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: Installing treesitter parser is hard (harder than
climbing to heaven).
Solution: Add optional support for wasm parsers with `wasmtime`.
Notes:
* Needs to be enabled by setting `ENABLE_WASMTIME` for tree-sitter and
Neovim. Build with
`make CMAKE_EXTRA_FLAGS=-DENABLE_WASMTIME=ON
DEPS_CMAKE_FLAGS=-DENABLE_WASMTIME=ON`
* Adds optional Rust (obviously) and C11 dependencies.
* Wasmtime comes with a lot of features that can negatively affect
Neovim performance due to library and symbol table size. Make sure to
build with minimal features and full LTO.
* To reduce re-compilation times, install `sccache` and build with
`RUSTC_WRAPPER=<path/to/sccache> make ...`
Problem: Adding support for modern Nvim features (reflow, OSC 8, full
utf8/emoji support) requires coupling libvterm to Nvim internals
(e.g., utf8proc).
Solution: Vendor libvterm at v0.3.3.
Problem: the zip plugin is not tested.
Solution: include tests (Damien)
closes: vim/vim#15411d7af21e746
Co-authored-by: Damien <141588647+xrandomname@users.noreply.github.com>
Previously the label was not added if the backport PR was created
manually. The new code is also easier to maintain as it's close to other
label-related code.
Since lintcommit is a required check, it will always need to be run.
However, the lintcommit script is not designed to work on PRs that
doesn't target master branch (and it's not clear whether it's even
desirable).
To circumvent this we create a "dummy" lintcommit check that is run on
release branches that always passes, thus fulfilling the condition of
the required check.
Github doesn't allow workflows to be run from the `github-actions`
account, which is the default account. This caused the CI on backport
PRs to not be run. The way to circumvent this is to use a token that
essentially "pretends" to be another user, which in turn triggers the CI
as desired.
Also run lintcommit on release branches as that is now a required check,
meaning it must always be run.
Auto-merging is a useful feature by github, but it requires required
checks which requires a few adjustments. The primary change is that
required checks can't use `paths` or `paths-ignore` as that risks not
running the job, and required checks must always be run.
A workaround for this is to introduce a dummy workflow which is used for
every path not used in the real workflow. That way the required job is
"always" run as far as github is concerned. The workaround is unweildly
so it's only useful to do it for costly workflows where the potential
benefits are big. If not it's better to simply remove any `paths` or
`paths-ignore` from a workflow instead.
This patch replaces fswatch with inotifywait from inotify-toools:
https://github.com/inotify-tools/inotify-tools
fswatch takes ~1min to set up recursively for the Samba source code
directory. inotifywait needs less than a second to do the same thing.
https://github.com/emcrisostomo/fswatch/issues/321
Also it fswatch seems to be unmaintained in the meantime.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Schneider <asn@cryptomilk.org>
`[Backport release-x.y]` will no longer be part of the pull request
title. This means the PR titles will go from looking like
```
[Backport release-0.9] fix(languagetree): remove double recursion in LanguageTree:parse
```
to
```
fix(languagetree): remove double recursion in LanguageTree:parse
```
The benefit of this is that pull requests merged with the "Squash and
Merge" strategy (which uses the PR title as the commit message), will
still follow the conventional commits specification. This will help
tools that rely on conventional commits such as git-cliff.
The `backport` label is added to backported PRs to help distinguish
between backport PRs with regular PRs in the "Pull Requests" tab on
github.
To reduce confusion with the `backport` label, the label to trigger the
backporting has been changed from `backport release-x.y` to
`ci:backport release-x.y`. This is also more consistent with other
labels that trigger a CI job which all use the `ci:` prefix.
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.
Python 3.12+ throws an error if you try to install a package in an
externally managed environment. Using `--break-system-packages` is not
recommended for personal use, but for CI it should be fine and is
probably the most straightforward solution.
`github.ref` is now defined for both pull requests and pushes, meaning
that it can be used to simplify the concurrency group.
`cancel-in-progress` is set to true only if the trigger is a pull
request, as we don't want master runs to cancel each other out.
Setting the label `ci:skip-news` will skip the job. This is useful for
maintainers to indicate to contributors that a feature isn't big enough
to warrant a news entry, or for contributors who dislike red CI even if
there's nothing wrong.
Also change label `ci-s390x` to `ci:s390x`; this way it'll be easier to
see that `ci:` are a subcategory of labels that affect CI in some way.
Problem:
vim._watch.watchdirs has terrible performance.
Solution:
- On linux use fswatch as a watcher backend if available.
- Add File watcher section to health:vim.lsp. Warn if watchfunc is
libuv-poll.
Problem:
The documentation flow (`gen_vimdoc.py`) has several issues:
- it's not very versatile
- depends on doxygen
- doesn't work well with Lua code as it requires an awkward filter script to convert it into pseudo-C.
- The intermediate XML files and filters makes it too much like a rube goldberg machine.
Solution:
Re-implement the flow using Lua, LPEG and treesitter.
- `gen_vimdoc.py` is now replaced with `gen_vimdoc.lua` and replicates a portion of the logic.
- `lua2dox.lua` is gone!
- No more XML files.
- Doxygen is now longer used and instead we now use:
- LPEG for comment parsing (see `scripts/luacats_grammar.lua` and `scripts/cdoc_grammar.lua`).
- LPEG for C parsing (see `scripts/cdoc_parser.lua`)
- Lua patterns for Lua parsing (see `scripts/luacats_parser.lua`).
- Treesitter for Markdown parsing (see `scripts/text_utils.lua`).
- The generated `runtime/doc/*.mpack` files have been removed.
- `scripts/gen_eval_files.lua` now instead uses `scripts/cdoc_parser.lua` directly.
- Text wrapping is implemented in `scripts/text_utils.lua` and appears to produce more consistent results (the main contributer to the diff of this change).
Splitting it on word boundaries rather than only spaces allows for better
detection. The issue labeler previously didn't catch titles such as
`treesitter: noisy "Invalid node type" error`.
Co-authored-by: casswedson <casswedson@users.noreply.github.com>
Run the release workflow on macos-14 to use faster M1 runners.
Lock the deployment target to the oldest supported version (11.0,
due to libuv support) instead of relying on the host OS version.
Problem: No test coverage on ARM.
Solution: Add `macos-14` tests, which now run on M1. Skip unit tests as these don't work on M1, see #26145. Also test universal build on M1.
Note: `macos-14` will be `macos-latest` in Q2 2024, so we'll want to switch these to keep Intel and unittest coverage on macos (while GH still offers Intel runners).
Explicitly set the build type for both deps and Nvim. They are already
explicitly set on Windows to RelWithDebInfo. Now also explicitly set
them to Debug on POSIX.