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This is good practice as all our iterators will never return a value
after reaching `None`
The benefit should be minimal as only `Iterator::fuse` is directly
specialized and itself rarely used (sometimes in `itertools` adaptors)
Thus it is mostly a documentation thing
# Description
When a closure if provided to `group-by`, errors that occur in the
closure are currently ignored. That is, `group-by` will fall back and
use the `"error"` key if an error occurs. For example, the code snippet
below will group all `ls` entries under the `"error"` column.
```nushell
ls | group-by { get nope }
```
This PR changes `group-by` to instead bubble up any errors triggered
inside the closure. In addition, this PR also does some refactoring and
cleanup inside `group-by`.
# User-Facing Changes
Errors are now returned from the closure provided to `group-by` instead
of falling back to the `"error"` group/key.
# 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`
# Description
A little refactor that use `working_set.error` rather than
`working_set.parse_errors.push`, which is reported here:
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/12238
> Inconsistent error reporting. Usage of both working_set.error() and
working_set.parse_errors.push(). Using ParseError::Expected for an
invalid variable name when there's ParseError::VariableNotValid (from
parser.rs:5237). Checking variable names manually when there's
is_variable() (from parser.rs:2905).
# User-Facing Changes
NaN
# Tests + Formatting
Done
# Description
Remove a couple of legacy fields (`input_type`, `output_type`), and
`var_id` which is optional and not required for deserialization.
I think until I document this in the plugin protocol ref, most people
will probably be using this example to get started, so it should be as
correct as possible
# After Submitting
- [ ] TODO: document `Signature` in plugin protocol reference
# Description
This is just some cleanup. I moved to_pipeline_data and to_cache_value
to the CustomValueSupport trait, where I should've put them to begin
with.
Co-authored-by: Jack Wright <jack.wright@disqo.com>
# Description
Work for #7149
- **Error `with-env` given uneven count in list form**
- **Fix `with-env` `CantConvert` to record**
- **Error `with-env` when given protected env vars**
- **Deprecate list/table input of vars to `with-env`**
- **Remove examples for deprecated input**
# User-Facing Changes
## Deprecation of the following forms
```
> with-env [MYENV "my env value"] { $env.MYENV }
my env value
> with-env [X Y W Z] { $env.X }
Y
> with-env [[X W]; [Y Z]] { $env.W }
Z
```
## recommended standardized form
```
# Set by key-value record
> with-env {X: "Y", W: "Z"} { [$env.X $env.W] }
╭───┬───╮
│ 0 │ Y │
│ 1 │ Z │
╰───┴───╯
```
## (Side effect) Repeated definitions in an env shorthand are now
disallowed
```
> FOO=bar FOO=baz $env
Error: nu:🐚:column_defined_twice
× Record field or table column used twice: FOO
╭─[entry #1:1:1]
1 │ FOO=bar FOO=baz $env
· ─┬─ ─┬─
· │ ╰── field redefined here
· ╰── field first defined here
╰────
```
# Description
@maxim-uvarov discovered the following error:
```
> [[a b]; [6 2] [1 4] [4 1]] | polars into-lazy | polars sort-by a | polars unique --subset [a]
Error: × Error using as series
╭─[entry #1:1:68]
1 │ [[a b]; [6 2] [1 4] [4 1]] | polars into-lazy | polars sort-by a | polars unique --subset [a]
· ──────┬──────
· ╰── dataframe has more than one column
╰────
```
During investigation, I discovered the root cause was that the lazy frame was incorrectly converted back to a eager dataframe. In order to keep this from happening, I explicitly set that the dataframe did not come from an eager frame. This causes the conversion logic to not attempt to convert the dataframe later in the pipeline.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jack Wright <jack.wright@disqo.com>
# Description
Fixes#12520
# User-Facing Changes
Breaking change:
Any operation parsing input with `PWD` to set the environment will now
fail with `ShellError::AutomaticEnvVarSetManually`
Furthermore transactions containing the special env-vars will be
rejected before executing any modifications. Prevoiusly this was
changing valid variables before while leaving valid variables after the
violation untouched.
## `PWD` handling.
Now failing
```
{PWD: "/trolling"} | load-env
```
already failing
```
load-env {PWD: "/trolling"}
```
## Error management
```
> load-env {MY_VAR1: foo, PWD: "/trolling", MY_VAR2: bar}
Error: nu:🐚:automatic_env_var_set_manually
× PWD cannot be set manually.
╭─[entry #1:1:2]
1 │ load-env {MY_VAR1: foo, PWD: "/trolling", MY_VAR2: bar}
· ────┬───
· ╰── cannot set 'PWD' manually
╰────
help: The environment variable 'PWD' is set automatically by Nushell and cannot be set manually.
```
### Before:
```
> $env.MY_VAR1
foo
> $env.MY_VAR2
Error: nu:🐚:name_not_found
....
```
### After:
```
> $env.MY_VAR1
Error: nu:🐚:name_not_found
....
> $env.MY_VAR2
Error: nu:🐚:name_not_found
....
```
# After Submitting
We need to check if any integrations rely on this hack.
# 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
# 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`
# 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`
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* Fixes#12482
* Initial PR failed due to CI issues at the time. Subsequent rebase
failed, so creating new PR.
# Description
<!--
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guide](../CONTRIBUTING.md) and talk to the core team before making major
changes.
Description of your pull request goes here. **Provide examples and/or
screenshots** if your changes affect the user experience.
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Use https://github.com/ndjson/ndjson-spec for help links instead of
former spam site
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
Link changed for `help to ndjson` and `help from ndjson`.
# Tests + Formatting
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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
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check that you're using the standard code style
- `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**
> 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
> ```
-->
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
# After Submitting
<!-- If your PR had any user-facing changes, update [the
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-->
# Description
Added a method for getting the base value for a PluginCustomValue.
cc: @devyn
---------
Co-authored-by: Jack Wright <jack.wright@disqo.com>
# Description
From @maxim-uvarov's
[post](https://discord.com/channels/601130461678272522/1227612017171501136/1228656319704203375).
When calling `to-lazy` back to back in a pipeline, an error should not
occur:
```
> [[a b]; [6 2] [1 4] [4 1]] | polars into-lazy | polars into-lazy
Error: nu:🐚:cant_convert
× Can't convert to NuDataFrame.
╭─[entry #1:1:30]
1 │ [[a b]; [6 2] [1 4] [4 1]] | polars into-lazy | polars into-lazy
· ────────┬───────
· ╰── can't convert NuLazyFrameCustomValue to NuDataFrame
╰────
```
This pull request ensures that custom value's of NuLazyFrameCustomValue are properly converted when passed in.
Co-authored-by: Jack Wright <jack.wright@disqo.com>
# Description
Close: #12147Close: #11796
About the change: it make pattern handling into a function:
`ls_for_one_pattern`(for ls), `du_for_one_pattern`(for du). Then
iterates on user input pattern, call these core function, and chaining
these iterator to one pipelinedata.
# Description
- Refactors `first` and `last` using `Vec::truncate` and `Vec::drain`.
- `std::mem::take` was also used to eliminate a few `Value` clones.
- The `NeedsPositiveValue` error now uses the span of the `rows`
argument instead of the call head span.
- `last` now errors on an empty stream to match `first` which does
error.
- Made metadata preservation more consistent.
# User-Facing Changes
Breaking change: `last` now errors on an empty stream to match `first`
which does error.
# Description
@maxim-uvarov discovered an issue with the current implementation. When
executing [[index a]; [1 1]] | polars into-df, a plugin_failed_to_decode
error occurs. This happens because a Record is created with two columns
named "index" as an index column is added during conversion. This pull
request addresses the problem by not adding an index column if there is
already a column named "index" in the dataframe.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jack Wright <jack.wright@disqo.com>
# Description
All polars commands that output a file were not handling relative paths
correctly.
A command like
``` [[a b]; [6 2] [1 4] [4 1]] | polars into-df | polars to-parquet foo.json```
was outputting the foo.json to the directory of the plugin executable.
This pull request pulls in nu-path and using it for resolving the file paths.
Related discussion
https://discord.com/channels/601130461678272522/1227612017171501136/1227889870358183966
# User-Facing Changes
None
# Tests + Formatting
Done, added tests for each of the polars to-* commands.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jack Wright <jack.wright@disqo.com>
# Description
The `kill` command returns a stream with a single value. This PR changes
it to simply return the value.
# User-Facing Changes
Technically a breaking change.
# Description
Refactors `drop` using `Vec::truncate` and adds a `NeedsPositiveValue`
error.
# User-Facing Changes
Breaking change: `drop` now errors if the number of rows/columns is
negative.
# Description
This PR just adds better logging for shell_integration and tweaks the
ansi escapes so they're closer to where the action happens. I also added
some perf log entries to help better understand plugin file load and
eval performance.
# 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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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
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check that you're using the standard code style
- `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**
> 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.
-->
# Description
`polars ls` is already different that `dfr ls`. Currently it just shows
the cache key, columns, rows, and type. I have added:
- creation time
- size
- span contents
- span start and end
<img width="1471" alt="Screenshot 2024-04-10 at 17 27 06"
src="https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/56345/545918b7-7c96-4c25-bc01-b9e2b659a408">
# Tests + Formatting
Done
Co-authored-by: Jack Wright <jack.wright@disqo.com>
related to
- https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/12196
# Description
while i'm 100% okey with the original intent behind
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/12196, i think the PR did
introduce two unintended things:
- extra parentheses that make the `log.nu` module look like Lisp lol
- a renaming of the `NU_LOG_LEVEL` environment variable to
`NU_log-level`. this breaks previous usage of `std log` and, as it's not
mentionned at all in the PR, i thought it was not intentional 😋
# User-Facing Changes
users can now control `std log` with `$env.NU_LOG_LEVEL`
# Tests + Formatting
the "log" tests have been fixed as well.
# After Submitting
# Description
Fixes: #11996
After this change `let t = timeit ^ls` will list current directory to
stdout.
```
❯ let t = timeit ^ls
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md Cargo.lock Cross.toml README.md aaa benches devdocs here11 scripts target toolkit.nu wix
CONTRIBUTING.md Cargo.toml LICENSE a.txt assets crates docker rust-toolchain.toml src tests typos.toml
```
If user don't want such behavior, he can redirect the stdout to `std
null-stream` easily
```
> use std
> let t = timeit { ^ls o> (std null-device) }
```
# User-Facing Changes
NaN
# Tests + Formatting
Done
# After Submitting
Nan
---------
Co-authored-by: Ian Manske <ian.manske@pm.me>
# Description
This is an attempt to isolate the unit tests from whatever might be in
the user's config. If the
user's config is broken in some way or incompatible with this version
(for example, especially if
there are plugins that aren't built for this version), tests can
spuriously fail.
This makes tests more reliably pass the same way they would on CI even
if the user has config, and
should also make them run faster.
I think this is _good enough_, but I still think we should have a
specific config dir env variable for nushell specifically (rather than
having to use `XDG_CONFIG_HOME`, which would mess with other things) and
then we can just have `nu-test-support` set that to a temporary dir
containing the shipped default config files.
# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
# 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.
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# Description
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Fixes#7849, #11465 based on @kubouch's suggestion in
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/11465#issuecomment-1883847806.
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
Can source files relative to `env.nu` or `config.nu` like in #6150.
# Tests + Formatting
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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
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Adds test that previously failed.
# After Submitting
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# Description
I have `nu` set as my shell in my editor, which allows me to easily pipe
selections of text to things like `str pascal-case` or even more complex
string operation pipelines, which I find super handy. However, the only
annoying thing is that I pretty much always have to add `| print -n` at
the end, because `nu` adds a newline when it prints the resulting value.
This adds a `--no-newline` option to stop that from happening, and then
you don't need to pipe to `print -n` anymore, you can just have your
shell command for your editor contain that flag.
# User-Facing Changes
- Add `--no-newline` command line option
# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
# 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
# Description
This PR tries to be a bit more precise with the repl logging when
starting nushell with `nu --log-level debug`. It adds a few more `perf`
lines and changes some of the text of others.
# User-Facing Changes
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# Tests + Formatting
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Changed `export` for `import`
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# Description
`help stor import` showed a help string that was probably copy-pasted
from `stor export`
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# User-Facing Changes
Now `help stor import` shows a correct description of the operation that
it is doing
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# Description
Edits the `echo` help text to mention the `print` command.
---------
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
# Description
@ayax79 added `nu-cmd-lang` as a dep for `nu-plugin-test-support` in
order to get access to `let`. Since we have the dep anyway now, we might
as well just add all of the lang commands - there aren't very many of
them and it would be less confusing than only `let` working.
# User-Facing Changes
- Can use some more core nu language features in plugin tests, like
loops and `do`
# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
# After Submitting
- [ ] Might need to change something about the plugin testing section of
the book, since I think it says something about there only being the
plugin command itself available
# Description
This decouples the serialized representation of `Record` from its
internal implementation. It now gets treated as a map type in `serde`.
This has several benefits:
- more efficient representation (not showing inner fields)
- human readable e.g. as a JSON record
- no breaking changes when refactoring the `Record` internals in the
future (see #12326, or potential introduction of `indexmap::IndexMap`
for large N)
- we now deny the creation of invalid records a non-cooperating plugin
could produce
- guaranteed key-value correspondence
- checking for unique keys
# Breaking change to the plugin protocol:
Now expects a record/map directly as the `Record.val` field instead of a
serialization of it.
# Description
The `let` command is needed for many example tests. This pull request
adds the `let` command to the EngineState of Test Plugin.
cc: @devyn
# User-Facing Changes
No user changes. Plugin tests can now have examples with the let
keyword.
Co-authored-by: Jack Wright <jack.wright@disqo.com>
# Description
This closes (nushell#10591)
The Command encode's help text says that utf-16le and utf-16be encodings
are not supported, however you could still use these encodings and they
didn't work properly, since they returned the bytes UTF-8 encoded:
```bash
"䆺ש" | encode utf-16
Length: 5 (0x5) bytes | printable whitespace ascii_other non_ascii
00000000: e4 86 ba d7 a9 ×××××
```
# User-Facing Changes
The Command encode's help text was updated and now when trying to encode with utf-16le and utf-16be returns an error:
![screenshot](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/119532691/c346dc57-8b42-4dfc-93d5-638b0041d89f)
# Tests + Formatting
- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
# 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: #11778Fixes: #11777Fixes: #11776Fixes: #11775Fixes: #11774Fixes: #11773Fixes: #11769.
# User-Facing Changes
Hopefully none, besides bug fixes.
Although, the `serde` representation might have changed.
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# Description
Resolves#11756.
Resolves#12346.
As per description, shell no longer hangs:
```
~/CodingProjects/nushell> [1 2 3] | select (-2)
Error: nu:🐚:cant_convert
× Can't convert to cell path.
╭─[entry #1:1:18]
1 │ [1 2 3] | select (-2)
· ──┬─
· ╰── can't convert negative number to cell path
╰────
```
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# User-Facing Changes
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# Tests + Formatting
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Added relevant test 🚀
# After Submitting
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Possibly support `get` `get`ting negative numbers, as per #12346
discussion. Alternatively, we can consider adding a cellpath for
negative indexing?
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# Description
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I was playing around with auto-cd and realised it didn't check for
permissions before cd'ing. This PR fixes that.
```
~/CodingProjects/nushell> /root
Error: nu:🐚:io_error
× I/O error
help: Cannot change directory to /root: You are neither the owner, in the group, nor the super user and do not have permission
```
This PR also refactors some of the filesystem utilities to nu-utils,
specifically the permissions checking and users.
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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# After Submitting
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# 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`
# 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`
# 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`
fixes#12361
Looking at the condition, `TRASH_SUPPORTED && (trash || (rm_always_trash
&& !permanent))`, this code path seems only to run when `--trash` is
enabled and `--permanent` is disabled.
This suggests that the `--trash` suggestion is a mistake and should have
suggested `--permanent`.
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# Description
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Resolves#11800.
```
~/CodingProjects/nushell> def "url expand" [$urls:any = []]: [string -> string, list -> table] {
::: let urls = ($in | default $urls)
::: def expand-link [] {
::: http head --redirect-mode manual $in | where name == location | get value.0
::: }
::: match ($urls | describe) {
::: string => { $urls | expand-link }
::: $type if ($type =~ list) => { $urls | wrap link | insert expanded {|url| $url.link | expand-link}}
::: }
::: }; view source "url expand"
def "url expand" [ $urls: any = [] ]: [string -> string, list<any> -> table] {
let urls = ($in | default $urls)
def expand-link [] {
http head --redirect-mode manual $in | where name == location | get value.0
}
match ($urls | describe) {
string => { $urls | expand-link }
$type if ($type =~ list) => { $urls | wrap link | insert expanded {|url| $url.link | expand-link}}
}
}
```
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
`view source` now
- adds quotes to commands with spaces
- shows default argument values
- shows type signatures
# Tests + Formatting
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# Description
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The error message when using `dfr open --type` shows an outdated list of
supported formats.
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
User is now informed that jsonl and avro formats are supported.
# Tests + Formatting
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
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Done.
# After Submitting
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No doc changes.
# Description
This fixes#12391.
nushell/nushell@87c5f6e455 accidentally introduced a bug where the path
was not being properly
expanded according to the cwd. This makes both 'touch' and 'mkdir' use
globs just like the rest of
the commands to preserve tilde behavior while still expanding the paths
properly.
This doesn't actually expand the globs. Should it?
# User-Facing Changes
- Restore behavior of `mkdir`, `touch`
- Help text now says they can take globs, but they won't actually expand
them, maybe this should be changed
# Tests + Formatting
Regression tests added.
# After Submitting
This is severe enough and should be included in the point release.
# Description
Fixes#12382, where overlay changes from hooks were not preserved into
the global state. This was due to creating child stacks for hooks, when
the global stack should have been used instead.
# 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.
Some platforms don't support the `system-clipboard` feature, notably
termux on android.
The default config currently contained references to `reedline` events
that are only available with the feature enabled (#12179). This thus
broke the out of the box config for those users.
For now be more defensive about this and only enable default events. Add
the alternative as commented out code you can quickly enable.
## Tested with:
```
cargo run --no-default-features --features default-no-clipboard -- --config crates/nu-utils/src/sample_config/default_config.nu
```
- [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
# Description
Fixes how the directory permissions are calculated in `mkdir`. Instead
of subtraction, the umask is actually used as a mask via negation
followed by bitwise and with the default mode. This matches how [uucore
calculates](cac7155fba/src/uu/mkdir/src/mkdir.rs (L61))
the mode.
# Description
This shrinks `Record`'s size in half and and allows you to include it in
`Value` without growing the size.
Changing the `Record` internals may have slightly different performance
characteristics as the cache locality changes on lookups (if you
directly need the value, it should be closer, but in other cases may
blow up the cache line budget)
Also different perf characteristics on creation expected.
`Record::from_raw_cols_vals` now probably worse.
## Benchmarking
Comparison with the main branch (boxed Record) revealed no significant
change to the creation but an improvement when accessing larger N.
The fact that this was more pronounced for nested access (still cloning
before nushell/nushell#12325) leads to the conclusion that this may
still be dominated by the smaller clone necessary for a 24-byte `Record`
over the previous 48 bytes.
# User-Facing Changes
Reduced memory usage
# Description
Currently `into bits` will try to coerce a `date`/`Value::Date` into a
string with a locale/timezone specific behavior (See #12268).
To resolve the ambiguity, remove the support for `date` entirely.
# User-Facing Changes
`date now | into bits` will now fail.
Instead you can use `... | format date '%c' | into bits` or any more
specific explicit choices to achieve the same behavior.
As `into bits` has minimal uses (and only pulled out of `extra` with
#12140), this doesn't warrant a deprecation.
# Description
Where possible, this PR replaces usages of raw `libc` bindings to
instead use safe interfaces from the `nix` crate. Where not possible,
the `libc` version reexported through `nix` was used instead of having a
separate `libc` dependency.
# 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
Those allocations are all small and insignificant in the grand scheme of
things and the optimizer may be able to resolve some of those but better
to be nice anyways.
Primarily inspired by the new
[`clippy::assigning_clones`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/assigning_clones)
- **Avoid reallocs with `clone_from` in `nu-parser`**
- **Avoid realloc on assignment in `Stack`**
- **Fix `clippy::assigning_clones` in `nu-cli`**
- **Reuse allocations in `nu-explore` if possible**
# Description
This clone is not necessary and tanks the performance of deep nested
access.
As soon as we found the value, we know we discard the old value, so can
`std::mem::take` the inner (`impl Default for Value` to the rescue)
We may be able to further optimize this but not having to clone the
value is vital.
# Description
This pr is addressing feedback from
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/12277#issuecomment-2027246752
Currently I think it's fine to replace `--legacy` flag with `--guess`
one. Only use `guess_width` algorithm if `--guess` is provided.
# User-Facing Changes
So it won't be a breaking change to previous version.
# Description
In #10232, the allowed input types were changed to be stricter, only
allowing records with types that can easily map onto sqlite equivalents.
Unfortunately, null was left out of the accepted input types, which
makes inserting rows with null values impossible.
This change fixes that by accepting null values as input.
One caveat of this is that when the command is creating a new table, it
uses the first row to infer an appropriate sqlite schema. If the first
row contains a null value, then it is impossible to tell which type this
column is supposed to have.
Throwing a hard error seems undesirable from a UX perspective, but
guessing can lead to a potentially useless database if we guess wrong.
So as a compromise, for null columns, we will assume the sqlite type is
TEXT and print a warning so the user knows. For the time being, if users
can't avoid a first row with null values, but also wants the right
schema, they are advised to create their table before running `into
sqlite`.
A future PR can add the ability to explicitly specify a schema.
Fixes#12225
# Tests + Formatting
* Tests added to cover expected behavior around insertion of null values
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# Description
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Closes#12253.
Exposes the option as "recursion_limit" under config.
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
The config file now has a new option!
# After Submitting
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Nothing else...? Do let me know if there's something I've missed!
# Description
Fixes `open --raw file o> out.txt` and other instances where
`PipelineData::ExternalStream` is created from sources that are not
external commands.
# 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
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# Tests + Formatting
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# Description
Again avoid uses of the `Record` internals, so we are free to change the
data layout
- **Don't use internals of `Record` in `into sqlite`**
- **Don't use internals of `Record` in `to xml`**
Remaining: `rename`
# User-Facing Changes
None
# Description
This PR reverts sqlparser to 0.39.0. It should stay here until we can
get polars updated so that we don't have to have two versions of
sqlparser.
# User-Facing Changes
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helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
# Tests + Formatting
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sure to [enable developer
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
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# After Submitting
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# 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
# Description
Now we only use `nix 0.28.0`
Achieved by
- updating `ctrlc` to `3.4.4`
- updating `wl-clipboard-rs` to `0.8.1`
- update our own dependency on `nix` from `0.27` to `0.28`
- required fixing uses of `nix::unistd::{tcgetpgrp,tcsetpgrp}`
- now requires an I/O safe file descriptor
- fake one pointing to `libc::STDIN_FILENO` (we were only accessing
`0` previously, dito for fish)
# User-Facing Changes
Better compile times and less to download as source dependencies
# 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 😄