Commit Graph

72 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
455d32d9e5 Cut down unnecessary lint allows (#14335)
Trying to reduce lint allows either by checking if they are former false
positives or by fixing the underlying warning.

- **Remove dead `allow(dead_code)`**
- **Remove recursive dead code**
- **Remove dead code**
- **Move test only functions to test module**
  The unit tests that use them, themselves are somewhat sus in that they
mock the usage and not test specificly used methods of the
implementation, so there is a risk for divergence
- **Remove `clippy::uninit_vec` allow.**
  May have been a false positive, or the impl has changed somewhat.
We certainly want to look at the unsafe code here to vet for
correctness.
2024-11-15 19:24:39 +01:00
Dom
e0bb5a2bd2 Allow using function keys F21-F35 for keybindings (#14201)
I feel like the limitations on what can be bound are too strict.

if an app _does_ support the Kitty keyboard protocol (Neovim,
Reedline), I can map the function keys (F27-F35 as listed below).

In Reedline everything works perfectly. The issue is for some reason we
limit the keys that can be bound in Nushell, so I am unable to do that.
2024-10-30 12:22:47 +01:00
3a685049da add name to $env.config.keybindings (#14159)
# Description

This PR adds the `name` column back to keybindings.


This may be considered a hack since the reedline keybinding has no spot
for name, but it seems to work.
2024-10-23 19:23:41 +02:00
a0f38f8845 Fix deleted lowercase in keybinding parsing (#14081)
# Description
Adds back the `to_ascii_lowercase` deleted in #13802. Also fixes the
error messages having the lowercased value instead of the original
value.
2024-10-13 19:31:09 +00:00
fce6146576 Refactor config updates (#13802)
# Description
This PR standardizes updates to the config through a new
`UpdateFromValue` trait. For now, this trait is private in case we need
to make changes to it.

Note that this PR adds some additional `ShellError` cases to create
standard error messages for config errors. A follow-up PR will move
usages of the old error cases to these new ones. This PR also uses
`Type::custom` in lots of places (e.g., for string enums). Not sure if
this is something we want to encourage.

# User-Facing Changes
Should be none.
2024-10-11 18:40:32 +02:00
55c3fc9141 Improve keybinding parsing for Unicode support (#14020)
# Description

This pull request enhances the `add_parsed_keybinding` function to
provide greater flexibility in specifying keycodes for keybindings in
Nushell. Previously, the function only supported specifying keycodes
directly through character notation (e.g., `char_e` for the character
`e`). This limited users to a small set of keybindings, especially in
scenarios where specific non-English characters were needed.

With this new version, users can also specify characters using their
Unicode codes, such as `char_u003B` for the semicolon (`;`), providing a
more flexible approach to customization, for example like this:

```nushell
{
    name: move_to_line_end_or_take_history_hint
    modifier: shift
    keycode: char_u003B # char_;
    mode: vi_normal
    event: {
        until: [
            { send: historyhintcomplete }
            { edit: movetolineend }
        ]
    }
}
```

# User-Facing Changes

Added support for specifying keycodes using Unicode codes, e.g.,
char_u002C (comma - `,`):

```nushell
{
    name: <command_name>, # name of the command
    modifier: none,       # key modifier
    keycode: char_u002C,  # Unicode code for the comma (',')
    mode: vi_normal,      # mode in which this binding should work
    event: {
        send: <action>    # action to be performed
    }
}
```
2024-10-08 14:42:15 +02:00
6ce20675eb Consistent default key bindings for ide_completion_menu (#13955)
Updates Ctrl+p to open the ide_completion menu and otherwise advance to
the "previous" menu item.

Ctrl+n opens the ide_completion_menu and subsequently advances to the
"next" menu item. Ctrl+p should share this behavior for the "previous"
menu item. See nushell/nushell#13946 for detailed discussion.

Tested by building and running nushell without a custom config, falling
back to this default config.
2024-10-04 06:54:37 -05:00
151767a5e3 Support kitty key modifiers in keybindings (#13906)
# Description
hi hi, this makes the parsing of modifier key combos in config more
general, and adds support for additional kitty keyboard protocol
modifiers. It seems that support for [kitty
keys](https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/keyboard-protocol) had already
been added to nushell in https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/10540,
and this was the only missing piece to making them available in
keybindings.

# User-Facing Changes
- keybindings in config can include the super, hyper and meta modifiers
(e.g. `modifier: super`, `modifier: shift_super`, etc.), and these
modifiers will work in supporting terminals (kitty, foot, wezterm,
alacritty...)
- all permutations of snake_cased modifier combinations now behave
equivalently for the purpose of describing keybindings in config (e.g.
`control_alt_shift` was previously supported where `shift_control_alt`
was a config error — now they're the same)

# Tests
None of this looks to be tested at the moment. I only found a smoke test
under the nu-cli crate, and I couldn't break tests elsewhere by stuffing
around with modifier handling. Works on my machine, though! 🌈
2024-09-24 15:37:04 +02:00
03ee54a4df Fix try not working with let, etc. (#13885)
# Description
Partialy addresses #13868. `try` does not catch non-zero exit code
errors from the last command in a pipeline if the result is assigned to
a variable using `let` (or `mut`).

This was fixed by adding a new `OutDest::Value` case. This is used when
the pipeline is in a "value" position. I.e., it will be collected into a
value. This ended up replacing most of the usages of `OutDest::Capture`.
So, this PR also renames `OutDest::Capture` to `OutDest::PipeSeparate`
to better fit the few remaining use cases for it.

# User-Facing Changes
Bug fix.

# Tests + Formatting
Added two tests.
2024-09-23 06:44:25 -05:00
abd230e12e Use IntoValue in config code (#13751)
# Description

Cleans up and refactors the config code using the `IntoValue` macro.
Shoutout to @cptpiepmatz for making the macro!

# User-Facing Changes

Should be none.

# After Submitting

Somehow refactor the reverse transformation.
2024-09-05 09:44:23 +02:00
4157ca711d Factor out style-setting code (#13406)
# Description
This is mainly cleanup, but introduces a slight (positive, if anything)
behavior change:

Some menu layouts support only a subset of styles, but with this change
the user will still be able to configure them. This seems strictly
better - if reedline starts supporting one of the existing styles for a
particular layout, there won't be any need to update nushell code.


# User-Facing Changes
None

# Tests + Formatting
This is simply factoring out existing code, old tests should still cover
it.

---------

Co-authored-by: sholderbach <sholderbach@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-08-01 11:17:58 +02:00
f65bc97a54 Update config directly at assignment (#13332)
# Description

Allows `Stack` to have a modified local `Config`, which is updated
immediately when `$env.config` is assigned to. This means that even
within a script, commands that come after `$env.config` changes will
always see those changes in `Stack::get_config()`.

Also fixed a lot of cases where `engine_state.get_config()` was used
even when `Stack` was available.

Closes #13324.

# User-Facing Changes
- Config changes apply immediately after the assignment is executed,
rather than whenever config is read by a command that needs it.
- Potentially slower performance when executing a lot of lines that
change `$env.config` one after another. Recommended to get `$env.config`
into a `mut` variable first and do modifications, then assign it back.
- Much faster performance when executing a script that made
modifications to `$env.config`, as the changes are only parsed once.

# Tests + Formatting
All passing.

# After Submitting
- [ ] release notes
2024-07-11 06:09:33 -07:00
a55a48529d Fix delta not being merged when evaluating menus (#13120)
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# Description
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After parsing menu code, the changes weren't merged into the engine
state, which didn't produce any errors (somehow?) until the recent span
ID refactors. With this PR, menus get a new cloned engine state with the
parsed changes correctly merged in.

Hopefully fixes https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/13118

# User-Facing Changes
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# Tests + Formatting
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tests for the standard library

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# After Submitting
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2024-06-10 22:33:22 +03:00
78fdb2f4d1 reduce log tracing in nu-cli (#13067)
This one trace message creates thousands of lines of trace messages that
is probably
better suited to using on an *as needed* basis rather than everyone
having to wade
through it...

For now, I just commented it out but eventually this line of code should
be removed
and used simply for the time when someone needs to see it...
2024-06-05 08:54:38 -07:00
f32ecc641f Remove some macros (#12742)
# Description
Replaces some macros with regular functions or other code.
2024-05-03 10:35:37 +02:00
e97368433b add a few more logging statements for debugging startup (#12316)
# Description

This PR adds a few more `trace!()` and `perf()` statements that allowed
a deeper understanding of the nushell startup process when used with `nu
-n --no-std-lib --log-level trace`.

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

# Tests + Formatting
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- `cargo test --workspace` to check that all tests pass (on Windows make
sure to [enable developer
mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
- `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing run-tests --path
crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

> **Note**
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automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```
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# After Submitting
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2024-03-28 11:27:12 -05:00
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
c7e0d4b1e5 Use the system clipboard only for explicit copy/paste operations. Addresses issue 11907 (#12179)
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# Description
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With the introduction of the system clipboard to nushell, many commands
changed their behavior from using a local cut buffer to the system
clipboard, perhaps surprisingly for many users. (See #11907)
This PR changes most of them back to using the local cut buffer and
introduces three commands (`CutSelectionSystem`, `CopySelectionSystem`
and `PasteSystem`) to explicitly use the system clipboard.


# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
Users who in the meantime already used the system clipboard now default
back to the local clipboard. To be able to use the system clipboard
again they have to append the suffix `system` to their current edit
command specified in their keybindings.

# Tests + Formatting
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

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automatically
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-->
The commands themselves are tested in `reedline`. The changes introduces
in nushell are minimal and simply forward from a match on the keybinding
name to the command.
# After Submitting
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documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the
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---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-03-15 08:59:21 -05:00
b6c7656194 IO and redirection overhaul (#11934)
# Description
The PR overhauls how IO redirection is handled, allowing more explicit
and fine-grain control over `stdout` and `stderr` output as well as more
efficient IO and piping.

To summarize the changes in this PR:
- Added a new `IoStream` type to indicate the intended destination for a
pipeline element's `stdout` and `stderr`.
- The `stdout` and `stderr` `IoStream`s are stored in the `Stack` and to
avoid adding 6 additional arguments to every eval function and
`Command::run`. The `stdout` and `stderr` streams can be temporarily
overwritten through functions on `Stack` and these functions will return
a guard that restores the original `stdout` and `stderr` when dropped.
- In the AST, redirections are now directly part of a `PipelineElement`
as a `Option<Redirection>` field instead of having multiple different
`PipelineElement` enum variants for each kind of redirection. This
required changes to the parser, mainly in `lite_parser.rs`.
- `Command`s can also set a `IoStream` override/redirection which will
apply to the previous command in the pipeline. This is used, for
example, in `ignore` to allow the previous external command to have its
stdout redirected to `Stdio::null()` at spawn time. In contrast, the
current implementation has to create an os pipe and manually consume the
output on nushell's side. File and pipe redirections (`o>`, `e>`, `e>|`,
etc.) have precedence over overrides from commands.

This PR improves piping and IO speed, partially addressing #10763. Using
the `throughput` command from that issue, this PR gives the following
speedup on my setup for the commands below:
| Command | Before (MB/s) | After (MB/s) | Bash (MB/s) |
| --------------------------- | -------------:| ------------:|
-----------:|
| `throughput o> /dev/null` | 1169 | 52938 | 54305 |
| `throughput \| ignore` | 840 | 55438 | N/A |
| `throughput \| null` | Error | 53617 | N/A |
| `throughput \| rg 'x'` | 1165 | 3049 | 3736 |
| `(throughput) \| rg 'x'` | 810 | 3085 | 3815 |

(Numbers above are the median samples for throughput)

This PR also paves the way to refactor our `ExternalStream` handling in
the various commands. For example, this PR already fixes the following
code:
```nushell
^sh -c 'echo -n "hello "; sleep 0; echo "world"' | find "hello world"
```
This returns an empty list on 0.90.1 and returns a highlighted "hello
world" on this PR.

Since the `stdout` and `stderr` `IoStream`s are available to commands
when they are run, then this unlocks the potential for more convenient
behavior. E.g., the `find` command can disable its ansi highlighting if
it detects that the output `IoStream` is not the terminal. Knowing the
output streams will also allow background job output to be redirected
more easily and efficiently.

# User-Facing Changes
- External commands returned from closures will be collected (in most
cases):
  ```nushell
  1..2 | each {|_| nu -c "print a" }
  ```
This gives `["a", "a"]` on this PR, whereas this used to print "a\na\n"
and then return an empty list.

  ```nushell
  1..2 | each {|_| nu -c "print -e a" }
  ```
This gives `["", ""]` and prints "a\na\n" to stderr, whereas this used
to return an empty list and print "a\na\n" to stderr.

- Trailing new lines are always trimmed for external commands when
piping into internal commands or collecting it as a value. (Failure to
decode the output as utf-8 will keep the trailing newline for the last
binary value.) In the current nushell version, the following three code
snippets differ only in parenthesis placement, but they all also have
different outputs:

  1. `1..2 | each { ^echo a }`
     ```
     a
     a
     ╭────────────╮
     │ empty list │
     ╰────────────╯
     ```
  2. `1..2 | each { (^echo a) }`
     ```
     ╭───┬───╮
     │ 0 │ a │
     │ 1 │ a │
     ╰───┴───╯
     ```
  3. `1..2 | (each { ^echo a })`
     ```
     ╭───┬───╮
     │ 0 │ a │
     │   │   │
     │ 1 │ a │
     │   │   │
     ╰───┴───╯
     ```

  But in this PR, the above snippets will all have the same output:
  ```
  ╭───┬───╮
  │ 0 │ a │
  │ 1 │ a │
  ╰───┴───╯
  ```

- All existing flags on `run-external` are now deprecated.

- File redirections now apply to all commands inside a code block:
  ```nushell
  (nu -c "print -e a"; nu -c "print -e b") e> test.out
  ```
This gives "a\nb\n" in `test.out` and prints nothing. The same result
would happen when printing to stdout and using a `o>` file redirection.

- External command output will (almost) never be ignored, and ignoring
output must be explicit now:
  ```nushell
  (^echo a; ^echo b)
  ```
This prints "a\nb\n", whereas this used to print only "b\n". This only
applies to external commands; values and internal commands not in return
position will not print anything (e.g., `(echo a; echo b)` still only
prints "b").

- `complete` now always captures stderr (`do` is not necessary).

# After Submitting
The language guide and other documentation will need to be updated.
2024-03-14 15:51:55 -05:00
14d1c67863 Debugger experiments (#11441)
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# Description
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This PR adds a new evaluator path with callbacks to a mutable trait
object implementing a Debugger trait. The trait object can do anything,
e.g., profiling, code coverage, step debugging. Currently,
entering/leaving a block and a pipeline element is marked with
callbacks, but more callbacks can be added as necessary. Not all
callbacks need to be used by all debuggers; unused ones are simply empty
calls. A simple profiler is implemented as a proof of concept.

The debugging support is implementing by making `eval_xxx()` functions
generic depending on whether we're debugging or not. This has zero
computational overhead, but makes the binary slightly larger (see
benchmarks below). `eval_xxx()` variants called from commands (like
`eval_block_with_early_return()` in `each`) are chosen with a dynamic
dispatch for two reasons: to not grow the binary size due to duplicating
the code of many commands, and for the fact that it isn't possible
because it would make Command trait objects object-unsafe.

In the future, I hope it will be possible to allow plugin callbacks such
that users would be able to implement their profiler plugins instead of
having to recompile Nushell.
[DAP](https://microsoft.github.io/debug-adapter-protocol/) would also be
interesting to explore.

Try `help debug profile`.

## Screenshots

Basic output:

![profiler_new](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/25571562/418b9df0-b659-4dcb-b023-2d5fcef2c865)

To profile with more granularity, increase the profiler depth (you'll
see that repeated `is-windows` calls take a large chunk of total time,
making it a good candidate for optimizing):

![profiler_new_m3](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/25571562/636d756d-5d56-460c-a372-14716f65f37f)

## Benchmarks

### Binary size

Binary size increase vs. main: **+40360 bytes**. _(Both built with
`--release --features=extra,dataframe`.)_

### Time

```nushell
# bench_debug.nu
use std bench

let test = {
    1..100
    | each {
        ls | each {|row| $row.name | str length }
    }
    | flatten
    | math avg
}

print 'debug:'
let res2 = bench { debug profile $test } --pretty
print $res2
```

```nushell
# bench_nodebug.nu
use std bench

let test = {
    1..100
    | each {
        ls | each {|row| $row.name | str length }
    }
    | flatten
    | math avg
}

print 'no debug:'
let res1 = bench { do $test } --pretty
print $res1
```

`cargo run --release -- bench_debug.nu` is consistently 1--2 ms slower
than `cargo run --release -- bench_nodebug.nu` due to the collection
overhead + gathering the report. This is expected. When gathering more
stuff, the overhead is obviously higher.

`cargo run --release -- bench_nodebug.nu` vs. `nu bench_nodebug.nu` I
didn't measure any difference. Both benchmarks report times between 97
and 103 ms randomly, without one being consistently higher than the
other. This suggests that at least in this particular case, when not
running any debugger, there is no runtime overhead.

## API changes

This PR adds a generic parameter to all `eval_xxx` functions that forces
you to specify whether you use the debugger. You can resolve it in two
ways:
* Use a provided helper that will figure it out for you. If you wanted
to use `eval_block(&engine_state, ...)`, call `let eval_block =
get_eval_block(&engine_state); eval_block(&engine_state, ...)`
* If you know you're in an evaluation path that doesn't need debugger
support, call `eval_block::<WithoutDebug>(&engine_state, ...)` (this is
the case of hooks, for example).

I tried to add more explanation in the docstring of `debugger_trait.rs`.

## TODO

- [x] Better profiler output to reduce spam of iterative commands like
`each`
- [x] Resolve `TODO: DEBUG` comments
- [x] Resolve unwraps
- [x] Add doc comments
- [x] Add usage and extra usage for `debug profile`, explaining all
columns

# User-Facing Changes
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Hopefully none.

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2024-03-08 20:21:35 +02:00
7884de1941 Remove some unnecessary static Vecs (#11947)
Avoid unnecessary allocations or larger iterator structs

- Turn static `Vec`s into arrays when possible
- Use `std::iter::once`/`empty` where applicable
- Use `bool::then_some` in `detect column` `.chain`
- Drop in the bucket: de-vec-ing tests
2024-02-24 20:58:01 +01:00
68fcd71898 Add Value::coerce_str (#11885)
# Description
Following #11851, this PR adds one final conversion function for
`Value`. `Value::coerce_str` takes a `&Value` and converts it to a
`Cow<str>`, creating an owned `String` for types that needed converting.
Otherwise, it returns a borrowed `str` for `String` and `Binary`
`Value`s which avoids a clone/allocation. Where possible, `coerce_str`
and `coerce_into_string` should be used instead of `coerce_string`,
since `coerce_string` always allocates a new `String`.
2024-02-18 17:47:10 +01:00
1c49ca503a Name the Value conversion functions more clearly (#11851)
# Description
This PR renames the conversion functions on `Value` to be more consistent.
It follows the Rust [API guidelines](https://rust-lang.github.io/api-guidelines/naming.html#ad-hoc-conversions-follow-as_-to_-into_-conventions-c-conv) for ad-hoc conversions.
The conversion functions on `Value` now come in a few forms:
- `coerce_{type}` takes a `&Value` and attempts to convert the value to
`type` (e.g., `i64` are converted to `f64`). This is the old behavior of
some of the `as_{type}` functions -- these functions have simply been
renamed to better reflect what they do.
- The new `as_{type}` functions take a `&Value` and returns an `Ok`
result only if the value is of `type` (no conversion is attempted). The
returned value will be borrowed if `type` is non-`Copy`, otherwise an
owned value is returned.
- `into_{type}` exists for non-`Copy` types, but otherwise does not
attempt conversion just like `as_type`. It takes an owned `Value` and
always returns an owned result.
- `coerce_into_{type}` has the same relationship with `coerce_{type}` as
`into_{type}` does with `as_{type}`.
- `to_{kind}_string`: conversion to different string formats (debug,
abbreviated, etc.). Only two of the old string conversion functions were
removed, the rest have been renamed only.
- `to_{type}`: other conversion functions. Currently, only `to_path`
exists. (And `to_string` through `Display`.)

This table summaries the above:
| Form | Cost | Input Ownership | Output Ownership | Converts `Value`
case/`type` |
| ---------------------------- | ----- | --------------- |
---------------- | -------- |
| `as_{type}` | Cheap | Borrowed | Borrowed/Owned | No |
| `into_{type}` | Cheap | Owned | Owned | No |
| `coerce_{type}` | Cheap | Borrowed | Borrowed/Owned | Yes |
| `coerce_into_{type}` | Cheap | Owned | Owned | Yes |
| `to_{kind}_string` | Expensive | Borrowed | Owned | Yes |
| `to_{type}` | Expensive | Borrowed | Owned | Yes |

# User-Facing Changes
Breaking API change for `Value` in `nu-protocol` which is exposed as
part of the plugin API.
2024-02-17 18:14:16 +00:00
a603b067e5 update default_config with new defaults (#11856)
# Description

Update a few defaults.
1. use_ls_colors_completeions defaults to true.
2. make ide_menu only offer 10 completions at a time with
`max_completion_height = 10` instead of taking the entire screen.

# User-Facing Changes
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2024-02-14 13:01:27 -06:00
86dd045554 add match-text style + config setting for ide menu (#11670)
the match-text style (https://github.com/nushell/reedline/pull/730) is
now configurable via the config.nu file.
the option ``correct_cursor_pos`` can now also be set in the config.nu
file.
2024-01-29 09:59:01 -06:00
b004e80f77 Bump Reedline for the Menu Refactor (#11658)
* [Refactor Menu System with Composition of Menu
Functions](https://github.com/nushell/reedline/issues/706)
* Move Description Menu over to Reedline to consolidate location of the
Menus which will simplify further changes and maintenance to the Menu
system going forward
* Removes lots of code duplication in the Menu system on the Reedline
side which should ease a developers ability to develop new cool menus
for Reedline moving forward
2024-01-28 08:26:03 -08:00
ea1bd9f8f9 IDE style completion (#11593)
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# Description
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Adds an IDE-Style completion menu

![grafik](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/104733404/df7f1039-2bbc-42f7-9501-fe28507b5cfe)

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2024-01-20 18:14:02 -06:00
e7a4af14cd Add shift + navigation functionality through reedline (#11535)
This PR should close #1171

# Description
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This PR introduces the capability to select text using the existing
move.. `EditCommand`s of `reedline`. Those commands are extended with an
optional parameter specifying if text should be selected while
navigating. This enables a workflow familiar from a wide variety of text
editors, where holding `shift` while navigating selects all text between
the initial cursor position when pressing `shift` and the current cursor
position.

Before this PR can be merged the [sibling PR for
reedline](https://github.com/nushell/reedline/pull/689) has to land
first.

# User-Facing Changes
## Additional `EditCommand`s
1. `SelectAll`
2. `CutSelection`
3. `CopySelection`
## New optional parameter on existing `EditCommand`s
All `EditCommand`s of `EditType` `MoveCursor` have a new optional
parameter named `select` of type `bool`. If this parameter is not set by
a user it is treated as false, which corresponds to their behavior up to
now.

I am relatively new to `nushell` and as such may not know of existing
behavior that might change through this PR. However, I believe there
should be none. I come to this conclusion because
1. Existing commands are extended only with an *optional* additional
parameter, users who currently use these EditCommands keep their
existing behavior if they don't use it.
2. A few new commands are introduced which were previously not valid.
3. The default keybindings specified in `default_config.nu` are
untouched.

# Tests + Formatting
Tests for the new optional parameter for the move commands are included
to make sure that they truly are optional and an unused optional
parameter conforms to the previous behavior.
2024-01-20 08:04:06 -06:00
67eec92e76 Convert more ShellError variants to named fields (#11222)
# Description

Convert errors to named fields:
* NeedsPositiveValue
* MissingConfigValue
* UnsupportedConfigValue
* DowncastNotPossible
* NonUtf8Custom
* NonUtf8
* DidYouMeanCustom
* DidYouMean
* ReadingFile
* RemoveNotPossible
* ChangedModifiedTimeNotPossible
* ChangedAccessTimeNotPossible

Part of #10700
2023-12-04 10:19:32 +01:00
0f600bc3f5 Improve case insensitivity consistency (#10884)
# Description

Add an extension trait `IgnoreCaseExt` to nu_utils which adds some case
insensitivity helpers, and use them throughout nu to improve the
handling of case insensitivity. Proper case folding is done via unicase,
which is already a dependency via mime_guess from nu-command.

In actuality a lot of code still does `to_lowercase`, because unicase
only provides immediate comparison and doesn't expose a `to_folded_case`
yet. And since we do a lot of `contains`/`starts_with`/`ends_with`, it's
not sufficient to just have `eq_ignore_case`. But if we get access in
the future, this makes us ready to use it with a change in one place.

Plus, it's clearer what the purpose is at the call site to call
`to_folded_case` instead of `to_lowercase` if it's exclusively for the
purpose of case insensitive comparison, even if it just does
`to_lowercase` still.

# User-Facing Changes

- Some commands that were supposed to be case insensitive remained only
insensitive to ASCII case (a-z), and now are case insensitive w.r.t.
non-ASCII characters as well.

# Tests + Formatting

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

---------

Co-authored-by: Stefan Holderbach <sholderbach@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-11-08 23:58:54 +01:00
86cd387439 Refactor and fix Config<->Value mechanism (#10896)
# Description
Our config exists both as a `Config` struct for internal consumption and
as a `Value`. The latter is exposed through `$env.config` and can be
both set and read.
Thus we have a complex bug-prone mechanism, that reads a `Value` and
then tries to plug anything where the value is unrepresentable in
`Config` with the correct state from `Config`.

The parsing involves therefore mutation of the `Value` in a nested
`Record` structure. Previously this was wholy done manually, with
indices.
To enable deletion for example, things had to be iterated over from the
back. Also things were indexed in a bunch of places. This was hard to
read and an invitation for bugs.

With #10876 we can now use `Record::retain_mut` to traverse the records,
modify anything that needs fixing, and drop invalid fields.

# Parts:

- Error messages now consistently use the correct spans pointing to the
problematic value and the paths displayed in some messages are also
aligned with the keys used for lookup.
- Reconstruction of values has been fixed for:
	- `table.padding`
	- `buffer_editor`
	- `hooks.command_not_found`
	- `datetime_format` (partial solution)
- Fix validation of `table.padding` input so value is not set (and
underflows `usize` causing `table` to run forever with negative values)
- New proper types for settings. Fully validated enums instead of
strings:
  - `config.edit_mode` -> `EditMode` 
  	- Don't fall back to vi-mode on invalid string
  - `config.table.mode` -> `TableMode`
- there is still a fall back to `rounded` if given an invalid
`TableMode` as argument to the `nu` binary
  - `config.completions.algorithm` -> `CompletionAlgorithm`
  - `config.error_style` -> `ErrorStyle`
    - don't implicitly fall back to `fancy` when given an invalid value.
- This should also shrink the size of `Config` as instead of 4x24 bytes
those fields now need only 4x1 bytes in `Config`
- Completely removed macros relying on the scope of `Value::into_config`
so we can break it up into smaller parts in the future.
- Factored everything into smaller files with the types and helpers for
particular topics.
- `NuCursorShape` now explicitly expresses the `Inherit` setting.
conversion to option only happens at the interface to `reedline`
2023-11-08 20:31:30 +01:00
60da7abbc7 Use Vec for Closure captures (#10940)
# Description
Changes the `captures` field in `Closure` from a `HashMap` to a `Vec`
and makes `Stack::captures_to_stack` take an owned `Vec` instead of a
borrowed `HashMap`.

This eliminates the conversion to a `Vec` inside `captures_to_stack` and
makes it possible to avoid clones altogether when using an owned
`Closure` (which is the case for most commands). Additionally, using a
`Vec` reduces the size of `Value` by 8 bytes (down to 72).

# User-Facing Changes
Breaking API change for `nu-protocol`.
2023-11-08 00:43:28 +01:00
72cb4b6032 Reuse Closure type in Value::Closure (#10894)
# Description
Reuses the existing `Closure` type in `Value::Closure`. This will help
with the span refactoring for `Value`. Additionally, this allows us to
more easily box or unbox the `Closure` case should we chose to do so in
the future.

# User-Facing Changes
Breaking API change for `nu_protocol`.
2023-10-30 23:34:23 +01:00
4b301710d3 Convert more examples and tests to record! macro (#10840)
# Description
Use `record!` macro instead of defining two separate `vec!` for `cols`
and `vals` when appropriate.
This visually aligns the key with the value.
Further more you don't have to deal with the construction of `Record {
cols, vals }` so we can hide the implementation details in the future.

## State

Not covering all possible commands yet, also some tests/examples are
better expressed by creating cols and vals separately.

# User/Developer-Facing Changes
The examples and tests should read more natural. No relevant functional
change

# Bycatch

Where I noticed it I replaced usage of `Value` constructors with
`Span::test_data()` or `Span::unknown()` to the `Value::test_...`
constructors. This should make things more readable and also simplify
changes to the `Span` system in the future.
2023-10-28 14:52:31 +02:00
fedd879b2e support tab completion cycling (#10199)
should close https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/7202

# Description
i have been annoyed enough by this missing feature, so let's add that to
Nushell without requiring any user configuration 😏

# User-Facing Changes
this PR should allow tab completion cycling everytime, without requiring
the user to use the default config files or add the following
keybindings to their config
```nushell
    {
        name: completion_menu
        modifier: none
        keycode: tab
        mode: [emacs vi_normal vi_insert]
        event: {
            until: [
                { send: menu name: completion_menu }
                { send: menunext }
                { edit: complete }
            ]
        }
    }
```

### 🧪 try it out
from the root of the repo, one can try `<tab>` in each of the following
cases:
- `cargo run -- -n` to load Nushell without any config
- `cargo run -- --config
crates/nu-utils/src/sample_config/default_config.nu --env-config
crates/nu-utils/src/sample_config/default_env.nu` to load the default
configuration
- `cargo run` to load the user configuration

## before
- `<tab>`, `ls <tab>` and `str <tab>` only work with the second `cargo
run`, i.e. when loading the default config files

## after
- `<tab>` should cycle through the available commands
- `ls <tab>` should cycle through the available files and directories
- `str <tab>` should cycle the subcommands of `str`

in all three cases

# Tests + Formatting

# After submitting
2023-09-03 19:19:39 -05:00
JT
6cdfee3573 Move Value to helpers, separate span call (#10121)
# Description

As part of the refactor to split spans off of Value, this moves to using
helper functions to create values, and using `.span()` instead of
matching span out of Value directly.

Hoping to get a few more helping hands to finish this, as there are a
lot of commands to update :)

# User-Facing Changes
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---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: WindSoilder <windsoilder@outlook.com>
2023-09-03 07:27:29 -07:00
JT
1e3e034021 Spanned Value step 1: span all value cases (#10042)
# Description

This doesn't really do much that the user could see, but it helps get us
ready to do the steps of the refactor to split the span off of Value, so
that values can be spanless. This allows us to have top-level values
that can hold both a Value and a Span, without requiring that all values
have them.

We expect to see significant memory reduction by removing so many
unnecessary spans from values. For example, a table of 100,000 rows and
5 columns would have a savings of ~8megs in just spans that are almost
always duplicated.

# User-Facing Changes

Nothing yet

# Tests + Formatting
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2023-08-25 08:48:05 +12:00
8da27a1a09 Create Record type (#10103)
# Description
This PR creates a new `Record` type to reduce duplicate code and
possibly bugs as well. (This is an edited version of #9648.)
- `Record` implements `FromIterator` and `IntoIterator` and so can be
iterated over or collected into. For example, this helps with
conversions to and from (hash)maps. (Also, no more
`cols.iter().zip(vals)`!)
- `Record` has a `push(col, val)` function to help insure that the
number of columns is equal to the number of values. I caught a few
potential bugs thanks to this (e.g. in the `ls` command).
- Finally, this PR also adds a `record!` macro that helps simplify
record creation. It is used like so:
   ```rust
   record! {
       "key1" => some_value,
       "key2" => Value::string("text", span),
       "key3" => Value::int(optional_int.unwrap_or(0), span),
       "key4" => Value::bool(config.setting, span),
   }
   ```
Since macros hinder formatting, etc., the right hand side values should
be relatively short and sweet like the examples above.

Where possible, prefer `record!` or `.collect()` on an iterator instead
of multiple `Record::push`s, since the first two automatically set the
record capacity and do less work overall.

# User-Facing Changes
Besides the changes in `nu-protocol` the only other breaking changes are
to `nu-table::{ExpandedTable::build_map, JustTable::kv_table}`.
2023-08-25 07:50:29 +12:00
066790552a add keybinding for search-history (#9930)
# Description

This PR adds a keybinding in the rust code for `search-history` aka
reverse-search as `ctrl+q` so it does not overwrite `history-search`
with `ctrl+r` as it does now.

This PR supercedes #9862. Thanks to @SUPERCILEX for bringing this to our
attention.

# User-Facing Changes
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2023-08-06 06:59:06 -05:00
583ef8674e Replace &Span with Span since Span is Copy (#9770)
# Description
`Span` is `Copy`, so we probably should not be passing references of
`Span` around. This PR replaces all instances of `&Span` with `Span`,
copying spans where necessary.

# User-Facing Changes
This alters some public functions to take `Span` instead of `&Span` as
input. Namely, `EngineState::get_span_contents`,
`nu_protocol::extract_value`, a bunch of the math commands, and
`Gstat::gstat`.
2023-07-31 21:47:46 +02:00
7e1b922ea7 Add functions for each Value case (#9736)
# Description
This PR ensures functions exist to extract and create each and every
`Value` case. It also renames `Value::boolean` to `Value::bool` to match
`Value::test_bool`, `Value::as_bool`, and `Value::Bool`. Similarly,
`Value::as_integer` was renamed to `Value::as_int` to be consistent with
`Value::int`, `Value::test_int`, and `Value::Int`. These two renames can
be undone if necessary.

# User-Facing Changes
No user facing changes, but two public functions were renamed which may
affect downstream dependents.
2023-07-21 08:20:33 -05:00
1b677f167e Remove old alias implementation (#8797) 2023-04-07 21:09:38 +03:00
JT
aded2c1937 Refactor to support multiple parse errors (#8765)
# Description

This is a pretty heavy refactor of the parser to support multiple parser
errors. It has a few issues we should address before landing:

- [x] In some cases, error quality has gotten worse `1 / "bob"` for
example
- [x] if/else isn't currently parsing correctly
- probably others

# User-Facing Changes

This may have error quality degradation as we adjust to the new error
reporting mechanism.

# Tests + Formatting

Don't forget to add tests that cover your changes.

Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:

- `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting (`cargo
fmt --all` applies these changes)
- `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used -A
clippy::needless_collect` to check that you're using the standard code
style
- `cargo test --workspace` to check that all tests pass
- `cargo run -- crates/nu-utils/standard_library/tests.nu` to run the
tests for the standard library

> **Note**
> from `nushell` you can also use the `toolkit` as follows
> ```bash
> use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it
automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```

# After Submitting

If your PR had any user-facing changes, update [the
documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the
PR is merged, if necessary. This will help us keep the docs up to date.
2023-04-07 12:35:45 +12:00
1e39a1a7a3 fixes the ability to have multiple modifiers on keybindings (#8579)
# Description

This PR fixes a bug that prevented you from having multiple modifiers on
your keybindings.

TODO:
- The docs need to be fixed too
https://www.nushell.sh/book/line_editor.html#keybindings.
(https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io/pull/840)
- I think reedline needs to be changed to show this too since it
provides the list of available modifiers.
(https://github.com/nushell/reedline/pull/559)

Now you can do something like this where `shift` and `alt` are combined
with an underscore.
```
  {
    name: fuzzy_history_fzf
    modifier: shift_alt
    keycode: char_r
    mode: [emacs , vi_normal, vi_insert]
    event: {
blah
}
```
Here's the list of available combinations
```rust
        "control" => KeyModifiers::CONTROL,
        "shift" => KeyModifiers::SHIFT,
        "alt" => KeyModifiers::ALT,
        "none" => KeyModifiers::NONE,
        "shift_alt" | "alt_shift" => KeyModifiers::SHIFT | KeyModifiers::ALT,
        "control_shift" | "shift_control" => KeyModifiers::CONTROL | KeyModifiers::SHIFT,
        "control_alt" | "alt_control" => KeyModifiers::CONTROL | KeyModifiers::ALT,
        "control_alt_shift" | "control_shift_alt" => {
            KeyModifiers::CONTROL | KeyModifiers::ALT | KeyModifiers::SHIFT
        }
```

# User-Facing Changes

_(List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This helps
us keep track of breaking changes.)_

# Tests + Formatting

Don't forget to add tests that cover your changes.

Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:

- `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting (`cargo
fmt --all` applies these changes)
- `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used -A
clippy::needless_collect` to check that you're using the standard code
style
- `cargo test --workspace` to check that all tests pass

> **Note**
> from `nushell` you can also use the `toolkit` as follows
> ```bash
> use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it
automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```

# After Submitting

If your PR had any user-facing changes, update [the
documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the
PR is merged, if necessary. This will help us keep the docs up to date.
2023-03-23 07:07:14 -05:00
ab480856a5 Use variable names directly in the format strings (#7906)
# Description

Lint: `clippy::uninlined_format_args`

More readable in most situations.
(May be slightly confusing for modifier format strings
https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/fmt/index.html#formatting-parameters)

Alternative to #7865

# User-Facing Changes

None intended

# Tests + Formatting

(Ran `cargo +stable clippy --fix --workspace -- -A clippy::all -D
clippy::uninlined_format_args` to achieve this. Depends on Rust `1.67`)
2023-01-29 19:37:54 -06:00
41306aa7e0 Reduce again the number of match calls (#7815)
- Reduce the number of match calls (see commit messages)
- A few miscellaneous improvements
2023-01-24 12:23:42 +01:00
b17e9f4ed0 Extend config support from F1-F12 to F1-F20, #7666 (#7669)
Co-authored-by: Piotr Meyer <aniou@smutek.pl>
2023-01-03 22:00:21 +01:00
45fe3be83e Further cleanup of Span::test_data usage + span fixes (#7595)
# Description

Inspired by #7592

For brevity use `Value::test_{string,int,float,bool}`

Includes fixes to commands that were abusing `Span::test_data` in their
implementation. Now the call span is used where possible or the explicit
`Span::unknonw` is used.

## Command fixes
- Fix abuse of `Span::test_data()` in `query_xml`
- Fix abuse of `Span::test_data()` in `term size`
- Fix abuse of `Span::test_data()` in `seq date`
- Fix two abuses of `Span::test_data` in `nu-cli`
- Change `Span::test_data` to `Span::unknown` in `keybindings listen`
- Add proper call span to `registry query`
- Fix span use in `nu_plugin_query`
- Fix span assignment in `select`
- Use `Span::unknown` instead of `test_data` in more places

## Other
- Use `Value::test_int`/`test_float()` consistently
- More `test_string` and `test_bool`
- Fix unused imports


# User-Facing Changes

Some commands may now provide more helpful spans for downstream use in
errors
2022-12-24 07:41:57 -06:00
11bdab7e61 Change instances of Value::string("foo", Span::test_data()) to Value::test_string("foo") (#7592) 2022-12-24 10:25:38 +01:00
774769a7ad color_config now accepts closures as color values (#7141)
# Description

Closes #6909. You can now add closures to your `color_config` themes.
Whenever a value would be printed with `table`, the closure is run with
the value piped-in. The closure must return either a {fg,bg,attr} record
or a color name (`'light_red'` etc.). This returned style is used to
colour the value.

This is entirely backwards-compatible with existing config.nu files.

Example code excerpt:
```
let my_theme = {
    header: green_bold
    bool: { if $in { 'light_cyan' } else { 'light_red' } }
    int: purple_bold
    filesize: { |e| if $e == 0b { 'gray' } else if $e < 1mb { 'purple_bold' } else { 'cyan_bold' } }
    duration: purple_bold
    date: { (date now) - $in | if $in > 1wk { 'cyan_bold' } else if $in > 1day { 'green_bold' } else { 'yellow_bold' } }
    range: yellow_bold
    string: { if $in =~ '^#\w{6}$' { $in } else { 'white' } }
    nothing: white
```
Example output with this in effect:
![2022-11-16 12 47 23 AM - style_computer
rs_-_nushell_-_VSCodium](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/83939/201952558-482de05d-69c7-4bf2-91fc-d0964bf71264.png)
![2022-11-16 12 39 41 AM - style_computer
rs_-_nushell_-_VSCodium](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/83939/201952580-2384bb86-b680-40fe-8192-71bae396c738.png)
![2022-11-15 09 21 54 PM - run_external
rs_-_nushell_-_VSCodium](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/83939/201952601-343fc15d-e4a8-4a92-ad89-9a7d17d42748.png)

Slightly important notes:

* Some color_config names, namely "separator", "empty" and "hints", pipe
in `null` instead of a value.
* Currently, doing anything non-trivial inside a closure has an
understandably big perf hit. I currently do not actually recommend
something like `string: { if $in =~ '^#\w{6}$' { $in } else { 'white' }
}` for serious work, mainly because of the abundance of string-type data
in the world. Nevertheless, lesser-used types like "date" and "duration"
work well with this.
* I had to do some reorganisation in order to make it possible to call
`eval_block()` that late in table rendering. I invented a new struct
called "StyleComputer" which holds the engine_state and stack of the
initial `table` command (implicit or explicit).
* StyleComputer has a `compute()` method which takes a color_config name
and a nu value, and always returns the correct Style, so you don't have
to worry about A) the color_config value was set at all, B) whether it
was set to a closure or not, or C) which default style to use in those
cases.
* Currently, errors encountered during execution of the closures are
thrown in the garbage. Any other ideas are welcome. (Nonetheless, errors
result in a huge perf hit when they are encountered. I think what should
be done is to assume something terrible happened to the user's config
and invalidate the StyleComputer for that `table` run, thus causing
subsequent output to just be Style::default().)
* More thorough tests are forthcoming - ran into some difficulty using
`nu!` to take an alternative config, and for some reason `let-env config
=` statements don't seem to work inside `nu!` pipelines(???)
* The default config.nu has not been updated to make use of this yet. Do
tell if you think I should incorporate that into this.

# User-Facing Changes

See above.

# Tests + Formatting

Don't forget to add tests that cover your changes.

Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:

- `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting (`cargo
fmt --all` applies these changes)
- `cargo clippy --workspace --features=extra -- -D warnings -D
clippy::unwrap_used -A clippy::needless_collect` to check that you're
using the standard code style
- `cargo test --workspace --features=extra` to check that all tests pass

# After Submitting

If your PR had any user-facing changes, update [the
documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the
PR is merged, if necessary. This will help us keep the docs up to date.
2022-12-17 07:07:56 -06:00