
Problem: Vim tests are slow and flaky at the same time due to reliance
on timeouts which are unreliable.
Solution: improve Vim test performance and reduce flakiness
(Yee Cheng Chin)
A lot of Vim tests currently rely on waiting a specific amount of time
before asserting a condition. This is bad because 1) it is slow, as the
timeout is hardcoded, 2) it's unreliable as a resource-starved runner
may overshoot the timeout. Also, there are a lot of builtin sleep
commands in commonly used utilities like VerifyScreenDump and WaitFor()
which leads to a lot of unnecessary idle time.
Fix these issues by doing the following:
1. Make utilities like VerifyScreenDump and WaitFor use the lowest wait
time possible (1 ms). This essentially turns it into a spin wait. On
fast machines, these will finish very quickly. For existing tests
that had an implicit reliance on the old timeouts (e.g.
VerifyScreenDump had a 50ms wait before), fix the tests to wait that
specific amount explicitly.
2. Fix tests that sleep or wait for long amounts of time to instead
explicitly use a callback mechanism to be notified when a child
terminal job has finished. This allows the test to only take as much
time as possible instead of having to hard code an unreliable
timeout.
With these fixes, tests should 1) completely quickly on fast machines,
and 2) on slow machines they will still run to completion albeit slowly.
Note that previoulsy both were not true. The hardcoded timeouts meant
that on fast machines the tests were mostly idling wasting time, whereas
on slow machines, the timeouts often were not generous enough to allow
them to run to completion.
closes: vim/vim#16615
e70587dbdb
Part of shared.vim and test_crash.vim changes only.
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Neovim is a project that seeks to aggressively refactor Vim in order to:
- Simplify maintenance and encourage contributions
- Split the work between multiple developers
- Enable advanced UIs without modifications to the core
- Maximize extensibility
See the Introduction wiki page and Roadmap for more information.
Features
- Modern GUIs
- API access from any language including C/C++, C#, Clojure, D, Elixir, Go, Haskell, Java/Kotlin, JavaScript/Node.js, Julia, Lisp, Lua, Perl, Python, Racket, Ruby, Rust
- Embedded, scriptable terminal emulator
- Asynchronous job control
- Shared data (shada) among multiple editor instances
- XDG base directories support
- Compatible with most Vim plugins, including Ruby and Python plugins
See :help nvim-features
for the full list, and :help news
for noteworthy changes in the latest version!
Install from package
Pre-built packages for Windows, macOS, and Linux are found on the Releases page.
Managed packages are in Homebrew, Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, Arch Linux, Void Linux, Gentoo, and more!
Install from source
See BUILD.md and supported platforms for details.
The build is CMake-based, but a Makefile is provided as a convenience. After installing the dependencies, run the following command.
make CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo
sudo make install
To install to a non-default location:
make CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/full/path/
make install
CMake hints for inspecting the build:
cmake --build build --target help
lists all build targets.build/CMakeCache.txt
(orcmake -LAH build/
) contains the resolved values of all CMake variables.build/compile_commands.json
shows the full compiler invocations for each translation unit.
Transitioning from Vim
See :help nvim-from-vim
for instructions.
Project layout
├─ cmake/ CMake utils
├─ cmake.config/ CMake defines
├─ cmake.deps/ subproject to fetch and build dependencies (optional)
├─ runtime/ plugins and docs
├─ src/nvim/ application source code (see src/nvim/README.md)
│ ├─ api/ API subsystem
│ ├─ eval/ Vimscript subsystem
│ ├─ event/ event-loop subsystem
│ ├─ generators/ code generation (pre-compilation)
│ ├─ lib/ generic data structures
│ ├─ lua/ Lua subsystem
│ ├─ msgpack_rpc/ RPC subsystem
│ ├─ os/ low-level platform code
│ └─ tui/ built-in UI
└─ test/ tests (see test/README.md)
License
Neovim contributions since b17d96 are licensed under the
Apache 2.0 license, except for contributions copied from Vim (identified by the
vim-patch
token). See LICENSE for details.
Vim is Charityware. You can use and copy it as much as you like, but you are
encouraged to make a donation for needy children in Uganda. Please see the
kcc section of the vim docs or visit the ICCF web site, available at these URLs:
https://iccf-holland.org/
https://www.vim.org/iccf/
https://www.iccf.nl/
You can also sponsor the development of Vim. Vim sponsors can vote for
features. The money goes to Uganda anyway.