Memfile used a private implementation of an open hash table with intrusive collision chains, but there is
no reason to assume the standard khash_t based Map won't work just fine.
Yes, we are taking full ownership and maintenance over memline and memfile.
No one is going to maintain it for us.
Trust the plan.
Fixes#24881
--force-config passed to luarocks' configure script is only taken into
account in case "make install" is used afterwards.
But if "make bootstrap" is used then this flag has no effect. And it can
actually copy an existing config on the system to the new installation.
That existing config can have a different version of Lua set by default.
In which case luarocks will install packages for that version instead of
the one used in tests. And trying to run tests then will fail because of
missing packages.
This reverts commit e71c7898ca.
Triggering jobs on users own fork turned out to be not that useful, and
only necessary in rare moments. It's easier to adjust the CI scripts if
the users wants CI results before creating a pull request. It also
reduces the complexity of the CI code.
Problem: Various Typos
Solution: Fix Typos
This is a collection of typo related commits.
closes: vim/vim#12753closes: vim/vim#13016ee17b6f70d
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Adri Verhoef <a3@a3.xs4all.nl>
Co-authored-by: Viktor Szépe <viktor@szepe.net>
Co-authored-by: nuid64 <lvkuzvesov@proton.me>
Co-authored-by: Meng Xiangzhuo <aumo@foxmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Dominique Pellé <dominique.pelle@gmail.com>
Problem: missing test for patch 9.0.1873
Solution: add a test trying to exchange windows
Add a test, making sure that switching windows is not allowed when
textlock is active, e.g. when running `:s/<pat>/\=func()/`
18d2709aa1
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
This will fix the failing release job.
Ubuntu 18.04 is incompatible with checkout action version 4, which
requires glibc 2.28+. This will bump the minimum glibc version required
to use the release versions to 2.31. People requring the older releases
can find them at https://github.com/neovim/neovim-releases.
runtime(tohtml): Update TOhtml to version 9.0v2 (vim/vim#13050)
Modified behavior:
- Change default value of g:html_use_input_for_pc from "fallback" to
"none". This means with default settings, only the standards-based
method to make special text unselectable is used. The old method
relying on unspecified browser behavior for <input> tags is now only
used if a user specifically enables it.
- Officially deprecate g:use_xhtml option (in favor of
g:html_use_xhtml) by issuing a warning message when used.
Bugfixes:
- Fix issue vim/vim#8547: LineNr and other special highlight groups did not
get proper style rules defined when using "hi link".
- Fix that diff filler was not properly added for deleted lines at the
end of a buffer.
Other:
- Refactored function definitions from long lists of strings to use
:let-heredoc variable assignment instead.
- Corrected deprecated "." string concatenation operator to ".."
operator in more places.
86cfb39030
Co-authored-by: fritzophrenic <fritzophrenic@gmail.com>
Problem: Wrong order of arguments for error messages
Solution: Reverse order or arguments for e_aptypes_is_null_nr_str
closes: vim/vim#130511bd2cb1169
Co-authored-by: Christ van Willegen <cvwillegen@gmail.com>
- Add runtime/lua/vim/vimhelp.lua, which is a translation of Vim's
runtime/import/dist/vimhelp.vim.
- Unlike Vim, run the highlighting from an ftplugin file instead of a
syntax file, so that it is run even if using treesitter.
This involves two redesigns of the map.c implementations:
1. Change of macro style and code organization
The old khash.h and map.c implementation used huge #define blocks with a
lot of backslash line continuations.
This instead uses the "implementation file" .c.h pattern. Such a file is
meant to be included multiple times, with different macros set prior to
inclusion as parameters. we already use this pattern e.g. for
eval/typval_encode.c.h to implement different typval encoders reusing a
similar structure.
We can structure this code into two parts. one that only depends on key
type and is enough to implement sets, and one which depends on both key
and value to implement maps (as a wrapper around sets, with an added
value[] array)
2. Separate the main hash buckets from the key / value arrays
Change the hack buckets to only contain an index into separate key /
value arrays
This is a common pattern in modern, state of the art hashmap
implementations. Even though this leads to one more allocated array, it
is this often is a net reduction of memory consumption. Consider
key+value consuming at least 12 bytes per pair. On average, we will have
twice as many buckets per item.
Thus old implementation:
2*12 = 24 bytes per item
New implementation
1*12 + 2*4 = 20 bytes per item
And the difference gets bigger with larger items.
One might think we have pulled a fast one here, as wouldn't the average size of
the new key/value arrays be 1.5 slots per items due to amortized grows?
But remember, these arrays are fully dense, and thus the accessed memory,
measured in _cache lines_, the unit which actually matters, will be the
fully used memory but just rounded up to the nearest cache line
boundary.
This has some other interesting properties, such as an insert-only
set/map will be fully ordered by insert only. Preserving this ordering
in face of deletions is more tricky tho. As we currently don't use
ordered maps, the "delete" operation maintains compactness of the item
arrays in the simplest way by breaking the ordering. It would be
possible to implement an order-preserving delete although at some cost,
like allowing the items array to become non-dense until the next rehash.
Finally, in face of these two major changes, all code used in khash.h
has been integrated into map.c and friends. Given the heavy edits it
makes no sense to "layer" the code into a vendored and a wrapper part.
Rather, the layered cake follows the specialization depth: code shared
for all maps, code specialized to a key type (and its equivalence
relation), and finally code specialized to value+key type.
runtime: don't execute external commands when loading ftplugins
This is a followup to 816fbcc262687b81fc46f82f7bbeb1453addfe0c (patch
9.0.1833: [security] runtime file fixes)
It basically disables that external commands are run on loading of the
filetype plugin, **unless** the user has set the `g:plugin_exec = 1`
global variable in their configuration or for a specific filetype the
variable g:<filetype>_exec=1.
There are a few more plugins, that may execute system commands like
debchangelog, gitcommit, sh, racket, zsh, ps1 but those do at least
do not run those commands by default during loading of the filetype plugin
(there the command is mostly run as convenience for auto-completion or
to provide documentation lookup).
closes: vim/vim#13034f7ac0ef509
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Tim Pope <vim@tpope.org>
runtime(ftplugin): allow to exec if curdir is in PATH
In case the current directory is present as valid $PATH entry, it is OK
to call the program from it, even if vim curdir is in that same
directory.
(Without that patch, for instance, you will not be able to open .zip
files while your current directory is /bin)
closes: vim/vim#1302767c951df4c
Co-authored-by: Anton Sharonov <anton.sharonov@gmail.com>
Problem: CI may fail in test_recover_empty_swap
Solution: Set directory option
Fix failing Test_recover_empty_swap test
:recover by default not only looks in the current directory, but also in
~/tmp for files to recover. If it finds some files to recover, it will
interactively prompt for a file to recover. However, prompting doesn't
work when running the test suite (and even if it would, there is no one
that can answer the prompt).
So it doesn't really make sense during testing, to inspect different
directories for swap files and prompt and wait (which will lead to a
timeout and therefore a failing test).
So set the 'directory' option temporarily to the current directory only
and reset it back once the test finishes.
closes: vim/vim#130381c7397f3f1
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: Too many delete() calls in tests.
Solution: Use deferred delete where possible.
db77cb3c08
Include test_recover.vim changes only.
Cherry-pick test_recover.vim change from patch 8.2.3637.
Co-authored-by: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
runtime: Fix problem of checking wrong cwd for ruby ftplugin (vim/vim#13026)
282a94be99
Co-authored-by: Anton Sharonov (ant0sha) <109120102+ant0sha@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Anton Sharonov <anton.sharonov@gmail.com>
runtime(php): Update the php indent script to the 1.75 (from 1.70) (vim/vim#13025)
Changes:
1.75:
- Fix 2072/PHP-Indenting-for-VImvim/vim#87: The indent optimization was causing wrong indentation of lines
preceded by a line ending with '}' when preceded by non white characters.
- Fix long standing non-reported regex escaping issue in cleaning end of line
comments function. This should help fixing some other unreported issues when
parts of codes are commented out at ends of lines...
1.74:
- Fix 2072/PHP-Indenting-for-VImvim/vim#86: Add support for `match` expression.
1.73:
- Fix 2072/PHP-Indenting-for-VImvim/vim#77 where multi line strings and true/false keywords at beginning of a
line would cause indentation failures.
1.72:
- Fix vim/vimvim/vim#5722 where it was reported that the option PHP_BracesAtCodeLevel
had not been working for the last 6 years.
1.71:
- Fix 2072/PHP-Indenting-for-VImvim/vim#75 where the indent script would hang on some multi-line quoted strings.
3170342af3
Co-authored-by: John Wellesz <john.wellesz@gmail.com>
vim-patch:9.0.1866: undo is synced after character find
Problem: Undo is synced after character find.
Solution: Set no_u_sync when calling gotchars_nop().
closes: vim/vim#13022closes: vim/vim#13024dccc29c228