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.
Uses the undocumented "error_exit" UI event for a different purpose:
When :detach is used on the server, send an "error_exit" with 0 `status`
to indicate that the server shouldn't wait for client exit.
Problem:
Developing/troubleshooting plugins has friction because "restarting"
Nvim requires quitting and manually starting again. #32484
Solution:
- Implement a `:restart` command which emits `restart` UI event.
- Handle the `restart` UI event in the builtin TUI client: stop the
`nvim --embed` server, start a new one, and attach to it.
When the TUI is suspending or stopping, redraw events should not be
processed, as when it next processes redraw events it's already waiting
for a DA1 response after having disabled some terminal modes.
Fix#33708
Problem:
vim.uv.os_setenv gets "stuck" per-key. #32550
Caused by the internal `envmap` cache. #7920
:echo $FOO <-- prints nothing
:lua vim.uv.os_setenv("FOO", "bar")
:echo $FOO <-- prints bar (as expected)
:lua vim.uv.os_setenv("FOO", "fizz")
:echo $FOO <-- prints bar, still (not expected. Should be "fizz")
:lua vim.uv.os_unsetenv("FOO")
:echo $FOO <-- prints bar, still (not expected. Should be nothing)
:lua vim.uv.os_setenv("FOO", "buzz")
:echo $FOO <-- prints bar, still (not expected. Should be "buzz")
Solution:
- Remove the `envmap` cache.
- Callers to `os_getenv` must free the result.
- Update all call-sites.
- Introduce `os_getenv_noalloc`.
- Extend `os_env_exists()` the `nonempty` parameter.
Problem:
On Windows, spawning the `nvim --embed` server with `detach=true` breaks
various `tt.setup_child_nvim` tests.
Solution:
Make this behavior opt-in with an env var, temporarily.
In the api_info() output:
:new|put =map(filter(api_info().functions, '!has_key(v:val,''deprecated_since'')'), 'v:val')
...
{'return_type': 'ArrayOf(Integer, 2)', 'name': 'nvim_win_get_position', 'method': v:true, 'parameters': [['Window', 'window']], 'since': 1}
The `ArrayOf(Integer, 2)` return type didn't break clients when we added
it, which is evidence that clients don't use the `return_type` field,
thus renaming Dictionary => Dict in api_info() is not (in practice)
a breaking change.
Problem:
The default builtin UI client does not declare its client info. This
reduces discoverability and makes it difficult for plugins to identify
the UI.
Solution:
- Call nvim_set_client_info after attaching, as recommended by `:help dev-ui`.
- Also set the "pid" field.
- Also change `ui_active()` to return a count. Not directly relevant to
this commit, but will be useful later.
This also makes shada reading slightly faster due to avoiding
some copying and allocation.
Use keysets to drive decoding of msgpack maps for shada entries.
Problem: null pointer member access in ui_client_start_server if
channel_job_start returns NULL.
Solution: check for it, return 0 in that case (which is already used to indicate
failure and is handled by main).
Happened on Linux when trying to run Nvim in an old gdbserver instance after having
rebuilt Nvim since. This gave E903 (the nvim binary was deleted, so " (deleted)" appears
as a suffix in the `v:progpath`, making it invalid), then ASAN complains due to the NPD;
instead it now then prints "Failed to start Nvim server!", as expected.
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.
Extmarks can contain URLs which can then be drawn in any supporting UI.
In the TUI, for example, URLs are "drawn" by emitting the OSC 8 control
sequence to the TTY. On terminals which support the OSC 8 sequence this
will create clickable hyperlinks.
URLs are treated as inline highlights in the decoration subsystem, so
are included in the `DecorSignHighlight` structure. However, unlike
other inline highlights they use allocated memory which must be freed,
so they set the `ext` flag in `DecorInline` so that their lifetimes are
managed along with other allocated memory like virtual text.
The decoration subsystem then adds the URLs as a new highlight
attribute. The highlight subsystem maintains a set of unique URLs to
avoid duplicating allocations for the same string. To attach a URL to an
existing highlight attribute we call `hl_add_url` which finds the URL in
the set (allocating and adding it if it does not exist) and sets the
`url` highlight attribute to the index of the URL in the set (using an
index helps keep the size of the `HlAttrs` struct small).
This has the potential to lead to an increase in highlight attributes
if a URL is used over a range that contains many different highlight
attributes, because now each existing attribute must be combined with
the URL. In practice, however, URLs typically span a range containing a
single highlight (e.g. link text in Markdown), so this is likely just a
pathological edge case.
When a new highlight attribute is defined with a URL it is copied to all
attached UIs with the `hl_attr_define` UI event. The TUI manages its own
set of URLs (just like the highlight subsystem) to minimize allocations.
The TUI keeps track of which URL is "active" for the cell it is
printing. If no URL is active and a cell containing a URL is printed,
the opening OSC 8 sequence is emitted and that URL becomes the actively
tracked URL. If the cursor is moved while in the middle of a URL span,
we emit the terminating OSC sequence to prevent the hyperlink from
spanning multiple lines.
This does not support nested hyperlinks, but that is a rare (and,
frankly, bizarre) use case. If a valid use case for nested hyperlinks
ever presents itself we can address that issue then.
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.
Enable 'termguicolors' automatically when Nvim can detect that truecolor
is supported by the host terminal.
If $COLORTERM is set to "truecolor" or "24bit", or the terminal's
terminfo entry contains capabilities for Tc, RGB, or setrgbf and
setrgbb, then we assume that the terminal supports truecolor. Otherwise,
the terminal is queried (using both XTGETTCAP and SGR + DECRQSS). If the
terminal's response to these queries (if any) indicates that it supports
truecolor, then 'termguicolors' is enabled.
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:
Since TUI was moved to another process 2448816956
v:argv and v:progname don't report the original argv[0].
["/usr/bin/nvim", "--embed", ...]
Solution:
Use argv[0] instead of VV_PROGPATH in ui_client_start_server().
Fix#23953
Adds new API helper macros `CSTR_AS_OBJ()`, `STATIC_CSTR_AS_OBJ()`, and `STATIC_CSTR_TO_OBJ()`, which cleans up a lot of the current code. These macros will also be used extensively in the upcoming option refactor PRs because then API Objects will be used to get/set options. This PR also modifies pre-existing code to use old API helper macros like `CSTR_TO_OBJ()` to make them cleaner.
- There is no "resource leak".
- "return 0" is definitely not the correct behavior if we ever occur a
platform where this would fail.
- There was no problem here to fix. so let's not "fix" it.
- once CI is upgraded to gcc 13, we'll figure out the correct way to make
it shut the fuck up. warnings on non-ci platforms are not critical.
gsrc/nvim/ui_client.c: In function ‘ui_client_start_server’:
gsrc/nvim/ui_client.c:68:5: warning: ignoring return value of ‘dup’ declared with attribute ‘warn_unused_result’ [-Wunused-result]
68 | dup(stderr_isatty ? STDERR_FILENO : STDOUT_FILENO);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Problem:
1. Some calls to preserve_exit() don't put a message in IObuff, so the
IObuff printed by preserve_exit() contains unrelated information.
2. If a TUI client runs out of memory or receives a deadly signal, the
error message is shown on alternate screen and cannot be easily seen
because the TUI exits alternate screen soon afterwards.
Solution:
Pass error message to preserve_exit() and exit alternate screen before
printing it.
Note that this doesn't fix the problem that server error messages cannot
be easily seen on exit. This is tracked in #21608 and #21843.
Problem:
When a TUI client is suspended it still receives UI events from the
server, and has to process these accumulated events when it is resumed.
With mulitple TUI clients this is a bigger problem, considering the
following steps:
1. A TUI client is attached.
2. CTRL-Z is pressed and the first client is suspended.
3. Another TUI client is attached.
4. CTRL-Z is pressed and a "suspend" event is sent to both clients. The
second client is suspended, while the first client isn't able to
process the event because it has already been suspended.
5. The first client is resumed. It processes the accumulated "suspend"
event and suspends immediately.
Solution:
Make a TUI client detach on suspend and re-attach on resume.
- Use the correct fd to replace stdin on windows (CONIN)
- Don't start the TUI if there are no tty fd (not a regression,
but makes sense regardless)
- De-mythologize "global input fd". it is just STDIN.