Problem: Calling :stopinsert from RPC while in terminal-mode does not
go back to normal-mode.
Solution: Implement a check() handler for state_enter(), adapted from
insert_check().
Fix#7807
appveyor.yml: set cache to an absolute path.
Desperate attempt to get AppVeyor cache to work.
My assumption in a7a56293aa#9852 that that different jobs were
overwriting each other's cache is probably wrong: AppVeyor
docs/discussions hint that the cache is per-config (though I haven't
found a clear, unambiguous statement as such).
Travis is phasing out its support for containers, so we remove the `sudo:
false`, which will be a no-op soon.
Reference: https://blog.travis-ci.com/2018-11-19-required-linux-infrastructure-migration
Changes for Linux:
- Xenial comes with libtool installed already. It only provides "libtoolize",
though. For "libtool" we need to install libtool-bin.
Give variables a default value to pass strict mode.
$ErrorActionPreference defines the default behavior
if a powershell command fails.
If it's set to 'stop', then it aborts the script
on the first unresolved error.
This behavior extends to native programs like cmake
but do not depend on it.
https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell/issues/3996
Despite #9095, `brew upgrade python` broke again, somehow.
We should not bother attempting to force a python version. Instead use
whatever python Travis provides on the macOS image.
PR #9087 changed the error string by removing 'Running', breaking the
MSBuild hack detecting failure for functional tests. If stdout or stderr
has a line with 'functional tests failed with error', fail the build.
After bumping Travis macOS to 10.13, it now hangs at:
+ check_core_dumps --delete quiet
+ local del=
+ test --delete = --delete
+ del=1
+ shift
+ local app=quiet
+ test osx = osx
++ find /cores/ -type f -print
+ local 'cores=/cores//core.554
/cores//core.641
/cores//core.801'
+ test -z '/cores//core.554
/cores//core.641
/cores//core.801'
+ local core
+ for core in '$cores'
+ test 1 = 1
+ print_core quiet /cores//core.554
+ local app=quiet
+ local core=/cores//core.554
+ test quiet = quiet
+ echo 'Found core /cores//core.554'
Found core /cores//core.554
+ return 0
+ rm /cores//core.554
override r-------- root/admin for /cores//core.554?
The cores are always present on the Travis macOS 10.13 image! Hilarious.
homebrew or Travis changed something, now `pip3` isn't in $PATH.
`ls /usr/local/opt/python/libexec/bin` confirmed this, no matter what
brew reinstall/relink/upgrade are used.
Bumping the macOS image to 10.12 or 10.13 makes the problem go away.
==> Processing gcc49 formula rename to gcc@4.9
==> Unlinking gcc49
==> Moving gcc49 versions to /usr/local/Cellar/gcc@4.9
==> Relinking gcc@4.9
Warning: gcc@4.9 is outdated!
To avoid broken installations, as soon as possible please run:
brew upgrade
Or, if you're OK with a less reliable fix:
brew upgrade gcc@4.9
python info:
Python 2.7.12
Python 2.7.12
ci/before_install.sh: line 18: python3: command not found
pip 8.1.2 from /usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages (python 2.7)
pip 8.1.2 from /usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages (python 2.7)
ci/before_install.sh: line 21: pip3: command not found
pyenv versions:
* system (set by /Users/travis/.pyenv/version)
Upgrade Python 3.
To restore the stashed changes to /usr/local/Homebrew run:
'cd /usr/local/Homebrew && git stash pop'
==> Caveats
Python has been installed as
/usr/local/bin/python3
Unversioned symlinks `python`, `python-config`, `pip` etc. pointing to
`python3`, `python3-config`, `pip3` etc., respectively, have been installed into
/usr/local/opt/python/libexec/bin
If you need Homebrew's Python 2.7 run
brew install python@2
Pip, setuptools, and wheel have been installed. To update them run
pip3 install --upgrade pip setuptools wheel
You can install Python packages with
pip3 install <package>
They will install into the site-package directory
/usr/local/lib/python3.7/site-packages
See: https://docs.brew.sh/Homebrew-and-Python
==> Summary
º /usr/local/Cellar/python/3.7.0: 8,864 files, 153.8MB, built in 6 minutes 32 seconds
...
Upgrade Python 3 pip.
ci/before_install.sh: line 30: pip3: command not found
travis_time🔚0d23f522:start=1538818824750644000,finish=1538819451424021000,duration=626673377000
The command "ci/before_install.sh" failed and exited with 127 during .
Your build has been stopped.
/Users/travis/.travis/job_stages: line 373: shell_session_update: command not found
==> Processing gcc49 formula rename to gcc@4.9
==> Unlinking gcc49
==> Moving gcc49 versions to /usr/local/Cellar/gcc@4.9
==> Relinking gcc@4.9
Warning: gcc@4.9 is outdated!
To avoid broken installations, as soon as possible please run:
brew upgrade
Or, if you're OK with a less reliable fix:
brew upgrade gcc@4.9
python info:
Python 2.7.12
Python 2.7.12
ci/before_install.sh: line 18: python3: command not found
pip 8.1.2 from /usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages (python 2.7)
pip 8.1.2 from /usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages (python 2.7)
ci/before_install.sh: line 21: pip3: command not found
pyenv versions:
* system (set by /Users/travis/.pyenv/version)
Upgrade Python 3.
To restore the stashed changes to /usr/local/Homebrew run:
'cd /usr/local/Homebrew && git stash pop'
==> Caveats
Python has been installed as
/usr/local/bin/python3
Unversioned symlinks `python`, `python-config`, `pip` etc. pointing to
`python3`, `python3-config`, `pip3` etc., respectively, have been installed into
/usr/local/opt/python/libexec/bin
If you need Homebrew's Python 2.7 run
brew install python@2
Pip, setuptools, and wheel have been installed. To update them run
pip3 install --upgrade pip setuptools wheel
You can install Python packages with
pip3 install <package>
They will install into the site-package directory
/usr/local/lib/python3.7/site-packages
See: https://docs.brew.sh/Homebrew-and-Python
==> Summary
º /usr/local/Cellar/python/3.7.0: 8,864 files, 153.8MB, built in 6 minutes 32 seconds
...
Upgrade Python 3 pip.
ci/before_install.sh: line 30: pip3: command not found
travis_time🔚0d23f522:start=1538818824750644000,finish=1538819451424021000,duration=626673377000
The command "ci/before_install.sh" failed and exited with 127 during .
Your build has been stopped.
/Users/travis/.travis/job_stages: line 373: shell_session_update: command not found
Currently the "gcov" build always fails on AppVeyor. It makes the builds
very slow, so disable it for PRs until the problem is fixed.
closes#8911closes#8912
a369385009 fixed this for "~/.cache/nvim-deps/", but strangely not for
"~/.cache/nvim-deps-downloads/".
ref a369385009
ref #8316
ref #8281
Seen in https://travis-ci.org/neovim/neovim/jobs/414982972 :
Using third-party dependencies from Travis cache (last update: Aug 11 23:00:15 2018).
cp: /Users/travis/build/neovim/neovim/deps-downloads/nvim-deps-downloads/…/nvim-deps-downloads/libvterm/a9c7c6fd20fa35e0ad3e0e98901ca12dfca9c25c.tar.gz:
name too long (not copied)
macOS travis builds recently started failing (travis caches were cleared
recently, maybe related). python2 is reasonably covered by linux CI. Not
going to waste time on it for macOS CI.
==> Installing python@2
==> Downloading https://homebrew.bintray.com/bottles/python@2-2.7.14_3.el_capita
==> Pouring python@2-2.7.14_3.el_capitan.bottle.tar.gz
Error: The `brew link` step did not complete successfully
The formula built, but is not symlinked into /usr/local
Could not symlink bin/2to3-2
Target /usr/local/bin/2to3-2
is a symlink belonging to python. You can unlink it:
brew unlink python
To force the link and overwrite all conflicting files:
brew link --overwrite python@2
To list all files that would be deleted:
brew link --overwrite --dry-run python@2
Possible conflicting files are:
/usr/local/bin/2to3-2 -> /usr/local/Cellar/python/2.7.12_1/bin/2to3-2
/usr/local/bin/2to3-2.7 -> /usr/local/Cellar/python/2.7.12_1/bin/2to3-2.7
/usr/local/bin/idle -> /usr/local/Cellar/python/2.7.12_1/bin/idle
...
Homebrew changed a few formulae to meet their standards. "python3" was renamed
to "python", and "python2" to "python@2".
As for why, read this announcement: https://brew.sh/2018/01/19/homebrew-1.5.0
Since we install Python 3 via homebrew anyway, we now do the same for Python 2
as well. We do that because the system Python 2 of macOS comes without pip
installed and this way seems cleaner than doing "sudo easy_install pip".
The Python 2 formula is keg-only now, so it doesn't interfere with the system
Python 2. Therefore we have to add its executables to $PATH ourselves.