* helix-term: send the STOP signal to all processes in the process group
From kill(3p):
If pid is 0, sig shall be sent to all processes (excluding an unspecified set
of system processes) whose process group ID is equal to the process group ID
of the sender, and for which the process has permission to send a signal.
This fixes the issue of running `git commit`, attempting to suspend
helix with ^Z, and then not regaining control over the terminal and
having to press ^Z again.
* helix-term: use libc directly to send STOP signal
* helix-term: document safety of libc::kill
* helix-term: properly handle libc::kill's failure
I misread the manpage for POSIX `kill` -- it returns `-1` in
the failure case, and sets `errno`, which is retrieved via
`std::io::Error::last_os_error()`, has its string representation printed
out, and then exits with the matching status code (or 1 if, for whatever
reason, there is no matching status code).
* helix-term: expand upon why we need to SIGSTOP the entire process group
Also add a link back to one of the upstream issues.
* Generalised to multiple runtime directories with priorities
This is an implementation for #3346.
Previously, one of the following runtime directories were used:
1. `$HELIX_RUNTIME`
2. sibling directory to `$CARGO_MANIFEST_DIR`
3. subdirectory of user config directory
4. subdirectory of path to helix executable
The first directory provided / found to exist in this order was used as a
root for all runtime file searches (grammars, themes, queries).
This change lowers the priority of `$HELIX_RUNTIME` so that the user
config runtime has higher priority. More significantly, all of these
directories are now searched for runtime files, enabling a user to override
default or system-level runtime files. If the same file name appears
in multiple runtime directories, the following priority is now used:
1. sibling directory to `$CARGO_MANIFEST_DIR`
2. subdirectory of user config directory
3. `$HELIX_RUNTIME`
4. subdirectory of path to helix executable
One exception to this rule is that a user can have a `themes`
directory directly in the user config directory that has higher piority
to `themes` directories in runtime directories. That behaviour has been
preserved.
As part of implementing this feature `theme::Loader` was simplified
and the cycle detection logic of the theme inheritance was improved to
cover more cases and to be more explicit.
* Removed AsRef usage to avoid binary growth
* Health displaying ;-separated runtime dirs
* Changed HELIX_RUNTIME build from src instructions
* Updated doc for more detail on runtime directories
* Improved health symlink printing and theme cycle errors
The health display of runtime symlinks now prints both ends of the
link.
Separate errors are given when theme file is not found and when the
only theme file found would form an inheritence cycle.
* Satisfied clippy on passing Path
* Clarified highest priority runtime directory purpose
* Further clarified multiple runtime details in book
Also gave markdown headings to subsections.
Fixed a error with table indentation not building
table that also appears present on master.
---------
Co-authored-by: Paul Scott <paul.scott@anu.edu.au>
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Previously we did not respond to malformed or unhandled LSP requests.
The JSONRPC spec says that all non-notification requests must have
responses:
> When a rpc call is made, the Server MUST reply with a Response,
> except for in the case of Notifications
(Note that Helix is the "Server" in this case. Also from the spec:
"The Server is defined as the origin of Response objects and the
handler of Request objects.")
So this change sends error replies for requests which can't be parsed
or handled. Request IDs are also now added to the log messages for
unhandled requests.
This moves the `Application::claim_term` and
`helix-term::application::restore_term` functions into the helix-tui
crate. How the terminal should be claimed and restored is a TUI concern
and is implemented differently through different TUI backends.
This cleans out a lot of crossterm and TUI code in Application and
makes it easier to modify claim/restore based on information we query
from the terminal host. The child commit will take advantage of this
to cache the check for whether the host terminal supports the keyboard
enhancement protocol. Without this change, caching that information
takes much more code which is not easily reusable for anything else.
The code to restore the terminal is somewhat duplicated by this patch:
we want to restore the terminal in cases of panics. Panic handler hooks
must live for `'static` and the Application's terminal does not.
This is a workaround for a freeze when suspending Helix with C-z on
non-Windows systems. The check for the keyboard enhancement protocol
locks up crossterm's internal event reading/polling system by trying to
set up multiple concurrent readers. `input_stream.next()` sets up one
reader looking for regular crossterm events while the
`supports_keyboard_enhancement` query sets up another looking for
internal events. The latter hangs for two seconds or until the former
yields an event. By handling signals first we don't lock up the mutex
by trying to read keyboard events.
Since crossterm 0.26.x, we receive press/release keyboard events on
Windows always. We can ignore the release events though to emulate
the behavior of keyboard input on Windows on crossterm 0.25.x.
This will allow testing more of the code base, as well as enable UI-
specific testing.
Debug mode builds are prohibitively slow for the tests, mostly
because of the concurrency write tests. So there is now a profile for
integration tests that sets the optimization level to 2 for a few helix
crates, and lowers the number of rounds of concurrent writes to 1000.
* rework positioning/rendering, enables softwrap/virtual text
This commit is a large rework of the core text positioning and
rendering code in helix to remove the assumption that on-screen
columns/lines correspond to text columns/lines.
A generic `DocFormatter` is introduced that positions graphemes on
and is used both for rendering and for movements/scrolling.
Both virtual text support (inline, grapheme overlay and multi-line)
and a capable softwrap implementation is included.
fix picker highlight
cleanup doc formatter, use word bondaries for wrapping
make visual vertical movement a seperate commnad
estimate line gutter width to improve performance
cache cursor position
cleanup and optimize doc formatter
cleanup documentation
fix typos
Co-authored-by: Daniel Hines <d4hines@gmail.com>
update documentation
fix panic in last_visual_line funciton
improve soft-wrap documentation
add extend_visual_line_up/down commands
fix non-visual vertical movement
streamline virtual text highlighting, add softwrap indicator
fix cursor position if softwrap is disabled
improve documentation of text_annotations module
avoid crashes if view anchor is out of bounds
fix: consider horizontal offset when traslation char_idx -> vpos
improve default configuration
fix: mixed up horizontal and vertical offset
reset view position after config reload
apply suggestions from review
disabled softwrap for very small screens to avoid endless spin
fix wrap_indicator setting
fix bar cursor disappearring on the EOF character
add keybinding for linewise vertical movement
fix: inconsistent gutter highlights
improve virtual text API
make scope idx lookup more ergonomic
allow overlapping overlays
correctly track char_pos for virtual text
adjust configuration
deprecate old position fucntions
fix infinite loop in highlight lookup
fix gutter style
fix formatting
document max-line-width interaction with softwrap
change wrap-indicator example to use empty string
fix: rare panic when view is in invalid state (bis)
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* improve documentation for positoning functions
* simplify tests
* fix documentation of Grapheme::width
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* add explicit drop invocation
* Add explicit MoveFn type alias
* add docuntation to Editor::cursor_cache
* fix a few typos
* explain use of allow(deprecated)
* make gj and gk extend in select mode
* remove unneded debug and TODO
* mark tab_width_at #[inline]
* add fast-path to move_vertically_visual in case softwrap is disabled
* rename first_line to first_visual_line
* simplify duplicate if/else
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
After changes in #5239, the loaded configuration wasn't stored,
resulting in a success message even if the instance kept the previous
configuration values.
* Show (git) diff signs in gutter (#3890)
Avoid string allocation when git diffing
Incrementally diff using changesets
refactor diffs to be provider indepndent and improve git implementation
remove dependency on zlib-ng
switch to asynchronus diffing with similar
Update helix-vcs/Cargo.toml
fix toml formatting
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
fix typo in documentation
use ropey reexpors from helix-core
fix crash when creating new file
remove useless use if io::Cursor
fix spelling mistakes
implement suggested improvement to repository loading
improve git test isolation
remove lefover comments
Co-authored-by: univerz <univerz@fu-solution.com>
fixed spelling mistake
minor cosmetic changes
fix: set self.differ to None if decoding the diff_base fails
fixup formatting
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
reload diff_base when file is reloaded from disk
switch to imara-diff
Fixup formatting
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Redraw buffer whenever a diff is updated.
Only store hunks instead of changes for individual lines to easily allow
jumping between them
Update to latest gitoxide version
Change default diff gutter position
Only update gutter after timeout
* update diff gutter synchronously, with a timeout
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* address review comments and ensure lock is always aquired
* remove configuration for redraw timeout
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
This change handles a language server exiting. This was a UX sore-spot:
if a language server crashed, Helix did not recognize the exit and
continued to send requests to it. All requests would timeout since they
would not receive responses. This would also hold-up Helix closing
itself down since it would try to gracefully shutdown the server which
is implemented in the LSP spec as a request.
We could attempt to automatically restart the language server on crash.
I left this for future work since that change will need to be slightly
complicated: it will need to cover the case of a language server
repeatedly crashing.
* Autosave all when the terminal loses focus
* Correct comment on focus config
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
* Need a block_try_flush_writes in all quit_all paths
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
If a document is written with a new path, currently, in the event that
the write fails, the document still gets its path changed. This fixes
it so that the path is not updated unless the write succeeds.
The way that document writes are handled are by submitting them to the
async job pool, which are all executed opportunistically out of order. It
was discovered that this can lead to write inconsistencies when there
are multiple writes to the same file in quick succession.
This seeks to fix this problem by removing document writes from the
general pool of jobs and into its own specialized event. Now when a
user submits a write with one of the write commands, a request is simply
queued up in a new mpsc channel that each Document makes to handle its own
writes. This way, if multiple writes are submitted on the same document,
they are executed in order, while still allowing concurrent writes for
different documents.
If the close method fails, the editor will quit before restoring the
terminal. This causes the shell to break if, e.g. the LS times out
shutting down.
This fixes this by always restoring the terminal after closing, and
printing out a message to stderr if there is an error.