neovim/runtime/lua/man.lua

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local api, fn = vim.api, vim.fn
local FIND_ARG = '-w'
local localfile_arg = true -- Always use -l if possible. #6683
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---@type table[]
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local buf_hls = {}
local M = {}
local function man_error(msg)
M.errormsg = 'man.lua: ' .. vim.inspect(msg)
error(M.errormsg)
end
-- Run a system command and timeout after 30 seconds.
---@param cmd string[]
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---@param silent boolean?
---@param env? table<string,string|number>
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---@return string
local function system(cmd, silent, env)
local r = vim.system(cmd, { env = env, timeout = 10000 }):wait()
if r.code ~= 0 and not silent then
local cmd_str = table.concat(cmd, ' ')
man_error(string.format("command error '%s': %s", cmd_str, r.stderr))
end
return assert(r.stdout)
end
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---@param line string
---@param linenr integer
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local function highlight_line(line, linenr)
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---@type string[]
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local chars = {}
local prev_char = ''
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local overstrike, escape = false, false
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---@type table<integer,{attr:integer,start:integer,final:integer}>
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local hls = {} -- Store highlight groups as { attr, start, final }
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local NONE, BOLD, UNDERLINE, ITALIC = 0, 1, 2, 3
local hl_groups = { [BOLD] = 'manBold', [UNDERLINE] = 'manUnderline', [ITALIC] = 'manItalic' }
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local attr = NONE
local byte = 0 -- byte offset
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local function end_attr_hl(attr_)
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for i, hl in ipairs(hls) do
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if hl.attr == attr_ and hl.final == -1 then
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hl.final = byte
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hls[i] = hl
end
end
end
local function add_attr_hl(code)
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local continue_hl = true
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if code == 0 then
attr = NONE
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continue_hl = false
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elseif code == 1 then
attr = BOLD
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elseif code == 22 then
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attr = BOLD
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continue_hl = false
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elseif code == 3 then
attr = ITALIC
elseif code == 23 then
attr = ITALIC
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continue_hl = false
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elseif code == 4 then
attr = UNDERLINE
elseif code == 24 then
attr = UNDERLINE
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continue_hl = false
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else
attr = NONE
return
end
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if continue_hl then
hls[#hls + 1] = { attr = attr, start = byte, final = -1 }
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else
if attr == NONE then
for a, _ in pairs(hl_groups) do
end_attr_hl(a)
end
else
end_attr_hl(attr)
end
end
end
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-- Break input into UTF8 code points. ASCII code points (from 0x00 to 0x7f)
-- can be represented in one byte. Any code point above that is represented by
-- a leading byte (0xc0 and above) and continuation bytes (0x80 to 0xbf, or
-- decimal 128 to 191).
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for char in line:gmatch('[^\128-\191][\128-\191]*') do
if overstrike then
local last_hl = hls[#hls]
if char == prev_char then
if char == '_' and attr == ITALIC and last_hl and last_hl.final == byte then
-- This underscore is in the middle of an italic word
attr = ITALIC
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else
attr = BOLD
end
elseif prev_char == '_' then
-- Even though underline is strictly what this should be. <bs>_ was used by nroff to
-- indicate italics which wasn't possible on old typewriters so underline was used. Modern
-- terminals now support italics so lets use that now.
-- See:
-- - https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/274658/purpose-of-ascii-text-with-overstriking-file-format/274795#274795
-- - https://cmd.inp.nsk.su/old/cmd2/manuals/unix/UNIX_Unleashed/ch08.htm
-- attr = UNDERLINE
attr = ITALIC
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elseif prev_char == '+' and char == 'o' then
-- bullet (overstrike text '+^Ho')
attr = BOLD
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char = '·'
elseif prev_char == '·' and char == 'o' then
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-- bullet (additional handling for '+^H+^Ho^Ho')
attr = BOLD
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char = '·'
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else
-- use plain char
attr = NONE
end
-- Grow the previous highlight group if possible
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if last_hl and last_hl.attr == attr and last_hl.final == byte then
last_hl.final = byte + #char
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else
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hls[#hls + 1] = { attr = attr, start = byte, final = byte + #char }
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end
overstrike = false
prev_char = ''
byte = byte + #char
chars[#chars + 1] = char
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elseif escape then
-- Use prev_char to store the escape sequence
prev_char = prev_char .. char
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-- We only want to match against SGR sequences, which consist of ESC
-- followed by '[', then a series of parameter and intermediate bytes in
-- the range 0x20 - 0x3f, then 'm'. (See ECMA-48, sections 5.4 & 8.3.117)
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---@type string?
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local sgr = prev_char:match('^%[([\032-\063]*)m$')
-- Ignore escape sequences with : characters, as specified by ITU's T.416
-- Open Document Architecture and interchange format.
if sgr and not string.find(sgr, ':') then
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local match ---@type string?
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while sgr and #sgr > 0 do
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-- Match against SGR parameters, which may be separated by ';'
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match, sgr = sgr:match('^(%d*);?(.*)')
add_attr_hl(match + 0) -- coerce to number
end
escape = false
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elseif not prev_char:match('^%[[\032-\063]*$') then
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-- Stop looking if this isn't a partial CSI sequence
escape = false
end
elseif char == '\027' then
escape = true
prev_char = ''
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elseif char == '\b' then
overstrike = true
prev_char = chars[#chars]
byte = byte - #prev_char
chars[#chars] = nil
else
byte = byte + #char
chars[#chars + 1] = char
end
end
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for _, hl in ipairs(hls) do
if hl.attr ~= NONE then
buf_hls[#buf_hls + 1] = {
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0,
-1,
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hl_groups[hl.attr],
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linenr - 1,
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hl.start,
hl.final,
}
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end
end
return table.concat(chars, '')
end
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local function highlight_man_page()
local mod = vim.bo.modifiable
vim.bo.modifiable = true
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local lines = api.nvim_buf_get_lines(0, 0, -1, false)
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for i, line in ipairs(lines) do
lines[i] = highlight_line(line, i)
end
api.nvim_buf_set_lines(0, 0, -1, false, lines)
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for _, args in ipairs(buf_hls) do
api.nvim_buf_add_highlight(unpack(args))
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end
buf_hls = {}
vim.bo.modifiable = mod
end
-- replace spaces in a man page name with underscores
-- intended for PostgreSQL, which has man pages like 'CREATE_TABLE(7)';
-- while editing SQL source code, it's nice to visually select 'CREATE TABLE'
-- and hit 'K', which requires this transformation
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---@param str string
---@return string
local function spaces_to_underscores(str)
local res = str:gsub('%s', '_')
return res
end
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---@param sect string|nil
---@param name string|nil
---@param silent boolean
local function get_path(sect, name, silent)
name = name or ''
sect = sect or ''
-- Some man implementations (OpenBSD) return all available paths from the
-- search command. Previously, this function would simply select the first one.
--
-- However, some searches will report matches that are incorrect:
-- man -w strlen may return string.3 followed by strlen.3, and therefore
-- selecting the first would get us the wrong page. Thus, we must find the
-- first matching one.
--
-- There's yet another special case here. Consider the following:
-- If you run man -w strlen and string.3 comes up first, this is a problem. We
-- should search for a matching named one in the results list.
-- However, if you search for man -w clock_gettime, you will *only* get
-- clock_getres.2, which is the right page. Searching the results for
-- clock_gettime will no longer work. In this case, we should just use the
-- first one that was found in the correct section.
--
-- Finally, we can avoid relying on -S or -s here since they are very
-- inconsistently supported. Instead, call -w with a section and a name.
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local cmd ---@type string[]
if sect == '' then
cmd = { 'man', FIND_ARG, name }
else
cmd = { 'man', FIND_ARG, sect, name }
end
local lines = system(cmd, silent)
local results = vim.split(lines, '\n', { trimempty = true })
if #results == 0 then
return
end
fix(man): handle absolute paths as `:Man` targets (#20624) * fix(man): handle absolute paths as :Man targets Previously, attempting to provide `:Man` with an absolute path as the name would cause neovim to return the following error: ``` Error detected while processing command line: /usr/local/share/nvim/runtime/lua/man.lua:690: /usr/local/share/nvim/runtime/lua/man.lua:683: Vim:E426: tag not found: nil(nil) Press ENTER or type command to continue ``` ..because it would try to validate the existence of a man page for the provided name by executing `man -w /some/path` which (on at least some Linux machines [0]) returns `/some/path` instead of the path to the nroff files that would be formatted to satisfy the man(1) lookup. While man pages are not normally named after absolute paths, users shouldn't be blamed for trying. Given such a name/path, neovim would **not** complain that the path didn't have a corresponding man file but would error out when trying to call the tag function for the null-propagated name-and-section `nil(nil)`. (The same underlying error existed before this function was ported to lua, but did not exhibit the lua-specific `nil(nil)` name; instead a tag lookup for `()` would fail and error out.) With this patch, we detect the case where `man -w ...` returns the same value as the provided name to not only prevent invoking the tag function for a non-existent/malformed name+sect but also to properly report the non-existence of a man page for the provided lookup (the absolute path). While man(1) can be used to directly read an nroff-formatted document via `man /path/to/nroff.doc`, `:Man /path/to/nroff.doc` never supported this behavior so no functionality is lost in case the provided path _was_ an nroff file. [0]: `man -w /absolute/path` returning `/absolute/path` observed on an Ubuntu 18.04 installation. * test: add regression test for #20624 Add a functional test to `man_spec.lua` to check for a regression for #20624 by first obtaining an absolute path to a random file and materializing it to disk, then attempting to query `:Man` for an entry by that same name/path. The test passes if nvim correctly reports that there is no man page correspending to the provided name/path and fails if any other error (or no error) is shown.
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-- `man -w /some/path` will return `/some/path` for any existent file, which
-- stops us from actually determining if a path has a corresponding man file.
-- Since `:Man /some/path/to/man/file` isn't supported anyway, we should just
-- error out here if we detect this is the case.
if sect == '' and #results == 1 and results[1] == name then
return
end
-- find any that match the specified name
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---@param v string
local namematches = vim.tbl_filter(function(v)
local tail = fn.fnamemodify(v, ':t')
return string.find(tail, name, 1, true)
end, results) or {}
local sectmatches = {}
if #namematches > 0 and sect ~= '' then
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---@param v string
sectmatches = vim.tbl_filter(function(v)
return fn.fnamemodify(v, ':e') == sect
end, namematches)
end
return fn.substitute(sectmatches[1] or namematches[1] or results[1], [[\n\+$]], '', '')
end
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---@param text string
---@param pat_or_re string
local function matchstr(text, pat_or_re)
local re = type(pat_or_re) == 'string' and vim.regex(pat_or_re) or pat_or_re
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---@type integer, integer
local s, e = re:match_str(text)
if s == nil then
return
end
return text:sub(vim.str_utfindex(text, s) + 1, vim.str_utfindex(text, e))
end
-- attempt to extract the name and sect out of 'name(sect)'
-- otherwise just return the largest string of valid characters in ref
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---@param ref string
---@return string, string
local function extract_sect_and_name_ref(ref)
ref = ref or ''
if ref:sub(1, 1) == '-' then -- try ':Man -pandoc' with this disabled.
man_error("manpage name cannot start with '-'")
end
local ref1 = ref:match('[^()]+%([^()]+%)')
if not ref1 then
local name = ref:match('[^()]+')
if not name then
man_error('manpage reference cannot contain only parentheses: ' .. ref)
end
return '', name
end
local parts = vim.split(ref1, '(', { plain = true })
-- see ':Man 3X curses' on why tolower.
-- TODO(nhooyr) Not sure if this is portable across OSs
-- but I have not seen a single uppercase section.
local sect = vim.split(parts[2] or '', ')', { plain = true })[1]:lower()
local name = parts[1]
return sect, name
end
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-- find_path attempts to find the path to a manpage
-- based on the passed section and name.
--
-- 1. If manpage could not be found with the given sect and name,
-- then try all the sections in b:man_default_sects.
-- 2. If it still could not be found, then we try again without a section.
-- 3. If still not found but $MANSECT is set, then we try again with $MANSECT
-- unset.
-- 4. If a path still wasn't found, return nil.
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---@param sect string?
---@param name string
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function M.find_path(sect, name)
if sect and sect ~= '' then
local ret = get_path(sect, name, true)
if ret then
return ret
end
end
if vim.b.man_default_sects ~= nil then
local sects = vim.split(vim.b.man_default_sects, ',', { plain = true, trimempty = true })
for _, sec in ipairs(sects) do
local ret = get_path(sec, name, true)
if ret then
return ret
end
end
end
-- if none of the above worked, we will try with no section
local res_empty_sect = get_path('', name, true)
if res_empty_sect then
return res_empty_sect
end
-- if that still didn't work, we will check for $MANSECT and try again with it
-- unset
if vim.env.MANSECT then
local mansect = vim.env.MANSECT
vim.env.MANSECT = nil
local res = get_path('', name, true)
vim.env.MANSECT = mansect
if res then
return res
end
end
-- finally, if that didn't work, there is no hope
return nil
end
local EXT_RE = vim.regex([[\.\%([glx]z\|bz2\|lzma\|Z\)$]])
-- Extracts the name/section from the 'path/name.sect', because sometimes the actual section is
-- more specific than what we provided to `man` (try `:Man 3 App::CLI`).
-- Also on linux, name seems to be case-insensitive. So for `:Man PRIntf`, we
-- still want the name of the buffer to be 'printf'.
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---@param path string
---@return string, string
local function extract_sect_and_name_path(path)
local tail = fn.fnamemodify(path, ':t')
if EXT_RE:match_str(path) then -- valid extensions
tail = fn.fnamemodify(tail, ':r')
end
local name, sect = tail:match('^(.+)%.([^.]+)$')
return sect, name
end
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---@return boolean
local function find_man()
if vim.bo.filetype == 'man' then
return true
end
local win = 1
while win <= fn.winnr('$') do
local buf = fn.winbufnr(win)
if vim.bo[buf].filetype == 'man' then
vim.cmd(win .. 'wincmd w')
return true
end
win = win + 1
end
return false
end
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---@param pager boolean
local function set_options(pager)
vim.bo.swapfile = false
vim.bo.buftype = 'nofile'
vim.bo.bufhidden = 'unload'
vim.bo.modified = false
vim.bo.readonly = true
vim.bo.modifiable = false
vim.b.pager = pager
vim.bo.filetype = 'man'
end
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---@param path string
---@param silent boolean?
---@return string
local function get_page(path, silent)
-- Disable hard-wrap by using a big $MANWIDTH (max 1000 on some systems #9065).
-- Soft-wrap: ftplugin/man.lua sets wrap/breakindent/….
-- Hard-wrap: driven by `man`.
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local manwidth ---@type integer|string
if (vim.g.man_hardwrap or 1) ~= 1 then
manwidth = 999
elseif vim.env.MANWIDTH then
manwidth = vim.env.MANWIDTH
else
manwidth = api.nvim_win_get_width(0) - vim.o.wrapmargin
end
local cmd = localfile_arg and { 'man', '-l', path } or { 'man', path }
-- Force MANPAGER=cat to ensure Vim is not recursively invoked (by man-db).
-- http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.editors.vim.devel/29085
-- Set MAN_KEEP_FORMATTING so Debian man doesn't discard backspaces.
return system(cmd, silent, {
MANPAGER = 'cat',
MANWIDTH = manwidth,
MAN_KEEP_FORMATTING = 1,
})
end
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---@param lnum integer
---@return string
local function getline(lnum)
---@diagnostic disable-next-line
return fn.getline(lnum)
end
---@param page string
local function put_page(page)
vim.bo.modifiable = true
vim.bo.readonly = false
vim.bo.swapfile = false
api.nvim_buf_set_lines(0, 0, -1, false, vim.split(page, '\n'))
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while getline(1):match('^%s*$') do
api.nvim_buf_set_lines(0, 0, 1, false, {})
end
-- XXX: nroff justifies text by filling it with whitespace. That interacts
-- badly with our use of $MANWIDTH=999. Hack around this by using a fixed
-- size for those whitespace regions.
vim.cmd([[silent! keeppatterns keepjumps %s/\s\{199,}/\=repeat(' ', 10)/g]])
vim.cmd('1') -- Move cursor to first line
highlight_man_page()
set_options(false)
end
local function format_candidate(path, psect)
if matchstr(path, [[\.\%(pdf\|in\)$]]) then -- invalid extensions
return ''
end
local sect, name = extract_sect_and_name_path(path)
if sect == psect then
return name
elseif sect and name and matchstr(sect, psect .. '.\\+$') then -- invalid extensions
-- We include the section if the user provided section is a prefix
-- of the actual section.
return ('%s(%s)'):format(name, sect)
end
return ''
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end
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---@generic T
---@param list T[]
---@param elem T
---@return T[]
local function move_elem_to_head(list, elem)
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---@diagnostic disable-next-line:no-unknown
local list1 = vim.tbl_filter(function(v)
return v ~= elem
end, list)
return { elem, unpack(list1) }
end
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---@param sect string
---@param name string
---@return string[]
local function get_paths(sect, name)
-- Try several sources for getting the list man directories:
-- 1. `man -w` (works on most systems)
-- 2. `manpath`
-- 3. $MANPATH
local mandirs_raw = vim.F.npcall(system, { 'man', FIND_ARG })
or vim.F.npcall(system, { 'manpath', '-q' })
or vim.env.MANPATH
if not mandirs_raw then
man_error("Could not determine man directories from: 'man -w', 'manpath' or $MANPATH")
end
local mandirs = table.concat(vim.split(mandirs_raw, '[:\n]', { trimempty = true }), ',')
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---@type string[]
local paths = fn.globpath(mandirs, 'man[^\\/]*/' .. name .. '*.' .. sect .. '*', false, true)
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-- Prioritize the result from find_path as it obeys b:man_default_sects.
local first = M.find_path(sect, name)
if first then
paths = move_elem_to_head(paths, first)
end
return paths
end
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---@param sect string
---@param psect string
---@param name string
---@return string[]
local function complete(sect, psect, name)
local pages = get_paths(sect, name)
-- We remove duplicates in case the same manpage in different languages was found.
return fn.uniq(fn.sort(vim.tbl_map(function(v)
return format_candidate(v, psect)
end, pages) or {}, 'i'))
end
-- see extract_sect_and_name_ref on why tolower(sect)
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---@param arg_lead string
---@param cmd_line string
function M.man_complete(arg_lead, cmd_line, _)
local args = vim.split(cmd_line, '%s+', { trimempty = true })
local cmd_offset = fn.index(args, 'Man')
if cmd_offset > 0 then
-- Prune all arguments up to :Man itself. Otherwise modifier commands like
-- :tab, :vertical, etc. would lead to a wrong length.
args = vim.list_slice(args, cmd_offset + 1)
end
if #args > 3 then
return {}
end
if #args == 1 then
-- returning full completion is laggy. Require some arg_lead to complete
-- return complete('', '', '')
return {}
end
if arg_lead:match('^[^()]+%([^()]*$') then
-- cursor (|) is at ':Man printf(|' or ':Man 1 printf(|'
-- The later is is allowed because of ':Man pri<TAB>'.
-- It will offer 'priclass.d(1m)' even though section is specified as 1.
local tmp = vim.split(arg_lead, '(', { plain = true })
local name = tmp[1]
local sect = (tmp[2] or ''):lower()
return complete(sect, '', name)
end
if not args[2]:match('^[^()]+$') then
-- cursor (|) is at ':Man 3() |' or ':Man (3|' or ':Man 3() pri|'
-- or ':Man 3() pri |'
return {}
end
if #args == 2 then
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---@type string, string
local name, sect
if arg_lead == '' then
-- cursor (|) is at ':Man 1 |'
name = ''
sect = args[1]:lower()
else
-- cursor (|) is at ':Man pri|'
if arg_lead:match('/') then
-- if the name is a path, complete files
-- TODO(nhooyr) why does this complete the last one automatically
return fn.glob(arg_lead .. '*', false, true)
end
name = arg_lead
sect = ''
end
return complete(sect, sect, name)
end
if not arg_lead:match('[^()]+$') then
-- cursor (|) is at ':Man 3 printf |' or ':Man 3 (pr)i|'
return {}
end
-- cursor (|) is at ':Man 3 pri|'
local name = arg_lead
local sect = args[2]:lower()
return complete(sect, sect, name)
end
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---@param pattern string
---@return {name:string,filename:string,cmd:string}[]
function M.goto_tag(pattern, _, _)
local sect, name = extract_sect_and_name_ref(pattern)
local paths = get_paths(sect, name)
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---@type {name:string,title:string}[]
local structured = {}
for _, path in ipairs(paths) do
sect, name = extract_sect_and_name_path(path)
if sect and name then
structured[#structured + 1] = {
name = name,
title = name .. '(' .. sect .. ')',
}
end
end
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---@param entry {name:string,title:string}
return vim.tbl_map(function(entry)
return {
name = entry.name,
filename = 'man://' .. entry.title,
cmd = '1',
}
end, structured)
end
-- Called when Nvim is invoked as $MANPAGER.
function M.init_pager()
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if getline(1):match('^%s*$') then
api.nvim_buf_set_lines(0, 0, 1, false, {})
else
vim.cmd('keepjumps 1')
end
highlight_man_page()
-- Guess the ref from the heading (which is usually uppercase, so we cannot
-- know the correct casing, cf. `man glDrawArraysInstanced`).
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local ref = fn.substitute(matchstr(getline(1), [[^[^)]\+)]]) or '', ' ', '_', 'g')
local ok, res = pcall(extract_sect_and_name_ref, ref)
vim.b.man_sect = ok and res or ''
if not fn.bufname('%'):match('man://') then -- Avoid duplicate buffers, E95.
vim.cmd.file({ 'man://' .. fn.fnameescape(ref):lower(), mods = { silent = true } })
end
set_options(true)
end
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---@param count integer
---@param args string[]
function M.open_page(count, smods, args)
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local ref ---@type string
if #args == 0 then
ref = vim.bo.filetype == 'man' and fn.expand('<cWORD>') or fn.expand('<cword>')
if ref == '' then
man_error('no identifier under cursor')
end
elseif #args == 1 then
ref = args[1]
else
-- Combine the name and sect into a manpage reference so that all
-- verification/extraction can be kept in a single function.
if args[1]:match('^%d$') or args[1]:match('^%d%a') or args[1]:match('^%a$') then
-- NB: Valid sections are not only digits, but also:
-- - <digit><word> (see POSIX mans),
-- - and even <letter> and <word> (see, for example, by tcl/tk)
-- NB2: don't optimize to :match("^%d"), as it will match manpages like
-- 441toppm and others whose name starts with digit
local sect = args[1]
table.remove(args, 1)
local name = table.concat(args, ' ')
ref = ('%s(%s)'):format(name, sect)
else
ref = table.concat(args, ' ')
end
end
local sect, name = extract_sect_and_name_ref(ref)
if count >= 0 then
sect = tostring(count)
end
-- Try both spaces and underscores, use the first that exists.
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local path = M.find_path(sect, name)
if path == nil then
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path = M.find_path(sect, spaces_to_underscores(name))
if path == nil then
man_error('no manual entry for ' .. name)
end
end
sect, name = extract_sect_and_name_path(path)
local buf = fn.bufnr()
local save_tfu = vim.bo[buf].tagfunc
vim.bo[buf].tagfunc = "v:lua.require'man'.goto_tag"
local target = ('%s(%s)'):format(name, sect)
local ok, ret = pcall(function()
smods.silent = true
smods.keepalt = true
if smods.hide or (smods.tab == -1 and find_man()) then
vim.cmd.tag({ target, mods = smods })
else
vim.cmd.stag({ target, mods = smods })
end
end)
vim.bo[buf].tagfunc = save_tfu
if not ok then
error(ret)
else
set_options(false)
end
vim.b.man_sect = sect
end
-- Called when a man:// buffer is opened.
function M.read_page(ref)
local sect, name = extract_sect_and_name_ref(ref)
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local path = M.find_path(sect, name)
if path == nil then
man_error('no manual entry for ' .. name)
end
sect = extract_sect_and_name_path(path)
local page = get_page(path)
vim.b.man_sect = sect
put_page(page)
end
function M.show_toc()
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local bufnr = api.nvim_get_current_buf()
local bufname = api.nvim_buf_get_name(bufnr)
local info = fn.getloclist(0, { winid = 1 })
if info ~= '' and vim.w[info.winid].qf_toc == bufname then
vim.cmd.lopen()
return
end
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---@type {bufnr:integer, lnum:integer, text:string}[]
local toc = {}
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local lnum = 2
local last_line = fn.line('$') - 1
local section_title_re = vim.regex([[^\%( \{3\}\)\=\S.*$]])
local flag_title_re = vim.regex([[^\s\+\%(+\|-\)\S\+]])
while lnum and lnum < last_line do
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local text = getline(lnum)
if section_title_re:match_str(text) then
-- if text is a section title
toc[#toc + 1] = {
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bufnr = bufnr,
lnum = lnum,
text = text,
}
elseif flag_title_re:match_str(text) then
-- if text is a flag title. we strip whitespaces and prepend two
-- spaces to have a consistent format in the loclist.
toc[#toc + 1] = {
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bufnr = bufnr,
lnum = lnum,
text = ' ' .. fn.substitute(text, [[^\s*\(.\{-}\)\s*$]], [[\1]], ''),
}
end
lnum = fn.nextnonblank(lnum + 1)
end
fn.setloclist(0, toc, ' ')
fn.setloclist(0, {}, 'a', { title = 'Man TOC' })
vim.cmd.lopen()
vim.w.qf_toc = bufname
end
local function init()
local path = get_path('', 'man', true)
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local page ---@type string?
if path ~= nil then
-- Check for -l support.
page = get_page(path, true)
end
if page == '' or page == nil then
localfile_arg = false
end
end
init()
return M