Commit Graph

330 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Devyn Cairns
e462b6cd99
Make the message when running a plugin exe directly clearer (#12806)
# Description

This changes the message that shows up when running a plugin executable
directly rather than as a plugin to direct the user to run `plugin add
--help`, which should have enough information to figure out what's going
on. The message previously just vaguely suggested that the user needs to
run the plugin "from within Nushell", which is not really enough - it
has to be added with `plugin add` to be used as a plugin.

Also fix docs for `plugin add` to mention `plugin use` rather than
`register` (oops)
2024-05-07 20:12:32 -07:00
Ian Manske
e879d4ecaf
ListStream touchup (#12524)
# Description

Does some misc changes to `ListStream`:
- Moves it into its own module/file separate from `RawStream`.
- `ListStream`s now have an associated `Span`.
- This required changes to `ListStreamInfo` in `nu-plugin`. Note sure if
this is a breaking change for the plugin protocol.
- Hides the internals of `ListStream` but also adds a few more methods.
- This includes two functions to more easily alter a stream (these take
a `ListStream` and return a `ListStream` instead of having to go through
the whole `into_pipeline_data(..)` route).
  -  `map`: takes a `FnMut(Value) -> Value`
  - `modify`: takes a function to modify the inner stream.
2024-05-05 16:00:59 +00:00
Ian Manske
847646e44e
Remove lazy records (#12682)
# Description
Removes lazy records from the language, following from the reasons
outlined in #12622. Namely, this should make semantics more clear and
will eliminate concerns regarding maintainability.

# User-Facing Changes
- Breaking change: `lazy make` is removed.
- Breaking change: `describe --collect-lazyrecords` flag is removed.
- `sys` and `debug info` now return regular records.

# After Submitting
- Update nushell book if necessary.
- Explore new `sys` and `debug info` APIs to prevent them from taking
too long (e.g., subcommands or taking an optional column/cell-path
argument).
2024-05-03 08:36:10 +08:00
Devyn Cairns
ad6deadf24
Flush on every plugin Data message (#12728)
# Description

This helps to ensure data produced on a stream is immediately available
to the consumer of the stream. The BufWriter introduced for performance
reasons in 0.93 exposed the behavior that data messages wouldn't make it
to the other side until they filled the buffer in @cablehead's
[`nu_plugin_from_sse`](https://github.com/cablehead/nu_plugin_from_sse).

I had originally not flushed on every `Data` message because I figured
that it isn't really critical that the other side sees those messages
immediately, since they're not used for control and they are flushed
when waiting for acknowledgement or when the buffer is too full anyway.

Increasing the amount of data that can be sent with a single underlying
write increases performance, but this interferes with some plugins that
want to use streams in a more real-time way. In the future I would like
to make this configurable, maybe even per-command, so that a command can
decide what the priority is. But for now I think this is reasonable.

In the worst case, this decreases performance by about 40%, when sending
very small values (just numbers). But for larger values, this PR
actually increases performance by about 20%, because I've increased the
buffer size about 2x to 16,384 bytes. The previous value of 8,192 bytes
was too small to fit a full buffer coming from an external command, so
doubling it makes sense, and now a write of a buffer from an external
command can be done in exactly one write call, which I think makes
sense. I'm doing this at the same time because flushing each data
message would make it very likely that each individual data message from
an external stream would require exactly two writes rather than
approximately one (amortized).

Again, hopefully the tradeoff isn't too bad, and if it is I'll just make
it configurable.

# User-Facing Changes

- Performance of plugin streams will be a bit different
- Plugins that expect to send streams in real-time will work again

# Tests + Formatting

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-05-02 23:51:16 +00:00
Devyn Cairns
21ebdfe8d7
Bump version to 0.93.1 (#12710)
# Description

Next patch/dev release, `0.93.1`
2024-05-01 17:19:20 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
3b220e07e3
Bump version to 0.93.0 (#12709)
# Description

Bump version to `0.93.0`
2024-04-30 15:51:13 -07:00
Devyn Cairns
0c4d5330ee
Split the plugin crate (#12563)
# Description

This breaks `nu-plugin` up into four crates:

- `nu-plugin-protocol`: just the type definitions for the protocol, no
I/O. If someone wanted to wire up something more bare metal, maybe for
async I/O, they could use this.
- `nu-plugin-core`: the shared stuff between engine/plugin. Less stable
interface.
- `nu-plugin-engine`: everything required for the engine to talk to
plugins. Less stable interface.
- `nu-plugin`: everything required for the plugin to talk to the engine,
what plugin developers use. Should be the most stable interface.

No changes are made to the interface exposed by `nu-plugin` - it should
all still be there. Re-exports from `nu-plugin-protocol` or
`nu-plugin-core` are used as required. Plugins shouldn't ever have to
use those crates directly.

This should be somewhat faster to compile as `nu-plugin-engine` and
`nu-plugin` can compile in parallel, and the engine doesn't need
`nu-plugin` and plugins don't need `nu-plugin-engine` (except for test
support), so that should reduce what needs to be compiled too.

The only significant change here other than splitting stuff up was to
break the `source` out of `PluginCustomValue` and create a new
`PluginCustomValueWithSource` type that contains that instead. One bonus
of that is we get rid of the option and it's now more type-safe, but it
also means that the logic for that stuff (actually running the plugin
for custom value ops) can live entirely within the `nu-plugin-engine`
crate.

# User-Facing Changes
- New crates.
- Added `local-socket` feature for `nu` to try to make it possible to
compile without that support if needed.

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-27 12:08:12 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
d126793290
Add plugin error propagation on write/flush (#12670)
# Description
Yet another attempt to fix the `stress_internals::test_wrong_version()`
test...

This time I think it's probably because we are getting a broken pipe
write error when we try to send `Hello` or perhaps something after it,
because the pipe has already been closed by the reader when it saw the
invalid version. In that case, an error should be available in state. It
probably makes more sense to send that back to the user rather than an
unhelpful I/O error.

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-26 06:23:58 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
25cbcb511d
Rename plugin cache file ⇒ plugin registry file (#12634)
# Description
So far this seems like the winner of my poll on what the name should be.
I'll take this off draft once the poll expires, if this is indeed the
winner.
2024-04-24 17:40:39 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
c52884b3c8
Fix (and test) for a deadlock that can happen while waiting for protocol info (#12633)
# Description

The local socket PR introduced a `Waitable` type, which could either
hold a value or be waited on until a value is available. Unlike a
channel, it would always return that value once set.

However, one issue with this design was that there was no way to detect
whether a value would ever be written. This splits the writer into a
different type `WaitableMut`, so that when it is dropped, waiting
threads can fail (because they'll never get a value).

# Tests + Formatting

A test has been added to `stress_internals` to make sure this fails in
the right way.

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-24 08:44:04 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
0f645b3bb6
Futher improve messages related to error propagation on plugin calls (#12646)
# Description
Trying to give as much context as possible. Now there should be a
spanned error with the call span if possible, and the propagated error
as an inner error if there was one in every case.

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-24 08:39:04 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
c9bc0c7d3e
Fix error message propagation on plugin call failure (#12632)
# Description

This should fix the sometimes failing wrong version test for
stress_internals.

The plugin interface state stores an error if some kind of critical
error happened, and this error should be propagated to any future
operations on the interface, but this wasn't being propagated to plugin
calls that were already waiting.

During plugin registration, the wrong version error needs to be received
as a response to the `get_signature()` to show up properly, but this
would only happen if `get_signature()` started after the `Hello` was
already received and processed. That would be a race condition, which
this commit solves.

cc @sholderbach - this should fix the CI issue

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-23 17:30:51 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
1f4131532d
Deprecate register and add plugin use (#12607)
# Description

Adds a new keyword, `plugin use`. Unlike `register`, this merely loads
the signatures from the plugin cache file. The file is configurable with
the `--plugin-config` option either to `nu` or to `plugin use` itself,
just like the other `plugin` family of commands. At the REPL, one might
do this to replace `register`:

```nushell
> plugin add ~/.cargo/bin/nu_plugin_foo
> plugin use foo
```

This will not work in a script, because `plugin use` is a keyword and
`plugin add` does not evaluate at parse time (intentionally). This means
we no longer run random binaries during parse.

The `--plugins` option has been added to allow running `nu` with certain
plugins in one step. This is used especially for the `nu_with_plugins!`
test macro, but I'd imagine is generally useful. The only weird quirk is
that it has to be a list, and we don't really do this for any of our
other CLI args at the moment.

`register` now prints a deprecation parse warning.

This should fix #11923, as we now have a complete alternative to
`register`.

# User-Facing Changes

- Add `plugin use` command
- Deprecate `register`
- Add `--plugins` option to `nu` to replace a common use of `register`

# Tests + Formatting

I think I've tested it thoroughly enough and every existing test passes.
Testing nu CLI options and alternate config files is a little hairy and
I wish there were some more generic helpers for this, so this will go on
my TODO list for refactoring.

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting

- [ ] Update plugins sections of book
- [ ] Release notes
2024-04-23 06:37:50 -05:00
Ian Manske
bae6d694ca
Refactor using ClosureEval types (#12541)
# Description
Adds two new types in `nu-engine` for evaluating closures: `ClosureEval`
and `ClosureEvalOnce`. This removed some duplicate code and centralizes
our logic for setting up, running, and cleaning up closures. For
example, in the future if we are able to reduce the cloning necessary to
run a closure, then we only have to change the code related to these
types.

`ClosureEval` and `ClosureEvalOnce` are designed with a builder API.
`ClosureEval` is used to run a closure multiple times whereas
`ClosureEvalOnce` is used for a one-shot closure.

# User-Facing Changes
Should be none, unless I messed up one of the command migrations.
Actually, this will fix any unreported environment bugs for commands
that didn't reset the env after running a closure.
2024-04-22 14:15:09 +08:00
Devyn Cairns
2595f31541
Overhaul the plugin cache file with a new msgpack+brotli format (#12579)
# Description

- Plugin signatures are now saved to `plugin.msgpackz`, which is
brotli-compressed MessagePack.
- The file is updated incrementally, rather than writing all plugin
commands in the engine every time.
- The file always contains the result of the `Signature` call to the
plugin, even if commands were removed.
- Invalid data for a particular plugin just causes an error to be
reported, but the rest of the plugins can still be parsed

# User-Facing Changes

- The plugin file has a different filename, and it's not a nushell
script.
- The default `plugin.nu` file will be automatically migrated the first
time, but not other plugin config files.
- We don't currently provide any utilities that could help edit this
file, beyond `plugin add` and `plugin rm`
  - `from msgpackz`, `to msgpackz` could also help
- New commands: `plugin add`, `plugin rm`

# Tests + Formatting

Tests added for the format and for the invalid handling.

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting

- [ ] Check for documentation changes
- [ ] Definitely needs release notes
2024-04-21 07:36:26 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
f2169c8022
Switch plugin msgpack protocol to named format (#12580)
# Description
In conflict with the documentation, the msgpack serializer for plugins
is actually using the compact format, which doesn't name struct fields,
and is instead dependent on their ordering, rendering them as tuples.
This is not a good idea for a robust protocol even if it makes the
serialization and deserialization faster.

I expect this to have some impact on performance, but I think the
robustness is probably worth it.

Deserialization always accepts either format, so this shouldn't cause
too many incompatibilities.

# User-Facing Changes
This does technically change the protocol, but it makes it reflect the
documentation. It shouldn't break deserialization, so plugins shouldn't
necessarily need a recompile.

Performance is likely worse and I should benchmark the difference.

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-19 07:50:51 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
fac2f43aa4
Add an example Nushell plugin written in Nushell itself (#12574)
# Description

As suggested by @fdncred.

It's neat that this is possible, but the particularly useful part of
this is that we can actually
test it because it doesn't have any external dependencies, unlike the
python plugin.

Right now this just implements exactly the same behavior as the python
plugin, but we could have it
exercise a few more things.

Also fixes a couple of bugs:

- `.nu` plugins were not run with `nu --stdin`, so they couldn't take
input.
- `register` couldn't be called if `--no-config-file` was set, because
it would error on trying to
  update the plugin file.

# User-Facing Changes

- `nu_plugin_nu_example` plugin added.
- `register` now works in `--no-config-file` mode.

# Tests + Formatting
Tests added for `nu_plugin_nu_example`.

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting

- [ ] Add the version bump to the release script just like for python
2024-04-19 09:53:30 +03:00
dependabot[bot]
9a739d9f0d
Bump rmp-serde from 1.1.2 to 1.2.0 (#12547)
Bumps [rmp-serde](https://github.com/3Hren/msgpack-rust) from 1.1.2 to
1.2.0.
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
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</ul>
</details>
<br />


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2024-04-17 16:44:54 +08:00
Devyn Cairns
48e4448e55
Add a panic unwind handler during plugin calls (#12526)
# Description
If a panic happens during a plugin call, because it always happens
outside of the main thread, it currently just hangs Nushell because the
plugin stays running without ever producing a response to the call.

This adds a panic handler that calls `exit(1)` after the unwind finishes
to the plugin runner. The panic error is still printed to stderr as
always, and waiting for the unwind to finish helps to ensure that
anything on the stack with `Drop` behavior that needed to run still
runs, at least on that thread.

# User-Facing Changes
Panics now look like this, which is what they looked like before the
plugin behavior was moved to a separate thread:

```
thread 'plugin runner (primary)' panicked at crates/nu_plugin_example/src/commands/main.rs:45:9:
Test panic
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Error: nu:🐚:plugin_failed_to_decode

  × Plugin failed to decode: Failed to receive response to plugin call

```

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-16 15:00:32 +00:00
Devyn Cairns
c06ef201b7
Local socket mode and foreground terminal control for plugins (#12448)
# Description

Adds support for running plugins using local socket communication
instead of stdio. This will be an optional thing that not all plugins
have to support.

This frees up stdio for use to make plugins that use stdio to create
terminal UIs, cc @amtoine, @fdncred.

This uses the [`interprocess`](https://crates.io/crates/interprocess)
crate (298 stars, MIT license, actively maintained), which seems to be
the best option for cross-platform local socket support in Rust. On
Windows, a local socket name is provided. On Unixes, it's a path. The
socket name is kept to a relatively small size because some operating
systems have pretty strict limits on the whole path (~100 chars), so on
macOS for example we prefer `/tmp/nu.{pid}.{hash64}.sock` where the hash
includes the plugin filename and timestamp to be unique enough.

This also adds an API for moving plugins in and out of the foreground
group, which is relevant for Unixes where direct terminal control
depends on that.

TODO:

- [x] Generate local socket path according to OS conventions
- [x] Add support for passing `--local-socket` to the plugin executable
instead of `--stdio`, and communicating over that instead
- [x] Test plugins that were broken, including
[amtoine/nu_plugin_explore](https://github.com/amtoine/nu_plugin_explore)
- [x] Automatically upgrade to using local sockets when supported,
falling back if it doesn't work, transparently to the user without any
visible error messages
  - Added protocol feature: `LocalSocket`
- [x] Reset preferred mode to `None` on `register`
- [x] Allow plugins to detect whether they're running on a local socket
and can use stdio freely, so that TUI plugins can just produce an error
message otherwise
  - Implemented via `EngineInterface::is_using_stdio()`
- [x] Clean up foreground state when plugin command exits on the engine
side too, not just whole plugin
- [x] Make sure tests for failure cases work as intended
  - `nu_plugin_stress_internals` added

# User-Facing Changes
- TUI plugins work
- Non-Rust plugins could optionally choose to use this
- This might behave differently, so will need to test it carefully
across different operating systems

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting
- [ ] Document local socket option in plugin contrib docs
- [ ] Document how to do a terminal UI plugin in plugin contrib docs
- [ ] Document: `EnterForeground` engine call
- [ ] Document: `LeaveForeground` engine call
- [ ] Document: `LocalSocket` protocol feature
2024-04-15 18:28:18 +00:00
Devyn Cairns
af72a18785
Improve error messages for plugin protocol by removing #[serde(untagged)] (#12510)
# Description

In the plugin protocol, I had used `#[serde(untagged)]` on the `Stream`
variant to make it smaller and include all of the stream messages at the
top level, but unfortunately this causes serde to make really unhelpful
errors if anything fails to decode anywhere:

```
Error: nu:🐚:plugin_failed_to_decode

  × Plugin failed to decode: data did not match any variant of untagged enum PluginOutput
```

If you are trying to develop something using the plugin protocol
directly, this error is incredibly unhelpful. Even as a user, this
basically just says 'something is wrong'. With this change, the errors
are much better:

```
Error: nu:🐚:plugin_failed_to_decode

  × Plugin failed to decode: unknown variant `PipelineDatra`, expected one of `Error`, `Signature`, `Ordering`, `PipelineData` at line 2 column 37
```

The only downside is it means I have to duplicate all of the
`StreamMessage` variants manually, but there's only 4 of them and
they're small.

This doesn't actually change the protocol at all - everything is still
identical on the wire.

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-14 15:55:18 +00:00
Devyn Cairns
2ae9ad8676
Copy-on-write for record values (#12305)
# Description
This adds a `SharedCow` type as a transparent copy-on-write pointer that
clones to unique on mutate.

As an initial test, the `Record` within `Value::Record` is shared.

There are some pretty big wins for performance. I'll post benchmark
results in a comment. The biggest winner is nested access, as that would
have cloned the records for each cell path follow before and it doesn't
have to anymore.

The reusability of the `SharedCow` type is nice and I think it could be
used to clean up the previous work I did with `Arc` in `EngineState`.
It's meant to be a mostly transparent clone-on-write that just clones on
`.to_mut()` or `.into_owned()` if there are actually multiple
references, but avoids cloning if the reference is unique.

# User-Facing Changes
- `Value::Record` field is a different type (plugin authors)

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting
- [ ] use for `EngineState`
- [ ] use for `Value::List`
2024-04-14 01:42:03 +00:00
Stefan Holderbach
872945ae8e
Bump version to 0.92.3 (#12476) 2024-04-12 08:00:43 -05:00
Ian Manske
d7ba8872bf
Rename IoStream to OutDest (#12433)
# Description
I spent a while trying to come up with a good name for what is currently
`IoStream`. Looking back, this name is not the best, because it:
1. Implies that it is a stream, when it all it really does is specify
the output destination for a stream/pipeline.
2. Implies that it handles input and output, when it really only handles
output.

So, this PR renames `IoStream` to `OutDest` instead, which should be
more clear.
2024-04-09 16:48:32 +00:00
Devyn Cairns
00b3a07efe
Add GetSpanContents engine call (#12439)
# Description
This allows plugins to view the source code of spans.

Requested by @ayax79 for implementing `polars ls`. Note that this won't
really help you find the location of the span. I'm planning to add
another engine call that will return information more similar to what
shows up in the miette diagnostics, with filename / line number / some
context, but I'll want to refactor some of the existing logic to make
that happen, so it was easier to just do this first. I hope this is
enough to at least have something somewhat useful show up for `polars
ls`.

# User-Facing Changes
- Example plugin: added `example view span` command

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting
- [ ] Add to plugin protocol reference
2024-04-09 10:02:17 -04:00
Ian Manske
7a7d43344e
Range refactor (#12405)
# Description
Currently, `Range` is a struct with a `from`, `to`, and `incr` field,
which are all type `Value`. This PR changes `Range` to be an enum over
`IntRange` and `FloatRange` for better type safety / stronger compile
time guarantees.

Fixes: #11778 Fixes: #11777 Fixes: #11776 Fixes: #11775 Fixes: #11774
Fixes: #11773 Fixes: #11769.

# User-Facing Changes
Hopefully none, besides bug fixes.

Although, the `serde` representation might have changed.
2024-04-06 09:04:56 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
0e36c43c64
Add BufWriter to ChildStdin on the plugin interface (#12419)
# Description
This speeds up writing messages to the plugin, because otherwise every
individual piece of the messages (not even the entire message) is
written with one syscall, leading to a lot of back and forth with the
kernel.

I learned this by running `strace` to debug something and saw a ton of
`write()` calls.

```nushell
# Before
1..10 | each { timeit { example seq 1 10000 | example sum } } | math avg
269ms 779µs 149ns
# After
> 1..10 | each { timeit { example seq 1 10000 | example sum } } | math avg
39ms 636µs 643ns
```

# User-Facing Changes
- Performance improvement

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-06 11:52:27 +08:00
Devyn Cairns
2562e306b6
Improve handling of custom values in plugin examples (#12409)
# Description
Requested by @ayax79. This makes the custom value behavior more correct,
by calling the methods on the plugin to handle the custom values in
examples rather than the methods on the custom values themselves. This
helps for handle-type custom values (like what he's doing with
dataframes).

- Equality checking in `PluginTest::test_examples()` changed to use
`PluginInterface::custom_value_partial_cmp()`
- Base value rendering for `PluginSignature` changed to use
`Plugin::custom_value_to_base_value()`
- Had to be moved closer to `serve_plugin` for this reason, so the test
for writing signatures containing custom values was removed
- That behavior should still be tested to some degree, since if custom
values are not handled, signatures will fail to parse, so all of the
other tests won't work.

# User-Facing Changes

- `Record::sort_cols()` method added to share functionality required by
`PartialCmp`, and it might also be slightly faster
- Otherwise, everything should mostly be the same but better. Plugins
that don't implement special handling for custom values will still work
the same way, because the default implementation is just a pass-through
to the `CustomValue` methods.

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-05 21:57:20 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
c82dfce246
Fix deadlock on PluginCustomValue drop (#12418)
# Description
Because the plugin interface reader thread can be responsible for
sending a drop notification, it's possible for it to end up in a
deadlock where it's waiting for the response to the drop notification
call.

I decided that the best way to address this is to just discard the
response and not wait for it. It's not really important to synchronize
with the response to `Dropped`, so this is probably faster anyway.

cc @ayax79, this is your issue where polars is getting stuck

# User-Facing Changes
- A bug fix
- Custom value plugin: `custom-value handle update` command

# Tests + Formatting

Tried to add a test with a long pipeline with a lot of drops and run it
over and over to reproduce the deadlock.

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-04-05 21:57:00 -05:00
Stefan Holderbach
394487b3a7
Bump version to 0.92.2 (#12402) 2024-04-05 10:24:00 -04:00
Stefan Holderbach
c00a05a762
Bump version to 0.92.1 (#12380) 2024-04-04 16:18:54 +02:00
Devyn Cairns
cbf7feef22
Make drop notification timing for plugin custom values more consistent (#12341)
# Description
This keeps plugin custom values that have requested drop notification
around during the lifetime of a plugin call / stream by sending them to
a channel that gets persisted during the lifetime of the call.

Before this change, it was very likely that the drop notification would
be sent before the plugin ever had a chance to handle the value it
received.

Tests have been added to make sure this works - see the `custom_values`
plugin.

cc @ayax79 

# User-Facing Changes
This is basically just a bugfix, just a slightly big one.

However, I did add an `as_mut_any()` function for custom values, to
avoid having to clone them. This is a breaking change.
2024-04-04 09:13:25 +02:00
Stefan Holderbach
c3428b891a
Bump version for 0.92.0 release (#12349)
- [x] `cargo hack` feature flag compatibility run
- [x] reedline released and pinned
- [x] `nu-plugin-test-support` added to release script
- [x] dependency tree checked
- [x] release notes
2024-04-02 20:50:26 +03:00
Devyn Cairns
714a0ccd24
Remove serde derive for ShellError, replace via LabeledError (#12319)
# Description

This changes the interface for plugins to always represent errors as
`LabeledError`s. This is good for altlang plugins, as it would suck for
them to have to implement and track `ShellError`. We save a lot of
generated code from the `ShellError` serde impl too, so `nu` and plugins
get to have a smaller binary size.

Reduces the release binary size by 1.2 MiB on my build configuration.

# User-Facing Changes

- Changes plugin protocol. `ShellError` no longer serialized.
- `ShellError` serialize output is different
- `ShellError` no longer deserializes to exactly the same value as
serialized

# Tests + Formatting

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting

- [ ] Document in plugin protocol reference
2024-03-30 14:21:40 +01:00
Stefan Holderbach
b19da158d5
Rename Value::CustomValue to Value::Custom (#12309)
# Description
The second `Value` is redundant and will consume five extra bytes on
each transmission of a custom value to/from a plugin.

# User-Facing Changes
This is a breaking change to the plugin protocol.

The [example in the protocol
reference](https://www.nushell.sh/contributor-book/plugin_protocol_reference.html#value)
becomes

```json
{
  "Custom": {
    "val": {
      "type": "PluginCustomValue",
      "name": "database",
      "data": [36, 190, 127, 40, 12, 3, 46, 83],
      "notify_on_drop": true
    },
    "span": {
      "start": 320,
      "end": 340
    }
  }
}
```

instead of 

```json
{
  "CustomValue": {
    ...
  }
}
```


# After Submitting
Update plugin protocol reference
2024-03-27 22:10:56 +01:00
Devyn Cairns
01d30a416b
Change PluginCommand API to be more like Command (#12279)
# Description

This is something that was discussed in the core team meeting last
Wednesday. @ayax79 is building `nu-plugin-polars` with all of the
dataframe commands into a plugin, and there are a lot of them, so it
would help to make the API more similar. At the same time, I think the
`Command` API is just better anyway. I don't think the difference is
justified, and the types for core commands have the benefit of requiring
less `.into()` because they often don't own their data

- Broke `signature()` up into `name()`, `usage()`, `extra_usage()`,
`search_terms()`, `examples()`
- `signature()` returns `nu_protocol::Signature`
- `examples()` returns `Vec<nu_protocol::Example>`
- `PluginSignature` and `PluginExample` no longer need to be used by
plugin developers

# User-Facing Changes
Breaking API for plugins yet again 😄
2024-03-27 11:59:57 +01:00
Ian Manske
c747ec75c9
Add command_prelude module (#12291)
# Description
When implementing a `Command`, one must also import all the types
present in the function signatures for `Command`. This makes it so that
we often import the same set of types in each command implementation
file. E.g., something like this:
```rust
use nu_protocol::ast::Call;
use nu_protocol::engine::{Command, EngineState, Stack};
use nu_protocol::{
    record, Category, Example, IntoInterruptiblePipelineData, IntoPipelineData, PipelineData,
    ShellError, Signature, Span, Type, Value,
};
```

This PR adds the `nu_engine::command_prelude` module which contains the
necessary and commonly used types to implement a `Command`:
```rust
// command_prelude.rs
pub use crate::CallExt;
pub use nu_protocol::{
    ast::{Call, CellPath},
    engine::{Command, EngineState, Stack},
    record, Category, Example, IntoInterruptiblePipelineData, IntoPipelineData, IntoSpanned,
    PipelineData, Record, ShellError, Signature, Span, Spanned, SyntaxShape, Type, Value,
};
```

This should reduce the boilerplate needed to implement a command and
also gives us a place to track the breadth of the `Command` API. I tried
to be conservative with what went into the prelude modules, since it
might be hard/annoying to remove items from the prelude in the future.
Let me know if something should be included or excluded.
2024-03-26 21:17:30 +00:00
Stefan Holderbach
e8bcfbaed1
Remove dead impl PluginEncoder for EncodingType (#12284)
Detected due to `clippy::wrong_self_convention` for `to_str`

# Breaking change to plugin authors

seems to be implementation detail
2024-03-26 12:11:49 +01:00
Antoine Büsch
4ddc35cdad
Move more dependencies to workspace level (#12270)
# Description
This is a followup to #12043 that moves more dependency versions to
workspace dependencies.

# User-Facing Changes
N/A

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-03-23 18:46:02 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
544e7bcb5e
Make some of the stream tests more robust against bad timeouts (#12271)
# Description

@WindSoilder [reported on
Discord](https://discord.com/channels/601130461678272522/855947301380947968/1221233630093901834)
that some plugin stream tests have been failing on the CI. It seems to
just be a timing thing (probably due to busy CI), so this extends the
amount of time that we can wait for a condition to be true.

# User-Facing Changes
None

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-03-24 07:41:27 +08:00
Devyn Cairns
78be67f0c6
Support for getting help text from a plugin command (#12243)
# Description
There wasn't really a good way to implement a command group style (e.g.
`from`, `query`, etc.) command in the past that just returns the help
text even if `--help` is not passed. This adds a new engine call that
just does that.

This is actually something I ran into before when developing the dbus
plugin, so it's nice to fix it.

# User-Facing Changes


# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting
- [ ] Document `GetHelp` engine call in proto
2024-03-24 07:30:38 +08:00
Devyn Cairns
c79c43d2f8
Add test support crate for plugin developers (#12259)
# Description

Adds a `nu-plugin-test-support` crate with an interface that supports
testing plugins.

Unlike in reality, these plugins run in the same process on separate
threads. This will allow
testing aspects of the plugin internal state and handling serialized
plugin custom values easily.
We still serialize their custom values and all of the engine to plugin
logic is still in play, so
from a logical perspective this should still expose any bugs that would
have been caused by that.
The only difference is that it doesn't run in a different process, and
doesn't try to serialize
everything to the final wire format for stdin/stdout.

TODO still:

- [x] Clean up warnings about private types exposed in trait definition
- [x] Automatically deserialize plugin custom values in the result so
they can be inspected
- [x] Automatic plugin examples test function
- [x] Write a bit more documentation
- [x] More tests
- [x] Add MIT License file to new crate

# User-Facing Changes

Plugin developers get a nice way to test their plugins.

# Tests + Formatting
Run the tests with `cargo test -p nu-plugin-test-support --
--show-output` to see some examples of what the failing test output for
examples can look like. I used the `difference` crate (MIT licensed) to
make it look nice.

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting

- [ ] Add a section to the book about testing
- [ ] Test some of the example plugins this way
- [ ] Add example tests to nu_plugin_template so plugin developers have
something to start with
2024-03-23 13:29:54 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
ff41cf91ef
Misc doc fixes (#12266)
# Description

Just a bunch of miscellaneous fixes to the Rust documentation that I
found recently while doing
a pass on some things.

# User-Facing Changes
None
2024-03-23 07:26:08 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
efe25e3f58
Better generic errors for plugins (and perhaps scripts) (#12236)
# Description
This makes `LabeledError` much more capable of representing close to
everything a `miette::Diagnostic` can, including `ShellError`, and
allows plugins to generate multiple error spans, codes, help, etc.

`LabeledError` is now embeddable within `ShellError` as a transparent
variant.

This could also be used to improve `error make` and `try/catch` to
reflect `LabeledError` exactly in the future.

Also cleaned up some errors in existing plugins.

# User-Facing Changes
Breaking change for plugins. Nicer errors for users.
2024-03-21 12:27:21 +01:00
Devyn Cairns
c810f5e3da
Refactor PluginCustomValue::render_to_base_value_in (#12244)
# Description

Changed to use `Value::recurse_mut` like the other functions.

# User-Facing Changes
None

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting
2024-03-20 17:22:25 +08:00
Devyn Cairns
dcf2e8ce9a
Refactor PipelineDataHeader ⇄ PipelineData mapping (#12248)
# Description
It was a bit ugly that when new `EngineCall`s or response types were
added, they needed to be added to multiple places with redundant code
just to change the types, even if they didn't have any stream content.

This fixes that and locates all of that logic in one place.

# User-Facing Changes
None

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-03-20 16:57:22 +08:00
Stefan Holderbach
f56070cbcd
Respond to nightly clippy (#12174)
Babe, wake up new nightly clippy just dropped

- Move `catch_unwind` block out of `match` scrutinee
- Remove unused members in `PluginExecutionContext`
2024-03-20 09:46:39 +08:00
Devyn Cairns
02551c416c
Fix broken build: replace value_string() straggler (#12237)
# Description

Fix after #12230 and #12231 crossed wires and broke the build
2024-03-19 07:52:49 -05:00
Devyn Cairns
6795ad7e33
Make custom value type handling more consistent (#12230)
[Context on
Discord](https://discord.com/channels/601130461678272522/855947301380947968/1219425984990806207)

# Description

- Rename `CustomValue::value_string()` to `type_name()` to reflect its
usage better.
- Change print behavior to always call `to_base_value()` first, to give
the custom value better control over the output.
- Change `describe --detailed` to show the type name as the subtype,
rather than trying to describe the base value.
- Change custom `Type` to use `type_name()` rather than `typetag_name()`
to make things like `PluginCustomValue` more transparent

One question: should `describe --detailed` still include a description
of the base value somewhere? I'm torn on it, it seems possibly useful
for some things (maybe sqlite databases?), but having `describe -d` not
include the custom type name anywhere felt weird. Another option would
be to add another method to `CustomValue` for info to be displayed in
`describe`, so that it can be more type-specific?

# User-Facing Changes
Everything above has implications for printing and `describe` on custom
values

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2024-03-19 11:09:59 +01:00
Devyn Cairns
992359a191
Support for custom values in plugin examples (#12213)
# Description
@ayax79 says that the dataframe commands all have dataframe custom
values in their examples, and they're used for tests.

Rather than send the custom values to the engine, if they're in
examples, this change just renders them using `to_base_value()` first.
That way we avoid potentially having to hold onto custom values in
`plugins.nu` that might not be valid indefinitely - as will be the case
for dataframes in particular - but we still avoid forcing plugin writers
to not use custom values in their examples.

# User-Facing Changes
- Custom values usable in plugin examples

# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`

# After Submitting
2024-03-18 07:34:21 -05:00