A bit big, but practically it was a lot simpler to change over all
fillchars and all listchars at once, to not need to maintain two
parallel implementations.
This is mostly an internal refactor, but it also removes an arbitrary
limitation: that 'fillchars' and 'listchars' values can only be
single-codepoint characters. Now any character which fits into a single
screen cell can be used.
Currently, setting &bg at all re-initializes highlights and reloads
the active colorscheme, even if the actual value of &bg has not changed.
With https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/26595 this causes a
regression since &bg is set unconditionally based on the value detected
from the terminal.
Instead, only reload the colorscheme if the actual value of &bg has
changed.
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.
Problem: The entire marktree needs to be traversed each time a sign is
removed from the sentinel line.
Solution: Remove sentinel line and instead keep track of the number of
lines that hold up the 'signcolumn' in "max_count". Adjust this
number for added/removed signs, and set it to 0 when the
maximum number of signs on a line changes. Only when
"max_count" is decremented to 0 due to sign removal do we need
to check the entire buffer.
Also replace "invalid_top" and "invalid_bot" with a map of
invalid ranges, further reducing the number of lines to be
checked.
Also improve tree traversal when counting the number of signs.
Instead of looping over the to be checked range and counting
the overlap for each row, keep track of the overlap in an
array and add this to the count.
Problem: [security]: stack-buffer-overflow in option callback functions
Solution: pass size of errbuf down the call stack, use snprintf()
instead of sprintf()
We pass the error buffer down to the option callback functions, but in
some parts of the code, we simply use sprintf(buf) to write into the error
buffer, which can overflow.
So let's pass down the length of the error buffer and use sprintf(buf, size)
instead.
Reported by @henices, thanks!
b39b240c38
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
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: Unused assignments when checking the value of 'listchars'.
Solution: Loop only once when just checking the value. Add a test to
check that this change doesn't cause double-free.
closes: vim/vim#1355900624a2fa0
Enable all clang-tidy warnings by default instead of disabling them.
This ensures that we don't miss useful warnings on each clang-tidy
version upgrade. A drawback of this is that it will force us to either
fix or adjust the warnings as soon as possible.
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.
While the interfaces for setting number and boolean options are now unified by #25394, there is still a separate `set_string_option` function that is used for setting a string option. This PR removes that function and merges it with set_option.
BREAKING CHANGE: `v:option_old` is now the old global value for all global-local options, instead of just string global-local options. Local value for a global-local number/boolean option is now unset when the option is set (e.g. using `:set` or `nvim_set_option_value`) without a scope, which means they now behave the same way as string options.
Ref: #25672
BREAKING CHANGE: This breaks the OptionSet autocommand, as the `v:` values associated with it (`v:option_new`, `v:option_old`, `v:option_oldlocal` and `v:option_oldglobal`) are now the same type as the option, instead of all option values being converted to strings.
Problem: cmdline completion should consider key option
Solution: Disable cmdline completion for key option, slightly
refactor how P_NO_CMD_EXPAND is handled
Harden crypto 'key' option: turn off cmdline completion, disable set-=
"set-=" can be used maliciously with a crypto key, as it allows an
attacker (who either has access to the computer or a plugin author) to
guess a substring by observing the modified state. Simply turn off
set+=/-=/^= for this option as there is no good reason for them to be
used.
Update docs to make that clear as well.
Also, don't allow cmdline completion for 'key' as it just shows *****
which is not useful and confusing to the user what it means (if the user
accidentally hits enter they will have replaced their key with "*****"
instead).
Move logic to better location, don't use above 32-bit for flags
Move P_NO_CMD_EXPAND to use the unused 0x20 instead of going above
32-bits, as currently the flags parameter is only 32-bits on some
systems. Left a comment to warn that future additions will need to
change how the flags work either by making it 64-bit or split into two
member vars.
Also, move the logic for detecting P_NO_CMD_EXPAND earlier so it's not
up to each handler to decide, and you won't see the temporary "..." that
Vim shows while waiting for completion handler to complete.
closes: vim/vim#132246ee7b521fa
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Problem: Cmdline completion for 'listchars' fields doesn't include
"multispace" and "leadmultispace" (after 9.0.1958).
Solution: Include "multispace" and "leadmultispace" in lcstab.
closes: vim/vim#132251f025b01e2
Problem: Make CI checks more strict
Solution: Add -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes to CI,
fix uncovered problems
Add -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes warnings check to CI
Add two new warnings to CI, silence some Perl related build-warnings:
- `strict-prototypes` helps prevent declaring a function with an empty
argument list, e.g. `int func()`. In C++, that's equivalent to `int
func(void)`, but in C, that means a function that can take any number
of arguments which is rarely what we want.
- `missing-prototypes` makes sure we use `static` for file-only internal
functions. Non-static functions should have been declared on a
prototype file.
- Add `no-compound-token-split-by-macro` to the perl cflags, since it
throws out a bunch of perl-related warnings that make the CI log
unnecessary verbose and hard to read. This seems to happen only with
clang 12 and above.
When applying those changes, it already uncovered a few warnings, so fix
up the code as well (fix prototypes, make the code static, remove
shadowed var declaration)
GTK header needs to have #pragma warning suppressiong because GTK2
headers will warn on `-Wstrict-prototypes`, and it's included by gui.h
and so we can't just turn off the warning in a couple files.
closes: vim/vim#13223closes: vim/vim#13226f7f746b167
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Problem: cannot complete option values
Solution: Add completion functions for several options
Add cmdline tab-completion for setting string options
Add tab-completion for setting string options on the cmdline using
`:set=` (along with `:set+=` and `:set-=`).
The existing tab completion for setting options currently only works
when nothing is typed yet, and it only fills in with the existing value,
e.g. when the user does `:set diffopt=<Tab>` it will be completed to
`set diffopt=internal,filler,closeoff` and nothing else. This isn't too
useful as a user usually wants auto-complete to suggest all the possible
values, such as 'iblank', or 'algorithm:patience'.
For set= and set+=, this adds a new optional callback function for each
option that can be invoked when doing completion. This allows for each
option to have control over how completion works. For example, in
'diffopt', it will suggest the default enumeration, but if `algorithm:`
is selected, it will further suggest different algorithm types like
'meyers' and 'patience'. When using set=, the existing option value will
be filled in as the first choice to preserve the existing behavior. When
using set+= this won't happen as it doesn't make sense.
For flag list options (e.g. 'mouse' and 'guioptions'), completion will
take into account existing typed values (and in the case of set+=, the
existing option value) to make sure it doesn't suggest duplicates.
For set-=, there is a new `ExpandSettingSubtract` function which will
handle flag list and comma-separated options smartly, by only suggesting
values that currently exist in the option.
Note that Vim has some existing code that adds special handling for
'filetype', 'syntax', and misc dir options like 'backupdir'. This change
preserves them as they already work, instead of converting to the new
callback API for each option.
closes: vim/vim#13182900894b09a
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
- Move vimoption_T to option.h
- option_defs.h is for option-related types
- option_vars.h corresponds to Vim's option.h
- option_defs.h and option_vars.h don't include each other
A lot of updated places in the docs were already incorrect since long
since they did not reflect the default behaviour.
"[dos format]" could've been argued being better for discoverability
but that ship has already sailed as it is no longer displayed by default.
This was only used to avoid the effect of SHM_OVERALL. This can easily
be handled in isolation, instead of clearing out all of 'shortmess' which
has unwanted side effects and mystifies what really is going on.