Problem:
Currently, only some filesystems (Btrfs, ext2, ext3, ext4) have full
support of accessing the `dirent` entry-type. On other filesystems,
`uv.fs_scandir_next` may return `nil` for an existing but unsupported
entry-type.
This means consumers (such as `fs.dir()`), cannot know if `nil` means
"non-existent" or "unsupported".
Solution:
Fall back to `uv.fs_lstat` when `etype` is `nil`; return "unknown" if it
fails.
(cherry picked from commit 4b5f026ac9)
feat(ui): vim.ui.input(opts.scope) #39570
Problem: There is no way for a `vim.ui.input` caller to indicate for
which scope the input is. As in "This input is for something at cursor
scope". This information can be useful for `vim.ui.input`
implementation to tweak its behavior and presentation:
- Show different floating window depending on the scope. For example:
- Near cursor for "cursor" scope.
- At line start for "line" scope.
- In window corner for "buffer" and "window" scopes.
- In whole editor corner for "tabpage", "editor", "project" scopes.
- Navigate through history only for inputs with the same scope.
Solution: Document new `opts.scope` for `vim.ui.input`. Use it in the
codebase.
Problem: filetype: some html files are wrongly recognized as htmlangular
Solution: Use the \< atom to anchor ng-template and ng-content to start
of word (truffle)
Prevent false-positive htmlangular detection on words containing
'ng-template' or 'ng-content' as a substring (e.g. 'song-template',
'sing-content'). Anchor both branches with \< to require a word start,
matching the \<DTD\s\+XHTML\s idiom used five lines below.
related: neovim/neovim#39778.
closes: vim/vim#20246354ab1a69e
Co-authored-by: truffle <truffleagent@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit f3bb21e71d)
Problem:
During startup, we manually trigger a useless and misleading `OptionSet`
event, which doesn't set `v:option_*` values (this is a limitation of
`nvim_exec_autocmds`).
ad4bc2d90c/runtime/lua/vim/_core/defaults.lua (L939).
Solution:
The `nvim_exec_autocmds('OptionSet',…)` call does not serve any purpose
since 5cbb9d613b, so just drop it.
Problem:
Using the `DiffTool` plugin (e.g. through `nvim -d ...` or `:DiffTool
<file1> <file2>` fails if a space is in one of the paths. This occurs
because the `diff` wraps the paths with quotes (`'`) if space
characters are present, which the line diff regex fails to parse.
Solution:
Update regex to handle quoted paths by matching the string within the
quotes, if it exists.
(cherry picked from commit 1e09b020e5)
Problem:
The `:checkhealth` buffer uses the help syntax, so help tag links (e.g.
`|clipboard|`) are highlighted like they are in help buffers. However,
unlike in help buffers, `CTRL-]` doesn't jump to the relevant help file.
I expect that if the `:checkhealth` buffer looks like a help buffer,
then it should behave like one where it makes sense. This comment from
/r/neovim suggests that this was the intention:
https://www.reddit.com/r/neovim/comments/5ghv3r/see_clipboard_how/dascnry/.
Solution:
Set `'tags'` in `checkhealth` buffers so that `:tag` and friends look
for tags in the help tags files.
(cherry picked from commit c4285acb92)
Problem: Crash with invalid shellredir/shellpipe value
(bfredl)
Solution: Validate the option and allow only a single "%s".
fixes: vim/vim#20157closes: vim/vim#2015984ae09dd79
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
(cherry picked from commit ffe87d91f7)
Problem:
- Empty ranges have different `<`, `<=`, `has` and `intersect` semantics compared to regular ranges.
- `to_inclusive_pos` assumes that the end position of a range is exclusive, which is not true for empty ranges
Solution:
Special case empty ranges in these operations.
(cherry picked from commit 416f3482e7)
feat(tui): restore 'ttyfast' to control tty requests
Problem:
When running nvim on a remote machine over SSH, if there is high ping,
then bg detection may not complete in time. This results in a warning
every time nvim is started. #38648
Solution:
Restore 'ttyfast' option and allow it to control whether or not bg
detection is performed. Because this is during startup and before any
user config or commands, we use the environment variable
`NVIM_NOTTYFAST` to allow disabling `ttyfast` during initialization.
Co-authored-by: Kyle <50718101+kylesower@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem:
`builtin_types.lua` seems to be about vimfn (aka "eval", aka
"vimscript", …) specifically, whereas `builtin.lua` is about the Lua
stdlib.
Solution:
Rename it to `vimfn_types.lua`, to align with `vimfn.gen.lua`.
(cherry picked from commit aea9aeee78)
Problem:
Linter missed backtick and double-quote keynames in the quasi-keyset of
the `nvim_create_user_command` docstring.
Solution:
Update the linter to check backtick-surrounded and quote-surrounded key
names.
Problem:
For a given position, it is not easy to compare which of several other positions is closest to it.
Solution:
Add support for converting `vim.Pos` to a buffer byte offset.
This allows for sorting, e.g:
```lua
table.sort(positions, function(pos1, pos2)
return pos1:to_offset() < pos2:to_offset()
end
```
Or a binary search, e.g:
```lua
vim.list.bisect(positions, pos, { key = function(pos) return pos:to_offset() end })
```
Co-authored-by: Yi Ming <ofseed@foxmail.com>
Problem:
`diagnostic.status` only follows the `config.status.format` setting to determine how to display diagnostic signs. However, `signs` can actually also be configured via `config.signs.text`.
Solution:
If the user has set symbols via `config.status.format`, let that determine the content of `signs`; otherwise, use `config.signs.text` for display.
TODO: drop support `type(config.status.format) == 'table'`; users should just configure `config.signs.text` directly.
Co-authored-by: Yi Ming <ofseed@foxmail.com>
Problem: Entering the pager fails if <ESC> is remapped to :fclose by user.
Solution: Avoid executing mappings with nvim_feedkeys() that closes expanded cmdline.
(cherry picked from commit 2b7a00746d)
Problem: `vim:`, etc. in cmdline are interpreted as modeline, causing error E518.
Solution: Set 'nomodeline' when creating the buffers.
(cherry picked from commit 0ea720f281)
Problem: Cannot set 'path' option via modeline (zeertzjq, after v9.2.0435)
Solution: Revert the part that disallows setting 'path' via modeline.
closes: vim/vim#2013788fb739918
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
(cherry picked from commit d1c3d6fbaa)
Problem: [security]: Backticks enclosed shell commands in the 'path'
option value are executed during completion (q1uf3ng).
Solution: Skip path entries containing backticks, add P_SECURE to 'path'
option, so that it cannot be set from a modeline (for symmetry with
the 'cdpath' option)
Github Advisory:
https://github.com/vim/vim/security/advisories/GHSA-hwg5-3cxw-wvvg
Supported by AI.
190cb3c2b9
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
(cherry picked from commit b06f8b174f)
Problem:
`get_node_text()` returned inconsistent results between buffer and
string sources when a node's range ends at `end_col == 0` (i.e. the node
ends with a newline). The buffer path dropped the trailing newline; the
string path included it correctly.
Solution:
Append `'\n'` in `buf_range_get_text()` when `end_col == 0` and
`start_row ~= end_row`. The `start_row ~= end_row` guard excludes
zero-width nodes at column 0, which should return `""`.
Remove the workaround in the `#trim!` directive that manually
compensated for the missing newline.
Strip whitespace in `resolve_lang()` so injection language nodes ending
at `end_col == 0` (e.g. `">lua\n"`) still resolve correctly.
(cherry picked from commit 7ed5609439)
Problem:
LSP clients previously did not handle dynamic registration for off-spec methods
Solution:
Update the client logic to assume support for dynamic registration when
the method is unknown. Adjust the registration provider fallback and
enhance tests to verify correct behaviour for unknown methods and their
registration options. This improves compatibility with servers using
custom dynamic registrations.
AI-assisted: OpenCode
(cherry picked from commit 344d984ed2)
Problem:
The argument to `:help` is normalized to fit the general tag format.
I.e. i^U-default, iCTRL-U-default and i_CTRL_U-default should all point
to the i_CTRL_U-default tag. Our normalization adds an underscore around
the CTRL keycode, e.g. iCTRL-GCTRL-J becomes i_CTRL-G_CTRL-J. That's not
necessary if the following part starts with a dash, like the case of
iCTRL-U-default.
Solution:
Do not insert an underscore if the following character is a dash/minus
(-).
(cherry picked from commit 84ae70c172)
docs: update instructions for debugging LSP
Previously, it was suggested to set:
vim.lsp.log.set_format_func(vim.inspect)
This made sense before f72c13341a, when
`format_func` was called once per argument being logged, but since that
commit it's called with the log level followed by the other args, so the
suggested setting would call `vim.inspect(log_level, ....)` which would
just print the human readable name of the current log level and no other
details, for example with this set I saw in my logs:
"DEBUG""DEBUG""DEBUG""DEBUG"
Instead just rely on the default formatter, which will:
> ... log the level, date, source and line number of the
caller, followed by the arguments.
(cherry picked from commit 578727c25e)
fix(lsp): send didClose, didOpen when languageId changes
Problem:
If a buffer's filetype changes after the LSP client has already
attached (e.g. from json to jsonc via a modeline), but the client
supports both filetypes, it stays attached. It does not notify the
server of the new languageId, causing the server to incorrectly process
the file using the old languageId.
Solution:
Save the languageId used during textDocument/didOpen, and send
textDocument/didClose + textDocument/didOpen when buffer's languageId
changed.
Lsp spec:
0003fb53f1/_specifications/lsp/3.18/textDocument/didOpen.md (L5)
> If the language id of a document changes, the client
> needs to send a textDocument/didClose to the server followed by a
> textDocument/didOpen with the new language id if the server handles
> the new language id as well.
AI-assisted: Gemini 3.1 Pro
Co-authored-by: phanium <91544758+phanen@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem:
`v:starttime`, `:uptime` use a monotonic high-resolution timer. This
only works as long as the timer keeps running (if the computer is
suspended the timer is paused). This is somewhat unintuitive, and
doesn't match the behavior of the `uptime` shell command.
Solution:
Implement `os_realtime` to get the real time since the
epoch in nanoseconds.
Problem:
Error when querying document symbols using python-lsp-server:
lsp/util.lua:1955: attempt to concatenate field 'containerName' (a userdata value)
Solution:
Check for `vim.NIL`.
(cherry picked from commit 1799aaebda)
Calling `set print pretty on` in GDB will:
> Cause GDB to print structures in an indented format with one member
per line
However, `termdebug` just renders the newlines as raw `\n` characters.
This is a regression of[1]. Glancing through the history it looks to
have been caused by cd1b14f027 which
removed the output splitting when displaying the eval results, so this
changes adds that behaviour back.
As a quick reproduction/test, compile the following C program:
```c
struct Foo {
char *name;
};
int main(void) {
struct Foo f = {"hello"};
printf("%s\n", f.name);
return 0;
}
```
Then launch `nvim` and run:
:Termdebug main
:Gdb
(gdb) set print pretty on
(gdb) break main
(gdb) run
:Source
Place the cursor on the `f` variable and call `:Evaluate`. Before this change:

With this change:

Link: https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/10020 [1]
(cherry picked from commit c06e3d6f81)
Co-authored-by: Matthew Hughes <matthewhughes934@gmail.com>