mirror of
https://github.com/nushell/nushell
synced 2024-12-28 14:03:09 +00:00
4b91ed57dd
# Description Previously, only direcly-recursive calls were checked for recursion depth. But most recursive calls in nushell are mutually recursive since expressions like `for`, `where`, `try` and `do` all execute a separte block. ```nushell def f [] { do { f } } ``` Calling `f` would crash nushell with a stack overflow. I think the only general way to prevent such a stack overflow is to enforce a maximum call stack depth instead of only disallowing directly recursive calls. This commit also moves that logic into `eval_call()` instead of `eval_block()` because the recursion limit is tracked in the `Stack`, but not all blocks are evaluated in a new stack. Incrementing the recursion depth of the caller's stack would permanently increment that for all future calls. Fixes #11667 # User-Facing Changes Any function call can now fail with `recursion_limit_reached` instead of just directly recursive calls. Mutually-recursive calls no longer crash nushell. # After Submitting <!-- If your PR had any user-facing changes, update [the documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the PR is merged, if necessary. This will help us keep the docs up to date. --> |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
src | ||
tests | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md |
nu-protocol
The nu-protocol crate holds the definitions of structs/traits that are used throughout Nushell. This gives us one way to expose them to many other crates, as well as make these definitions available to each other, without causing mutually recursive dependencies.