Problem:
on_proc_exit() has a special-case that assumes that the UI client will
never spawn more than 1 child process.
Solution:
If the Nvim server exits, the stream EOF will trigger `rpc_close()` in
the UI client, so we don't need the special case in `on_proc_exit`.
Pass `Channel.exit_status` from `rpc_close()` so that the correct exit
code is reflected.
Problem:
- "process" is often used as a verb (`multiqueue_process_events`), which
is ambiguous for cases where it's used as a topic.
- The documented naming convention for processes is "proc".
- `:help dev-name-common`
- Shorter is better, when it doesn't harm readability or
discoverability.
Solution:
Rename "process" => "proc" in all C symbols and module names.
Before this change, "static inline" functions in headers needed to have
their function attributes specified in a completely different way. The
prototype had to be duplicated, and REAL_FATTR_ had to be used instead
of the public FUNC_ATTR_ names.
TODO: need a check that a "header.h.inline.generated.h" file is not
forgotten when the first "static inline" function with attributes
is added to a header (they would just be silently missing).
This is a structural refactor with no logical changes, yet. Done in
preparation for simplifying rstream/rbuffer which will require more
state inline in RStream.
The initial idea was to have RStream and WStream as sub-types
symetrically but that doesn't work, as sockets are both reading and
writing. Also there is very little write-specific state to start with,
so the benefit of a separate WStream struct is a lot smaller. Just
document what fields in `Stream` are write specific.
Remove `export` pramgas from defs headers as it causes IWYU to believe
that the definitions from the defs headers comes from main header, which
is not what we really want.
FUNC_ATTR_* should only be used in .c files with generated headers.
Defining FUNC_ATTR_* as empty in headers causes misuses of them to be
silently ignored. Instead don't define them by default, and only define
them as empty after a .c file has included its generated header.
This reduces the total number of khash_t instantiations from 22 to 8.
Make the khash internal functions take the size of values as a runtime
parameter. This is abstracted with typesafe Map containers which
are still specialized for both key, value type.
Introduce `Set(key)` type for when there is no value.
Refactor shada.c to use Map/Set instead of khash directly.
This requires `map_ref` operation to be more flexible.
Return pointers to both key and value, plus an indicator for new_item.
As a bonus, `map_key` is now redundant.
Instead of Map(cstr_t, FileMarks), use a pointer map as the FileMarks struct is
humongous.
Make `event_strings` actually work like an intern pool instead of wtf it
was doing before.
libnvim couldn't be easily used in C++ due to the use of reserved keywords.
Additionally, add explicit casts to *alloc function calls used in inline
functions, as C++ doesn't allow implicit casts from void pointers.
Allow Include What You Use to remove unnecessary includes and only
include what is necessary. This helps with reducing compilation times
and makes it easier to visualise which dependencies are actually
required.
Work on https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/549, but doesn't close
it since this only works fully for .c files and not headers.
- Fix the problem that chanclose() does not work for channel created by
nvim_open_term().
- Fix the problem that the loopback channel is not released.
- Fix the error message when sending raw data to the loopback channel.
This commit adds an on_print callback to stdioopen's dictionary
argument which lets the caller specify a function called each time
neovim will try to output something to stdout (e.g. on "echo" or
"echoerr" in --headless mode).
* refactor: format all C files under nvim
* refactor: disable formatting for Vim-owned files:
* src/nvim/indent_c.c
* src/nvim/regexp.c
* src/nvim/regexp_nfa.c
* src/nvim/testdir/samples/memfile_test.c
Note: the reason for removing them is not that there after this refactor
is no use of them, but rather that having them available is an
anti-pattern: they manange an _extra_ heap allocation which has
nothing to do with the functionality of the map itself (khash
manages the real buffers internally). In case there happens to
be a reason to allocate the map structure itself later, this
should be made explicit using xcalloc/xfree calls.
Some programs behave differently when they detect that stdin is being
piped. This can be problematic when these programs are used with the job
control API where stdin is attached, but not typically used. It is
possible to run the job using a PTY which circumvents this problem, but
that includes a lot of overhead when simply closing the stdin pipe would
suffice.
To enable this behavior, add a new parameter to the jobstart options
dict called "stdin" with two valid values: "pipe" (the default)
implements the existing behavior of opening a channel for stdin and
"null" which disconnects stdin (or, if you prefer, connects it to
/dev/null). This is extensible so that other modes can be added in the
future.
As gcc10 uses -fno-common by default, global variables declared with the
same name more than once is not allowed anymore revealing this issue.
We need to define it as extern to access it.
See also https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1799680