Copy four files from Vim v8.2.1432.
Try to match Vim's test_alot.vim.
This marks Vim patch 8.2.0164 as ported:
vim-patch:8.2.0164: test_alot takes too long
Problem: Test_alot takes too long.
Solution: Run several tests individually.
842931cd7a
os_proc_children returns 2 if there's a failure in the underlying
syscall. Only shell out to pgrep in that case.
It returns 1 if the pid isn't found. In that case, we can roll forward
with returning an empty list.
--clean is supposed to emulate a "fresh install" and since Neovim
enables filetype detection and syntax highlighting by default, these
should be enabled when using --clean as well.
`:verbose` didn't work properly with lua configs (For example:
options or keymaps are set from lua, just say that they were set
from lua, doesn't say where they were set at.
This fixes that issue. Now `:verbose` will provide filename and line no
when option/keymap is set from lua.
Changes:
- compiles lua/vim/keymap.lua as vim/keymap.lua
- When souring a lua file current_sctx.sc_sid is set to SID_LUA
- Moved finding scripts SID out of `do_source()` to `get_current_script_id()`.
So it can be reused for lua files.
- Added new function `nlua_get_sctx` that extracts current lua scripts
name and line no with debug library. And creates a sctx for it.
NOTE: This function ignores C functions and blacklist which
currently contains only vim/_meta.lua so vim.o/opt wrappers aren't
targeted.
- Added function `nlua_set_sctx` that changes provided sctx to current
lua scripts sctx if a lua file is being executed.
- Added tests in tests/functional/lua/verbose_spec.lua
- add primary support for additional types (:autocmd, :function, :syntax) to lua verbose
Note: These can't yet be directly set from lua but once that's possible
:verbose should work for them hopefully :D
- add :verbose support for nvim_exec & nvim_command within lua
Currently auto commands/commands/functions ... can only be defined
by nvim_exec/nvim_command this adds support for them. Means if those
Are defined within lua with vim.cmd/nvim_exec :verbose will show their
location . Though note it'll show the line no on which nvim_exec call was made.
Works similar to ex <f-args>. It only splits the arguments if the
command has more than one posible argument. In cases were the command
can only have 1 argument opts.fargs = { opts.args }