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9304 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Devyn Cairns
f87cf895c2
Set the capacity of the Vec used in gather_captures() to the number of captures expected (#13339)
# Description

Just more efficient allocation during `Stack::gather_captures()` so that
we don't have to grow the `Vec` needlessly.

# User-Facing Changes
Slightly better performance.
2024-07-11 02:13:35 +00:00
Darren Schroeder
ac561b1b0e
quick fix up for ir pr as_refs (#13340)
# Description

Was having an issue compiling main after the IR pr. Talked to devyn and
he led me to change a couple things real quick and we're compiling once
again.
2024-07-11 09:19:06 +08:00
Devyn Cairns
1a5bf2447a
Use Arc for environment variables on the stack (#13333)
# Description

This is another easy performance lift that just changes `env_vars` and
`env_hidden` on `Stack` to use `Arc`. I noticed that these were being
cloned on essentially every closure invocation during captures
gathering, so we're paying the cost for all of that even when we don't
change anything. On top of that, for `env_vars`, there's actually an
entirely fresh `HashMap` created for each child scope, so it's highly
unlikely that we'll modify the parent ones.

Uses `Arc::make_mut` instead to take care of things when we need to
mutate something, and most of the time nothing has to be cloned at all.

# Benchmarks

The benefits are greater the more calls there are to env-cloning
functions like `captures_to_stack()`. Calling custom commands in a loop
is basically best case for a performance improvement. Plain `each` with
a literal block isn't so badly affected because the stack is set up
once.

## random_bytes.nu

```nushell
use std bench
do {
  const SCRIPT = ../nu_scripts/benchmarks/random-bytes.nu
  let before_change = bench { nu $SCRIPT }
  let after_change = bench { target/release/nu $SCRIPT }
  {
    before: ($before_change | reject times),
    after: ($after_change | reject times)
  }
}
```

```
╭────────┬──────────────────────────────╮
│        │ ╭──────┬───────────────────╮ │
│ before │ │ mean │ 603ms 759µs 727ns │ │
│        │ │ min  │ 593ms 298µs 167ns │ │
│        │ │ max  │ 648ms 612µs 291ns │ │
│        │ │ std  │ 9ms 335µs 251ns   │ │
│        │ ╰──────┴───────────────────╯ │
│        │ ╭──────┬───────────────────╮ │
│ after  │ │ mean │ 518ms 400µs 557ns │ │
│        │ │ min  │ 507ms 762µs 583ns │ │
│        │ │ max  │ 566ms 695µs 166ns │ │
│        │ │ std  │ 9ms 554µs 767ns   │ │
│        │ ╰──────┴───────────────────╯ │
╰────────┴──────────────────────────────╯
```

## gradient_benchmark_no_check.nu

```nushell
use std bench
do {
  const SCRIPT = ../nu_scripts/benchmarks/gradient_benchmark_no_check.nu
  let before_change = bench { nu $SCRIPT }
  let after_change = bench { target/release/nu $SCRIPT }
  {
    before: ($before_change | reject times),
    after: ($after_change | reject times)
  }
}
```

```
╭────────┬──────────────────────────────╮
│        │ ╭──────┬───────────────────╮ │
│ before │ │ mean │ 146ms 543µs 380ns │ │
│        │ │ min  │ 142ms 416µs 166ns │ │
│        │ │ max  │ 189ms 595µs       │ │
│        │ │ std  │ 7ms 140µs 342ns   │ │
│        │ ╰──────┴───────────────────╯ │
│        │ ╭──────┬───────────────────╮ │
│ after  │ │ mean │ 134ms 211µs 678ns │ │
│        │ │ min  │ 132ms 433µs 125ns │ │
│        │ │ max  │ 135ms 722µs 583ns │ │
│        │ │ std  │ 793µs 134ns       │ │
│        │ ╰──────┴───────────────────╯ │
╰────────┴──────────────────────────────╯
```

# User-Facing Changes
Better performance, particularly for custom commands, especially if
there are a lot of environment variables. Nothing else.

# Tests + Formatting
All passing.
2024-07-10 17:34:50 -07:00
Devyn Cairns
d7392f1f3b
Internal representation (IR) compiler and evaluator (#13330)
# Description

This PR adds an internal representation language to Nushell, offering an
alternative evaluator based on simple instructions, stream-containing
registers, and indexed control flow. The number of registers required is
determined statically at compile-time, and the fixed size required is
allocated upon entering the block.

Each instruction is associated with a span, which makes going backwards
from IR instructions to source code very easy.

Motivations for IR:

1. **Performance.** By simplifying the evaluation path and making it
more cache-friendly and branch predictor-friendly, code that does a lot
of computation in Nushell itself can be sped up a decent bit. Because
the IR is fairly easy to reason about, we can also implement
optimization passes in the future to eliminate and simplify code.
2. **Correctness.** The instructions mostly have very simple and
easily-specified behavior, so hopefully engine changes are a little bit
easier to reason about, and they can be specified in a more formal way
at some point. I have made an effort to document each of the
instructions in the docs for the enum itself in a reasonably specific
way. Some of the errors that would have happened during evaluation
before are now moved to the compilation step instead, because they don't
make sense to check during evaluation.
3. **As an intermediate target.** This is a good step for us to bring
the [`new-nu-parser`](https://github.com/nushell/new-nu-parser) in at
some point, as code generated from new AST can be directly compared to
code generated from old AST. If the IR code is functionally equivalent,
it will behave the exact same way.
4. **Debugging.** With a little bit more work, we can probably give
control over advancing the virtual machine that `IrBlock`s run on to
some sort of external driver, making things like breakpoints and single
stepping possible. Tools like `view ir` and [`explore
ir`](https://github.com/devyn/nu_plugin_explore_ir) make it easier than
before to see what exactly is going on with your Nushell code.

The goal is to eventually replace the AST evaluator entirely, once we're
sure it's working just as well. You can help dogfood this by running
Nushell with `$env.NU_USE_IR` set to some value. The environment
variable is checked when Nushell starts, so config runs with IR, or it
can also be set on a line at the REPL to change it dynamically. It is
also checked when running `do` in case within a script you want to just
run a specific piece of code with or without IR.

# Example

```nushell
view ir { |data|
  mut sum = 0
  for n in $data {
    $sum += $n
  }
  $sum
}
```
  
```gas
# 3 registers, 19 instructions, 0 bytes of data
   0: load-literal           %0, int(0)
   1: store-variable         var 904, %0 # let
   2: drain                  %0
   3: drop                   %0
   4: load-variable          %1, var 903
   5: iterate                %0, %1, end 15 # for, label(1), from(14:)
   6: store-variable         var 905, %0
   7: load-variable          %0, var 904
   8: load-variable          %2, var 905
   9: binary-op              %0, Math(Plus), %2
  10: span                   %0
  11: store-variable         var 904, %0
  12: load-literal           %0, nothing
  13: drain                  %0
  14: jump                   5
  15: drop                   %0          # label(0), from(5:)
  16: drain                  %0
  17: load-variable          %0, var 904
  18: return                 %0
```

# Benchmarks

All benchmarks run on a base model Mac Mini M1.

## Iterative Fibonacci sequence

This is about as best case as possible, making use of the much faster
control flow. Most code will not experience a speed improvement nearly
this large.

```nushell
def fib [n: int] {
  mut a = 0
  mut b = 1
  for _ in 2..=$n {
    let c = $a + $b
    $a = $b
    $b = $c
  }
  $b
}
use std bench
bench { 0..50 | each { |n| fib $n } }
```

IR disabled:

```
╭───────┬─────────────────╮
│ mean  │ 1ms 924µs 665ns │
│ min   │ 1ms 700µs 83ns  │
│ max   │ 3ms 450µs 125ns │
│ std   │ 395µs 759ns     │
│ times │ [list 50 items] │
╰───────┴─────────────────╯
```

IR enabled:

```
╭───────┬─────────────────╮
│ mean  │ 452µs 820ns     │
│ min   │ 427µs 417ns     │
│ max   │ 540µs 167ns     │
│ std   │ 17µs 158ns      │
│ times │ [list 50 items] │
╰───────┴─────────────────╯
```

![explore ir
view](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/10729/d7bccc03-5222-461c-9200-0dce71b83b83)

##
[gradient_benchmark_no_check.nu](https://github.com/nushell/nu_scripts/blob/main/benchmarks/gradient_benchmark_no_check.nu)

IR disabled:

```
╭───┬──────────────────╮
│ 0 │ 27ms 929µs 958ns │
│ 1 │ 21ms 153µs 459ns │
│ 2 │ 18ms 639µs 666ns │
│ 3 │ 19ms 554µs 583ns │
│ 4 │ 13ms 383µs 375ns │
│ 5 │ 11ms 328µs 208ns │
│ 6 │  5ms 659µs 542ns │
╰───┴──────────────────╯
```

IR enabled:

```
╭───┬──────────────────╮
│ 0 │       22ms 662µs │
│ 1 │ 17ms 221µs 792ns │
│ 2 │ 14ms 786µs 708ns │
│ 3 │ 13ms 876µs 834ns │
│ 4 │  13ms 52µs 875ns │
│ 5 │ 11ms 269µs 666ns │
│ 6 │  6ms 942µs 500ns │
╰───┴──────────────────╯
```

##
[random-bytes.nu](https://github.com/nushell/nu_scripts/blob/main/benchmarks/random-bytes.nu)

I got pretty random results out of this benchmark so I decided not to
include it. Not clear why.

# User-Facing Changes
- IR compilation errors may appear even if the user isn't evaluating
with IR.
- IR evaluation can be enabled by setting the `NU_USE_IR` environment
variable to any value.
- New command `view ir` pretty-prints the IR for a block, and `view ir
--json` can be piped into an external tool like [`explore
ir`](https://github.com/devyn/nu_plugin_explore_ir).

# Tests + Formatting
All tests are passing with `NU_USE_IR=1`, and I've added some more eval
tests to compare the results for some very core operations. I will
probably want to add some more so we don't have to always check
`NU_USE_IR=1 toolkit test --workspace` on a regular basis.

# After Submitting
- [ ] release notes
- [ ] further documentation of instructions?
- [ ] post-release: publish `nu_plugin_explore_ir`
2024-07-10 17:33:59 -07:00
Devyn Cairns
ea8c4e3af2
Make pipe redirections consistent, add err>| etc. forms (#13334)
# Description

Fixes the lexer to recognize `out>|`, `err>|`, `out+err>|`, etc.

Previously only the short-style forms were recognized, which was
inconsistent with normal file redirections.

I also integrated it all more into the normal lex path by checking `|`
in a special way, which should be more performant and consistent, and
cleans up the code a bunch.

Closes #13331.

# User-Facing Changes
- Adds `out>|` (error), `err>|`, `out+err>|`, `err+out>|` as recognized
forms of the pipe redirection.

# Tests + Formatting
All passing. Added tests for the new forms.

# After Submitting
- [ ] release notes
2024-07-11 07:16:22 +08:00
132ikl
616e9faaf1
Fix main binary being rebuilt when nothing has changed (#13337)
# Description
<!--
Thank you for improving Nushell. Please, check our [contributing
guide](../CONTRIBUTING.md) and talk to the core team before making major
changes.

Description of your pull request goes here. **Provide examples and/or
screenshots** if your changes affect the user experience.
-->

The build script is currently re-run on each `cargo build` even when it
has not changed. The `rerun-if-changed` line points to `/build.rs`, but
`build.rs` is actually located at `/scripts/build.rs`. This updates that
path.

# User-Facing Changes
N/A

# Tests + Formatting
N/A
2024-07-10 18:05:24 -05:00
Jack Wright
b68c7cf3fa
Make polars unpivot consistent with polars pivot (#13335)
# Description
Makes `polars unpivot` use the same arguments as `polars pivot` and
makes it consistent with the polars' rust api. Additionally, support for
the polar's streaming engine has been exposed on eager dataframes.
Previously, it would only work with lazy dataframes.


# User-Facing Changes
* `polars unpivot` argument `--columns`|`-c` has been renamed to
`--index`|`-i`
* `polars unpivot` argument `--values`|`-v` has been renamed to
`--on`|`-o`
* `polars unpivot` short argument for `--streamable` is now `-t` to make
it consistent with `polars pivot`. It was made `-t` for `polars pivot`
because `-s` is short for `--short`
2024-07-10 16:36:38 -05:00
dependabot[bot]
0178295363
Bump crate-ci/typos from 1.22.9 to 1.23.1 (#13328)
Bumps [crate-ci/typos](https://github.com/crate-ci/typos) from 1.22.9 to
1.23.1.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/crate-ci/typos/releases">crate-ci/typos's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>v1.23.1</h2>
<h2>[1.23.1] - 2024-07-05</h2>
<h3>Fixes</h3>
<ul>
<li>Add missing <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/crate-ci/typos/issues/1024">June
2024</a> changes</li>
</ul>
<h2>v1.23.0</h2>
<h2>[1.23.0] - 2024-07-05</h2>
<h3>Fixes</h3>
<ul>
<li>Updated the dictionary with the <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/crate-ci/typos/issues/1024">June
2024</a> changes</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Changelog</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/crate-ci/typos/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md">crate-ci/typos's
changelog</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>[1.23.1] - 2024-07-05</h2>
<h3>Fixes</h3>
<ul>
<li>Add missing <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/crate-ci/typos/issues/1024">June
2024</a> changes</li>
</ul>
<h2>[1.23.0] - 2024-07-05</h2>
<h3>Fixes</h3>
<ul>
<li>Updated the dictionary with the <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/crate-ci/typos/issues/1024">June
2024</a> changes</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="81a34f1ca2"><code>81a34f1</code></a>
chore: Release</li>
<li><a
href="1aa7c985e4"><code>1aa7c98</code></a>
docs: Update changelog</li>
<li><a
href="4d4121ea86"><code>4d4121e</code></a>
chore: Release</li>
<li><a
href="4edcc6aa95"><code>4edcc6a</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/crate-ci/typos/issues/1053">#1053</a>
from epage/june</li>
<li><a
href="fa7786ec69"><code>fa7786e</code></a>
fix(dict): Add more june typos</li>
<li><a
href="04eea79695"><code>04eea79</code></a>
chore: Release</li>
<li><a
href="d3b2a6eb90"><code>d3b2a6e</code></a>
docs: Update changelog</li>
<li><a
href="494a98f93e"><code>494a98f</code></a>
chore: Release</li>
<li><a
href="bdc571d921"><code>bdc571d</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/crate-ci/typos/issues/1052">#1052</a>
from epage/june</li>
<li><a
href="eac884cf3b"><code>eac884c</code></a>
fix(dict): June updates</li>
<li>Additional commits viewable in <a
href="https://github.com/crate-ci/typos/compare/v1.22.9...v1.23.1">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
<br />


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2024-07-09 19:53:46 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
ad8054ebed
update table comments 2024-07-09 19:52:57 -05:00
Jack Wright
ff27d6a18e
Implemented a command to expose polar's pivot functionality (#13282)
# Description
Implementing pivot support 

The example below is a port of the [python API
example](https://docs.pola.rs/api/python/stable/reference/dataframe/api/polars.DataFrame.pivot.html)

<img width="1079" alt="Screenshot 2024-07-01 at 14 29 27"
src="https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/56345/277eb7a2-233b-4070-9d24-c2183805c1b8">

# User-Facing Changes
* Introduction of the `polars pivot` command
2024-07-09 10:17:20 -07:00
Maxim Zhiburt
4cdceca1f7
Fix kv table width issue with header_on_border configuration (#13325)
GOOD CATCH.............................................................
SORRY

I've added a test to catch regression just in case.

close #13319

cc: @fdncred
2024-07-09 09:49:04 -05:00
Wind
1964dacaef
Raise error when using o>| pipe (#13323)
# Description
From the feedbacks from @amtoine , it's good to make nushell shows error
for `o>|` syntax.

# User-Facing Changes
## Before
```nushell
'foo' o>| print                                                                                                                                                                                                                     07/09/2024 06:44:23 AM
Error: nu::parser::parse_mismatch

  × Parse mismatch during operation.
   ╭─[entry #6:1:9]
 1 │ 'foo' o>| print
   ·         ┬
   ·         ╰── expected redirection target
```

## After
```nushell
'foo' o>| print                                                                                                                                                                                                                     07/09/2024 06:47:26 AM
Error: nu::parser::parse_mismatch

  × Parse mismatch during operation.
   ╭─[entry #1:1:7]
 1 │ 'foo' o>| print
   ·       ─┬─
   ·        ╰── expected `|`.  Redirection stdout to pipe is the same as piping directly.
   ╰────
```

# Tests + Formatting
Added one test

---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-07-09 07:11:25 -05:00
Ian Manske
e98b2ceb8c
Path migration 1 (#13309)
# Description
Part 1 of replacing `std::path` types with `nu_path` types added in
#13115.
2024-07-09 17:25:23 +08:00
Ian Manske
399a7c8836
Add and use new Signals struct (#13314)
# Description
This PR introduces a new `Signals` struct to replace our adhoc passing
around of `ctrlc: Option<Arc<AtomicBool>>`. Doing so has a few benefits:
- We can better enforce when/where resetting or triggering an interrupt
is allowed.
- Consolidates `nu_utils::ctrl_c::was_pressed` and other ad-hoc
re-implementations into a single place: `Signals::check`.
- This allows us to add other types of signals later if we want. E.g.,
exiting or suspension.
- Similarly, we can more easily change the underlying implementation if
we need to in the future.
- Places that used to have a `ctrlc` of `None` now use
`Signals::empty()`, so we can double check these usages for correctness
in the future.
2024-07-07 22:29:01 +00:00
Justin Ma
c6b6b1b7a8
Upgrade Ubuntu runners to 22.04 to fix nightly build errors, fix #13255 (#13273)
# Description
Upgrade Ubuntu runners to 22.04 to fix nightly build errors related to
`GLIBC` versions like:

https://github.com/nushell/nushell/actions/runs/9727979044/job/26848189346
Should close #13255

BTW: The [workflow of
`nushell/nightly`](6faf3c3aed/.github/workflows/nightly-build.yml (L108))
has been upgraded a long time ago

# User-Facing Changes

Older linux system users can download
`*-x86_64-unknown-linux-musl.tar.gz` binaries if any `GLIBC` error found
while starting `nu` binary
2024-07-07 22:15:03 +00:00
YizhePKU
152fb5be39
Fix PWD-aware command hints (#13024)
This PR fixes PWD-aware command hints by sending PWD to the Reedline
state in every REPL loop. This PR should be merged along with
https://github.com/nushell/reedline/pull/796.

Fixes https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/12951.
2024-07-07 11:43:22 -05:00
Reilly Wood
83081f9852
explore: pass config to views at creation time (#13312)
cc: @zhiburt

This is an internal refactoring for `explore`.

Previously, views inside `explore` were created with default/incorrect
configuration and then the correct configuration was passed to them
using a function called `setup()`. I believe this was because
configuration was dynamic and could change while `explore` was running.

After https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/10259, configuration can
no longer be changed on the fly. So we can clean this up by removing
`setup()` and passing configuration to views when they are created.
2024-07-07 08:09:59 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
6ce5530fc2
Make into bits produce bitstring stream (#13310)
# Description

Fix `into bits` to have consistent behavior when passed a byte stream.

# User-Facing Changes

Previously, it was returning a binary on stream, even though its
input/output types don't describe this possibility. We don't need this
since we have `into binary` anyway.

# Tests + Formatting
Tests added
2024-07-07 08:00:57 -05:00
goldfish
5af8d62666
Fix from toml to handle toml datetime correctly (#13315)
# Description

fixed #12699

When bare dates or naive times are specified in toml files, `from toml`
returns invalid dates or times.
This PR fixes the problem to correctly handle toml datetime.

The current version command returns the default datetime
(`chrono::DateTime::default()`) if the datetime parse fails. However, I
felt that this behavior was a bit unfriendly, so I changed it to return
`Value::string`.

# User-Facing Changes

The command returns a date with default time and timezone if a bare date
is specified.

```
~/Development/nushell> "dob = 2023-05-27" | from toml
╭─────┬────────────╮
│ dob │ a year ago │
╰─────┴────────────╯
~/Development/nushell> "dob = 2023-05-27" | from toml |
Sat, 27 May 2023 00:00:00 +0000 (a year ago)
~/Development/nushell>                            
```

If a bare time is given, a time string is returned.

```
~/Development/nushell> "tm = 11:00:00" | from toml
╭────┬──────────╮
│ tm │ 11:00:00 │
╰────┴──────────╯
~/Development/nushell> "tm = 11:00:00" | from toml | get tm
11:00:00
~/Development/nushell>  
```

# Tests + Formatting

When I ran tests, `commands::touch::change_file_mtime_to_reference`
failed with the following error.
The error also occurs in the master branch, so it's probably unrelated
to these changes.
(maybe a problem with my dev environment)

```
$ ~/Development/nushell> toolkit check pr

~~~~~~~~

test usage_start_uppercase ... ok
test format_conversions::yaml::convert_dict_to_yaml_with_integer_floats_key ... ok
test format_conversions::yaml::convert_dict_to_yaml_with_boolean_key ... ok
test format_conversions::yaml::table_to_yaml_text_and_from_yaml_text_back_into_table ... ok
test quickcheck_parse ... ok
test format_conversions::yaml::convert_dict_to_yaml_with_integer_key ... ok

failures:

---- commands::touch::change_file_mtime_to_reference stdout ----
=== stderr

thread 'commands::touch::change_file_mtime_to_reference' panicked at crates/nu-command/tests/commands/touch.rs:298:9:
assertion `left == right` failed
  left: SystemTime { tv_sec: 1720344745, tv_nsec: 862392750 }
 right: SystemTime { tv_sec: 1720344745, tv_nsec: 887670417 }


failures:
    commands::touch::change_file_mtime_to_reference

test result: FAILED. 1542 passed; 1 failed; 32 ignored; 0 measured; 0 filtered out; finished in 12.04s

error: test failed, to rerun pass `-p nu-command --test main`
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🔴 `toolkit test`
-  `toolkit test stdlib`

~/Development/nushell> toolkit test stdlib
   Compiling nu v0.95.1 (/Users/hiroki/Development/nushell)
   Compiling nu-cmd-lang v0.95.1 (/Users/hiroki/Development/nushell/crates/nu-cmd-lang)
    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 6.64s
     Running `target/debug/nu --no-config-file -c '
        use crates/nu-std/testing.nu
        testing run-tests --path crates/nu-std
    '`
2024-07-07T19:00:20.423|INF|Running from_jsonl_invalid_object in module test_formats
2024-07-07T19:00:20.436|INF|Running env_log-prefix in module test_logger_env

~~~~~~~~~~~

2024-07-07T19:00:22.196|INF|Running debug_short in module test_basic_commands
~/Development/nushell> 
```

# After Submitting

nothing
2024-07-07 07:55:06 -05:00
Maxim Zhiburt
32db5d3aa3
Fix issue with head on separation lines (#13291)
Hi there,

Seems to work

Though I haven't done a lot of testing.


![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20165848/c95aa8d4-a8d2-462c-afc9-35c48f8825f4)

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20165848/1859dfe5-4a76-4776-a4e0-d3f53fc86862)

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20165848/b46bb62b-a951-412d-b8fa-65cebcfbfed6)

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20165848/bff0762e-42d4-41bf-b2c2-641c0436ca2e)

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20165848/2c3c5664-9b90-44e4-befc-c250174cb630)


close #13287
cc: @fdncred 

PS: Yessssss I do remember about emojie issue..... 😞
2024-07-06 14:47:39 -05:00
Ian Manske
fa183b6669
help operators refactor (#13307)
# Description
Refactors `help operators` so that its output is always up to date with
the parser.

# User-Facing Changes
- The order of output rows for `help operators` was changed.
- `not` is now listed as a boolean operator instead of a comparison
operator.
- Edited some of the descriptions for the operators.
2024-07-06 13:09:12 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
d2a1f96dbd
update to latest reedline commit (#13313)
# Description

Update to the latest reedline version.

(don't ask me why libloading changed. `cargo update -p reedline`
sometimes does weird things)

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

# Tests + Formatting
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# After Submitting
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/cc @YizhePKU (this include your reedline pwd change)
2024-07-06 12:04:19 -05:00
Yash Thakur
de2b752771
Fix variable completion sort order (#13306)
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# Description
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My last PR (https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/13242) made it so
that the last branch in the variable completer doesn't sort suggestions.
Sorry about that. This should fix it.

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

Variables will now be sorted properly.

# Tests + Formatting
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Added one test case to verify this won't happen again.

# After Submitting
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2024-07-05 17:58:35 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
948b90299d
Preserve attributes on external ByteStreams (#13305)
# Description

Bug fix: `PipelineData::check_external_failed()` was not preserving the
original `type_` and `known_size` attributes of the stream passed in for
streams that come from children, so `external-command | into binary` did
not work properly and always ended up still being unknown type.

# User-Facing Changes
The following test case now works as expected:

```nushell
> head -c 2 /dev/urandom | into binary
# Expected: pretty hex dump of binary
# Previous behavior: just raw binary in the terminal
```

# Tests + Formatting
Added a test to cover this to `into binary`
2024-07-05 21:10:41 +00:00
Himadri Bhattacharjee
34da26d039
fix: exotic types return float on division, self on modulo (#13301)
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Related to #13298

# Description
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Exotic types like `Duration` and `Filesize` return a float on division
by the same type, i.e., the unit is gone since division results in a
scalar. When using the modulo operator, the output type has the same
unit.

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

Division results in a float like the following:

```sh
~/Public/nushell> 512sec / 3sec
170.66666666666666
```

Modulo results in an output with the same unit:

```sh
~/Public/nushell> 512sec mod 3sec
2sec
```

Type checking isn't confused with output types:

```sh
~/Public/nushell> (512sec mod 3sec) / 0.5sec
4
```

# Tests + Formatting
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Existing tests are passing.

# After Submitting
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2024-07-05 09:01:27 -05:00
Reilly Wood
8707d14f95
Limit drilling down inside explore (#13293)
This PR fixes an issue with `explore` where you can "drill down" into
the same value forever. For example:

1. Run `ls | explore`
2. Press Enter to enter cursor mode
3. Press Enter again to open the selected string in a new layer
4. Press Enter again to open that string in a new layer
5. Press Enter again to open that string in a new layer
6. Repeat and eventually you have a bajillion layers open with the same
string

IMO it only makes sense to "drill down" into lists and records.

In a separate commit I also did a little refactoring, cleaning up naming
and comments.
2024-07-05 07:18:25 -05:00
Wind
1514b9fbef
don't show result in error make examples (#13296)
# Description
Fixes: #13189 

The issue is caused `error make` returns a `Value::Errror`, and when
nushell pass it to `table -e` in `std help`, it directly stop and render
the error message.
To solve it, I think it's safe to make these examples return None
directly, it doesn't change the reult of `help error make`.

# User-Facing Changes
## Before
```nushell
~> help "error make"
Error: nu:🐚:eval_block_with_input

  × Eval block failed with pipeline input
     ╭─[NU_STDLIB_VIRTUAL_DIR/std/help.nu:692:21]
 691 │ ] {
 692 │     let commands = (scope commands | sort-by name)
     ·                     ───────┬──────
     ·                            ╰── source value
 693 │
     ╰────

Error:   × my custom error message
```

## After
```nushell
Create an error.

Search terms: panic, crash, throw

Category: core

This command:
- does not create a scope.
- is a built-in command.
- is a subcommand.
- is not part of a plugin.
- is not a custom command.
- is not a keyword.

Usage:
  > error make {flags} <error_struct>


Flags:

  -u, --unspanned - remove the origin label from the error
  -h, --help - Display the help message for this command

Signatures:

  <nothing> | error make[ <record>] -> <any>

Parameters:

  error_struct: <record> The error to create.


Examples:
  Create a simple custom error
  > error make {msg: "my custom error message"}


  Create a more complex custom error
  > error make {
        msg: "my custom error message"
        label: {
            text: "my custom label text"  # not mandatory unless $.label exists
            # optional
            span: {
                # if $.label.span exists, both start and end must be present
                start: 123
                end: 456
            }
        }
        help: "A help string, suggesting a fix to the user"  # optional
    }


  Create a custom error for a custom command that shows the span of the argument
  > def foo [x] {
        error make {
            msg: "this is fishy"
            label: {
                text: "fish right here"
                span: (metadata $x).span
            }
        }
    }
```
# Tests + Formatting
Added 1 test
2024-07-05 07:17:07 -05:00
Andy Gayton
b27cd70fd1
remove the deprecated register command (#13297)
# Description

This PR removes the `register` command which has been
[deprecated](https://www.nushell.sh/blog/2024-04-30-nushell_0_93_0.html#register-toc)
in favor of [`plugin
add`](https://www.nushell.sh/blog/2024-04-30-nushell_0_93_0.html#redesigned-plugin-management-commands-toc)

# User-Facing Changes

`register` is no longer available
2024-07-05 07:16:50 -05:00
Himadri Bhattacharjee
afaa019fae
feat: replace unfold with from_fn for the generate command (#13299)
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This PR should close #13247 

# Description
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- The deprecated `itertools::unfold` function is replaced with
`std::iter::from_fn` for the generate command.
- The mutable iterator state is no longer passed as an argument to
`from_fn` but it gets captured with the closure's `move`.

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
No user facing changes

# Tests + Formatting
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Tests for the generate command are passing locally.

# After Submitting
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---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-07-05 07:16:21 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
8833d3f89f
change duration mod duration to duration instead of float (#13300)
# Description

closes #13298 so that duration mod duration / duration = duration

### Before
```nushell
(92sec mod 1min) / 1sec
Error: nu::parser::unsupported_operation

  × division is not supported between float and duration.
   ╭─[entry #5:1:1]
 1 │ (92sec mod 1min) / 1sec
   · ────────┬─────── ┬ ──┬─
   ·         │        │   ╰── duration
   ·         │        ╰── doesn't support these values
   ·         ╰── float
   ╰────
```
### After
```nushell
❯ (92sec mod 1min) / 1sec
32
```

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

# Tests + Formatting
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2024-07-05 07:16:03 -05:00
Sang-Heon Jeon
d5e00c0d5d
Support default offset with dateformat option (#13289)
# Description
Fixes #13280. After apply this patch, we can use non-timezone string +
format option `into datetime` cmd

# User-Facing Changes
AS-IS (before fixing)
```
$ "09.02.2024 11:06:11" | into datetime --format '%m.%d.%Y %T'
Error: nu:🐚:cant_convert

  × Can't convert to could not parse as datetime using format '%m.%d.%Y %T'.
   ╭─[entry #1:1:25]
 1 │ "09.02.2024 11:06:11" | into datetime --format '%m.%d.%Y %T'
   ·                         ──────┬──────
   ·                               ╰── can't convert input is not enough for unique date and time to could not parse as datetime using format '%m.%d.%Y %T'
   ╰────
  help: you can use `into datetime` without a format string to enable flexible parsing

$ "09.02.2024 11:06:11" | into datetime
Mon, 2 Sep 2024 11:06:11 +0900 (in 2 months)
```

TO-BE(After fixing)

```
$ "09.02.2024 11:06:11" | into datetime --format '%m.%d.%Y %T'
Mon, 2 Sep 2024 20:06:11 +0900 (in 2 months)

$ "09.02.2024 11:06:11" | into datetime 
Mon, 2 Sep 2024 11:06:11 +0900 (in 2 months)
```


# Tests + Formatting
If there is agreement on the direction, I will add a test.

# After Submitting

---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-07-04 10:44:12 -05:00
Jakub Žádník
3fae77209a
Revert "Span ID Refactor (Step 2): Make Call SpanId-friendly (#13268)" (#13292)
This reverts commit 0cfd5fbece.

The original PR messed up syntax higlighting of aliases and causes
panics of completion in the presence of alias.

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2024-07-04 00:02:13 +03:00
NotTheDr01ds
ca7a2ae1d6
for - remove deprecated --numbered (#13239)
# Description

Complete the `--numbered` removal that was started with the deprecation
in #13112.

# User-Facing Changes

Breaking change - Use `| enumerate` in place of `--numbered` as shown in
the help example

# Tests + Formatting

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting

Searched online doc for `--numbered` to ensure no other usage needed to
be updated.
2024-07-03 07:55:41 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
ba1d900020
create a better error message when saving fails (#13290)
# Description

This PR just creates a better error message when the `save` command
fails.

# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

# Tests + Formatting
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2024-07-03 07:43:07 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
f59dfac130
update uutils crate versions (#13285)
# Description

This PR updates the uutils crates to version 0.0.27.

# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

# Tests + Formatting
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mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
- `cargo run -- -c "use toolkit.nu; toolkit test stdlib"` to run the
tests for the standard library

> **Note**
> from `nushell` you can also use the `toolkit` as follows
> ```bash
> use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it
automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```
-->

# After Submitting
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2024-07-03 06:49:18 -05:00
Yash Thakur
9e738193f3
Force completers to sort in fetch() (#13242)
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# Description
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This PR fixes the problem pointed out in
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/13204, where the Fish-like
completions aren't sorted properly (this PR doesn't close that issue
because the author there wants more than just fixed sort order).

The cause is all of the file/directory completions being fetched first
and then sorted all together while being treated as strings. Instead,
this PR sorts completions within each individual directory, avoiding
treating `/` as part of the path.

To do this, I removed the `sort` method from the completer trait (as
well as `get_sort_by`) and made all completers sort within the `fetch`
method itself. A generic `sort_completions` helper has been added to
sort lists of completions, and a more specific `sort_suggestions` helper
has been added to sort `Vec<Suggestion>`s.

As for the actual change that fixes the sort order for file/directory
completions, the `complete_rec` helper now sorts the children of each
directory before visiting their children. The file and directory
completers don't bother sorting at the end (except to move hidden files
down).

To reviewers: don't let the 29 changed files scare you, most of those
are just the test fixtures :)

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

This is the current behavior with prefix matching:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/45539777/6a36e003-8405-45b5-8cbe-d771e0592709)

And with fuzzy matching:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/45539777/f2cbfdb2-b8fd-491b-a378-779147291d2a)

Notice how `partial/hello.txt` is the last suggestion, even though it
should come before `partial-a`. This is because the ASCII code for `/`
is greater than that of `-`, so `partial-` is put before `partial/`.

This is this PR's behavior with prefix matching (`partial/hello.txt` is
at the start):

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/45539777/3fcea7c9-e017-428f-aa9c-1707e3ab32e0)

And with fuzzy matching:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/45539777/d55635d4-cdb8-440a-84d6-41111499f9f8)

# Tests + Formatting
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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:

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> ```
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- Modified the partial completions test fixture to test whether this PR
even fixed anything
- Modified fixture to test sort order of .nu completions (a previous
version of my changes didn't sort all the completions at the end but
there were no tests catching that)
- Added a test for making sure subcommand completions are sorted by
Levenshtein distance (a previous version of my changes sorted in
alphabetical order but there were no tests catching that)

# After Submitting
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2024-07-03 06:48:06 -05:00
Jack Wright
8316a1597e
Polars: Check to see if the cache is empty before enabling GC. More logging (#13286)
There was a bug where anytime the plugin cache remove was called, the
plugin gc was turned back on. This probably happened when I added the
reference counter logic.
2024-07-03 06:44:26 -05:00
Jakub Žádník
0cfd5fbece
Span ID Refactor (Step 2): Make Call SpanId-friendly (#13268)
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# Description
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Part of https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/12963, step 2.

This PR refactors Call and related argument structures to remove their
dependency on `Expression::span` which will be removed in the future.

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

Should be none. If you see some error messages that look broken, please
report.

# Tests + Formatting
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-->

# After Submitting
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2024-07-03 09:00:52 +03:00
dependabot[bot]
9b63e17072
Bump open from 5.1.2 to 5.2.0 (#13288) 2024-07-03 01:23:11 +00:00
Jack Wright
122ff1f19c
Add the ability to set content-type metadata with metadata set (#13284)
# Description

With #13254, the content-type pipeline metadata field was added. This
pull request allows it to be manipulated with `metadata set`

# User-Facing Changes
* `metadata set` now has a `--content-type` flag
2024-07-02 13:35:55 -07:00
Jack Wright
0d060aeae8
Use pipeline data for http post|put|patch|delete commands. (#13254)
# Description
Provides the ability to use http commands as part of a pipeline.
Additionally, this pull requests extends the pipeline metadata to add a
content_type field. The content_type metadata field allows commands such
as `to json` to set the metadata in the pipeline allowing the http
commands to use it when making requests.

This pull request also introduces the ability to directly stream http
requests from streaming pipelines.

One other small change is that Content-Type will always be set if it is
passed in to the http commands, either indirectly or throw the content
type flag. Previously it was not preserved with requests that were not
of type json or form data.

# User-Facing Changes
* `http post`, `http put`, `http patch`, `http delete` can be used as
part of a pipeline
* `to text`, `to json`, `from json` all set the content_type metadata
field and the http commands will utilize them when making requests.
2024-07-01 12:34:19 -07:00
Ian Manske
e5cf4863e9
Fix clippy lint (#13277)
# Description
Fixes `items_after_test_module` lint.
2024-06-30 18:28:09 -05:00
alex-tdrn
69e4790b00
Skip decoration lines for detect columns --guess (#13274)
# Description
I introduced a regression in #13272 that resulted in `detect columns
--guess` to panic whenever it had to handle empty, whitespace-only, or
non-whitespace-only lines that go all the way to the last column (and as
such, cannot be considered to be lines that only have entries for the
first colum). I fix this by detecting these cases and skipping them,
since these are usually decoration lines. An example is the second line
output by `winget list`:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20356389/06c873fb-0a26-45dd-b020-3bcc737d027f)

What we don't want to skip, however, is lines that contain no
whitespace, and fit into the detected first column, since these lines
represent cases where data is only available for the first column, and
are not just decoration lines. For example (made up example, there are
no such entries in `winget lits`'s output), in this output we would not
want to skip the `Docker Desktop` line :
```
Name                                                        Id                                           Version     Available Source
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AMD Software                                                ARPMachineX64AMD Catalyst Install Manager 24.4.1
AMD Ryzen Master                                            ARPMachineX64AMD Ryzen Master             2.13.0.2908
Docker Desktop
Mozilla Firefox (x64 en-US)                                 Mozilla.Firefox                              127.0.2               winget
```

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20356389/12e31995-a7c1-4759-8c62-fb4fb199fd2e)

NOTE: `winget list | detect columns --guess` does not panic, but sadly
still does not work as expected. I believe this is not a nushell issue
anymore, but a `winget` one. When being piped, `winget` seems to add
extra whitespace and random `\r` symbols at the beginning of the text.
This messes with the column detection, of course.

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20356389/7d1b7e5f-17d0-41c8-8d2f-7896e0d73d66)

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20356389/56917954-1231-43e7-bacf-e5760e263054)

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20356389/630bcfc9-eb78-4a45-9c8f-97efc0c224f4)


# User-Facing Changes
`detect columns --guess` should not panic when receiving output from
`winget list` at all anymore.

A breaking change is the skipping of decoration lines, especially since
scripts probably were doing something like
`winget list | lines | reject 1 | str join "\n" | detect columns
--guess`. This will now cause them to reject a line with valid data.

# Tests + Formatting
Added tests that exercise these edge cases, as well as a single-column
test to make sure that trivial cases keep working.

# After Submitting
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2024-06-30 07:38:41 -05:00
NotTheDr01ds
a2873336bb
Fix do signature (#13216)
Recommend holding until after #13125 is fully digested and *possibly*
until 0.96.

# Description

Fixes one of the issues described in #13125 

The `do` signature included a `SyntaxShape:Any` as one of the possible
first-positional types. This is incorrect. `do` only takes a closure as
a positional. This had the result of:

1. Moving what should have been a parser error to evaluation-time

   ## Before

   ```nu
   > do 1
   Error: nu:🐚:cant_convert

     × Can't convert to Closure.
      ╭─[entry #26:1:4]
    1 │ do 1
      ·    ┬
      ·    ╰── can't convert int to Closure
      ╰────
   ```

   ## After

   ```nu
   > do 1
   Error: nu::parser::parse_mismatch

     × Parse mismatch during operation.
      ╭─[entry #5:1:4]
    1 │ do 1
      ·    ┬
      ·    ╰── expected block, closure or record
      ╰────
   ```  

2. Masking a bad test in `std assert`

This is a bit convoluted, but `std assert` tests included testing
`assert error` to make sure it:

* Asserts on bad code
* Doesn't assert on good code

The good-code test was broken, and was essentially bad-code (really
bad-code) that wasn't getting caught due to the bad signature.

Fixing this resulted in *parse time* failures on every call to
`test_asserts` (not something that particular test was designed to
handle.

This PR also fixes the test case to properly evaluate `std assert error`
against a good code path.

# User-Facing Changes

* Error-type returned (possible breaking change?)

# Tests + Formatting

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting

N/A
2024-06-29 16:17:06 -05:00
Andy Gayton
4fe0f860a8
feat: add query webpage-info to plugin_nu_query (#13252)
# Description

This PR adds a new subcommand `query webpage-info` to `plugin_nu_query`.
The subcommand is a basic wrapper for the
[`webpage`](https://crates.io/crates/webpage) crate.

Usage:

```
http get https://phoronix.com | query webpage-info
```

and it returns a `Record` version of
[`webpage::HTML`](https://docs.rs/webpage/latest/webpage/struct.HTML.html).

The PR also takes a shot at bringing @lily-mara 's
[nu-serde::to_value](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/3878/files)
back to life, updating it for the latest version of nushell. That's not
the main focus of the PR though - I just didn't want to have to
implement a custom converter for `webpage::HTML` 😅. If it looks
reasonable we could move it to `nu_protocol`(?) either in this PR or a
future one (along with adding tests for it).

# User-Facing Changes

no breaking changes
2024-06-29 16:13:31 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
33d0537cae
add str deunicode command (#13270)
# Description

Sometimes it's helpful to deal with only ASCII. This command will take a
unicode string as input and convert it to ASCII using the deunicode
crate.

```nushell
❯ "A…B" | str deunicode
A...B
```

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

# Tests + Formatting
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automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```
-->

# After Submitting
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2024-06-29 16:12:34 -05:00
alex-tdrn
40e629beb1
Fix multibyte codepoint handling in detect columns --guess (#13272)
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# Description
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This PR fixes #13269. The splitting code in `guess_width.rs` was
creating slices from char indices, instead of byte indices. This works
perfectly fine for 1-byte code points, but panics or returns wrong
results as soon as multibyte codepoints appear in the input. I
originally discovered this by piping `winget list` into `detect columns
--guess`, since winget sometimes uses the unicode ellipsis symbol (`…`)
which is 3 bytes long when encoded in utf-8.

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
`detect columns --guess` should not crash due to multibyte unicode input
anymore

before:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20356389/833cd732-be3b-4158-97f7-0ca2616ce23f)

after:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20356389/15358b40-4083-4a33-9f2c-87e63f39d985)


# Tests + Formatting
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- Added tests to `guess_width.rs` for testing handling of multibyte as
well as combining diacritical marks

# After Submitting
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2024-06-29 16:12:17 -05:00
Justin Ma
1b1928c103
Update Nu version to v0.95 and setup-nu for workflows (#13265)
Update Nu version to v0.95 and setup-nu to v3.12 for workflows
The change has been tested here:
https://github.com/nushell/nightly/actions/runs/9722586476
2024-06-29 16:10:17 +08:00
Tim Martin
153b45bc63
Surprising symlink resolution for std path add (#13258)
# Description
The standard library's `path add` function has some surprising side
effects that I attempt to address in this PR:

1. Paths added, if they are symbolic links, should not be resolved to
their targets. Currently, resolution happens.

   Imagine the following:

   ```nu
# Some time earlier, perhaps even not by the user, a symlink is created
   mkdir real-dir
   ln -s real-dir link-dir

   # Then, step to now, with link-dir that we want in our PATHS variable
   use std
   path add link-dir
   ```

In the current implementation of `path add`, it is _not_ `link-dir` that
will be added, as has been stated in the command. It is instead
`real-dir`. This is surprising. Users have the agency to do this
resolution if they wish with `path expand` (sans a `--no-symlink` flag):
for example, `path add (link-dir | path expand)`

In particular, when I was trying to set up
[fnm](https://github.com/Schniz/fnm), a Node.js version manager, I was
bitten by this fact when `fnm` told me that an expected path had not
been added to the PATHS variable. It was looking for the non-resolved
link. The user in [this
comment](https://github.com/Schniz/fnm/issues/463#issuecomment-1710050737)
was likely affected by this too.

Shells, such as nushell, can handle path symlinks just fine. Binary
lookup is unaffected. Let resolution be opt-in.

Lastly, there is some convention already in place for **not** resolving
path symlinks in the [default $env.ENV_CONVERSIONS
table](57452337ff/crates/nu-utils/src/sample_config/default_env.nu (L65)).
   
2. All existing paths in the path variable should be left untouched.
Currently, they are `path expand`-ed (including symbolic link
resolution).

   Path add should mean just that: prepend/append this path.

Instead, it currently means that, _plus mutate all other paths in the
variable_.

Again, users have the agency to do this with something like `$env.PATH =
$env.PATH | split row (char esep) | path expand`.

3. Minorly, I update documentation on running tests in
`crates/nu-std/CONTRIBUTING.md`. The offered command to run the standard
library test suite was no longer functional. Thanks to @weirdan in [this
Discord
conversation](https://discord.com/channels/601130461678272522/614593951969574961/1256029201119576147)
for the context.

# User-Facing Changes

(Written from the perspective of release notes)

- The standard library's `path add` function no longer resolves symlinks
in either the newly added paths, nor the other paths already in the
variable.

# Tests + Formatting

A test for the changes working correctly has been added to
`crates/nu-std/tests/test_std.nu` under the test named
`path_add_expand`.

You can quickly verify this new test and the existing `path add` test
with the following command:

```nu
cargo run -- -c 'use crates/nu-std/testing.nu; NU_LOG_LEVEL=INFO testing run-tests --path crates/nu-std --test path_add'
```

All commands suggested in the issue template have been run and complete
without error.

# After Submitting
I'll add a release note to [the
documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the
PR is merged.
2024-06-28 18:11:48 -05:00
Bruce Weirdan
4f8d82bb88
Added support for multiple attributes to query web -a (#13256)
# Description

Allows specifying multiple attributes to retrieve from the selected
nodes. E.g. you may want to select both hrefs and targets from the list
of links:

```nushell
.... | query web --query a --attribute [href target]
```
# User-Facing Changes

`query web --attribute` previously accepted a string. Now it accepts
either a string or a list of strings.

The shape definition for this flag was relaxed temporarily, until
nushell/nushell#13253 is fixed.
2024-06-28 12:50:20 -05:00