These are not needed after #35129 but making uncrustify still play nice
with them was a bit tricky.
Unfortunately `uncrustify --update-config-with-doc` breaks strings
with backslashes. This issue has been reported upstream,
and in the meanwhile auto-update on every single run has been disabled.
Problem: Unnecessary use of vim_tolower() in vim_strnicmp_asc().
Solution: Use TOLOWER_ASC() instead (zeertzjq).
It was passing *s1 and *s2 to vim_tolower(). When char is signed, which
is the case on most platforms, c < 0x80 is always true, so it already
behaves the same as TOLOWER_ASC().
closes: vim/vim#16826b7dc5d3b61
Use this function for hashy case-insensitive lookup, as it's ASCII-only.
Note that this function doesn't cast TOLOWER_ASC() argument to uint8_t,
so it'll treat a UTF-8 byte as smaller than NUL. It doesn't matter, as
one of the strings being compared is ASCII-only, and its behavior still
leads to consistent ordering.
A binary format spec always expects a corresponding unsigned long long
value. However, that explicit handling didn't get included when porting
the code from Vim, so binary format spec was falling through to the
"unsigned" and "length_modifier = NUL" portion of the code:
} else {
// unsigned
switch (length_modifier) {
case NUL:
uarg = (tvs
? (unsigned)tv_nr(tvs, &arg_idx)
: (skip_to_arg(ap_types, ap_start, &ap, &arg_idx,
&arg_cur, fmt),
va_arg(ap, unsigned)));
break;
This incorrectly read an "unsigned" value from an "unsigned long long"
variable, which would produce incorrect results on certain platforms.
Problem: vim_strnchr() is strange and unnecessary (after v9.1.1009)
Solution: Remove vim_strnchr() and use memchr() instead. Also remove a
comment referencing an #if that is no longer present.
vim_strnchr() is strange in several ways:
- It's named like vim_strchr(), but unlike vim_strchr() it doesn't
support finding a multibyte char.
- Its logic is similar to vim_strbyte(), but unlike vim_strbyte() it
uses char instead of char_u.
- It takes a pointer as its size argument, which isn't convenient for
all its callers.
- It allows embedded NULs, unlike other "strn*" functions which stop
when encountering a NUL byte.
In comparison, memchr() also allows embedded NULs, and it converts bytes
in the string to (unsigned char).
closes: vim/vim#1657934e1e8de91
Problem:
Linematch used to use strchr to navigate a string, however strchr does
not supoprt embedded NULs.
Solution:
Use `mmfile_t` instead of `char *` in linematch and introduce `strnchr()`.
Also remove heap allocations from `matching_char_iwhite()`
Fixes: #30505
Problem: E1510 may happen when formatting a message
(after 9.1.0181).
Solution: Only give E1510 when using typval. (zeertzjq)
closes: vim/vim#153910dff31576a
Problem: No test for escaping '<' with shellescape()
Solution: Add a test. Use memcpy() in code to make it easier to
understand. Fix a typo (zeertzjq).
closes: vim/vim#1487688c8c547d5
Problem: MS-Windows: Compiler warnings
Solution: Resolve size_t to int warnings
closes: vim/vim#14874
A couple of warnings in ex_docmd.c have been resolved by modifying their
function argument types, followed by some changes in various function
call sites. This also allowed removal of some casts to cope with
size_t/int conversion.
51024bbc1a
Co-authored-by: Mike Williams <mrmrdubya@gmail.com>
Problem: too many strlen() calls in the regexp engine
Solution: refactor code to retrieve strlen differently, make use
of bsearch() for getting the character class
(John Marriott)
closes: vim/vim#1464882792db631
Cherry-pick keyvalue_T and its comparison functions from patch 9.1.0256.
vim-patch:9.1.0410: warning about uninitialized variable
vim-patch:9.1.0412: typo in regexp_bt.c in DEBUG code
Co-authored-by: John Marriott <basilisk@internode.on.net>
Problem: no overflow check for string formatting
Solution: Check message formatting function for overflow.
(Chris van Willegen)
closes: vim/vim#13799c35fc03dbd
Co-authored-by: Christ van Willegen <cvwillegen@gmail.com>
Current uses of vim_strup() calls memcpy()/strcpy() before calling vim_strup().
This results in 2 * strlen(string) operations.
We can trivially convert to lowercase while copying the string instead.
Before, we needed to always pack an entire msgpack_rpc Object to
a continous memory buffer before sending it out to a channel.
But this is generally wasteful. it is better to just flush
whatever is in the buffer and then continue packing to a new buffer.
This is also done for the UI event packer where there are some extra logic
to "finish" of an existing batch of nevents/ncalls. This doesn't really
stop us from flushing the buffer, just that we need to update the state
machine accordingly so the next call to prepare_call() always will
start with a new event (even though the buffer might contain overflow
data from a large event).
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.
We already have an extensive suite of static analysis tools we use,
which causes a fair bit of redundancy as we get duplicate warnings. PVS
is also prone to give false warnings which creates a lot of work to
identify and disable.
Problem: trim(): hard to use default mask (partly revert v9.0.2040)
Solution: use default mask when it is empty
The default 'mask' value is pretty complex, as it includes many
characters. Yet, if one needs to specify the trimming direction, the
third argument, 'trim()' currently requires the 'mask' value to be
provided explicitly.
Currently, an empty 'mask' will make 'trim()' call return 'text' value
that is passed in unmodified. It is unlikely that someone is using it,
so the chances of scripts being broken by this change are low.
Also, this reverts commit 9.0.2040 (which uses v:none for the default
and requires to use an empty string instead).
closes: vim/vim#133588079917447
vim-patch:9.0.2040: trim(): hard to use default mask
Problem: trim(): hard to use default mask
Solution: Use default 'mask' when it is v:none
The default 'mask' value is pretty complex, as it includes many
characters. Yet, if one needs to specify the trimming direction, the
third argument, 'trim()' currently requires the 'mask' value to be
provided explicitly.
'v:none' is already used to mean "use the default argument value" in
user defined functions. See |none-function_argument| in help.
closes: vim/vim#133636e6386716f
Co-authored-by: Illia Bobyr <illia.bobyr@gmail.com>
Problem: strange error number
Solution: change error number,
add doc tag for E1507
closes: vim/vim#13270ea746f9e86
Co-authored-by: Christ van Willegen <cvwillegen@gmail.com>
Problem: Vim9: error codes spread out
Solution: group them together and reserve 100
more for future use
Reserve 100 error codes for future enhancements to the Vim9 class
support
closes: vim/vim#13207413f83990f
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
Problem: Wrong order of arguments for error messages
Solution: Reverse order or arguments for e_aptypes_is_null_nr_str
closes: vim/vim#130511bd2cb1169
Co-authored-by: Christ van Willegen <cvwillegen@gmail.com>
Problem: reverse() does not work for a String.
Solution: Implement reverse() for a String. (Yegappan Lakshmanan,
closesvim/vim#12179)
03ff1c2dde
vim-patch:9.0.1738: Duplicate code to reverse a string
Problem: Duplicate code to reverse a string
Solution: Move reverse_text() to strings.c and remove string_reverse().
closes: vim/vim#128474dd266cb66
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
Problem: Cannot use positional arguments for printf()
Solution: Support positional arguments in string formatting
closes: vim/vim#121400c6181fec4
Co-authored-by: Christ van Willegen <cvwillegen@gmail.com>
* perf(rtp): reduce rtp scans
Problem:
Scanning the filesystem is expensive and particularly affects
startuptime.
Solution:
Reduce the amount of redundant directory scans by relying less on glob
patterns and handle vim and lua sourcing lower down.
Problem: Having utf16idx() rounding up is inconvenient.
Solution: Make utf16idx() round down. (Yegappan Lakshmanan, closesvim/vim#12523)
95707037af
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
Problem: charidx() and utf16idx() result is not consistent with byteidx().
Solution: When the index is equal to the length of the text return the
lenght of the text instead of -1. (Yegappan Lakshmanan,
closesvim/vim#12503)
577922b917
Co-authored-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>