- Add a job control module for spawning and controlling co-processes
- Add three vimscript functions for interfacing with the module
- Use dedicated header files for typedefs/structs in event/job modules
The SHELL_* defines are the bitflags that can be passed to `mch_call_shell`.
The enum is defined in 'os/shell.h', where all shell-related functions will
eventually be defined.
This feature was accidentally removed when doing the initial import from vim. It
makes vim use pipes instead of temporary files for filtering buffers through
shell commands.
I found that this was missing when looking for references of
SHELL_READ/SHELL_WRITE outside mch_call_shell`.
When `mch_call_shell` is reimplemented on top of libuv process management
facilities, pipes will always be used for communication with child processes so
it makes sense to enable the feature permanently.
- Valgrind configuration removed
- Fix errors reported by the undefined behavior sanitizer
- Travis will now run two build steps:
- A normal build of a shared library for unit testing(in parallel with gcc)
- A clang build with some sanitizers enabled for integration testing.
After these changes travis will run much faster, while providing valgrind-like
error detection.
* removed a putenv() implementation which isn't needed anymore
* mch_getenv() and mch_setenv() are now functions in src/os/env.c
* removes direct calls to getenv() and setenv() outside of src/os/env.c
* refactored the logic of get_env_name into mch_getenvname_at_index
* added unittests for the functions in os/env.c
* Rename mch_full_name to mch_get_absolute_path.
* Rename mch_is_full_name to mch_is_absolute_path.
* Add a lot of missing parentheses.
* Remove yoda-conditions for consistency.
* Remove spaces in function declaration.
* Rename mch_FullName to mch_full_name to match the style guide.
* Add mch_full_dir_name, which saves the absolute path of a given
directory relative to cwd into a given buffer.
* Add function append_path, which glues together two given paths with a
slash.
* Adapt moonscript coding style to the tests.