mirror of
https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell
synced 2025-01-15 06:24:01 +00:00
f285e85b0c
Some terminals send the focus-in sequences ("^[I") whenever focus reporting is enabled. We enable focus reporting whenever we are finished running a command. If we run two commands without reading in between, the focus sequences will show up on the terminal. Fix this by enabling focus-reporting as late as possible. This fixes the problem with `^[I` showing up when running "cat" in gnome-terminal https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/10411. This begs the question if we should do the same for CSI u and bracketed paste. It's difficult to answer that; let's hope we find motivating test cases. If we enable CSI u too late, we might misinterpret key presses, so for now we still enable those as early as possible. Also, since we now read immediately after enabling focus events, we can get rid of the hack where we defer enabling them until after the first prompt. When I start a fresh terminal, the ^[I no longer shows up.
126 lines
3.5 KiB
Python
126 lines
3.5 KiB
Python
#!/usr/bin/env python3
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from pexpect_helper import SpawnedProc
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sp = SpawnedProc(timeout=10)
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send, sendline, sleep, expect_prompt, expect_re, expect_str = (
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sp.send,
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sp.sendline,
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sp.sleep,
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sp.expect_prompt,
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sp.expect_re,
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sp.expect_str,
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)
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from time import sleep
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import os
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import platform
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import signal
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import subprocess
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import sys
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if platform.system() == "FreeBSD": # Spurious failure.
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sys.exit(127)
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expect_prompt()
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# Verify that SIGINT inside a command sub cancels it.
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# Negate the pid to send to the pgroup (which should include sleep).
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sendline("while true; echo (sleep 1000); end")
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sleep(0.5)
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os.kill(-sp.spawn.pid, signal.SIGINT)
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expect_prompt()
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sendline("sleep 10 &")
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expect_prompt()
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send("\x03")
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sleep(0.010)
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sendline("jobs")
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expect_prompt("sleep.10")
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sendline("kill %1")
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expect_prompt()
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# Verify that the fish_postexec handler is called after SIGINT.
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sendline("function postexec --on-event fish_postexec; echo fish_postexec spotted; end")
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expect_prompt()
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sendline("read")
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expect_re(r"\r\n?read> \x1b\[\?1004h$")
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sleep(0.200)
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os.kill(sp.spawn.pid, signal.SIGINT)
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expect_str("fish_postexec spotted")
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expect_prompt()
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# Verify that the fish_kill_signal is set.
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sendline(
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"functions -e postexec; function postexec --on-event fish_postexec; echo fish_kill_signal $fish_kill_signal; end"
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)
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expect_prompt()
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sendline("sleep 5")
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sleep(0.200)
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subprocess.call(["pkill", "-INT", "-P", str(sp.spawn.pid), "sleep"])
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expect_str("fish_kill_signal 2")
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expect_prompt()
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sendline("sleep 5")
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sleep(0.200)
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subprocess.call(["pkill", "-TERM", "-P", str(sp.spawn.pid), "sleep"])
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expect_str("fish_kill_signal 15")
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expect_prompt()
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# See that open() is only interruptible by SIGINT.
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sendline("mkfifo fifoo")
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expect_prompt()
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sendline("cat >fifoo")
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subprocess.call(["kill", "-WINCH", str(sp.spawn.pid)])
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expect_re("open: ", shouldfail=True, timeout=10)
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subprocess.call(["kill", "-INT", str(sp.spawn.pid)])
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expect_prompt()
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# Verify that sending SIGHUP to the shell, such as will happen when the tty is
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# closed by the terminal, terminates the shell and the foreground command and
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# any background commands run from that shell.
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#
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# Save the pids for later to check if they are still running.
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pids = []
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send("sleep 130 & echo $last_pid\r")
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pids += [expect_re("\\d+\r\n").group().strip()]
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expect_prompt()
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send("sleep 131 & echo $last_pid\r")
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pids += [expect_re("\\d+\r\n").group().strip()]
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expect_prompt()
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send("sleep 9999999\r")
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sleep(0.500) # ensure fish kicks off the above sleep before it gets HUP - see #7288
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os.kill(sp.spawn.pid, signal.SIGHUP)
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# Verify the spawned fish shell has exited.
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sp.spawn.wait()
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# Verify all child processes have been killed. We don't use `-p $pid` because
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# if the shell has a bug the child processes might have been reparented to pid
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# 1 rather than killed.
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proc = subprocess.run(
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["pgrep", "-l", "-f", "sleep 13"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE
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)
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remaining = []
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if proc.returncode == 0:
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# If any sleeps exist, we check them against our pids,
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# to avoid false-positives (any other `sleep 13xyz` running on the system)
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print(proc.stdout)
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for line in proc.stdout.split(b"\n"):
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pid = line.split(b" ", maxsplit=1)[0].decode("utf-8")
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if pid in pids:
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remaining += [pid]
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# Kill any remaining sleeps ourselves, otherwise rerunning this is pointless.
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for pid in remaining:
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try:
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os.kill(int(pid), signal.SIGTERM)
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except ProcessLookupError:
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continue
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if remaining:
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# We still have processes left over!
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print("Commands were still running!")
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print(remaining)
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sys.exit(1)
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