Problem: Using a range for window and buffer commands has a few
problems.
Cannot specify the type of range for a user command.
Solution: Add the -addr argument for user commands. Fix problems.
(Marcin Szamotulski
https://code.google.com/p/vim/source/detail?name=v7-4-542
Problem: Value of v:hlsearch reflects an internal variable.
Solution: Make the value reflect whether search highlighting is actually
displayed. (Christian Brabandt)
https://github.com/vim/vim/releases/tag/v7-4-537
This commit integrates libvterm with Neovim and implements a terminal emulator
with nvim buffers as the display mechanism. Terminal buffers can be created
using any of the following methods:
- Opening a file with name following the "term://[${cwd}//[${pid}:]]${cmd}"
URI pattern where:
- cwd is the working directory of the process
- pid is the process id. This is just for use in session files where a pid
would have been assigned to the saved buffer title.
- cmd is the command to run
- Invoking the `:terminal` ex command
- Invoking the `termopen` function which returns a job id for automating the
terminal window.
Some extra changes were also implemented to adapt with terminal buffers. Here's
an overview:
- The `main` function now sets a BufReadCmd autocmd to intercept the term:// URI
and spawn the terminal buffer instead of reading the file.
- terminal buffers behave as if the following local buffer options were set:
- `nomodifiable`
- `swapfile`
- `undolevels=-1`
- `bufhidden=hide`
- All commands that delete buffers(`:bun`, `:bd` and `:bw`) behave the same for
terminal buffers, but only work when bang is passed(eg: `:bwipeout!`)
- A new "terminal" mode was added. A consequence is that a new set of mapping
commands were implemented with the "t" prefix(tmap, tunmap, tnoremap...)
- The `edit` function(which enters insert mode) will actually enter terminal
mode if the current buffer is a terminal
- The `put` operator was adapted to send data to the terminal instead of
modifying the buffer directly.
- A window being resized will also trigger a terminal resize if the window
displays the terminal.
Problem : String not null terminated @ 1543.
Diagnostic : Real issue.
Rationale : We are reading a struct block0, which contains some string
fields, from a file, without checking for string fields to
be correctly terminated. That could cause a buffer overrun
if file has somehow been garbled.
Resolution : Add string fields check for nul termination.
Mark issue as intentional (there seems to be no way of
teaching coverity about read_eintr being ok that way).
Helped-by: oni-link <knil.ino@gmail.com>
- Removed term.c, term.h and term_defs.h
- Tests for T_* values were removed. screen.c was simplified as a
consequence(the best strategy for drawing is implemented in the UI layer)
- Redraw functions now call ui.c functions directly. Updates are flushed with
`ui_flush()`
- Removed all termcap options(they now return empty strings for compatibility)
- &term/&ttybuiltin options return a constant value(nvim)
- &t_Co is still available, but it mirrors t_colors directly
- Remove cursor tracking from screen.c and the `screen_start` function. Now the
UI is expected to maintain cursor state across any call, and reset it when
resized.
- Remove unused code
Allow globals.h to be included without including vim.h. Another small piece
of the puzzle of dismantling vim.h.
Moving some extra `#define`'s to globals.h is no better than having them in
vim.h. We should, in a later PR, move them to the file where they belong or
to a separate `constants.h` or something.
Should be better than gettimeofday() since libuv uses higher resolution
clocks on most UNIX platforms. Libuv also tries to use monotonic clocks,
kernel bugs notwithstanding, which is another win over gettimeofday().
Necessary for Windows, which doesn't have gettimeofday(). In vanilla vim,
Windows uses QueryPerformanceCounter, which is the correct primitive for
this sort of things, but that was removed when slimming up the codebase.
Libuv uses QueryPerformanceCounter to implement uv_hrtime() on Windows so
the behaviour of vim profiling on Windows should now be the same.
The behaviour on Linux should be different (better) though, libuv uses more
accurate primitives than gettimeofday().
Other misc. changes:
- Added function attributes where relevant (const, pure, ...)
- Convert functions to receive scalars: Now that proftime_T is always a
(uint64_t) scalar (and not a struct), it's clearer to convert the
functions to receive it as such instead of a pointer to a scalar.
- Extract profiling funcs to profile.c: make everything clearer and reduces
the size of the "catch-all" ex_cmds2.c
- Add profile.{c,h} to clint and -Wconv:
- Don't use sprintf, use snprintf
- Don't use long, use int16_t/int32_t/...