There are really two issues solved here:
- The directory listing was not populating the new buffer when using
the :Explore command. This was because the directory to open is
determined by using expand("%:p") which includes '!/running/command' at
the end of the string in terminal buffers.
- The :Explore command should replace the buffer, not split it. This
because the Explore command will automatically split if the current
buffer has been modified. According to the docs, all terminal buffers
will have the modified flag set when a job is running.
fixes: vim/vim#9862closes: vim/vim#1806953466887f7
Co-authored-by: Jason Long <jasonlongball@gmail.com>
This change includes the following upstream commits:
- fix: remove black lines in directory listing
- fix: correctly create new file when using Lexplore
- refactor: remove print functionality
The main highlight is removing print functionality that was broken both
in neovim and vim.
closes: vim/vim#178470bda7830ac
Co-authored-by: Luca Saccarola <github.e41mv@aleeas.com>
relevant commits:
- refactor: cleanup netrw#BrowseX
- fix: correctly handle symlinks in treeview
- chore: add minimalrc for reproducing issues
- refactor: simplify s:NetrwInit with the 'newer' assignment syntax
- refactor: remove balloon functionality
- Tune local file listing especially for Windows network drives
- interim fix for browse open with multiple windows
closes: vim/vim#17616ef925556cb
Co-authored-by: Luca Saccarola <github.e41mv@aleeas.com>
The version check introduced with commit edd4ac3e8 has a logic error.
Also it should only trigger when trying to use the netrw plugin and not
always.
fixes: vim/vim#165416d6ec2ee05
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
relevant commits:
- deprecate!: netrw#Launch, netrw#Open and gx mappings
- refactor: move some utility functions in a private file
- feat: add function to deprecate features
- refactor!: remove NetrwClean command and function
- refactor: use appropriate directories to store temporary files
- refactor: better way to call vim.ui.open
- refactor(Open): prefer lua wrapper function instead of cmdline
- refactor!: drop vim 7 checks
- refactor: use vim.ui.open when using neovim
- refactor: remove s:CheckIfKde
- refactor: balloon functionality
- refactor!: remove netrw#Access function
closes: vim/vim#16519ec961b05dc
Co-authored-by: Luca Saccarola <github.e41mv@aleeas.com>
This double escaping was likely introduced because it was the only way
to make :Open work with hashes/percent signs despite shellescape(..., 1)
supposedly taking care of it, but then breaks the gx mapping
on MSYS2 as reported at [0]
Since special characters in the URL following :Open can be escaped,
whereas gx simply breaks and is more common, no longer double escape
[0]: https://github.com/vim/vim/issues/16252fixes: vim/vim#16252closes: vim/vim#162652328a39a54
Co-authored-by: Konfekt <Konfekt@users.noreply.github.com>
Problem:
Nvim depends on netrw to download/request URL contents.
Solution:
- Add `vim.net.request()` as a thin curl wrapper:
- Basic GET with --silent, --show-error, --fail, --location, --retry
- Optional `opts.outpath` to save to a file
- Operates asynchronously. Pass an `on_response` handler to get the result.
- Add integ tests (requires NVIM_TEST_INTEG to be set) to test success
and 404 failure.
- Health check for missing `curl`.
- Handle `:edit https://…` using `vim.net.request()`.
API Usage:
1. Asynchronous request:
vim.net.request('https://httpbingo.org/get', { retry = 2 }, function(err, response)
if err then
print('Fetch failed:', err)
else
print('Got body of length:', #response.body)
end
end)
2. Download to file:
vim.net.request('https://httpbingo.org/get', { outpath = 'out_async.txt' }, function(err)
if err then print('Error:', err) end
end)
3. Remote :edit integration (in runtime/plugin/net.lua) fetches into buffer:
:edit https://httpbingo.org/get
Dr. Chip retired some time ago and is no longer maintaining the netrw
plugin. However as a runtime plugin distributed by Vim, it important to
maintain the netrw plugin in the future and fix bugs as they are
reported.
So, split out the netrw plugin as an additional package, however include
some stubs to make sure the plugin is still loaded by default and the
documentation is accessible as well.
closes: vim/vim#163689cfdabb074
Co-authored-by: Luca Saccarola <github.e41mv@aleeas.com>