The "technically correct" interpretation is to execute the first line
that is seen (and this is what happens on middle-click paste in Vim).
^M is only intended to "defuse" the newline, so the user can review it.
The parent commit changed the behavior to insert <Space> between lines,
but that's a higher-risk change: it is arguably possible that some user
*wants* the literal ^M chars when e.g. assigning to a register:
:let @a='<C-R>b'
To avoid that risk, keep the old behavior and only omit the last ^M.
This makes `yy:<C-R>0` nicer at no cost.
^M isn't any more "correct" than space: the "technically correct"
interpretation is to execute the first line that is seen (and this is
what happens on middle-click paste in Vim). ^M is only intended to
defuse the newline, so that the user can review the command. We can do
that with a space instead, and then the command can be executed without
having to fix it up first.
1. When calling writefile(list, fname, []) do not show error message twice.
2. Do not allow file name to be overwritten for writefile([1], 2).
3. Do not show “Can’t open file with an empty name” error after error like
“using Float as a String” when type of the second argument is not correct.
4. Do not give multiple error messages and still continue for code like
`writefile(["test", [], [], [], "tset"])`.
Note that to fix 4. ideally I need tv_check_str_or_nr which is currently present
in two PRs: #6114 and #5119. I would want to avoid copying this function into
a yet another PR.
Ref vim/vim#1476.
- Do not exclude any directories from `find` search, remove dumps before tests
instead.
- Install `apport` on travis so that linux tests should produce core dumps
(based on information from travis-ci/travis-ci#3754, not sure whether it still
applies).
- Check cores in lua so that one has an idea which test is failing exactly. Do
this only 10% of time on linux because traversing the file system is slow.
Unit tests are still not touched, though it is what `app` argument in
`check_cores` is for.
TODO? consider using `find`, it may be faster. Consider retiring `os.execute`,
dealing with escaping is bad.
- Add support for TEST_FILE to the `oldtest` target, for consistency
with the busted/lua tests.
Caveat: with the busted/lua tests TEST_FILE takes a full path, whereas
for `oldtest` it must be "test_foo.res".
- Add support for NVIM_PRG, again so that all test-related targets are
consistent.
- Use consistent name for NVIM_PRG. But still need to support NVIM_PROG
for QuickBuild CI.
Note: The `oldtest` target is driven by the top-level Makefile, because
it requires a TTY. CMake 3.2 added a USES_TERMINAL flag to
add_custom_target(). But we support CMake 2.8...
add_custom_target(oldtest
COMMAND make clean
COMMAND make NVIM_PRG=$<TARGET_FILE:nvim> $ENV{MAKEOVERRIDES}
DEPENDS nvim
WORKING_DIRECTORY "${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/nvim/testdir"
USES_TERMINAL true
)
patch 8.0.0280: problem setting multi-byte environment var on MS-Windows
Problem: On MS-Windows setting an environment variable with multi-byte
strings does not work well.
Solution: Use wputenv when possible. (Taro Muraoka, Ken Takata)
7c23d1d9d9cc
This was a workaround from long ago, but it doesn't seem to be needed
anymore. And it breaks the $PATH on the Windows build (AppVeyor CI).
After this change python3 (and 2) is correctly detected on AppVeyor CI.
References #5946
This allows executables to be found by :!, system(), and executable() if
they live next to ("sibling" to) nvim.exe. This is what gvim on Windows
does, and also matches the behavior of Win32 SearchPath().
c4a249a736/src/os_win32.c (L354-L370)
When test/functional/eval/system_spec.lua is run on its own,
helpers.os_name() was being called before a session had been created.
This caused that describe block to fail.
Turning printargs_path into a function delays the call of
helpers.os_name() until the test is being run, which ensures a session
is available.
memcpy is not equivalent to memmove (which is used by vim_strcat), this
could cause subtle bugs if xstrlcat is used as a replacement for
vim_strcat. But vim_strcat is inconsistent: in the `else` branch it uses
strcpy, which doesn't allow overlap.
Helped-by: oni-link <knil.ino@gmail.com>
Helped-by: James McCoy <jamessan@jamessan.com>
Helped-by: Nikolai Aleksandrovich Pavlov <kp-pav@yandex.ru>
Previously alternate branches were not accounted for properly, with this
change g- after an undo to a branch point works.
The current sequence number b_u_seq_cur is used in undo_time(), in
u_doit() this was calculated by subtracting one from the curhead
sequence number.
The curhead header entry represents the change that was just undone, so
the sequence number we want is that of the change we have moved to. This
is the sequence number of the undo head that is the uh_next element of
this curhead. That sequence number is not always one less than the
curhead sequence number -- there may have been an alternate branch at
this point.
Instead of subtracting one, we now directly find the sequence number of
curhead->uh_next.
This default causes too much confusion for terminal users. Until
a better approach is implemented, revert to the traditional default.
Better solution would be:
- Implement a right-click menu for TUI
- Set 'mouse=a' *only* if clipboard is working.
Closes#5938
`find_command(s->ca.cmdchar) >= 0` was established near the start of
normal_execute(). And `unshift_special(&s->ca);` "should" not ever
result in s->ca.cmdchar containing a multibyte char.
So only an assert() is needed here.
Also give NVIM_TUI_ENABLE_CURSOR_SHAPE more granularity:
0 = do not change cursor shape
1 = non-blinking ("steady") cursor with mode-sensitive shape
2 = blinking cursor with mode-sensitive shape
Note: blink state is not changed for Konsole, instead user's terminal
preference makes the decision. (Can't do that for xterm-likes, DECSCUSR
forces us to choose blink-state.)
This is a temporary step until the TUI respects 'guicursor'
Ref: https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/2583#issuecomment-272988384
Test sometimes fails on AppVeyor (Windows). 300/50=6, but there could be
environment factors that miss the timer interval on the "edges".
timer_start() does not have such a hard requirement.
- Default to powershell.
- Avoid hardcoded "-c".
- Remove ^M character from received lines.
- pending_win32(): clear() is unnecessary and it pollutes the tests.
Closes#3973
Helped-by: Rui Abreu Ferreira <raf-ep@gmx.com>
When there is a difference in expected vs. actual row count, the user
gets a confusing message about being unable to string concat a nil value
from screen:expect.
This assert makes it clear what the problem is rather than requiring
people to dig through the code of screen:expect to determine what
happened.
Note some bugs were judged to have too ugly a fix to solve, tests to
demonstrate these problems, and the explanation behind not fixing them
are below.
describe('register . problems', function()
before_each(reset)
-- The difficulty here is: The basic requirement is that the text
-- inserted is treated as if it were typed in insert mode. This is why
-- the paste method is to enter insert mode and enter the ". register
-- into readbuf1.
-- We can't add a count into the readbuf here because the insert mode
-- count is implemented with readbuf2 which is checked for characters
-- after readbuf1.
-- Hence, the ".gp command (which adds extra characters into readbuf1
-- to emulate leaving the cursor after the text by moving the cursor
-- after inserting the text) would insert the motion characters into
-- the buffer instead of using them to move after the insert has been
-- done.
-- I could probably get this working properly with a special flag put
-- into start_redo_ins() and set in do_put(), but I think this adds
-- much more complexity than fixing this bug justifies.
pending('should not change the ". register with ".2p', function()
local orig_register = funcs.getreg('.')
feed('2".p')
eq(orig_register, funcs.getreg('.'))
end)
describe("cursor positioning after undo and redo with '.'", function()
before_each(reset)
local function make_cursor_test(macro_string)
return function()
feed(macro_string)
local afterpos = funcs.getcurpos()
local orig_string = curbuf_contents()
feed('u.')
eq(afterpos, funcs.getcurpos())
expect(orig_string)
end
end
-- The difficulty here is: setting the cursor after the end of the
-- pasted text is done by adding a motion command to the
-- stuffbuffer after the insert.
-- Modifying 'redobuff' is done in the code that handles inserting
-- text and moving around.
-- I could add a special case in ins_esc() that checks for a flag
-- set in do_put() to add the motion character to the redo buffer,
-- but I think that is starting to get way too convoluted for the
-- benefit.
pending('should be the same after ".gp and ".gpu.',
make_cursor_test('".gp'))
-- The difficulty here is: putting forwards is implemented by using
-- 'a' instead of 'i' to start insert.
-- Undoing with 'u' an insert that began with 'a' leaves the cursor
-- where the first character was inserted, not where the cursor was
-- when the 'a' was pressed.
-- We account for this the first time by saving the cursor position
-- in do_put(), but this isn't stored in redobuff for a second time
-- around.
-- We can't change how such a fundamental action as undo after
-- inserting with 'a' behaves, we could add in a special case
-- whereby we set a flag in do_put() and read it when entering
-- insert mode but this seems like way too much to fix such a minor
-- bug.
pending('should be the same after ".pu. and ".pu.u.',
make_cursor_test('".pu.'))
end)
end)
Also make setpos("'A", [999, 1, 1, 0]) fail, i.e. return -1 (assuming there is no buffer 999).
Fixes#5713
Background:
`:help setpos()` mentions an argument `"bufnum"` that determines the buffer a mark should be put in.
This argument is respected for uppercase marks, but not for lowercase marks.
This is reasonable (though I personally would like `setpos()` to be able to set marks in other buffers), but the help doesn't mention this anywhere.
It's also strange that attempting to change buffers with `setpos('.', [bufnr('#'), 1, 1, 0])` alerts the user that having a different buffer is an error, while attempting to set a mark with `setpos("'d", [bufnr('#'), 1, 1, 0])` doesn't tell the user that the `"bufnum"` argument is an error.
While a job callback is active, it may be invoked again. Since the
data handled by the first invocation of the callback hasn't been marked
as consumed, the subsequent invocation will see the same data.
Reported-by: Daniel Hahler
Patch-by: oni-link
Closes#5889
This fixes a use-after-free noticed by ASAN which would occur when a
dictwatcher was still active on a dictionary when the dictionary was
freed.
fun! MakeWatch()
let d = {'foo': 'bar'}
call dictwatcheradd(d, 'foo', function('...'))
endfun
Patch-by: oni-link
Closes#5930
Do _not_ set v:shell_error on parameter validation error.
system([...]) does not invoke a shell, so this change is somewhat
questionable. But `:help v:shell_error` is sufficiently vague to allow
-1 in this case.
After #4964 environment variables in the XDG "fallback" table are no
longer expanded.
Fallback to correctly expanded $LOCALAPPDATA, $TEMP. If that fails
(unlikely), fallback to hard-coded paths (e.g. ~/AppData/Local).
Closes#5255
On Windows, if the nvim process has a directory open the lua process
cannot remove it. After failing once, it's safe to force `nvim` to the
top-level directory. Then try again.
- Eliminate global test_autochdir.
- Eliminate VimL function test_autochdir()
- Use a lua test instead. Fails correctly after reverting
0c43479979 / vim-patch:7.4.2015.
- Improve test reliability by only checking for a line with the string
we are interested in ("Interrupt").
- Try to avoid OOM by loading an existing big file instead of looping to
create one.
Keeps arguments separated and not joined as a single string as long as possible.
Abstracts away additional arguments so that Gcc:preprocess should work for
compilers with different conventions should they be supported.
Works by saving all preprocessor defines and reusing them on each run. This also
saves NVIM_HEADER_H defines. Saving other defines is needed for defines like
`Map(foo, bar)` which are sometimes used to declare types or functions. Saving
types or function declarations is not needed because they are recorded as luajit
state.
Fixes#5857
Also fixed dumping of partials by encode_vim_to_object and added code which is
able to work with partials and dictionaries to test/unit/eval/helpers.lua
(mostly copied from #5119, except for partials handling).
Occurs when trying to dump a partial with attached self dictionary which
references that partial. “Infinite” loop should normally result in Neovim killed
by OOM killer.
Also moved the place when partials are unreferenced by clear_tv: from
…FUNC_START to …FUNC_END.
This ameliorates use-cases like:
:!cat foo.txt
:make
where the user is interested in the last few lines of output.
Try these shell-based ex-commands before/after this commit:
:grep -r '' *
:make
:!yes
:!grep -r '' *
:!git grep ''
:!cat foo
:!echo foo
:!while true; do date; done
:!for i in `seq 1 20000`; do echo XXXXXXXXXX $i; done
In all cases the last few lines of the command should always be shown,
regardless of where throttling was triggered.
Periodically skip :! spam. This is a "cheat" that works for all UIs and greatly
improves responsiveness when :! spams MB or GB of output:
:!yes
:!while true; do date; done
:!git grep ''
:grep -r '' *
After ~10KB of data is seen from a single :! invocation, output will be skipped
for ~1s and three dots "..." will pulse in the bottom-left. Thereafter the
behavior alternates at every:
* 10KB received
* ~1s throttled
This also avoids out-of-memory which could happen with large :! outputs.
Note: This commit does not change the behavior of execute(':!foo').
execute(':!foo') returns the string ':!foo^M', it captures *only* Vim
messages, *not* shell command output. Vim behaves the same way.
Use system('foo') for capturing shell command output.
Closes#1234
Helped-by: oni-link <knil.ino@gmail.com>
Closes#1234
multiqueue:
- Implement multiqueue_size()
- Rename MultiQueueItem.parent to MultiQueueItem.parent_item, to avoid confusion
with MultiQueue.parent.