking waitpid(). Instead
fish uses the topic mechanism. For each reapable process, fish checks if
it has received a SIGCHLD since last poll; if not it waits until the next
SIGCHLD, and then polls them all.
topic_monitor allows for querying changes posted to one or more topics,
initially sigchld. This will eventually replace the waitpid logic in
process_mark_finished_children().
Comment from the new header:
Topic monitoring support. Topics are conceptually "a thing that can
happen." For example, delivery of a SIGINT, a child process exits, etc. It
is possible to post to a topic, which means that that thing happened.
Associated with each topic is a current generation, which is a 64 bit
value. When you query a topic, you get back a generation. If on the next
query the generation has increased, then it indicates someone posted to
the topic.
For example, if you are monitoring a child process, you can query the
sigchld topic. If it has increased since your last query, it is possible
that your child process has exited.
Topic postings may be coalesced. That is there may be two posts to a given
topic, yet the generation only increases by 1. The only guarantee is that
after a topic post, the current generation value is larger than any value
previously queried.
Tying this all together is the topic_monitor_t. This provides the current
topic generations, and also provides the ability to perform a blocking
wait for any topic to change in a particular topic set. This is the real
power of topics: you can wait for a sigchld signal OR a thread exit.
This resolves the issue where running pre-compiled Linux packages from
binary package manager repositories lead fish to think that we are not
running under WSL.
- Closes#5619.
- Ping neovim/neovim#7330
This happens on OpenIndiana/Solaris/Illumos/SunOS.
Elsewhere we use read_blocked, which already returned in this
case (and which we might want to use here as well!).
`fish_title` as invoked by fish itself is not running in an interactive
context, and attempts to read from the input fd (e.g. via `read`) cause
fish to segfault, go into an infinite loop, or hang at the read prompt
depending on the exact command line and fish version.
This patch addresses that by explicitly closing the input fd when
invoking `fish_title`.
Reported by @floam in #5629. May close that issue, but situation is
unclear.
Taking advantage of the maybe_t's, the logic and nesting here
can be a bit less intense.
Small adjustments to debug output, and found a more accurate
version number for Lion Terminal.app.
Longer term we should have a terminal_t class or something
encapsulating all the kinds of terminal detection we have
with methods that return the color support, and also stuff
like whether the terminal has the newline glitch, the
ambiguous width character behavior, etc.
fish forks child processes when (for example) writing out builtin output.
After fork it resets signal handlers, but if a signal is delivered before
the signal handlers are reset, it will inherit fish's default handlers,
which do things like swallow SIGINT. Teach fish's default signal handlers
to detect this case and re-raise signals with default handlers.
This improves the reliability of control-C in the face of builtins.
I hope this is now complete.
Also, shorten enough descriptions to make `string match --<TAB>`
show a two column pager with 80 cols.
We really should have shown more retraint in the design of `string`,
not all of the flags required both a long and short option created.
300ms was waaay too long, and even 100ms wasn't necessary.
Emacs' evil mode uses 10ms (0.01s), so let's stay a tad higher in case
some terminals are slow.
If anyone really wants to be able to type alt+h with escape, let them
raise the timeout.
Fixes#3904.
`/tmp` isn't present / writeable on every system. Instead of always
using `/tmp`, try to use standard environment variables and
configuration to find a temporary directory.
Adapted from #3974, with updates based on those comments.
Closes#3845.
This is a large change to how io_buffers are filled. The essential problem
comes about with code like (example):
echo ( /bin/pwd )
The output of /bin/pwd must go to fish, not the tty. To arrange for this,
fish does the following:
1. Invoke pipe() to create a pipe.
2. Add an io_bufferfill_t redirection that owns the write end of the pipe.
3. After fork (or equiv), call dup2() to replace pwd's stdout with this pipe.
Now when /bin/pwd writes, it will send output to the read end of the pipe.
But who reads it?
Prior to this fix, fish would do the following in a loop:
1. select() on the pipe with a 10 msec timeout
2. waitpid(WNOHANG) on the pwd proc
This polling is ugly and confusing and is what is replaced here.
With this new change, fish now reads from the pipe via a background thread:
1. Spawn a background pthread, which select()s on the pipe's read end with
a long (100 msec) timeout.
2. In the foreground, waitpid() (allowing hanging) on the pwd proc.
The big win here is a major simplification of job_t::continue_job() since
it no longer has to worry about filling buffers. This will make things
easier for concurrent execution.
It may not be obvious why the background thread still needs a poll (100 msec).
The answer is for cases where the write end of the fd escapes, in particular
background processes invoked inside command substitutions. psub is perhaps
the only important case of this (other shells typically just hang here).
This makes some significant architectual improvements to io_pipe_t and
io_buffer_t.
Prior to this fix, io_buffer_t subclassed io_pipe_t. io_buffer_t is now
replaced with a class io_bufferfill_t, which does not subclass pipe.
io_pipe_t no longer remembers both fds. Instead it has an autoclose_fd_t,
so that the file descriptor ownership is clear.
This switches IO redirections after fork() to use the dup2_list_t,
instead of io_chain_t. This results in simpler code with much simpler
error handling.
This represents a "resolved" io_chain_t, where all of the different io_data_t
types have been reduced to a sequence of dup2() and close(). This will
eliminate a lot of the logic duplication around posix_spawn vs fork, and pave
the way for in-process redirections.
This is a large change to how io_buffers are filled. The essential problem
comes about with code like (example):
echo ( /bin/pwd )
The output of /bin/pwd must go to fish, not the tty. To arrange for this,
fish does the following:
1. Invoke pipe() to create a pipe.
2. Add an io_bufferfill_t redirection that owns the write end of the pipe.
3. After fork (or equiv), call dup2() to replace pwd's stdout with this pipe.
Now when /bin/pwd writes, it will send output to the read end of the pipe.
But who reads it?
Prior to this fix, fish would do the following in a loop:
1. select() on the pipe with a 10 msec timeout
2. waitpid(WNOHANG) on the pwd proc
This polling is ugly and confusing and is what is replaced here.
With this new change, fish now reads from the pipe via a background thread:
1. Spawn a background pthread, which select()s on the pipe's read end with
a long (100 msec) timeout.
2. In the foreground, waitpid() (allowing hanging) on the pwd proc.
The big win here is a major simplification of job_t::continue_job() since
it no longer has to worry about filling buffers. This will make things
easier for concurrent execution.
It may not be obvious why the background thread still needs a poll (100 msec).
The answer is for cases where the write end of the fd escapes, in particular
background processes invoked inside command substitutions. psub is perhaps
the only important case of this (other shells typically just hang here).
This makes some significant architectual improvements to io_pipe_t and
io_buffer_t.
Prior to this fix, io_buffer_t subclassed io_pipe_t. io_buffer_t is now
replaced with a class io_bufferfill_t, which does not subclass pipe.
io_pipe_t no longer remembers both fds. Instead it has an autoclose_fd_t,
so that the file descriptor ownership is clear.
This switches IO redirections after fork() to use the dup2_list_t,
instead of io_chain_t. This results in simpler code with much simpler
error handling.
This represents a "resolved" io_chain_t, where all of the different io_data_t
types have been reduced to a sequence of dup2() and close(). This will
eliminate a lot of the logic duplication around posix_spawn vs fork, and pave
the way for in-process redirections.
By exclusively waiting by pgrp, we can fail to reap processes that
change their own pgrp then either crash or close their fds. If we wind
up in a situation where `waitpid(2)` returns 0 or ECHLD even though we
did not specify `WNOHANG` but we still have unreaped child processes,
wait on them by pid.
Closes#5596.
If we read an R_EOF, we'd try to match mappings to it.
In emacs mode, that's not an issue because the generic binding was
always available, but in vi-normal mode there is no generic binding,
so we'd endlessly loop, waiting for another character.
Fixes#5528.
Originally I sought out to configure the foreground color of the
selected text in the pager. After reading a thread on a github issue I
was inpired to do more: now you can conifgure any part of the pager when
selected, and when a row is secondary. More specifically this commit adds the
ability to specify a pager row's:
- Prefix
- Completion text
- Description
- Background
when said row is selected or secondary.
This will print out along with the stuff we've guessed about color
support. We get a lot of bug reports about these messing up rendering,
this is useful diagnostic output.
Ask the system where utilities are available with confstr (POSIX).
This is the same string printed by `getconf PATH`, which likely
includes more directories.
I was surprised to see:
> set_color normal | string escape
\e\[30m\e\(B\e\[m
I only expected to see a sgr0 here.
Cleanup a nearby `else { if (...) {` and comment with a bogus example.
There was a bogus check for is_interactive_session. But if we are in
reader_readline we are necessarily interactive (even if we are not in
an interactive session, i.e. a fish script invoked some interactive
functionality).
Remove this check.
Fixes#5519
A while loop now evaluates to the last executed command in the body, or
zero if the loop body is empty. This matches POSIX semantics.
Add a bunch of tricky tests.
See #4982
This is effectively a pick of 2ebdcf82ee
and the subsequent fixup. However we also avoid setting WNOHANG unless
waitpid() indicates a process was reaped.
Fixes#5438
For some reason, we have two places where a variable can be read-only:
- By key in env.cpp:is_read_only(), which is checked via set*
- By flag on the actual env_var_t, which is checked e.g. in
parse_execution
The latter didn't happen for non-electric variables like hostname,
because they used the default constructor, because they were
constructed via operator[] (or some such C++-iness).
This caused for-loops to crash on an assert if they used a
non-electric read-only var like $hostname or $SHLVL.
Instead, we explicitly set the flag.
We might want to remove one of the two read-only checks, or something?
Fixes#5548.
Our is_hex_digit() was redundant, we can just use iswxdigit; the libc
implementation is a more efficient table lookup anyhow.
Do is_octal_digit() in terms of iswdigit instead of using wcschr.
This requires threading environment_t through many places, such as completions
and history. We introduce null_environment_t for when the environment isn't
important.
`xlocale.h` is not available on Linux, so we can't just universally
include it.
`HAVE_XLOCALE_H` was already being tested/set in the CMake script as a
possible requirement for `wcstod_l` support, this just adds it to
`config_cmake_h.in` and uses it in `wutil.h` to gate the include.
Removes the dependency on the current user's home directory, instead
overriding it to be within the current hierarchy.
Fixes the tests on Debian buildd, where the home directory is
deliberately unwriteable to pick up errors in builds.
Using `setlocale` is both not thread-safe and not correct, as
a) The global locale is usually stored in static storage, so
simultaneous calls to `setlocale` can result in corruption, and
b) `setlocale` changes the locale for the entire application, not
just the calling thread. This means that even if we wrapped the
`wcstod_l` in a mutex to prevent the previous point, the results
would still be incorrect because this would incorrectly influence the
results of locale-aware functions executed in other threads while
this thread is executing.
The previous comment mentioned that `uselocale` hadn't worked. I'm not
sure what the failing implementation looked like, but `uselocale` can be
tricky. The committed implementation passes the tests for me under Linux
and FreeBSD.
This was the actual issue leading to memory corruption under FreeBSD in
issue #5453, worked around by correcting the detection of `wcstod_l` so
that our version of the function is not called at all.
If we are 100% certain that `wcstod_l` does not exist, then then the
existing code is fine. But given that our checks have failed seperately
on two different platforms already (FreeBSD and Cygwin/newlib), it's a
good precaution to take.
This helps on netbsd, because enter_standout_mode et al are const
there.
These methods don't alter their argument, so they should have been
const to begin with.
This is non-const on macOS, but some of the args we pass are always
const on netbsd.
I have no idea why you'd ever want this to modify its argument, but whatever.
This is the more correct fix for #5447, as regardless of which process
in the job (be it the first or the last) finished first, once we have
waited on a process without ~WNOHANG we don't do that for any subsequent
processes in the job.
It is also a waste to call into the kernel to wait for a process we
already know is completed!
@ridiculousfish had introduced this in 3a45cad12e
to work around an issue with Coverity Scan where it couldn't tell the
mutex was correctly locked, but even with the `fish_mutex_t` hack, it
still emits the same warnings, so there's no pointing in keeping it.
This is necessary for the history race condition test to succeed.
(That test is permanently disabled under WSL (as it always fails) so I
didn't catch this on my end.)
Use `pthread_atfork()` to mark child processes as dirty when `fork()` is
invoked rather than needing to call into the kernel each time
`ASSERT_IS_NOT_FORKED_CHILD()` is called.
This makes simple test cases that hit `ASSERT_IS_NOT_FORKED_CHILD()` 1.8x faster.
------------------------
With a7998c4829 reverted but before this optimization:
```
mqudsi@ZBOOK ~/r/fish-shell> hyperfine -S build/fish 'for i in (seq 100000); test 1 = 1; end'
Benchmark #1: for i in (seq 100000); test 1 = 1; end
Time (mean ± σ): 717.8 ms ± 14.9 ms [User: 503.4 ms, System: 216.2 ms]
Range (min … max): 692.3 ms … 740.2 ms
```
With a7998c4829 reverted and with this optimization:
```
mqudsi@ZBOOK ~/r/fish-shell> hyperfine -S build/fish 'for i in (seq 100000); test 1 = 1; end'
Benchmark #1: for i in (seq 100000); test 1 = 1; end
Time (mean ± σ): 397.2 ms ± 22.3 ms [User: 322.1 ms, System: 79.3 ms]
Range (min … max): 376.0 ms … 444.0 ms
```
Without a7998c4829 reverted and with this optimization:
mqudsi@ZBOOK ~/r/fish-shell> hyperfine -S build/fish 'for i in (seq 100000); test 1 = 1; end'
Benchmark #1: for i in (seq 100000); test 1 = 1; end
Time (mean ± σ): 423.4 ms ± 51.6 ms [User: 363.2 ms, System: 61.3 ms]
Range (min … max): 378.4 ms … 541.1 ms
```
By using a user-land thread-local integer and lock-free (at least under
x86/x64) atomics, we can implement a safe `assert_is_main_thread()`
without calling into the kernel. Thread-local variables are part of
C++11.
This is called a lot in some performance-sensitive areas, so it is worth
optimizing.
This fixes#5438 by having fish block while waiting on a foreground job
via its individual processes by enumerating the procs in reverse order,
such that we hang waiting for the last job in the IO chain to terminate,
rather than the first.
If it's a foreground job, it is related to the currently running exec.
This fixes exec in functions, i.e.
function reload
exec fish
end
would previously always ask about the "function reload" job.
Fixes#5449.
Fixesoh-my-fish/oh-my-fish#664.
Mainly this removes the "TYPE_MASK" macro that just masks off the
higher bits, which I don't think were ever actually used.
Much of this seems like anticipation of future direction, but we're
going somewhere else.
This removes the need to run c-compilation on one file, and allows us
to in future c++-ify this a bit.
There's a lot of bit-fiddling here that is quite unnecessary, better
error-handling would be nice...
So far this removes a few more unused things (because I would have had
to port them), including:
- Functions with ARITY > 3 (even 3 isn't used, but just so we don't
get complacent)
- Variables
- Most functions moved out of the header, because only te_interp is used.
- The te_print function
The function `add_disowned_pgid` adds process *group* ids and not
process ids. It multiplies the value by negative 1 to indicate a wait
on a process group, so the original value must be positive.
If a job is disowned that, for some reason, has a pgid that is special
to waitpid, like 0 (process with pgid of the calling process), -1 (any
process), or our actual pgid, that would lead to us waiting for too
many processes when we later try to reap the disowned processes (to
stop zombies from appearing).
And that means we'd snag away the processes we actually do want to
wait for, which would end with us in a waiting loop.
This is tough to reproduce, the easiest I've found was
fish -ic 'sleep 5 &; disown; set -g __fish_git_prompt_showupstream auto; __fish_git_prompt'
in a git repo.
What we do is to not allow special pgids in the disowned_pids list.
That means we might leave a zombie around (though we probably wait on
0 somewhere), but that's preferable to infinitely looping.
See #5426.
Return STATUS_INVALID_ARGS when failing due to evaluation errors,
so we can tell the difference between an error and falseness.
Add a test for the ERANGE error
The rest of the high-numbered exit codes are not values used by scripts
or builtins, they are internal to fish and come out of
the parser for example.
Prior to adding STATUS_INVALID_ARGS, builtins were usually exiting 2
if they had a special exit status for the situation of bad arguments.
Set it to 2.
We were not parsing an in-range number when we claimed we were,
and were thus failing to error with invalid numbers and returned
a wrong test result. Fixed#5414
Also, provide the detail we can for the other error cases.
Return STATUS_INVALID_ARGS when failing due to evaluation errors,
so we can tell the difference between an error and falseness.
Add a test for the ERANGE error
The rest of the high-numbered exit codes are not values used by scripts
or builtins, they are internal to fish and come out of
the parser for example.
Prior to adding STATUS_INVALID_ARGS, builtins were usually exiting 2
if they had a special exit status for the situation of bad arguments.
Set it to 2.
Cleaned up the code to no longer replicate in fishscript what fish
already does (and caches to boot) in C++ in setting up the paths to the
user configuration directory.
Also introduced a `$__fish_user_data_dir` instead of the sporadic
definitions of `$userdatadir` that may or may not go through
`XDG_DATA_HOME`.
We were not parsing an in-range number when we claimed we were,
and were thus failing to error with invalid numbers and returned
a wrong test result. Fixed#5414
Also, provide the detail we can for the other error cases.
Just sets locale to "C" (because that's the only one we need), does
wcstod and resets the locale.
No idea why uselocale(loc) failed for me, but it did.
Fixes#5407.
This happens in firejail, and it means that we can't use it as an
argument to most pgid-taking functions.
E.g. `wait(0)` means to wait for the _current_ process group,
`tcsetpgrp(0)` doesn't work etc.
So we just stop doing this stuff and hope it works.
Fixes#5295.
This reverts commit 1cb8b2a87b.
argv[0] has the full path in it for a user when he executes it
out of $PATH. This is really annoying in the title which uses $_.
Also check if that is actually defined, not the cur_term proxy.
In #5371, we figured out that there are terminfo entries without this
capability, so this would do a NULL-dereference.
OCLINT was ignoring this, but we can just not do the bad thing.
Declare argc and argv const. These are in the stack, they can
be modified, but we won't.
Fix a typo
... rather than hard code it to "fish". This affects
what is found in $_ and improves the errors:
For example, if fish was ran with ./fish, instead of
something like:
fish: Expected 3 surprises, only got 2 surprises
we'll see:
./fish: Expected 3 surprises, only got 2 surprises
like most other shell utilities. It's just a tiny bit
of detail that can avoid confusion.
This broke fishtape, which did
somestuff | fish -c "source"
Because `source` didn't have a redirection, it refused to read from
stdin.
So, to keep the common issue of `source (command that does not print)`
from seeminly stopping fish, we instead actually check if stdin is a terminal.
This was causing problems if "fish" wasn't in exec_path, like
if the binary had been renamed.
I also noticed that even with 'fish' not renamed, only paths.data
was made relative to my source tree. paths.sysconf, paths.doc, and
paths.bin were all relative to /usr/local.
This had a bunch of "do_{backward,forward}" movements that differed
only in one argument.
Just keep them together, so it's less code, and less needs to be
changed.
If the user is in a directory which has been unlinked, it is possible
for the path .. to not exist, relative to the working directory.
Always pass in the working directory (potentially virtual) to
path_get_cdpath; this ensures we check absolute paths and are immune
from issues if the working directory has been unlinked.
Also introduce a new function path_normalize_for_cd which normalizes the
"join point" of a path and a working directory. This allows us to 'cd' out of
a non-existent directory, but not cd into such a directory.
Fixes#5341
realpath() will return NULL and sets errno if it fails.
We asserted that realpath(".") does not fail. We also didn't really
check that it was successful. Made sure we'll get a perror telling
us about what went wrong if something like this happens again.
Updated tests and added test case
Fixes#5351
If fish detects that it was started with a pgrp of 0 (which appears to
oddly be the case when run under firejail), create new process group for
fish and give it control of the terminal.
This selectively reverts 55b3c45 in cases where an invalid pgrp is
detected. Note that this is known to cause problems in other cases, such
as #3805 and Microsoft/WSL#1653, although the former may have been
ameliorated or even addressed by the recent job control overhaul, so
that's why we are careful to only assign fish to its own pgroup if an
invalid pgroup was detected and not as the normal case.
This reverts commit 54050bd4c5.
Type job_list_t was changed from a list to a deque in
commit 54050bd4c5.
In process_clean_after_marking(), we remove jobs while iterating.
dequeues do not support that. Make it a list again.
This fixes the `~floam/` case, where the out_tail_idx pointer needs to
point to the "/", not the last letter.
The `~/` and `~floam` cases still work.
Unfortunately, I'm unsure of how to test this.
Fixes#5325.
Limit the fish_wcstod fast path to ASCII digits only, to fix the problem
observed in the discussion for a700acadfa
where LANG=de_DE.UTF-8 would cause `test` to interpret commas instead of
periods inside floating point values.
Now jobs are aware of their parent jobs, and can interrogate those jobs,
to determine if every job in the chain is fully constructed.
Remove flags and the static stacks that manipulated them.
The parent of a job is the parent pipeline that executed the function or
block corresponding to this job. This will help simplify
process_mark_finished_children().
Prior to this fix, cding into a symlink and then completing .. would complete
from the physical directory instead of the logical directory, which could not
actually be cd'd to. Teach cd completiond to use the logical directory.
select_try() returned IO_ERROR to indicate that there's no file descriptors
from which to read. Name this return value properly.
Also migrate this type into proc.cpp since it's not used outside of the
header.
This is an opposite case from the usual "pipe into grep-the-function"
where my `pbpaste` emitted a lot of content exceeding the OS pipe
buffer. The `block_on_fg` condition was just `send_sigcont` in the
original job control rewrite, and it was incorrect to sub it for
WAIT_BY_PROCESS on its own.
However, this requires always blocking when select_try returns an
interrupted/incomplete read or else fish doesn't block and stays running
in a tight loop in the background (and incorrectly writing to a terminal
it doesn't own under higher debug levels), which I *think* is OK.
Instantiate the std:locale instance used within the character comparison
callback outside the lambda and take a reference to it instead of
creating the locale object for each character in the sequence.
This is part of a very tight loop with lots of inputs during the
evaluation of fuzzy string matches for completions/autosuggestions and
is worth optimizing.
This was introduced in 1b1bc28c0a but did
not cause any problems until the job control refactor, which caused it
to attempt to signal the calling `exec` builtin's own (invalid) pgrp
with SIGHUP.
Also improved debugging for `j->signal()` failures by printing the
signal we tried sending in case of error, rename the function to
`hup_background_jobs`, and move it from `reader.h`/`reader.cpp` to
`proc.h`/`proc.cpp`.
When a function is encountered by exec_job, a new context is created for
its execution from the ground up, with a new job and all, ultimately
resulting in a recursive call to exec_job from the same (main) thread.
Since each time exec_job encounters a new job with external commands
that needs terminal control it creates a new pgrp and gives it control
of the terminal (tcsetpgrp & co), this effectively takes control away
from the previously spawned external commands which may be (and likely
are) expecting to still have terminal access.
This commit attempts to detect when such a situation arises by handling
recursive calls to exec_job (which can only happen if the pipeline
included a function) by borrowing the pgrp from the (necessarily still
active) parent job and spawning new external commands into it.
When a parent job spawns new jobs due to the evaluation of a new
function (which shouldn't be the case in the first place), we end up
with two distinct jobs sharing one pgrp (to fix#3952). This can lead to
early termination of a pgrp if finished parent job children are reaped
before future processes in either the parent or future child jobs can
join it.
While the parent job is under construction, require that waitpid(2)
calls for the child job be done by process id and not job pgrp.
Closes#3952.
Use SIGCHLD to determine whether or not waitpid(2) calls can be elided,
but only with extreme caution. If we receive SIGCHLD but are not able to
reap all jobs, we need to iterate through them again.
For this to work, we need to make sure that we reap all children that we
can reap after a SIGCHLD, i.e. it's not OK to just reap the first and
return or else we can never clear the dirty state flag.
In all cases, as expensive as a call to waitpid() may be, if a child
process is available for reaping it is always cheaper to wait on it then
reap it than to call select_try() and end up timing out.
The old code was rather haphazard with regards to error control, and
would make mutable changes before operations that could fail without any
viable error handling options.
Convert `select_try()` to return a well-defined enum describing its
state, and handle each of the three possible cases with clear reasons
why we are blocking or not blocking in each subsequent call to
`process_mark_finished_children()`.
* Use the newly-introduced signal_block_t RAII wrapper
* Remove EINTR loops as all signals are blocked
* Clean up control flow thanks to RAII wrappers
* Rename parameter to clarify what it does and update docs accordingly
* Update outdated comments referencing SIGSTOP code that was removed a
long time ago.
* Remove no-op CHECK_BLOCK() call
* Convert JOB_* enums to scoped enums
* Convert standalone job_is_* functions to member functions
* Convert standalone job_{promote, signal, continue} to member functions
* Convert standolen job_get{,_from_pid} to `job_t` static functions
* Reduce usage of JOB_* enums outside of proc.cpp by using new
`job_t::is_foo()` const helper methods instead.
This patch is only a refactor and should not change any functionality or
behavior (both observed and unobserved).
* Debug level 3: describe all commands being executed (this is, after all,
a shell and one can argue that this is the most important debug
information avaliable)
* Debug level 4: details of execution, mainly fork vs no-fork and io
handling
Also introduced j->preview() to print a short descriptor of the job
based on the head of the first process so we don't overwhelm with
needless repitition, but also so that we don't have to rely on
distinguishing between repeated, non-unique/non-monotonic job ids that
are often recycled within a single "execution cycle" (pressing enter
once).
Per @ridiculousfish's suggestions in #5219,
`process_mark_finished_children()` has been updated to work in an easier-
to-follow manner. Its behavior is now straight forward, it always checks
for finished processes but only blocks if `block_on_fg` is true.
We're not using the SIGCHLD count in s_sigchld_generation_cnt for
anything any more, as it's not actually a reliable metric since we can
experience one SIGCHLD as a result of two processes exiting (see #1768),
but only reap one of them if the other is in a not-fully-constructed job
(see #5219), a state we cannot possibly detect without calling
`waitpid()` on all child processes, which we are explicitly avoiding.
We never insert elements into the middle of a job list, only move
elements to the top. While that can be done "efficiently" with a list, it
can be done faster with a deque, which also won't thrash the cache when
enumerating over jobs.
This speeds up enumeration in the critical path in
`process_mark_finished_children()`.
* Instead of reaping all child processes when we receive a SIGCHLD, try
reaping only processes belonging to process groups from fully-
constructed jobs, which should eliminate the need for the keepalive
process entirely (WSL's lack of zombies not withstanding) as now
completed processes are not reaped until the job has been fully
constructed (i.e. all processes launched), which means their process
group should still be around for new processes to join.
* When `tcgetpgrp()` calls return 0, attempt to `tcsetpgrp()` before
invoking failure handling code.
* When forking a builtin and not running interactively, do not bail if
unable to set/restore terminal attributes.
Fixes#4178. Fixes#3805. Fixes#5210.
This is to avoid development versions of fish 3.0 freaking out when the
file format is changed. We now have better support for for future universal
variable formats so it's unlikely we'll have to change the file name again.
In private mode, access to previous history is blocked and new history
does not persist and is only available for the duration of the current
session.
This mode can be used when it is not desirable for commandline history
to leak into a session, e.g. via autocomplete or when it is desirable to
test the behavior of fish in the absence of history items without
permanently clearing the history.
I'm sure there are a lot more features that can be incorporated into
private mode, such as restricting access to certain user-specific
configuration files, etc.
This addresses a lot of the concerns raised in #1363 (which was later
changed to track mosh-specific problems). See also #102.
When we discard output because there's been too much, we print a
warning, but subsequent uses of the same buffer still discard.
Now we explicitly reset the flag, so we warn once and everything works
normal after.
Fixes#5267.
For things like
source $undefined
or
source (nooutput)
it was quite annoying that it read from tty.
Instead we now require a "-" as the filename to read from the tty.
This does not apply to reading from stdin if it's redirected, so
something | source
still works.
Fixes#2633.
This adds flags --path and --unpath to builtin set, analogous to
--export and --unexport. These flags change whether a variable is
marked as a path variable.
Universal variables cannot yet be path variables.
This switches quoted expansion like "$foo" to use foo's delimiter instead of
space. The delimiter is space for normal variables and colonf or path variables.
Expansions like "$PATH" will now expand using ':'.
This commit begins to bake in a notion of path-style variables.
Prior to this fix, fish would export arrays as ASCII record separator
delimited, except for a whitelist (PATH, CDPATH, MANPATH). This is
surprising and awkward for other programs to deal with, and there's no way
to get similar behavior for other variables like GOPATH or LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
This commit does the following:
1. Exports all arrays as colon delimited strings, instead of RS.
2. Introduces a notion of "path variable." A path variable will be
"colon-delimited" which means it gets colon-separated in quoted expansion,
and automatically splits on colons. In this commit we only do the exporting
part.
Colons are not escaped in exporting; this is deliberate to support uses
like
`set -x PYTHONPATH "/foo:/bar"`
which ought to work (and already do, we don't want to make a compat break
here).
This reverts commit 3f820f0edf.
While the premise described by @nbuwe is sound in #4505, we are now
apparently relying on this behavior is some places (although
inadvertently as there doesn't seem to be a deliberate acknowledgement
of that anywhere).
Turning off ONLCR causes things like indented multiline commands to not
appear correct at the tty (subsequent lines appear both at column 0 and
again indented).
Per @nbuwe's excellent explanation in #4505, we can save on output
to the tty by maintaining column location after NL by disabling the
ONLCR terminal mode.
Closes#4505.
Adds a new match mode for `string_fuzzy_match_t` that matches against a
case-insensitive subsequence within a string, e.g. `LL` now (partially)
matches against `hello`. This is implemented as a separate mode, given a
lower priority of match than a same-case match (when present).
Note that `fuzzy_match_subsequence_insertions_only` has purposely not
been extended with a case-insensitive version as that would be a)
unlikely to match often, and b) adding a second inefficient fuzzy search
to something that's queried a lot. Perhaps `subsequence_insertions_only`
can simply be changed to be a case-insensitive comparison in the future?
Closes#1196. Affects #3978.
Load fish docs and configuration out of the source and/or build
directories rather from the installed paths when running directly out
of the cmake build directory.
Closes#5255.
Prior to this fix, fish would swallow SIGINT in non-interactive mode. This
meant that scripts could only be Ctrl-C'd if fish was executing an external
command.
Unblock SIGINT in non-interactive mode.
Fixes#5253
Fixes broken macOS build. I'm not sure how the code used to compile
without including `dyld.h` previously, perhaps a different header used
to pull it in?
Retrieves the fully resolved path to the currently executing fish binary
(regardless of PATH). Can be used to ensure that the same fish is
launched again from a script.
`get_executable_path()` moved from fish binary to libfish, also cleaned
up some duplicated (but differing!) definitions of PATH_MAX (which was
used by that function) in the process.
Remove dependency on the Linux compatibility layer's procfs being
installed and mounted when running under FreeBSD by directly querying
the MIB for the path to the running fish executable
(KERN_PROC_PATHNAME). Tested under FreeBSD 11.2-RELEASE.
This switches fish to a "virtual" PWD, where it no longer uses getcwd to
discover its PWD but instead synthesizes it based on normalizing cd against
the $PWD variable.
Both pwd and $PWD contain the virtual path. pwd is taught about -P to
return the physical path, and -L the logical path (which is the default).
Fixes#3350
This new function performs normalization of paths including dropping
/./ segments, and resolving /../ segments, in preparation for switching
fish to a "virtual" PWD.
Mostly resolves#4862, though there remains the lingering question of
whether or not to emit a warning to /dev/tty or stderr when a
non-literal-zero index evaluates to zero.
Coalesces commands with leading (if even possible) and trailing
whitespace into the same item, improving the experience when iterating
over history entries.
Closes#4908.
This allows for marking certain bindings as part of a preset, which allows us to
- only erase those when switching presets
- go back to the preset binding when erasing a user binding
- only show user customization if requested
- make bare bind statements in config.fish work (!!!11elf!!!)
Fixes#5191.
Fixes#3699.
This reverts commit 8c14f0f30f.
This list is not reliable - there are many ways for fish to quit that does not
invoke these functions. It's also not necessary since the history is correctly
saved on exec.