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148 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
148 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
*job_control.txt* Nvim
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NVIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Thiago de Arruda
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Nvim job control *job* *job-control*
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Job control is a way to perform multitasking in Nvim, so scripts can spawn and
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control multiple processes without blocking the current Nvim instance.
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Type |gO| to see the table of contents.
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==============================================================================
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Concepts
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Job Id *job-id*
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Each job is identified by an integer id, unique for the life of the current
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Nvim session. Each job-id is a valid |channel-id|: they share the same "key
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space". Functions like |jobstart()| return job ids; functions like
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|jobstop()|, |chansend()|, |rpcnotify()|, and |rpcrequest()| take job ids.
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Job stdio streams form a |channel| which can send and receive raw bytes or
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|msgpack-rpc| messages.
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==============================================================================
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Usage *job-control-usage*
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To control jobs, use the "job…" family of functions: |jobstart()|,
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|jobstop()|, etc.
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Example: >vim
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function! s:OnEvent(job_id, data, event) dict
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if a:event == 'stdout'
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let str = self.shell.' stdout: '.join(a:data)
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elseif a:event == 'stderr'
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let str = self.shell.' stderr: '.join(a:data)
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else
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let str = self.shell.' exited'
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endif
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call append(line('$'), str)
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endfunction
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let s:callbacks = {
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\ 'on_stdout': function('s:OnEvent'),
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\ 'on_stderr': function('s:OnEvent'),
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\ 'on_exit': function('s:OnEvent')
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\ }
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let job1 = jobstart(['bash'], extend({'shell': 'shell 1'}, s:callbacks))
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let job2 = jobstart(['bash', '-c', 'for i in {1..10}; do echo hello $i!; sleep 1; done'], extend({'shell': 'shell 2'}, s:callbacks))
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To test the above script, copy it to a file ~/foo.vim and run it: >bash
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nvim -u ~/foo.vim
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<
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Description of what happens:
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- Two bash shells are spawned by |jobstart()| with their stdin/stdout/stderr
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streams connected to nvim.
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- The first shell is idle, waiting to read commands from its stdin.
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- The second shell is started with -c which executes the command (a for-loop
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printing 0 through 9) and then exits.
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- `OnEvent()` callback is passed to |jobstart()| to handle various job
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events. It displays stdout/stderr data received from the shells.
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For |on_stdout| and |on_stderr| see |channel-callback|.
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*on_exit*
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Arguments passed to on_exit callback:
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0: |job-id|
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1: Exit-code of the process, or 128+SIGNUM if by signal (e.g. 143 on SIGTERM).
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2: Event type: "exit"
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Note: Buffered stdout/stderr data which has not been flushed by the sender
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will not trigger the on_stdout/on_stderr callback (but if the process
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ends, the on_exit callback will be invoked).
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For example, "ruby -e" buffers output, so small strings will be
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buffered unless "auto-flushing" ($stdout.sync=true) is enabled. >vim
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function! Receive(job_id, data, event)
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echom printf('%s: %s',a:event,string(a:data))
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endfunction
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call jobstart(['ruby', '-e',
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\ '$stdout.sync = true; 5.times do sleep 1 and puts "Hello Ruby!" end'],
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\ {'on_stdout': 'Receive'})
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< https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/1592
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Note 2:
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Job event handlers may receive partial (incomplete) lines. For a given
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invocation of on_stdout/on_stderr, `a:data` is not guaranteed to end
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with a newline.
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- `abcdefg` may arrive as `['abc']`, `['defg']`.
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- `abc\nefg` may arrive as `['abc', '']`, `['efg']` or `['abc']`,
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`['','efg']`, or even `['ab']`, `['c','efg']`.
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Easy way to deal with this: initialize a list as `['']`, then append
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to it as follows: >vim
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let s:chunks = ['']
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func! s:on_stdout(job_id, data, event) dict
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let s:chunks[-1] .= a:data[0]
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call extend(s:chunks, a:data[1:])
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endf
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<
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The |jobstart-options| dictionary is passed as |self| to the callback.
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The above example could be written in this "object-oriented" style: >vim
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let Shell = {}
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function Shell.on_stdout(_job_id, data, event)
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call append(line('$'),
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\ printf('[%s] %s: %s', a:event, self.name, join(a:data[:-2])))
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endfunction
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let Shell.on_stderr = function(Shell.on_stdout)
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function Shell.on_exit(job_id, _data, event)
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let msg = printf('job %d ("%s") finished', a:job_id, self.name)
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call append(line('$'), printf('[%s] BOOM!', a:event))
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call append(line('$'), printf('[%s] %s!', a:event, msg))
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endfunction
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function Shell.new(name, cmd)
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let object = extend(copy(g:Shell), {'name': a:name})
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let object.cmd = ['sh', '-c', a:cmd]
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let object.id = jobstart(object.cmd, object)
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$
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return object
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endfunction
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let instance = Shell.new('bomb',
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\ 'for i in $(seq 9 -1 1); do echo $i 1>&$((i % 2 + 1)); sleep 1; done')
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<
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To send data to the job's stdin, use |chansend()|: >vim
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:call chansend(job1, "ls\n")
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:call chansend(job1, "invalid-command\n")
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:call chansend(job1, "exit\n")
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<
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A job may be killed with |jobstop()|: >vim
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:call jobstop(job1)
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<
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A job may be killed at any time with the |jobstop()| function:
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>vim
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:call jobstop(job1)
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<
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Individual streams can be closed without killing the job, see |chanclose()|.
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==============================================================================
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vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
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