Problem: heap-use-after-free in garbage collection with location list
user data.
Solution: Mark user data as in use when no other window is referencing
the location list (zeertzjq)
fixes: neovim/neovim#30371closes: vim/vim#15683be4bd189d2
Problem: Crash with cursor-screenline and narrow window
(elig0n)
Solution: Don't set right_col when width2 is 0 (zeertzjq).
fixes: vim/vim#15677closes: vim/vim#1567859149f0269
Problem: Wrong cursor-screenline when resizing window
Solution: Invalidate saved left_col and right_col when width1 or width2
change.
closes: vim/vim#1567986dc4f8b43
Problem:
The LSP omnifunc can insert nil bytes, which when read in other places
(like semantic token) could cause an error:
semantic_tokens.lua:304: Vim:E976: Using a Blob as a String
Solution:
Use `#line` instead of `vim.fn.strlen(line)`. Both return UTF-8 bytes
but the latter can't handle nil bytes.
Completion candidates can currently insert nil bytes, if other parts of
Alternative fix to https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/30359
Note that https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/30315 will avoid the
insertion of nil bytes from the LSP omnifunc, but the change of this PR
can more easily be backported.
This will ensure automatic backports created by the backport action does
not request reviewers (since the commit in question has already been
vetted and merged), but manual backports created by users does request
reviewers as these commits has not been vetted previously.
**Problem:** `vim.treesitter.get_parser` will throw an error if no parser
can be found.
- This means the caller is responsible for wrapping it in a `pcall`,
which is easy to forget
- It also makes it slightly harder to potentially memoize `get_parser`
in the future
- It's a bit unintuitive since many other `get_*` style functions
conventionally return `nil` if no object is found (e.g. `get_node`,
`get_lang`, `query.get`, etc.)
**Solution:** Return `nil` if no parser can be found or created
- This requires a function signature change, and some new assertions in
places where the parser will always (or should always) be found.
- This commit starts by making this change internally, since it is
breaking. Eventually it will be rolled out to the public API.
Ensure that the function `pick_call_hierarchy_item` correctly handles
the case where `call_hierarchy_items` is nil or an empty table. This
prevents potential errors when the function is called with no items.
Problem: filetype: swiftinterface files are not recognized
Solution: Detect '*.swiftinterface' files as swift filetype
(LosFarmosCTL)
closes: vim/vim#1565803cac4b70d
Co-authored-by: LosFarmosCTL <80157503+LosFarmosCTL@users.noreply.github.com>
By default spell checking is enabled for all text, but adding
`contains=@Spell` to syntax rules restricts spell checking to those
syntax rules. See `:help spell-syntax` for full details.
Variable names and headers are far more likely than comments to contain
spelling errors, so only enable spell checking in comments.
Introduced in https://github.com/xuhdev/syntax-dosini.vim/pull/8
cc @tobinjt
closes: vim/vim#15655c0982f9f79
Co-authored-by: John Tobin <johntobin@johntobin.ie>
Previously these would be cached in buffer-local variables and
would not change on :compiler pandoc
closes: vim/vim#15642d30ffdca49
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Groff MOM (Macros for Manuscripts) is a macro package for the GNU
troff (groff) typesetting system, a light-weight alternative
to LaTeX for professional-quality documents.
closes: vim/vim#156467cc0e9145d
Co-authored-by: Konfekt <Konfekt@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem: too many strlen() calls in option.c
Solution: refactor the code to reduce the number of strlen() calls
(John Marriott)
closes: vim/vim#1560495dacbb5fd
Co-authored-by: John Marriott <basilisk@internode.on.net>
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
Problem:
The name `os_inchar` (from Vim's old `mch_inchar`) is ambiguous:
"inchar" sounds like it could be reading or enqueuing (setting) input.
Its docstring is also ambiguous.
Solution:
- Rename `os_inchar` to `input_get`.
- Write some mf'ing docstrings.
- Add assert() in TRY_READ().
Problem:
str_utfindex_enc could return an error if the index was longer than the
line length. This was handled in each of the calls to it individually
Solution:
* Fix the call at the source level so that if the index is higher than
the line length, utf length is returned
Problem:
floating windows did not correctly inherit the NormalFloat highlight
group from the global namespace when it was not defined in the window-specific
namespace. This led to floating windows losing their background highlight when
switching between namespaces.
Solution:
Updated the window highlight logic in update_window_hl() to handle the fallback.
This fix resolves issues with floating window backgrounds not displaying as expected
in certain namespace configurations.
$NVIM_LOG_FILE: /Users/runner/work/neovim/neovim/build/.nvimlog
WRN 2024-09-08T21:48:13.279 ?.21134 vim_mktempdir:3281: $TMPDIR tempdir not a directory (or does not exist): TMPDIR-should-be-ignored
WRN 2024-09-08T21:48:13.312 ?.21137 vim_mktempdir:3281: $TMPDIR tempdir not a directory (or does not exist): TMPDIR-should-be-ignored
- `alter_slashes` belongs in `testutil.lua`, not `testnvim.lua`.
- `alter_slashes` is an unusual name. Rename it to `fix_slashes`.
- invert its behavior, to emphasize that `/` slashes are the preferred,
pervasive convention, not `\` slashes.
Problem:
If $NVIM_APPNAME is a relative dir path, Nvim fails to start its
primary/default server, and `v:servername` is empty.
Root cause is d34c64e342, but this wasn't
noticed until 96128a5076 started reporting the error more loudly.
Solution:
- `server_address_new`: replace slashes "/" in the appname before using
it as a servername.
- `vim_mktempdir`: always prefer the system-wide top-level "nvim.user/"
directory. That isn't intended to be specific to NVIM_APPNAME; rather,
each *subdirectory* ("nvim.user/xxx") is owned by each Nvim instance.
Nvim "apps" can be identified by the server socket(s) stored in those
per-Nvim subdirs.
fix#30256
Problem: vim.tbl_deep_extend had an undocumented feature where arrays
(integer-indexed tables) were not merged but compared literally (used
for merging default and user config, where one list should overwrite the
other completely). Turns out this behavior was relied on in quite a
number of plugins (even though it wasn't a robust solution even for that
use case, since lists of tables (e.g., plugin specs) can be array-like
as well).
Solution: Revert the removal of this special feature. Check for
list-like (contiguous integer indices) instead, as this is closer to the
intent. Document this behavior.
Problem:
$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR may be broken on WSL, which prevents starting (and even
building) Nvim. #30282
Solution:
- When startup fails, mention the servername in the error message.
- If an autogenerated server address fails, log an error and continue
with an empty `v:servername`. It's only fatal if a user provides a bad
`--listen` or `$NVIM_LISTEN_ADDRESS` address.
Before:
$ nvim --headless --listen ./hello.sock
nvim: Failed to --listen: "address already in use"
$ NVIM_LISTEN_ADDRESS='./hello.sock' ./build/bin/nvim --headless
nvim: Failed to --listen: "address already in use"
After:
$ nvim --headless --listen ./hello.sock
nvim: Failed to --listen: address already in use: "./hello.sock"
$ NVIM_LISTEN_ADDRESS='./hello.sock' ./build/bin/nvim --headless
nvim: Failed $NVIM_LISTEN_ADDRESS: address already in use: "./hello.sock"