This workarounds a bug likely in nvim__get_runtime, and fixes#35124
Though I'd argue it is more correct anyway as the point of
vim.SUBMODULE lazy loading is "only pay for what you use". If no one
has require'vim.diagnostic' yet in LSP or otherwise, there cannot
be any diagostics available and loading the lua module is wasteful.
Problem: Visual block insert on a single line incorrectly triggers two
on_lines callbacks - one for the correct line (0-indexed) and another
for a non-existent additional line.
Solution: Only call changed_lines() in block_insert() when additional
lines beyond the first were actually modified (start.lnum < end.lnum).
Problem:
It's relatively easy to mispress key `a` to (a)llow arbitrary execution
of 'exrc' files. #35050
Solution:
- For exrc files (not directories), remove "allow" menu item.
Require the user to "view" and then explicitly `:trust` the file.
Problem:
diagnostic extmark used for positioning continues to exist after
deleting a range containing it, so it's possible to jump to a
next/previous diagnositc, which isn't visible in any way, including not
being shown via `open_float`.
Solution:
enable `invalidate` flag when setting an extmark to be able to filter
out diagnostics based on `invalid` flag when looking for next/previous
diagnostic to jump to.
When right_gravity is set to true for deactivating tabstop expansion we
have to set end_right_gravity to false to avoid expanding the tabstop
region on the right side. Vice versa for activating tabstop expansion
again.
Problem:
Diagnostic positions are not being updated after text changes, which
means `vim.diagnostic.open_float` and `vim.diagnostic.jump` will work
with outdated positions when text is changed until diagnostics are
updated again (if ever).
Solution:
Create extmarks in `vim.diagnostic.set` and use their positions for
`vim.diagnostic.open_float` and `next_diagnostic` (used by
`vim.diagnostic.jump`, `vim.diagnostic.get_next` and
`vim.diagnostic.get_prev`).
Problem:
":restart" always executes ":qall" to exit the server.
Solution:
Support ":restart +cmd" so the user can control the command
used to exit the server.
Co-authored-by: Justin M. Keyes <justinkz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
Problem: After filtering out all elements, ArrayIter:last still returns a stale element.
Solution: Add check for self._head == self._tail and return nil early.
Fix#34696
Problem: Routing based on message kinds can be perceived as unpredictable.
Solution: Implement phase 1 of #34281, always showing the full message
in a window dismissed on any user input when it does not fit
in the 'cmdheight'. Also show spill "[+n]" indicator if needed.
Problem: unlike win_close, win_close_othertab could be used to close the
autocommand window from a different tabpage. This causes aucmd_restbuf to close
the wrong window, potentially causing a crash.
Solution: disallow closing it. Also replace a deprecated use of exc_exec in the
test file.
Fixes#21409.
Problem: no check for nvim_open_win opening a new floating window into a closing
buffer, which can lead to crashes.
Solution: call check_split_disallowed; opening a new float semantically splits
from a window, so the same problems as regular splits apply. Also restore the
error if switch_win_noblock in win_set_buf fails (may not be possible to hit
this, but win_set_buf can silently succeed there since #31595).
As the lock check applies to curbuf (not the target buffer) this may feel a bit
restrictive, though this isn't different to how things like ":split" or
nvim_open_win with "split = true" works when targeting a different buffer. Only
checking the target buffer's lock will cause issues if win_set_buf doesn't end
up in the target buffer for whatever reason.
Maybe we could consider checking the lock of the buffer after win_set_buf and
close the window if it's locked (maybe a bit fiddly, especially as closing a
window can fail...), or make the open + switch operation more atomic, like how
Vim does for its popup windows..?
It also used to be the case that win_set_buf would set an error if autocommands
sent us to a different buffer than what was requested, but #31595 appears to
have also changed that... I haven't touched that here.
Problem: can't accurately know if close_buffer directly (e.g: not via autocmds)
decremented b_nwindows. This can cause crashes if win_close_othertab decides to
keep the window after calling close_buffer (if it did not free the buffer), as
b_nwindows may remain out-of-sync.
Solution: change the return value of close_buffer to accurately depict whether
it decremented b_nwindows. Check it in win_close_othertab to avoid a crash.
Similar issues may exist in other places that call close_buffer, but I've not
addressed those here (not to mention only one other place even checks its return
value...)
Problem: TabClosed is fired after close_buffer is called (after b_nwindows is
decremented) and after the tab page is removed from the list, but before it's
freed. This causes inconsistencies such as the removed tabpage having a valid
handle and functions like nvim_tabpage_get_number returning nonsense.
Solution: fire it after free_tabpage. Try to maintain the Nvim-specific
behaviour of setting `<amatch>` to the old tab page number, and the
(undocumented) behaviour of setting `<abuf>` to the buffer it was showing
(close_buffer sets w_buffer to NULL if it was freed, so it should be OK pass it
to apply_autocmds_group, similar to before).
Problem: No check for closing the only non-floating window in a non-current
tabpage that contains floats. This can lead to a tabpage that contains only
floats, causing crashes.
Solution: Copy the relevant check from win_close to win_close_othertab. Fix some
uncovered issues.
Closes#34943Fixes#31236
Co-authored-by: glepnir <glephunter@gmail.com>
**Problem:** For unchanged document diagnostic reports, the `resultId`
is ignored completely, even though it should still be saved for the
request (in fact, the spec marks it as mandatory for unchanged reports,
so it should be extra important).
**Solution:** Always store the `resultId`.
Problem: Crash when using inline diff mode
(Ilya Grigoriev)
Solution: Set tp_diffbuf to NULL when skipping a diff block
(Yee Cheng Chin).
Fix an array out of bounds crash when using diffopt+=inline:char when 4
or more buffers are being diff'ed. This happens when one of the blocks
is empty. The inline highlight logic skips using that buffer's block,
but when another buffer is used later and calls diff_read() to merge the
diff blocks together, it could erroneously consider the empty block's
diff info which has not been initialized, leaving to diff numbers that
are invalid. Later on the diff num is used without bounds checking which
leads to the crash.
Fix this by making sure to unset tp_diffbuf to NULL when we skip a
block, so diff_read() will not consider this buffer to be used within
inline diff. Also, add more bounds checking just to be safe.
closes: vim/vim#17805c8b99e2d13
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Problem:
From https://matrix.to/#/!cylwlNXSwagQmZSkzs:matrix.org/$Ofj-TFIsEMbp0O9OhE8xuZSNi-nhRLtZTOgs6JRLNrs?via=matrix.org&via=gitter.im&via=mozilla.org
In lesson 2.6, users are asked to remove the second, forth and fifth
lines with `dd` command, then they are asked to undo twice to make the
text go back to original state. But after that, the mark ✗ appears
again, which confuses the user because they think they do something
wrong. This is a limitation with the current implementation, which is
based on line number only.
Solution:
Reimplement interactive marks as extmarks in Lua. This also make the
feature less fragile, as users can remove, add some arbitrary lines
without breaking the interactive marks.
Co-authored-by: Justin M. Keyes <justinkz@gmail.com>
Problem: not possible to anchor specific lines in diff mode
Solution: Add support for the anchoring lines in diff mode using the
'diffanchor' option (Yee Cheng Chin).
Adds support for anchoring specific lines to each other while viewing a
diff. While lines are anchored, they are guaranteed to be aligned to
each other in a diff view, allowing the user to control and inform the
diff algorithm what the desired alignment is. Internally, this is done
by splitting up the buffer at each anchor and run the diff algorithm on
each split section separately, and then merge the results back for a
logically consistent diff result.
To do this, add a new "diffanchors" option that takes a list of
`{address}`, and a new "diffopt" option value "anchor". Each address
specified will be an anchor, and the user can choose to use any type of
address, including marks, line numbers, or pattern search. Anchors are
sorted by line number in each file, and it's possible to have multiple
anchors on the same line (this is useful when doing multi-buffer diff).
Update documentation to provide examples.
This is similar to Git diff's `--anchored` flag. Other diff tools like
Meld/Araxis Merge also have similar features (called "synchronization
points" or "synchronization links"). We are not using Git/Xdiff's
`--anchored` implementation here because it has a very limited API
(it requires usage of the Patience algorithm, and can only anchor
unique lines that are the same across both files).
Because the user could anchor anywhere, diff anchors could result in
adjacent diff blocks (one block is directly touching another without a
gap), if there is a change right above the anchor point. We don't want
to merge these diff blocks because we want to line up the change at the
anchor. Adjacent diff blocks were first allowed when linematch was
added, but the existing code had a lot of branched paths where
line-matched diff blocks were handled differently. As a part of this
change, refactor them to have a more unified code path that is
generalized enough to handle adjacent diff blocks correctly and without
needing to carve in exceptions all over the place.
closes: vim/vim#176150d9160e11c
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Problem: The ruler disappears after typing the second character during
insert mode completion, even when completion messages are
suppressed ('shortmess' includes "c"). This makes the UI
appear inconsistent.
Solution: Ensure the ruler is restored during screen redraw when popup
completion is active (Girish Palya).
Notes:
No new tests were added, as existing screen dump tests were updated to
reflect the corrected behavior.
closes: vim/vim#17770824286c9a7
Nvim already behaves correctly as the popup menu is a separate grid in
the compositor.
Co-authored-by: Girish Palya <girishji@gmail.com>
Problem: get_default_attr_ids() is used to get and change a subset of
the current highlight definitions in {fold,popupmenu}_spec.lua,
for which we have add_extra_attr_ids().
Solution: Use global highlight definitions and use add_extra_attr_ids to
replace.
Problem:
Cannot use `nvim_open_term()` to pipe terminal scrollback > 100000
Solution:
Increase scrollback limit to 1000000
If there's no technical consequences of doing this, can be set even
higher in the future.
Problem: completion: messages don't respect 'shm' setting
Solution: Turn off completion messages when 'shortmess' includes "c"
(Girish Palya).
`:set shortmess+=c` is intended to reduce noise during completion by
suppressing messages.
Previously, some completion messages still appeared regardless of this setting.
This change ensures that **all** completion-related messages are suppressed
when `'c'` is present in `'shortmess'`.
Not entirely sure if the original behavior was intentional. If there's a
reason certain messages were always shown, feel free to close this without
merging.
closes: vim/vim#17737fe1d3c8af7
Co-authored-by: Girish Palya <girishji@gmail.com>
Problem:
Nvim depends on netrw to download/request URL contents.
Solution:
- Add `vim.net.request()` as a thin curl wrapper:
- Basic GET with --silent, --show-error, --fail, --location, --retry
- Optional `opts.outpath` to save to a file
- Operates asynchronously. Pass an `on_response` handler to get the result.
- Add integ tests (requires NVIM_TEST_INTEG to be set) to test success
and 404 failure.
- Health check for missing `curl`.
- Handle `:edit https://…` using `vim.net.request()`.
API Usage:
1. Asynchronous request:
vim.net.request('https://httpbingo.org/get', { retry = 2 }, function(err, response)
if err then
print('Fetch failed:', err)
else
print('Got body of length:', #response.body)
end
end)
2. Download to file:
vim.net.request('https://httpbingo.org/get', { outpath = 'out_async.txt' }, function(err)
if err then print('Error:', err) end
end)
3. Remote :edit integration (in runtime/plugin/net.lua) fetches into buffer:
:edit https://httpbingo.org/get
Problem:
The "gitsigns" plugin runs `vim.diff` in a thread (`uv.new_work`), but
`vim.diff` is nil in that context:
Lua callback:
…/gitsigns.nvim/lua/gitsigns/diff_int.lua:30: bad argument #1 to 'decode' (string expected, got nil)
stack traceback:
[C]: in function 'decode'
…/gitsigns.nvim/lua/gitsigns/diff_int.lua:30: in function <…/gitsigns.nvim/lua/gitsigns/diff_int.lua:29>
Luv thread:
…/gitsigns.nvim/lua/gitsigns/diff_int.lua:63: attempt to call field 'diff' (a nil value)
Solution:
Revert the `stdlib.c` change (set `vim.diff` instead of `vim._diff`).