In order to run unittests with a release build, we need the test
functions to be accessible when NDEBUG is defined. Moving the functions
into the test fixture ensures they are available and only available for
use by the unit tests.
These were imported from the v0.3.3 git tag
https://github.com/neovim/libvterm/tree/v0.3.3 and not the latest
commit. This is for compatibility reasons as the libvterm code was
imported from v0.3.3.
In the api_info() output:
:new|put =map(filter(api_info().functions, '!has_key(v:val,''deprecated_since'')'), 'v:val')
...
{'return_type': 'ArrayOf(Integer, 2)', 'name': 'nvim_win_get_position', 'method': v:true, 'parameters': [['Window', 'window']], 'since': 1}
The `ArrayOf(Integer, 2)` return type didn't break clients when we added
it, which is evidence that clients don't use the `return_type` field,
thus renaming Dictionary => Dict in api_info() is not (in practice)
a breaking change.
Skipped importing the following unit tests from libtermkey as they'd
require introducing a lot of unused code or require more effort to port
than is probably worth:
- 05read
- 12strpkey
- 20canon
- 40ti-override
Use the grapheme break algorithm from utf8proc to support grapheme
clusters from recent unicode versions.
Handle variant selector VS16 turning some codepoints into double-width
emoji. This means we need to use ptr2cells rather than char2cells when
possible.
This also makes shada reading slightly faster due to avoiding
some copying and allocation.
Use keysets to drive decoding of msgpack maps for shada entries.
Before this change, "static inline" functions in headers needed to have
their function attributes specified in a completely different way. The
prototype had to be duplicated, and REAL_FATTR_ had to be used instead
of the public FUNC_ATTR_ names.
TODO: need a check that a "header.h.inline.generated.h" file is not
forgotten when the first "static inline" function with attributes
is added to a header (they would just be silently missing).
Problem: fnamemodify() treats ".." and "../" differently.
Solution: Expand ".." properly like how "/.." is treated in 8.2.3388.
(zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#152181ee7420460
Problem: the recursive parameter in the *_equal functions can be removed
Solution: Remove the recursive parameter in dict_equal(), list_equal()
object_equal and tv_equal(). Use a comparison of the static
var recursive_cnt == 0 to determine whether or not tv_equal()
has been called recursively (Yinzuo Jiang).
closes: vim/vim#150707ccd1a2e85
Co-authored-by: Yinzuo Jiang <jiangyinzuo@foxmail.com>
If you like it you shouldn't put a ring on it.
This is what _every_ consumer of RStream used anyway, either by calling
rbuffer_reset, or rbuffer_consumed_compact (same as rbuffer_reset
without needing a scratch buffer), or by consuming everything in
each stream_read_cb call directly.
Problem: too many strlen() calls in search.c
Solution: refactor code and remove more strlen() calls,
use explicit variable to remember strlen
(John Marriott)
closes: vim/vim#147968c85a2a49a
Co-authored-by: John Marriott <basilisk@internode.on.net>
Use uv_fs_realpath() instead.
It seems that uv_fs_realpath() has some problems on non-Linux platforms:
- macOS and other BSDs: this function will fail with UV_ELOOP if more
than 32 symlinks are found while resolving the given path. This limit
is hardcoded and cannot be sidestepped.
- Windows: while this function works in the common case, there are a
number of corner cases where it doesn't:
- Paths in ramdisk volumes created by tools which sidestep the Volume
Manager (such as ImDisk) cannot be resolved.
- Inconsistent casing when using drive letters.
- Resolved path bypasses subst'd drives.
Ref: https://docs.libuv.org/en/v1.x/fs.html#c.uv_fs_realpath
I don't know if the old implementation that uses uv_chdir() and uv_cwd()
also suffers from the same problems.
- For the ELOOP case, chdir() seems to have the same limitations.
- On Windows, Vim doesn't use anything like chdir() either. It uses
_wfullpath(), while libuv uses GetFinalPathNameByHandleW().
Add more filters so that LuaJIT can parse headers on macOS 14.
The system headers use a style of enum introduced in C++11 (and allowed
as an extension in C by clang) of the form:
enum Name : Type {
The system headers also use bitfields in the mach_vm_range_recipe* types:
struct Foo { int bar : 32; }
Neither of these constructs can be parsed by LuaJIT, so filter the lines
out. Neither of these declarations are used by neovim's unittests.
There is a (now closed) issue about bitfields for LuaJIT:
https://github.com/LuaJIT/LuaJIT/issues/951Fixes#26145.
If the filename passed to vim_FullName() is a relative directory, and
does not exist, it is appended to the current working directory. Since
the return value of append_path() was ignored, and if the buffer length
was too small to fit getcwd() + dirname(filename), it would still try to
append the basename(filename).
This was manifesting as a failure in test/unit/path_spec.lua in:
itp('fails and uses filename if given filename contains non-existing directory', ..
This failure occurs when running the tests from directory with a short
path such as: /work/src/nv
test/unit/path_spec.lua:420: Expected objects to be the same.
Passed in:
(string) '/work/src/nv/test.file'
Expected:
(string) 'non_existing_dir/test.file'
This return value for the second call to append_path() to append
basename(filename) was checked, and this is where it would fail for
normal / longer getcwd()s.
LuaJIT does not handle -0.0 correctly in 'dual number mode' (which is
the default, and only supported mode for LuaJIT arm64). If LuaJIT is
forced to use 'dual number mode' on X64 (where the default is single),
this test will fail in the same manner.
Fix this by using tonumber("-0.0") instead of a -0.0 literal.
See: https://github.com/LuaJIT/LuaJIT/issues/858
Then we can just load metadata in C as a single msgpack blob. Which also
can be used directly as binarly data, instead of first unpacking all the
functions and ui_events metadata to immediately pack it again, which was
a bit of a silly walk (and one extra usecase of `msgpack_rpc_from_object`
which will get yak shaved in the next PR)
Problems:
- Illegal bytes after valid UTF-8 char cause utf_cp_*_off() to fail.
- When stream isn't NUL-terminated, utf_cp_*_off() may go over the end.
Solution: Don't go over end of the char of end of the string.
Functions like file_open_new() and file_open_fd_new() which just is a
wrapper around the real functions but with an extra xmalloc/xfree around
is an anti-pattern. If the caller really needs to allocate a
FileDescriptor as a heap object, it can do that directly.
FileDescriptor by itself is pretty much a pointer, or rather two:
the OS fd index and a pointer to a buffer. So most of the time an extra
pointer layer is just wasteful.
In the case of scriptin[curscript] in getchar.c, curscript used
to mean in practice:
N+1 open scripts when curscript>0
zero or one open scripts when curscript==0
Which means scriptin[0] had to be compared to NULL to disambiguate the
curscript=0 case.
Instead, use curscript==-1 to mean that are no script,
then all pointer comparisons dissappear and we can just use an array of
structs without extra pointers.
Note: this contains two _temporary_ changes which can be reverted
once the Arena vs no-Arena distinction in API wrappers has been removed.
Both nlua_push_Object and object_to_vim_take_luaref() has been changed
to take the object argument as a pointer. This is not going to be
necessary once these are only used with arena (or not at all) allocated
Objects.
The object_to_vim() variant which leaves luaref untouched might need to
stay for a little longer.
The `get_indent_str_vtab()` function currently calls `tabstop_padding()`
every time a tab is encountered (unless tabstops aren't used).
`tabstop_padding()` either does a division by 'tabstop' If 'vartabstop'
is not set, or iterates through the 'vartabstop' list to find current
tab width.
Since the virtual column only increases, we can keep track of where the
next tabstop would be, and update this information once it was reached.
`get_indent_str_vtab()` also depends on 'listchars' "tab" value from the
current window, even though it may be called for a line from the same
buffer in a different window. In most cases, it is called with tabstops
enabled (last argument was `false`), so I split the function into one
that uses tabstops and the other that doesn't.
I removed `get_indent_str()` since I couldn't find any calls to it.
Currently having two separate memory strategies for API return values is
a bit unnecessary, and mostly a consequence of converting the hot spot
cases which needed it first. But there is really no downside to using
arena everywhere (which implies also directly using strings which are
allocated earlier or even statically, without copy).
There only restriction is we need to know the size of arrays in advance,
but this info can often be passed on from some earlier stage if it is
missing.
This collects some "small" cases. The more complex stuff will get a PR
each.
This expands on the global "don't pay for what you don't use" rules for
these special extmark decorations:
- inline virtual text, which needs to be processed in plines.c when we
calculate the size of text on screen
- virtual lines, which are needed when calculating "filler" lines
- signs, with text and/or highlights, both of which needs to be
processed for the entire line already at the beginning of a line.
This adds a count to each node of the marktree, for how many special
marks of each kind can be found in the subtree for this node. This makes
it possible to quickly skip over these extra checks, when working in
regions of the buffer not containing these kind of marks, instead of
before where this could just be skipped if the entire _buffer_
didn't contain such marks.
A bit big, but practically it was a lot simpler to change over all
fillchars and all listchars at once, to not need to maintain two
parallel implementations.
This is mostly an internal refactor, but it also removes an arbitrary
limitation: that 'fillchars' and 'listchars' values can only be
single-codepoint characters. Now any character which fits into a single
screen cell can be used.
Problem: Many places in the code use `findoption()` to access an option using its name, even if the option index is available. This is very slow because it requires looping through the options array over and over.
Solution: Use option index instead of name wherever possible. Also introduce an `OptIndex` enum which contains the index for every option as enum constants, this eliminates the need to pass static option names as strings.
Problem:
Not all Lua code is checked by stylua. Automating code-style is an
important mechanism for reducing time spent on accidental
(non-essential) complexity.
Solution:
- Enable lintlua for `test/unit/` directory.
- TODO: only `test/functional/` remains unchecked.
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