When UV_OVERLAPPED_PIPE was used for the pipe passed to the child process, a
problem occurred with the standard input of the .Net Framework application
(#11809). Therefore, add the overlapped option to jobstart() and change it so
that it is set only when necessary
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
This matches Vim behavior. From `:help :ls` :
R a terminal buffer with a running job
F a terminal buffer with a finished job
? a terminal buffer without a job: `:terminal NONE`
TODO: implement `:terminal NONE`.
ref #10349
Namespaces is a lightweight concept that should be used to group
objects for purposes of bulk operations and introspection. This is
initially used for highlights and virtual text in buffers, and is
planned to also be used for extended marks. There is no plan use them
for privileges or isolation, neither to introduce nanespace-level
options.
* os/fs.c: add os_isdir_executable()
* eval.c: fix hang on job start caused by non-executable cwd option
* channel.c: assert cwd is an executable directory
* test: jobstart() produces error when using non-executable cwd
likely fixes#7768#7913
If multiple internal stream callbacks were recieved before vimL
callbacks got called, only invoke one vimL callback with all data.
children_kill_cb() is racey. One obvious problem is that
process_close_handles() is *queued* by on_process_exit(), so when
children_kill_cb() is invoked, the dead process might still be in the
`loop->children` list. If the OS already reclaimed the dead PID, Nvim
may try to SIGKILL it.
Avoid that by checking `proc->status`.
Vim doesn't have this problem because it doesn't attempt to kill
processes that ignored SIGTERM after a timeout.
closes#8269