Problem: silent! causes following try/catch to not work
(Malcolm Rowe)
Solution: consider emsg_silent in handle_did_throw() and do not abort
evaluation flow for :silent! (LemonBoy)
The silent! flag causes the evaluation not to be aborted in case of
uncaught exceptions, adjust handle_did_throw to take this detail into
account.
Fixes the long-standing todo.txt item:
```
Problem that a previous silent ":throw" causes a following try/catch not
to work. (ZyX, 2013 Sep 28) With examples: (Malcolm Rowe, 2015 Dec 24)
Also see vim/vim#8487 for an example.
```
fixes: vim/vim#538closes: vim/vim#15128749ba0f6d9
Cherry-pick Test_deeply_nested_source() from patch 8.2.5169.
Co-authored-by: LemonBoy <thatlemon@gmail.com>
The latter was mostly relevant with the past char_u madness.
NOTE: STRCAT also functioned as a counterfeit "NOLINT" for clint
apparently. But NOLINT-ing every usecase is just the same as disabling
the check entirely.
It's a function to perform operations in their own sealed context,
similar to pythons `with`. This helps ease operations where you need to
perform an operation in a specific context, and then restore the
context.
Marked as private for now as it's not ready for public use. The current
plan is to start using this internally so we can discover and fix any
problems. Once this is ready to be exposed it will be renamed to
`vim.with`.
Usage:
```lua
local ret = vim._with({context = val}, function()
return "hello"
end)
```
, where `context` is any combination of:
- `buf`
- `emsg_silent`
- `hide`
- `horizontal`
- `keepalt`
- `keepjumps`
- `keepmarks`
- `keeppatterns`
- `lockmarks`
- `noautocmd`
- `options`
- `sandbox`
- `silent`
- `unsilent`
- `win`
(except for `win` and `buf` which can't be used at the same time). This
list will most likely be expanded in the future.
Work on https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/19832.
Co-authored-by: Lewis Russell <lewis6991@gmail.com>
Problem: too many strlen() calls in search.c
Solution: refactor code and remove more strlen() calls,
use explicit variable to remember strlen
(John Marriott)
closes: vim/vim#147968c85a2a49a
Co-authored-by: John Marriott <basilisk@internode.on.net>
Problem: POSIX function name in exarg struct causes issues
on OpenVMS
Solution: Rename getline member in exarg struct to ea_getline,
remove isinf() workaround for VMS
There are compilers that do not treat well POSIX functions - like
getline - usage in the structs.
Older VMS compilers could digest this... but the newer OpenVMS compilers
( like VSI C x86-64 X7.4-843 (GEM 50XB9) ) cannot deal with these
structs. This could be limited to getline() that is defined via
getdelim() and might not affect all POSIX functions in general - but
avoiding POSIX function names usage in the structs is a "safe side"
practice without compromising the functionality or the code readability.
The previous OpenVMS X86 port used a workaround limiting the compiler
capabilities using __CRTL_VER_OVERRIDE=80400000
In order to make the OpenVMS port future proof, this pull request
proposes a possible solution.
closes: vim/vim#137046fdb628082
Co-authored-by: Zoltan Arpadffy <zoltan.arpadffy@gmail.com>
Problem: Filetype may be undetected when a SwapExists autocommand sets
filetype in another buffer.
Solution: Make filetype detection state buffer-specific. Also fix a
similar problem for 'modified' (zeertzjq).
closes: vim/vim#143445bf6c2117f
Problem: winfixbuf does not allow to re-edit current buffer
(Tim Pope, after v9.1.0147)
Solution: Explicitly allow :e even when 'winfixbuf' is set,
since it just re-loads the current buffer
(Colin Kennedy)
fixes: vim/vim#14237closes: vim/vim#1428665e580bd56
Problem: Cannot use modifiers before :-Ntabmove.
Solution: Check backwards from the command instead of checking from the
start of the command line. Slightly adjust docs to make them
more consistent (zeertzjq).
closes: vim/vim#14289076faac537
Problem: `set_string_option_direct()` contains a separate codepath specifically for setting string options. Not only is that unnecessary code duplication, but it's also limited to only string options.
Solution: Replace `set_string_option_direct()` with `set_option_direct()` which calls `set_option()` under the hood. This reduces code duplication and allows directly setting an option of any type.
A lot of functions in move.c only worked for curwin, alternatively
took a `wp` arg but still only work if that happens to be curwin.
Refactor those that are needed for update_topline(wp) to work
for any window.
fixes#27723fixes#27720
and for return value of nlua_exec/nlua_call_ref, as this uses
the same family of functions.
NB: the handling of luaref:s is a bit of a mess.
add api_luarefs_free_XX functions as a stop-gap as refactoring
luarefs is a can of worms for another PR:s.
as a minor feature/bug-fix, nvim_buf_call and nvim_win_call now preserves
arbitrary return values.
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.
Problem: Many places in the code use `findoption()` to access an option using its name, even if the option index is available. This is very slow because it requires looping through the options array over and over.
Solution: Use option index instead of name wherever possible. Also introduce an `OptIndex` enum which contains the index for every option as enum constants, this eliminates the need to pass static option names as strings.
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.
Problem: [security]: overflow in ex address parsing
Solution: Verify that lnum is positive, before substracting from
LONG_MAX
[security]: overflow in ex address parsing
When parsing relative ex addresses one may unintentionally cause an
overflow (because LONG_MAX - lnum will overflow for negative addresses).
So verify that lnum is actually positive before doing the overflow
check.
060623e4a3
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
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.
long is 32 bits on windows, while it is 64 bits on other architectures.
This makes the type suboptimal for a codebase meant to be
cross-platform. Replace it with more appropriate integer types.