Problem: Comparing two NULL list fails.
Solution: Change the order of comparing two lists.
7b293c730b
N/A patches for version.c:
vim-patch:8.2.1187: terminal2 test sometimes hangs in the GUI on Travis
Problem: Terminal2 test sometimes hangs in the GUI on Travis.
Solution: Disable Test_zz2_terminal_guioptions_bang() for now.
c85156bb89
vim-patch:8.2.1188: memory leak with invalid json input
Problem: Memory leak with invalid json input.
Solution: Free all keys at the end. (Dominique Pellé, closesvim/vim#6443,
closesvim/vim#6442)
6d3a7213f5
vim-patch:8.2.1196: build failure with normal features
Problem: Build failure with normal features.
Solution: Add #ifdef.
83e7450053
vim-patch:8.2.1198: terminal2 test sometimes hangs in the GUI on Travis
Problem: Terminal2 test sometimes hangs in the GUI on Travis.
Solution: Move test function to terminal3 to see if the problem moves too.
a4b442614c
Problem: Dict and list could be GC'ed while displaying error in a timer.
(Yasuhiro Matsumoto)
Solution: Block garbage collection when executing a timer. Add
test_garbagecollect_soon(). Add "no_wait_return" to
test_override(). (closesvim/vim#4571)
adc6714aac
The test.functional.helpers and test.unit.helpers modules now include
all of the public functions from test.helpers, so there is no need to
separately require('test.helpers').
Currently supported nodes:
- Register as it is one of the simplest value nodes (even numbers are
not that simple with that dot handling).
- Plus, both unary and binary.
- Parenthesis, both nesting and calling.
Note regarding unit tests: it stores data for AST in highlighting in
strings in place of tables because luassert fails to do a good job at
representing big tables. Squashing a bunch of data into a single string
simply yields more readable result.
Not using enum{} because SIZE_MAX exceeds integer and I do not really like how
enum definition is described in C99:
1. Even though all values must fit into the chosen type (6.7.2.2, p 4) the type
to choose is still implementation-defined.
2. 6.4.4.3 explicitly states that “an identifier declared as an enumeration
constant has type `int`”. So it looks like “no matter what type was chosen
for enumeration, constants will be integers”. Yet the following simple
program:
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stddef.h>
enum { X=SIZE_MAX };
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
printf("x:%zu m:%zu t:%zu v:%zu",
sizeof(X), sizeof(SIZE_MAX), sizeof(size_t), (size_t)X);
}
yields one of the following using different compilers:
- clang/gcc/pathcc: `x:8 m:8 t:8 v:18446744073709551615`
- pcc/tcc: `x:4 m:8 t:8 v:1844674407370955161`
If I remove the cast of X to size_t then pcc/tcc both yield `x:4 m:8 t:8
v:4294967295`, other compilers’ output does not change.
All compilers were called with `$compiler -std=c99 -xc -` (feeding program
from echo), except for `tcc` which has missing `-std=c99`. `pcc` seems to
ignore the argument though: it is perfectly fine with `-std=c1000`.
Also fixes incorrect location of `tv_dict_add` function and three bugs in other
functions:
1. `tv_dict_add_list` may free list it does not own (vim/vim#1555).
2. `tv_dict_add_dict` may free dictionary it does not own (vim/vim#1555).
3. `tv_dict_add_dict` ignores `key_len` argument.