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852 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Devyn Cairns
872aa78373
Add interleave command for reading multiple streams in parallel (#11955)
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# Description
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This command mixes input from multiple sources and sends items to the
final stream as soon as they're available. It can be called as part of a
pipeline with input, or it can take multiple closures and mix them that
way.

See `crates/nu-command/tests/commands/interleave.rs` for a practical
example. I imagine this will be most often used to run multiple commands
in parallel and print their outputs line-by-line. A stdlib command could
potentially use `interleave` to make this particular use case easier.

It's quite common to wish that nushell had a command for running things
in the background, and instead of providing job control, this provides
an alternative to some use cases for that by just allowing multiple
commands to run simultaneously and direct their output to the same
place.

This enables certain things that are not possible with `par-each` - for
example, you may wish to run `make` across several projects in parallel:

```nushell
(ls projects).name | par-each { |project| cd $project; make }
```

This works well enough, but the output will only be available after each
`make` command finishes. `interleave` allows you to get each line:

```nushell
interleave ...(
  (ls projects).name | each { |project|
    {
      cd $project
      make | lines | each { |line| {project: $project, out: $line} }
    }
  }
)
```

The result of this is a stream that you could process further - for
example, by saving to a text file.

Note that the closures themselves are not run in parallel. The initial
execution happens serially, and then the streams are consumed in
parallel.

# User-Facing Changes
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Adds a new command.

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2024-03-01 16:56:37 -06:00
kik4444
38a42905ae
Fix touch to allow changing timestamps on directories, remake from #11760 (#12005)
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Based off of #11760 to be mergable without conflicts.

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Fix for #11757.
The main issue in #11757 is I tried to copy the timestamp from one
directory to another only to realize that did not work whereas the
coreutils `^touch` had no problems. I thought `--reference` just did not
work, but apparently the whole `touch` command could not work on
directories because
`OpenOptions::new().write(true).create(true).open(&item)` tries to
create `touch`'s target in advance and then modify its timestamps. But
if the target is a directory that already exists then this would fail
even though the crate used for working with timestamps, `filetime`,
already works on directories.

# User-Facing Changes
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I don't believe this should change any existing valid behaviors. It just
changes a non-working behavior.

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~~I only could not run `cargo test` because I get compilation errors on
the latest main branch~~
All tests pass with `cargo test --features=sqlite`

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2024-03-01 07:23:03 -06:00
Darren Schroeder
262914cf92
remove old mv command in favor of umv (renamed to mv) (#12022)
# Description

This PR removes our old nushell `mv` command in favor of the
uutils/coreutils `uu_mv` crate's `mv` command which we integrated in
0.90.1.

# User-Facing Changes

# Tests + Formatting

# After Submitting
2024-03-01 09:37:23 +08:00
Devyn Cairns
e69a02d379
Add tee command for operating on copies of streams (#11928)
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Discord](https://discord.com/channels/601130461678272522/615329862395101194/1209951539901366292)

# Description
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This is inspired by the Unix tee command, but significantly more
powerful. Rather than just writing to a file, you can do any kind of
stream operation that Nushell supports within the closure.

The equivalent of Unix `tee -a file.txt` would be, for example, `command
| tee { save -a file.txt }` - but of course this is Nushell, and you can
do the same with structured data to JSON objects, or even just run any
other command on the system with it.

A `--stderr` flag is provided for operating on the stderr stream from
external programs. This may produce unexpected results if the stderr
stream is not then also printed by something else - nushell currently
doesn't. See #11929 for the fix for that.

# User-Facing Changes
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If someone was using the system `tee` command, they might be surprised
to find that it's different.

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2024-02-28 17:08:31 -06:00
Ian Manske
0126620c19
Disable flaky network tests (#12010)
# Description
Ignores some network tests that sometimes fail in CI. E.g., in
[11953](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/11953#issuecomment-1962275863)
and
[11654](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/11654#issuecomment-1968404551).
2024-02-28 16:28:33 +00:00
Wind
387328fe73
Glob: don't allow implicit casting between glob and string (#11992)
# Description
As title, currently on latest main, nushell confused user if it allows
implicit casting between glob and string:
```nushell
let x = "*.txt"
def glob-test [g: glob] { open $g } 
glob-test $x
```
It always expand the glob although `$x` is defined as a string.
This pr implements a solution from @kubouch :
> We could make it really strict and disallow all autocasting between
globs and strings because that's what's causing the "magic" confusion.
Then, modify all builtins that accept globs to accept oneof(glob,
string) and the rules would be that globs always expand and strings
never expand

# User-Facing Changes
After this pr, user needs to use `into glob` to invoke `glob-test`, if
user pass a string variable:
```nushell
let x = "*.txt"
def glob-test [g: glob] { open $g } 
glob-test ($x | into glob)
```
Or else nushell will return an error.
```
 3 │ glob-test $x
   ·           ─┬
   ·            ╰── can't convert string to glob
```

# Tests + Formatting
Done

# After Submitting
Nan
2024-02-28 23:05:35 +08:00
Justin Ma
7b95e37bbe
Making coreutils umkdir as the default mkdir (#12007)
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`umkdir` was added in #10785, I think it's time to replace the default
one.

# After Submitting

Remove the old `mkdir` command and making coreutils' `umkdir` as the
default
2024-02-28 06:27:10 -06:00
moonlander
ecaed7f0ae
add --signed flag for binary into int conversions (#11902)
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- adds a `--signed` flag to `into int` to allow parsing binary values as
signed integers, the integer size depends on the length of the binary
value

# User-Facing Changes
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- attempting to convert binary values larger than 8 bytes into integers
now throws an error, with or without `--signed`

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- wrote 3 tests and 1 example for `into int --signed` usage
- added an example for unsigned binary `into int`

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- will add examples from this PR to `into int` documentation
2024-02-27 15:05:26 +00:00
Darren Schroeder
43687207b4
allow current day to be highlighted (#11954)
# Description

This PR tweaks the built-in `cal` command so that it's still nushell-y
but looks closer to the "expected" cal by abbreviating the name of the
days. I also added the ability to color the current day with the current
"header" color.

### Before

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/343840/c7ad3017-d872-4d39-926d-cc99b097d934)

### After

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/343840/735c4f2e-9867-4cd7-ae3b-397dd02059d7)



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2024-02-26 08:31:46 -06:00
Stefan Holderbach
96744e3155
Fix cargo b -p nu-command --tests (#11939)
The feature `sqlite` is not active by default on `nu-command`.
Only when building `cargo b --all --tests` would the feature be
activated via `nu`'s feature requirements.

Make the tests conditional

Saw this when double checking the removals from #11938.
Making sure each crate still compiles individually, ensures both that
you can run subcrate tests independently and that the `cargo publish`
run will succeed to build the crate with the default feature set (see
the problems occurring for the `0.90.0` release.
2024-02-25 00:01:29 +01:00
nils-degroot
67a63162b2
Add date support in from xlsx (#11952)
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This PR add date support when using the `open` command on a xlsx file,
and the using `from xlsx` on a xlsx file.
 
# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

Currently dates in xlsx files are read as nulls, after this PR this
would be regular dates.

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2024-02-24 07:25:51 -06:00
Maxim Zhiburt
6be91a68f3
nu-table: Improve table -a (#11905)
Hi there;

Sorry took that long to respond.

I guess it's good?
It will consume the whole stream whether possible.
I do believe it will be faster in WSL in general too (in a sense of
whole buffer output), but its interesting issue probably needed to be
separated. It was not very well explained as well.

```nushell
> 0..2000 | table -a 2
╭───┬──────╮
│ 0 │    0 │
│ 1 │    1 │
│ 2 │ ...  │
│ 3 │ 1999 │
│ 4 │ 2000 │
╰───┴──────╯
```

Take care

fix: #11845

cc: @fdncred
2024-02-23 19:12:10 -06:00
Wind
f7d647ac3c
open, rm, umv, cp, rm and du: Don't globs if inputs are variables or string interpolation (#11886)
# Description
This is a follow up to
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/11621#issuecomment-1937484322

Also Fixes: #11838 

## About the code change
It applys the same logic when we pass variables to external commands:


0487e9ffcb/crates/nu-command/src/system/run_external.rs (L162-L170)

That is: if user input dynamic things(like variables, sub-expression, or
string interpolation), it returns a quoted `NuPath`, then user input
won't be globbed
 
# User-Facing Changes
Given two input files: `a*c.txt`, `abc.txt`

* `let f = "a*c.txt"; rm $f` will remove one file: `a*c.txt`. 
~* `let f = "a*c.txt"; rm --glob $f` will remove `a*c.txt` and
`abc.txt`~
* `let f: glob = "a*c.txt"; rm $f` will remove `a*c.txt` and `abc.txt`

## Rules about globbing with *variable*
Given two files: `a*c.txt`, `abc.txt`
| Cmd Type | example | Result |
| ----- | ------------------ | ------ |
| builtin | let f = "a*c.txt"; rm $f | remove `a*c.txt` |
| builtin | let f: glob = "a*c.txt"; rm $f | remove `a*c.txt` and
`abc.txt`
| builtin | let f = "a*c.txt"; rm ($f \| into glob) | remove `a*c.txt`
and `abc.txt`
| custom | def crm [f: glob] { rm $f }; let f = "a*c.txt"; crm $f |
remove `a*c.txt` and `abc.txt`
| custom | def crm [f: glob] { rm ($f \| into string) }; let f =
"a*c.txt"; crm $f | remove `a*c.txt`
| custom | def crm [f: string] { rm $f }; let f = "a*c.txt"; crm $f |
remove `a*c.txt`
| custom | def crm [f: string] { rm $f }; let f = "a*c.txt"; crm ($f \|
into glob) | remove `a*c.txt` and `abc.txt`

In general, if a variable is annotated with `glob` type, nushell will
expand glob pattern. Or else, we need to use `into | glob` to expand
glob pattern

# Tests + Formatting
Done

# After Submitting
I think `str glob-escape` command will be no-longer required. We can
remove it.
2024-02-23 09:17:09 +08:00
Wind
1058707a29
make stderr works for failed external command (#11914)
# Description
Fixes: #11913

When running external command, nushell shouldn't consumes stderr
messages, if user want to redirect stderr.

# User-Facing Changes
NaN

# Tests + Formatting
Done

# After Submitting
NaN
2024-02-21 21:15:05 +08:00
David Matos
123bf2d736
fix format date based on users locale (#11908)
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# Description
Hi, 

Fixes #10838, where before the `date` would be formatted incorrectly,
and was not picking `LC_TIME` for time formatting, but it picked the
first locale returned by the `sys-locale` crate instead. Now it will
format time based on `LC_TIME`. For example,

```
// my locale `nl_NL.UTF-8`
❯ date now | format date '%x %X'
20-02-24 17:17:12

$env.LC_TIME = "en_US.UTF-8"

❯ date now | format date '%x %X'
02/20/2024 05:16:28 PM
```
Note that I also changed the `default_env.nu` as otherwise the Time will
show AM/PM twice. Also reason for the `chrono` update is because this
relies on a fix to upstream repo, which i initially submitted an
[issue](https://github.com/chronotope/chrono/issues/1349#event-11765363286)

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# Tests + Formatting

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

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

- [X] `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting
(`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes)
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make sure to [enable developer
mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

> **Note**
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> ```bash
> use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it
automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```


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2024-02-20 11:08:49 -06:00
Ian Manske
fb4251aba7
Remove Record::from_raw_cols_vals_unchecked (#11810)
# Description
Follows from #11718 and replaces all usages of
`Record::from_raw_cols_vals_unchecked` with iterator or `record!`
equivalents.
2024-02-18 14:20:22 +02:00
yuri@FreeBSD
0487e9ffcb
FreeBSD compatibility patches (#11869)
# Description

nushell is verified to work on FreeBSD 14 with these patches.

What isn't supported on FreeBSD:
* the crate 'procfs' doesn't support FreeBSD yet, all functionality
depending on procfs is disabled
* several RLIMIT_* values aren't supported on FreeBSD - functions
related to these are disabled




# User-Facing Changes
n/a

# Tests + Formatting
n/a

# After Submitting
n/a

---------

Co-authored-by: sholderbach <sholderbach@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-02-17 20:04:59 +01:00
Ian Manske
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
KITAGAWA Yasutaka
bce2627e45
Fix panic in seq date (#11871)
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# Description
Fix #11732 

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# User-Facing Changes
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Invalid output format causes an error, not a panic.
```nu
❯ seq date --output-format '%H-%M-%S'
Error:   × Invalid output format
   ╭─[entry #1:1:1]
 1 │ seq date --output-format '%H-%M-%S'
   · ────┬───
   ·     ╰── an error occurred when formatting an argument
   ╰────
```
# Tests + Formatting
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2024-02-17 10:51:20 +02:00
Ian Manske
74d62581b9
Remove list of cell path support for select and reject (#11859)
# Description
Requires each of the rest args for `select` and `reject` to be a cell
path instead of the current `oneof(cellpath, list<cellpath>`. This
simplifies the command signatures and code for `select` and `reject`.
Users can now spread lists into the rest arguments instead of providing
them as is.

For example,
```nushell
ls | select [name size]
```
must now be
```nushell
ls | select ...[name size]
```

# User-Facing Changes
Breaking change for the `select` and `reject` command signatures.
2024-02-15 07:49:48 -06:00
Wind
fd7eef1499
refactor: move du from platform to filesystem (#11852)
# Description
`du` command shouldn't belong to `platform`, so I think we should move
it to `filesystem` directory
2024-02-15 06:55:21 +08:00
Wind
58c6fea60b
Support redirect stderr and stdout+stderr with a pipe (#11708)
# Description
Close: #9673
Close: #8277
Close: #10944

This pr introduces the following syntax:
1. `e>|`, pipe stderr to next command. Example: `$env.FOO=bar nu
--testbin echo_env_stderr FOO e>| str length`
2. `o+e>|` and `e+o>|`, pipe both stdout and stderr to next command,
example: `$env.FOO=bar nu --testbin echo_env_mixed out-err FOO FOO e+o>|
str length`

Note: it only works for external commands. ~There is no different for
internal commands, that is, the following three commands do the same
things:~ Edit: it raises errors if we want to pipes for internal
commands
``` 
❯ ls e>| str length
Error:   × `e>|` only works with external streams
   ╭─[entry #1:1:1]
 1 │ ls e>| str length
   ·    ─┬─
   ·     ╰── `e>|` only works on external streams
   ╰────

❯ ls e+o>| str length
Error:   × `o+e>|` only works with external streams
   ╭─[entry #2:1:1]
 1 │ ls e+o>| str length
   ·    ──┬──
   ·      ╰── `o+e>|` only works on external streams
   ╰────
```

This can help us to avoid some strange issues like the following:

`$env.FOO=bar (nu --testbin echo_env_stderr FOO) e>| str length`

Which is hard to understand and hard to explain to users.

# User-Facing Changes
Nan

# Tests + Formatting
To be done

# After Submitting
Maybe update documentation about these syntax.
2024-02-09 01:30:46 +08:00
KITAGAWA Yasutaka
09f513bb53
Allow comments in match blocks (#11717)
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# Description
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Fix #9878 

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
Writing comments in match blocks will be allowed.

# Tests + Formatting
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# After Submitting
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2024-02-08 07:22:42 +08:00
TrMen
4b91ed57dd
Enforce call stack depth limit for all calls (#11729)
# Description
Previously, only direcly-recursive calls were checked for recursion
depth. But most recursive calls in nushell are mutually recursive since
expressions like `for`, `where`, `try` and `do` all execute a separte
block.

```nushell
def f [] {
    do { f }
}
```
Calling `f` would crash nushell with a stack overflow.

I think the only general way to prevent such a stack overflow is to
enforce a maximum call stack depth instead of only disallowing directly
recursive calls.

This commit also moves that logic into `eval_call()` instead of
`eval_block()` because the recursion limit is tracked in the `Stack`,
but not all blocks are evaluated in a new stack. Incrementing the
recursion depth of the caller's stack would permanently increment that
for all future calls.

Fixes #11667

# User-Facing Changes
Any function call can now fail with `recursion_limit_reached` instead of
just directly recursive calls. Mutually-recursive calls no longer crash
nushell.

# After Submitting
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2024-02-08 06:42:24 +08:00
Jakub Žádník
b8d37a7541
Fix panic in rotate; Add safe record creation function (#11718)
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# Description
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Fixes https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/11716

The problem is in our [record creation
API](0d518bf813/crates/nu-protocol/src/value/record.rs (L33))
which panics if the numbers of columns and values are different. I added
a safe variant that returns a `Result` and used it in the `rotate`
command.

## TODO in another PR:

Go through all `from_raw_cols_vals_unchecked()` (this includes the
`record!` macro which uses the unchecked version) and make sure that
either
a) it is guaranteed the number of cols and vals is the same, or
b) convert the call to `from_raw_cols_vals()`

Reason: Nushell should never panic.

# 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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sure to [enable developer
mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

> **Note**
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> ```bash
> use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it
automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```
-->

# After Submitting
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documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the
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2024-02-03 13:23:16 +02:00
WindSoilder
16f3d9b4e1
cp: expand target path before checking (#11692)
# Description
Fixes: #11683

# User-Facing Changes
NaN

# Tests + Formatting
~~I don't think we need to add a test, or else it'll copy some file to
user's directory, it seems bad.~~
Done.

# After Submitting
NaN
2024-02-01 09:06:03 +08:00
ellis
3e0fa8ff85
Allow 'url join' to print username without password (#11697)
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# Description
Fixes: https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/11677
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# 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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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
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```
'https://example.com' | url parse | update scheme ssh | upda
te username user | url join
# => ssh://user@example.com/
'https://example.com' | url parse | update scheme ssh | upda
te password hackme | url join
# => ssh://example.com/
'https://example.com' | url parse | update scheme ssh | update username user | update password hackme | url join
# => ssh://user:hackme@example.com/
```
# After Submitting
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---------

Co-authored-by: Richard Westhaver <ellis@rwest.io>
2024-01-31 16:52:23 -06:00
Darren Schroeder
0a355db5c0
make the ansi command const (#11682)
# Description

This PR changes the `ansi` command to be a `const` command. 

- ~~It's breaking because I found that I had to change the way `ansi` is
used in scripts a little bit.
https://github.com/nushell/nu_scripts/pull/751~~

- I had to change one of the examples because apparently `const` can't
be tested yet.

- ~~I'm not sure this is right at all
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/11682/files#diff-ba932369a40eb40d6e1985eac1c784af403dab4500a7f0568e593900bf6cd740R654-R655.
I just didn't want to duplicate a ton of code. Maybe if I duplicated the
code it wouldn't be a breaking change because it would have a run and
run_const?~~

- I had to add `opt_const` to CallExt.

/cc @kubouch Can you take a look at this? I'm a little iffy if I'm doing
this right, or even if we should do this at all.

# 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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2024-01-30 16:09:43 -06:00
Ian Manske
4e0a65c822
Strict JSON parsing (#11592)
# Description
Adds the `--strict` flag for `from json` which will try to parse text
while following the exact JSON specification (e.g., no comments or
trailing commas allowed). Fixes issue #11548.
2024-01-30 08:10:19 -06:00
Georgiana Grigoreanu
6530403ff8
Highlights find upgrade (#11509)
this PR should close #9105

# Description
I have implemented highlights for find which work for all strings. The
implementation also works for lists, but with exceptions (for example,
it does not work for list of lists). The implementation is also not
implemented for --regex.

---------

Co-authored-by: Georgiana <geo@LAPTOP-EQP6H37N>
Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-01-30 08:06:20 -06:00
WindSoilder
25b62c2ac3
fix force rm: should suppress error if directory is not found (#11656)
# Description
Fix a breaking change which is introduced by #11621

`rm -f /tmp/aaa` shouldn't return error if `/tmp/aaa/` doesn't exist.

# User-Facing Changes
NaN

# Tests + Formatting
Done
2024-01-28 09:01:19 -06:00
WindSoilder
d646903161
Unify glob behavior on open, rm, cp-old, mv, umv, cp and du commands (#11621)
# Description
This pr is a follow up to
[#11569](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/11569#issuecomment-1902279587)
> Revert the logic in https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/10694 and
apply the logic in this pr to mv, cp, rv will require a larger change, I
need to think how to achieve the bahavior

And sorry @bobhy for reverting some of your changes.

This pr is going to unify glob behavior on the given commands:
* open
* rm
* cp-old
* mv
* umv
* cp
* du

So they have the same behavior to `ls`, which is:
If given parameter is quoted by single quote(`'`) or double quote(`"`),
don't auto-expand the glob pattern. If not quoted, auto-expand the glob
pattern.

Fixes: #9558  Fixes: #10211 Fixes: #9310 Fixes: #10364 

# TODO
But there is one thing remains: if we give a variable to the command, it
will always auto-expand the glob pattern, e.g:
```nushell
let path = "a[123]b"
rm $path
```
I don't think it's expected. But I also think user might want to
auto-expand the glob pattern in variables.

So I'll introduce a new command called `glob escape`, then if user
doesn't want to auto-expand the glob pattern, he can just do this: `rm
($path | glob escape)`

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

# Tests + Formatting
Done

# After Submitting
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-->

## NOTE
This pr changes the semantic of `GlobPattern`, before this pr, it will
`expand path` after evaluated, this makes `nu_engine::glob_from` have no
chance to glob things right if a path contains glob pattern.

e.g: [#9310
](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/9310#issuecomment-1886824030)
#10211

I think changing the semantic is fine, because it makes glob works if
path contains something like '*'.

It maybe a breaking change if a custom command's argument are annotated
by `: glob`.
2024-01-26 21:57:35 +08:00
WindSoilder
a4809d2f08
Remove --flag: bool support (#11541)
# Description
This is a follow up to: #11365

After this pr, `--flag: bool` is no longer allowed.

I think `ParseWarning::Deprecated` is useful when we want to deprecated
something at syntax level, so I just leave it there for now.

# User-Facing Changes
## Before
```
❯ def foo [--b: bool] {}
Error:   × Deprecated: --flag: bool
   ╭─[entry #15:1:1]
 1 │ def foo [--b: bool] {}
   ·               ──┬─
   ·                 ╰── `--flag: bool` is deprecated and will be removed in 0.90. Please use `--flag` instead, more info: https://www.nushell.sh/book/custom_commands.html
   ╰────
```

## After
```
❯ def foo [--b: bool] {}
Error:   × Type annotations are not allowed for boolean switches.
   ╭─[entry #2:1:1]
 1 │ def foo [--b: bool] {}
   ·               ──┬─
   ·                 ╰── Remove the `: bool` type annotation.
   ╰────
```
# Tests + Formatting
Done
2024-01-25 14:16:49 +08:00
WindSoilder
c59d6d31bc
do not attempt to glob expand if the file path is wrapped in quotes (#11569)
# Description
Fixes: #11455

### For arguments which is annotated with `:path/:directory/:glob`
To fix the issue, we need to have a way to know if a path is originally
quoted during runtime. So the information needed to be added at several
levels:
* parse time (from user input to expression)
We need to add quoted information into `Expr::Filepath`,
`Expr::Directory`, `Expr::GlobPattern`
* eval time
When convert from `Expr::Filepath`, `Expr::Directory`,
`Expr::GlobPattern` to `Value::String` during runtime, we won't auto
expanded the path if it's quoted

### For `ls`
It's really special, because it accepts a `String` as a pattern, and it
generates `glob` expression inside the command itself.

So the idea behind the change is introducing a special SyntaxShape to
ls: `SyntaxShape::LsGlobPattern`. So we can track if the pattern is
originally quoted easier, and we don't auto expand the path either.

Then when constructing a glob pattern inside ls, we check if input
pattern is quoted, if so: we escape the input pattern, so we can run `ls
a[123]b`, because it's already escaped.
Finally, to accomplish the checking process, we also need to introduce a
new value type called `Value::QuotedString` to differ from
`Value::String`, it's used to generate an enum called `NuPath`, which is
finally used in `ls` function. `ls` learned from `NuPath` to know if
user input is quoted.

# User-Facing Changes
Actually it contains several changes
### For arguments which is annotated with `:path/:directory/:glob`
#### Before
```nushell
> def foo [p: path] { echo $p }; print (foo "~/a"); print (foo '~/a')
/home/windsoilder/a
/home/windsoilder/a
> def foo [p: directory] { echo $p }; print (foo "~/a"); print (foo '~/a')
/home/windsoilder/a
/home/windsoilder/a
> def foo [p: glob] { echo $p }; print (foo "~/a"); print (foo '~/a')
/home/windsoilder/a
/home/windsoilder/a
```
#### After
```nushell
> def foo [p: path] { echo $p }; print (foo "~/a"); print (foo '~/a')
~/a
~/a
> def foo [p: directory] { echo $p }; print (foo "~/a"); print (foo '~/a')
~/a
~/a
> def foo [p: glob] { echo $p }; print (foo "~/a"); print (foo '~/a')
~/a
~/a
```
### For ls command
`touch '[uwu]'`
#### Before
```
❯ ls -D "[uwu]"
Error:   × No matches found for [uwu]
   ╭─[entry #6:1:1]
 1 │ ls -D "[uwu]"
   ·       ───┬───
   ·          ╰── Pattern, file or folder not found
   ╰────
  help: no matches found
```

#### After
```
❯ ls -D "[uwu]"
╭───┬───────┬──────┬──────┬──────────╮
│ # │ name  │ type │ size │ modified │
├───┼───────┼──────┼──────┼──────────┤
│ 0 │ [uwu] │ file │  0 B │ now      │
╰───┴───────┴──────┴──────┴──────────╯
```

# Tests + Formatting
Done

# After Submitting
NaN
2024-01-21 23:22:25 +08:00
Artemiy
ff290a5c3d
Add self-closed tag support for to xml (#11577)
# Description
This PR closes #11524
Add `to xml --self-closed` flag to output empty tags as self close.
For example:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/17511668/bdf040f7-8ac1-4e8b-80bb-0043d7cec7f9)


# User-Facing Changes
New `to xml` flag `--self-closed`.

# Tests + Formatting
Added new example for `to xml` command and new test for self-closed
tags.
2024-01-19 05:35:29 -06:00
WindSoilder
56067da39c
Send only absolute paths to uu_mv (#11576)
# Description
Fixes: #11127 

It's something similar to #11080, applying the same logic to `uu_mv`.

# User-Facing Changes

# After Submitting
2024-01-19 05:34:18 -06:00
David Matos
ee6547dbb7
Initial implementation of umv from uutils (#10822)
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# Description
Hi,
This closes #10446 , wherein we start implementing `mv` from `uutils`.
There are some stuff to iron out, particularly
* Decide on behavior from ignored tests 
* Wait for release/PRs to be approved on `uutils` side, but still can be
tested for now. See [PR
approved](https://github.com/uutils/coreutils/pull/5428), and
[pending](https://github.com/uutils/coreutils/pull/5429).
* `--progress` does not seem to work on `uutils mv` either and have not
checked whether certain `X` size has to be achieved in order for it to
appear, thus something to investigate as well, but thought it wasnt
important enough to not make the PR.

See [issue
comment](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/10446#issuecomment-1764497988),
on the possible strategy to follow, mainly copy what we did with `ucp`.

I still left some comments on purpose particularly on tests, which of
course would be removed before something is decided here. :) @fdncred
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2024-01-18 10:20:57 -06:00
Skyler Hawthorne
7ac3e97bfe
Fix memory consumption of into sqlite (#10232)
# Description

Currently, the `into sqlite` command collects the entire input stream
into a single Value, which soaks up the entire input into memory, before
it ever tries to write anything to the DB. This is very problematic for
large inputs; for example, I tried transforming a multi-gigabyte CSV
file into SQLite, and before I knew what was happening, my system's
memory was completely exhausted, and I had to hard reboot to recover.

This PR fixes this problem by working directly with the pipeline stream,
inserting into the DB as values are read from the stream.

In order to facilitate working with the stream directly, I introduced a
new `Table` struct to store the connection and a few configuration
parameters, as well as to make it easier to lazily create the table on
the first read value.

In addition to the purely functional fixes, a few other changes were
made to the serialization and user facing behavior.

### Serialization

Much of the preexisting code was focused on generating the exact text
needed for a SQL statement. This is unneeded and less safe than using
the `rusqlite` crate's serialization for native Rust types along with
prepared statements.

### User-Facing Changes

Currently, the command is very liberal in the input types it accepts.
The strategy is basically if it is a record, try to follow its structure
and make an analogous SQL row, which is pretty reasonable. However, when
it's not a record, it basically tries to guess what the user wanted and
just makes a single column table and serializes the value into that one
column, whatever type it may be.

This has been changed so that it only accepts records as input. If the
user wants to serialize non-record types into SQL, then they must
explicitly opt into doing this by constructing a record or table with it
first. For a utility for inserting data into SQL, I think it makes more
sense to let the user choose how to convert their data, rather than make
a choice for them that may surprise them.

However, I understand this may be a controversial change. If the
maintainers don't agree, I can change this back.

#### Long switch names

The `file_name` and `table_name` long form switches are currently
snake_case and expect to be as such at the command line. These have been
changed to kebab-case to be more conventional.

# Tests + Formatting

To test the memory consumption, I used [this publicly available index of
all Wikipedia articles](https://dumps.wikimedia.org/enwiki/20230820/),
using the first 10,000, 100,000, and 1,000,000 entries, in that order. I
ran the following script to benchmark the changes against the current
stable release:

```nu
#!/usr/bin/nu

# let shellbin = $"($env.HOME)/src/nushell/target/aarch64-linux-android/release/nu"
let shellbin = "nu"
const dbpath = 'enwiki-index.db'

[10000, 100000, 1000000]
  | each {|rows|
      rm -f $dbpath;
      do { time -f '%M %e %U %S' $shellbin -c (
        $"bzip2 -cdk ~/enwiki-20230820-pages-articles-multistream-index.txt.bz2
            | head -n ($rows)
            | lines
            | parse '{offset}:{id}:{title}'
            | update cells -c [offset, id] { into int }
            | into sqlite ($dbpath)"
        )
      }
      | complete
      | get stderr
      | str trim
      | parse '{rss_max} {real} {user} {kernel}'
      | update cells -c [rss_max] { $"($in)kb" | into filesize }
      | update cells -c [real, user, kernel] { $"($in)sec" | into duration }
      | insert rows $rows
      | roll right
    }
  | flatten
  | to nuon
```

This yields the following results

Current stable release:

|rows|rss_max|real|user|kernel|
|-|-|-|-|-|
|10000|53.6 MiB|770ms|460ms|420ms|
|100000|209.6 MiB|6sec 940ms|3sec 740ms|4sec 380ms|
|1000000|1.7 GiB|1min 8sec 810ms|38sec 690ms|42sec 550ms|

This PR:

|rows|rss_max|real|user|kernel|
|-|-|-|-|-|
|10000|38.2 MiB|780ms|440ms|410ms|
|100000|39.8 MiB|6sec 450ms|3sec 530ms|4sec 160ms|
|1000000|39.8 MiB|1min 3sec 230ms|37sec 440ms|40sec 180ms|

# Note

I started this branch kind of at the same time as my others, but I
understand the feedback that smaller PRs are preferred. Let me know if
it would be better to split this up.

I do think the scope of the changes are on the bigger side even without
the behavior changes I mentioned, so I'm not sure if that will help this
particular PR very much, but I'm happy to oblige on request.
2024-01-15 21:41:25 -06:00
Artemiy
e4c2c123ab
Support for disabling automatic escaping in to xml (#11536)
# Description
This PR addresses #11525 by adding `--partial-escape` which makes `to
xml` only escape `<>&` in text and `<>&"` in comments. This PR also
fixes issue where comment and PI content was escaped even though [it
should not be](https://stackoverflow.com/a/46637835)

# User-Facing Changes
Correct comments and PIs
 `to xml --partial-escape` flag to emit less escaped characters

# Tests + Formatting
Added tests for specified issues
2024-01-14 07:36:53 -06:00
A. Taha Baki
d25be66929
check existance w/o traversing symlinks (#10872)
# Description

Currently `path exists` checks the file/folder's existence by traversing
symlinks. I've added a `-n` switch/flag that disables symlink
traversing, similar to what `path expand -n` does.

## The Long Story (for those interested)

Hello! 👋 While working on one of my scripts, I discovered that the `path
exists` command was traversing symlinks. This meant that even if the
file existed, it would fail if the pointed location didn't exist. To
address this, I've introduced a new `-n` flag, which I borrowed from the
`path expand` command. This addition should make the behavior more
consistent within the *path commands universe*.

## But, is it any useful?
 
```nushell
let compat = /run/media/userX/DriveX/steam/steamapps/compatdata
if "symlink" == ($compat | path expand -n | path type) {}
# to this
if ($compat | path exists -n) {}
```

# User-Facing Changes

Users, will not efect. Unless they use the mentioned `-n` flag/switch.
2024-01-14 07:33:33 +08:00
Artemiy
387c5462e9
Add file attribute handling flag to cp (#11491)
# Description
This PR adds possibility to preserve/strip attributes from files when
using `cp` (via uu_cp::Attributes). To achieve this a single `--preserve
<list of attributes>` flag is added. This is different from how
coreutils and uutils cp function, but I believe this is better for
nushell.

Coreutils cp has three options `-p`, `--preserve` and `--no-presevce`.
The logic of these two options is not straightforward. As far as I
understand it is:
1. By default only mode attributes are preserved
2. `--preserve` option adds to default preserved attributes specified
ones (e.g. `--preserve=xattr,timestamps` will preserve mode, timestamps
and xattr)
3. `-p` is the same as `--preserve=mode,ownership,timestamps`
4. `--no-preserve` option rejects specified attributes (having priority
over `--preserve`)

However (in my opinion) the `--no-preserve` option is not needed,
because its only use seems to be rejecting attributes preserved by
default. But there is no need for this in nushell, because `--preserve`
can be specified with empty list as argument (whereas coreutils cp will
display a `cp: ambiguous argument ‘’ for ‘--preserve’` error if
`--preserve` is used with empty string as argument).

So to simplify this command is suggest (and implemented) only the
`--preserve` with the following logic:
1. By default mode attribute is preserved (as in coreutils cp)
2. `--preserve [ ... ]` will overwrite default with whatever is
specified in list (empty list meaning preserve nothing)

This way cp without `--preserve` behaves the same as coreutils `cp`, but
instead of using combinations of `--preserve` and `--no-preserve` one
needs to use `--preserve [ ... ]` with all attributes specified
explicitly. This seems more user-friendly to me as it does not require
remembering what the attributes preserved by default are and rejecting
them manually. However I see the possible problem with behavior
different from coreutils implementation, so some feedback is
apprecieated!

# User-Facing Changes
Users can now preserve or reject file attributes when using `cp`

# Tests + Formatting
Added tests manipulating mode and timestamps attributes.
2024-01-12 12:02:55 -06:00
Artemiy
1867bb1a88
Fix incorrect handling of boolean flags for builtin commands (#11492)
# Description
Possible fix of #11456
This PR fixes a bug where builtin commands did not respect the logic of
dynamically passed boolean flags. The reason is
[has_flag](6f59abaf43/crates/nu-protocol/src/ast/call.rs (L204C5-L212C6))
method did not evaluate and take into consideration expression used with
flag.

To address this issue a solution is proposed:
1. `has_flag` method is moved to `CallExt` and new logic to evaluate
expression and check if it is a boolean value is added
2. `has_flag_const` method is added to `CallExt` which is a constant
version of `has_flag`
3. `has_named` method is added to `Call` which is basically the old
logic of `has_flag`
4. All usages of `has_flag` in code are updated, mostly to pass
`engine_state` and `stack` to new `has_flag`. In `run_const` commands it
is replaced with `has_flag_const`. And in a few select places: parser,
`to nuon` and `into string` old logic via `has_named` is used.

# User-Facing Changes
Explicit values of boolean flags are now respected in builtin commands.
Before:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/17511668/f9fbabb2-3cfd-43f9-ba9e-ece76d80043c)
After:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/17511668/21867596-2075-437f-9c85-45563ac70083)

Another example:
Before:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/17511668/efdbc5ca-5227-45a4-ac5b-532cdc2bbf5f)
After:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/17511668/2907d5c5-aa93-404d-af1c-21cdc3d44646)


# Tests + Formatting
Added test reproducing some variants of original issue.
2024-01-11 17:19:48 +02:00
Artemiy
5f7425a7b4
Xml errors fix (#11487)
# Description
Fixes #11264
This PR adds checks in `to xml` to output error for malformed xml
entries:
* With columns that are not one of `tag`, `attributes` or `content`
* With no `tag` when entry is not a string
* With `tag` that is not a string
This PR also replaces `attrs` with `attributes` in example and
extra_usage of `to xml` (column was originally named attrs and renamed
to attributes, but this was missed in docs)

# User-Facing Changes
`to xml` will produce error for conditions described above instead of
silently returning nothing

# Tests + Formatting
Added tests for `to xml` to check handling of malformed xml entries
2024-01-05 15:56:13 -06:00
tomoda
ad95e4cc27
Refactor tests (using cococo instead of ^echo) (#11479)
- related PR: #11478 

# Description

Now we can use `nu --testbin cococo` instead of `^echo` to echo messages
to stdout in tests.

But `nu` treats parameters as its own flags when parameter starts with
`-`. So `^echo --foo='bar'` still use `^echo`.

# User-Facing Changes

(none)

# Tests + Formatting

- [x] `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting
(`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes)
- [x] `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used`
to check that you're using the standard code style
- [x] `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))
- [x] `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing run-tests --path
crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library


# After Submitting

(none)
2024-01-05 11:40:56 +08:00
tomoda
77f10eb270
Fix the test which fails on windows (#11478)
- related PR: #11463

# Description

Currently, `commands::complete::basic` fails on Windows without git
bash.
This pr fixes it.

# User-Facing Changes

(none)

# Tests + Formatting

- [x] (on Windows) `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code
formatting (`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes)
- [x] (on Windows) `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D
clippy::unwrap_used` to check that you're using the standard code style
- [x] (on Windows without git bash, Windows with git bash and Ubuntu)
`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))
- on my Windows with Japanese lang pack: 1 test still fails. (see
#11463)
- [x] (on Windows and Ubuntu) `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing
run-tests --path crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard
library

# After Submitting

(none)
2024-01-03 07:22:43 -06:00
tomoda
42bb42a2e1
Fix rm for symlinks pointing to directory on windows (issue #11461) (#11463)
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- this PR closes #11461

# Description
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Using `std::fs::remove_dir` instead of `std::fs::remove_file` when try
remove symlinks pointing to a directory on Windows.

# User-Facing Changes
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none

# Tests + Formatting
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> ```
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- [x] `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting
(`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes)
- [x] `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used`
to check that you're using the standard code style
- [x] `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))
- I got 2 test fails on my Windows devenv; these fails in main branch
too
- `commands::complete::basic` : passed on Ubuntu, failed on Windows (a
bug?)
- `commands::cp::copy_file_with_read_permission`: failed on Windows with
Japanese environment (This test refers error message, so that fails on
environments using a language except for english.)
- [x] `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing run-tests --path
crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

# After Submitting
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This fix has no changes to user-facing interface.
2024-01-02 21:27:03 +08:00
Yash Thakur
21b3eeed99
Allow spreading arguments to commands (#11289)
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Finishes implementing https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/10598,
which asks for a spread operator in lists, in records, and when calling
commands.

# Description
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This PR will allow spreading arguments to commands (both internal and
external). It will also deprecate spreading arguments automatically when
passing to external commands.

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

- Users will be able to use `...` to spread arguments to custom/builtin
commands that have rest parameters or allow unknown arguments, or to any
external command
- If a custom command doesn't have a rest parameter and it doesn't allow
unknown arguments either, the spread operator will not be allowed
- Passing lists to external commands without `...` will work for now but
will cause a deprecation warning saying that it'll stop working in 0.91
(is 2 versions enough time?)

Here's a function to help with demonstrating some behavior:
```nushell
> def foo [ a, b, c?, d?, ...rest ] { [$a $b $c $d $rest] | to nuon }
```

You can pass a list of arguments to fill in the `rest` parameter using
`...`:
```nushell
> foo 1 2 3 4 ...[5 6]
[1, 2, 3, 4, [5, 6]]
```

If you don't use `...`, the list `[5 6]` will be treated as a single
argument:

```nushell
> foo 1 2 3 4 [5 6] # Note the double [[]]
[1, 2, 3, 4, [[5, 6]]]
```

You can omit optional parameters before the spread arguments:
```nushell
> foo 1 2 3 ...[4 5] # d is omitted here
[1, 2, 3, null, [4, 5]]
```

If you have multiple lists, you can spread them all:
```nushell
> foo 1 2 3 ...[4 5] 6 7 ...[8] ...[]
[1, 2, 3, null, [4, 5, 6, 7, 8]]
```

Here's the kind of error you get when you try to spread arguments to a
command with no rest parameter:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/45539777/93faceae-00eb-4e59-ac3f-17f98436e6e4)

And this is the warning you get when you pass a list to an external now
(without `...`):


![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/45539777/d368f590-201e-49fb-8b20-68476ced415e)


# Tests + Formatting
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> ```
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Added tests to cover the following cases:
- Spreading arguments to a command that doesn't have a rest parameter
(unexpected spread argument error)
- Spreading arguments to a command that doesn't have a rest parameter
*but* there's also a missing positional argument (missing positional
error)
- Spreading arguments to a command that doesn't have a rest parameter
but does allow unknown arguments, such as `exec` (allowed)
- Spreading a list literal containing arguments of the wrong type (parse
error)
- Spreading a non-list value, both to internal and external commands
- Having named arguments in the middle of rest arguments
- `explain`ing a command call that spreads its arguments

# After Submitting
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# Examples

Suppose you have multiple tables:
```nushell
let people = [[id name age]; [0 alice 100] [1 bob 200] [2 eve 300]]
let evil_twins = [[id name age]; [0 ecila 100] [-1 bob 200] [-2 eve 300]]
```

Maybe you often find yourself needing to merge multiple tables and want
a utility to do that. You could write a function like this:
```nushell
def merge_all [ ...tables ] { $tables | reduce { |it, acc| $acc | merge $it } }
```

Then you can use it like this:
```nushell
> merge_all ...([$people $evil_twins] | each { |$it| $it | select name age })
╭───┬───────┬─────╮
│ # │ name  │ age │
├───┼───────┼─────┤
│ 0 │ ecila │ 100 │
│ 1 │ bob   │ 200 │
│ 2 │ eve   │ 300 │
╰───┴───────┴─────╯
```

Except they had duplicate columns, so now you first want to suffix every
column with a number to tell you which table the column came from. You
can make a command for that:
```nushell
def select_and_merge [ --cols: list<string>, ...tables ] {
  let renamed_tables = $tables
    | enumerate
    | each { |it|
      $it.item | select $cols | rename ...($cols | each { |col| $col + ($it.index | into string) })
    };
  merge_all ...$renamed_tables
}
```
And call it like this:
```nushell
> select_and_merge --cols [name age] $people $evil_twins
╭───┬───────┬──────┬───────┬──────╮
│ # │ name0 │ age0 │ name1 │ age1 │
├───┼───────┼──────┼───────┼──────┤
│ 0 │ alice │  100 │ ecila │  100 │
│ 1 │ bob   │  200 │ bob   │  200 │
│ 2 │ eve   │  300 │ eve   │  300 │
╰───┴───────┴──────┴───────┴──────╯
```

---

Suppose someone's made a command to search for APT packages:

```nushell
# The main command
def search-pkgs [
    --install                   # Whether to install any packages it finds
    log_level: int              # Pretend it's a good idea to make this a required positional parameter
    exclude?: list<string>      # Packages to exclude
    repositories?: list<string> # Which repositories to look in (searches in all if not given)
    ...pkgs                     # Package names to search for
] {
  { install: $install, log_level: $log_level, exclude: ($exclude | to nuon), repositories: ($repositories | to nuon), pkgs: ($pkgs | to nuon) }
}
```

It has a lot of parameters to configure it, so you might make your own
helper commands to wrap around it for specific cases. Here's one
example:
```nushell
# Only look for packages locally
def search-pkgs-local [
    --install              # Whether to install any packages it finds
    log_level: int
    exclude?: list<string> # Packages to exclude
    ...pkgs                # Package names to search for
] {
  # All required and optional positional parameters are given
  search-pkgs --install=$install $log_level [] ["<local URI or something>"] ...$pkgs
}
```
And you can run it like this:
```nushell
> search-pkgs-local --install=false 5 ...["python2.7" "vim"]
╭──────────────┬──────────────────────────────╮
│ install      │ false                        │
│ log_level    │ 5                            │
│ exclude      │ []                           │
│ repositories │ ["<local URI or something>"] │
│ pkgs         │ ["python2.7", vim]           │
╰──────────────┴──────────────────────────────╯
```

One thing I realized when writing this was that if we decide to not
allow passing optional arguments using the spread operator, then you can
(mis?)use the spread operator to skip optional parameters. Here, I
didn't want to give `exclude` explicitly, so I used a spread operator to
pass the packages to install. Without it, I would've needed to do
`search-pkgs-local --install=false 5 [] "python2.7" "vim"` (explicitly
pass `[]` (or `null`, in the general case) to `exclude`). There are
probably more idiomatic ways to do this, but I just thought it was
something interesting.

If you're a virologist of the [xkcd](https://xkcd.com/350/) kind,
another helper command you might make is this:
```nushell
# Install any packages it finds
def live-dangerously [ ...pkgs ] {
  # One optional argument was given (exclude), while another was not (repositories)
  search-pkgs 0 [] ...$pkgs --install # Flags can go after spread arguments
}
```

Running it:
```nushell
> live-dangerously "git" "*vi*" # *vi* because I don't feel like typing out vim and neovim
╭──────────────┬─────────────╮
│ install      │ true        │
│ log_level    │ 0           │
│ exclude      │ []          │
│ repositories │ null        │
│ pkgs         │ [git, *vi*] │
╰──────────────┴─────────────╯
```

Here's an example that uses the spread operator more than once within
the same command call:
```nushell
let extras = [ chrome firefox python java git ]

def search-pkgs-curated [ ...pkgs ] {
  (search-pkgs
      1
      [emacs]
      ["example.com", "foo.com"]
      vim # A must for everyone!
      ...($pkgs | filter { |p| not ($p | str contains "*") }) # Remove packages with globs
      python # Good tool to have
      ...$extras
      --install=false
      python3) # I forget, did I already put Python in extras?
}
```

Running it:
```nushell
> search-pkgs-curated "git" "*vi*"
╭──────────────┬───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────╮
│ install      │ false                                                             │
│ log_level    │ 1                                                                 │
│ exclude      │ [emacs]                                                           │
│ repositories │ [example.com, foo.com]                                            │
│ pkgs         │ [vim, git, python, chrome, firefox, python, java, git, "python3"] │
╰──────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────╯
```
2023-12-28 15:43:20 +08:00
Kira
a86a7e6c29
Allow http commands' automatic redirect-following to be disabled (#11329)
Intends to close #8920 

This PR suggests a new flag for the `http` commands, `--redirect-mode`,
which enables users to choose between different redirect handling modes.
The current behaviour of letting ureq silently follow redirects remains
the default, but two new options are introduced here, following the lead
of [JavaScript's `fetch`
API](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/fetch#redirect):
"manual", where any 3xx response to a request is simply returned as the
command's result, and "error", where any 3xx response causes a network
error like those caused by 4xx and 5xx responses.

This PR is a draft. Tests have not been added or run, the flag is
currently only implemented for the `http get` command, and design tweaks
are likely to be appropriate.

Most notably, it's not obvious to me whether a single flag which can
take one of three values is the nicest solution here.
We might instead consider two binary flags (like
`--no-following-redirects` and `--disallow-redirects`, although I'm bad
at naming things so I need help with that anyway), or completely drop
the "error" option if it's not deemed useful enough. (I personally think
it has some merit, especially since 4xx and 5xx responses are already
treated as errors by default; So this would allow users to treat only
immediate 2xx responses as success)

# User-facing changes
New options for the `http [method]` commands. Behaviour remains
unchanged when the command line flag introduced here is not used.


![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/12228688/1eb89f14-7d48-4f41-8a3e-cc0f1bd0a4f8)
2023-12-28 15:26:34 +08:00
nibon7
aeffa188f0
Fix an infinite loop if the input stream and output stream are the same (#11384)
# Description

Fixes #11382 

# User-Facing Changes
* before

```console
nushell/test (109f629) [✘?]
❯ open hello.md
hello
nushell/test (109f629) [✘?]
❯ ls hello.md | get size
╭───┬─────╮
│ 0 │ 6 B │
╰───┴─────╯
nushell/test (109f629) [✘?]
❯ open --raw hello.md | prepend "world" | save --raw --force hello.md
^C
nushell/test (109f629) [✘?]
❯ ls hello.md | get size
╭───┬─────────╮
│ 0 │ 2.8 GiB │
╰───┴─────────╯
```

* after

```console
nushell/test on  fix_save [✘!?⇡]
❯ open hello.md | prepend "hello" | save --force hello.md
nushell/test on  fix_save [✘!?⇡]
❯ open --raw hello.md | prepend "hello" | save --raw --force ../test/hello.md
Error:   × pipeline input and output are same file
   ╭─[entry #4:1:1]
 1 │ open --raw hello.md | prepend "hello" | save --raw --force ../test/hello.md
   ·                                                           ────────┬───────
   ·                                                                   ╰── can't save output to '/data/source/nushell/test/hello.md' while it's being reading
   ╰────
  help: you should change output path


nushell/test on  fix_save [✘!?⇡]
❯ open hello | prepend "hello" | save --force hello
Error:   × pipeline input and output are same file
   ╭─[entry #5:1:1]
 1 │ open hello | prepend "hello" | save --force hello
   ·                                            ──┬──
   ·                                              ╰── can't save output to '/data/source/nushell/test/hello' while it's being reading
   ╰────
  help: you should change output path
```

# Tests + Formatting
Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
- [x] add `commands::save::save_same_file_with_extension`
- [x] add `commands::save::save_same_file_without_extension`
- [x] `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting
(`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes)
- [x] `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used`
to check that you're using the standard code style
- [x] `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))
- [x] `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing run-tests --path
crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

# After Submitting
2023-12-24 23:29:23 +08:00
Stefan Holderbach
df1fecd2cb
Fix sandboxing of redirection tests (#11407)
When running `cargo test --workspace` a file `crates/nu-command/a.txt`
remained which we also saw as an accidential additions in some commits.

Searching for `a.txt` narrowed it down that
`redirection_keep_exit_codes` was not sandboxed in a temporary directory
and created this file.

Went through redirection tests and placed them in a `Playground` to get
sandboxing `dirs` for `nu!(cwd:`.
For those tests where redirection fails and no file should be created
now I added a check that no file is created on accident.


- Sandbox `redirection_keep_exit_codes` test
- Sandbox `no_duplicate_redirection` test
- Check that no redirect file is created on error
- Sandbox `redirection_should_have_a_target` test
2023-12-23 20:01:20 +01:00
nibon7
cd0a52cf00
Fix build for BSDs (#11372)
# Description
This PR fixes build for BSD variants (including FreeBSD and NetBSD). 

Currently, `procfs` only support linux, android and l4re, and
0cba269d80 only adds support for NetBSD,
this PR should work on all BSD variants.


b153b782a5/procfs/build.rs (L4-L8)

Fixes #11373 

# User-Facing Changes
* before

```console
nibon7@fbsd /d/s/nushell ((70f7db14))> cargo build
   Compiling tempfile v3.8.1
   Compiling procfs v0.16.0
   Compiling toml_edit v0.21.0
   Compiling native-tls v0.2.11
error: failed to run custom build command for `procfs v0.16.0`

Caused by:
  process didn't exit successfully: `/data/source/nushell/target/debug/build/procfs-d59599f40f32f0d5/build-script-build` (exit status: 1)
  --- stderr
  Building procfs on an for a unsupported platform. Currently only linux and android are supported
  (Your current target_os is freebsd)
warning: build failed, waiting for other jobs to finish...
```

* after

```console
nushell on  bsd [✘!?] is 📦 v0.88.2 via 🦀 v1.74.1
❯ version
╭────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────────────╮
│ version            │ 0.88.2                                    │
│ branch             │ bsd                                       │
│ commit_hash        │ 151edef186  │
│ build_os           │ freebsd-x86_64                            │
│ build_target       │ x86_64-unknown-freebsd                    │
│ rust_version       │ rustc 1.74.1 (a28077b28 2023-12-04)       │
│ rust_channel       │ stable-x86_64-unknown-freebsd             │
│ cargo_version      │ cargo 1.74.1 (ecb9851af 2023-10-18)       │
│ build_time         │ 2023-12-19 10:12:15 +00:00                │
│ build_rust_channel │ debug                                     │
│ allocator          │ mimalloc                                  │
│ features           │ default, extra, sqlite, trash, which, zip │
│ installed_plugins  │                                           │
╰────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────────╯
nushell on  bsd [✘!?] is 📦 v0.88.2 via 🦀 v1.74.1
❯ cargo test --workspace commands::ulimit e>> /dev/null | rg ulimit
test commands::ulimit::limit_set_filesize2 ... ok
test commands::ulimit::limit_set_filesize1 ... ok
test commands::ulimit::limit_set_hard1 ... ok
test commands::ulimit::limit_set_hard2 ... ok
test commands::ulimit::limit_set_invalid1 ... ok
test commands::ulimit::limit_set_invalid3 ... ok
test commands::ulimit::limit_set_invalid4 ... ok
test commands::ulimit::limit_set_invalid5 ... ok
test commands::ulimit::limit_set_soft2 ... ok
test commands::ulimit::limit_set_soft1 ... ok
nushell on  bsd [✘!?] is 📦 v0.88.2 via 🦀 v1.74.1
```


# 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` to
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.
-->
2023-12-19 08:58:45 -06:00
nibon7
a6da8ce769
Allow filesize type as a valid limit value (#11349)
# Description
This pr allow us to use `filesize` type as a valid limit value, which is
benefit for some file size based limits.

# User-Facing Changes
```console
/data/source/nushell> ulimit -f                                                                                                   
╭───┬─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┬───────────┬───────────╮
│ # │                     description                     │   soft    │   hard    │
├───┼─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┼───────────┼───────────┤
│ 0 │ Maximum size of files created by the shell (kB, -f) │ unlimited │ unlimited │
╰───┴─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┴───────────┴───────────╯
/data/source/nushell> ulimit -f 10Mib                                                                                           
/data/source/nushell> ulimit -f                                                                                                    
╭───┬─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┬───────┬───────╮
│ # │                     description                     │ soft  │ hard  │
├───┼─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┼───────┼───────┤
│ 0 │ Maximum size of files created by the shell (kB, -f) │ 10240 │ 10240 │
╰───┴─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┴───────┴───────╯
/data/source/nushell> ulimit -n                                                                                                 
╭───┬──────────────────────────────────────────────┬──────┬────────╮
│ # │                 description                  │ soft │  hard  │
├───┼──────────────────────────────────────────────┼──────┼────────┤
│ 0 │ Maximum number of open file descriptors (-n) │ 1024 │ 524288 │
╰───┴──────────────────────────────────────────────┴──────┴────────╯
/data/source/nushell> ulimit -n 10Mib                                                                                            
Error: nu:🐚:type_mismatch

  × Type mismatch.
   ╭─[entry #5:1:1]
 1 │ ulimit -n 10Mib
   ·             ─┬─
   ·              ╰── filesize is not compatible with resource RLIMIT_NOFILE
   ╰────
```

# Tests + Formatting
Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:

- [x] add `commands::ulimit::limit_set_filesize1`
- [x] add `commands::ulimit::limit_set_filesize2`
- [x] `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting
(`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes)
- [x] `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used`
to check that you're using the standard code style
- [x] `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))
- [x] `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing run-tests --path
crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
2023-12-16 09:56:03 -06:00
Andrej Kolchin
020e121391
Bubble up errors passed to complete (#11313)
Errors passed in `PipelineData::Value` get thrown in `complete` now.

Also added two simple tests for the command.

Fix #11187
Fix #10204
2023-12-16 09:07:08 -06:00
nibon7
7d5bd0d6be
Allow int type as a valid limit value (#11346)
# Description
This PR allows `int` type as a valid limit value for `ulimit`, so there
is no need to use `into string` to convert limit values in the tests.

# User-Facing Changes
N/A

# Tests + Formatting
Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:
- [x] add `commands::ulimit::limit_set_invalid3`
- [x] add `commands::ulimit::limit_set_invalid4`
- [x] add `commands::ulimit::limit_set_invalid5`
- [x] `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting
(`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes)
- [x] `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used`
to check that you're using the standard code style
- [x] `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))
- [x] `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing run-tests --path
crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
2023-12-16 08:55:44 -06:00
nibon7
84742275a1
Add ulimit command (#11324)
# Description
Add `ulimit` command to Nushell.

Closes #9563
Closes #3976

Related pr #11246

Reference:
https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/blob/master/fish-rust/src/builtins/ulimit.rs
https://github.com/mirror/busybox/blob/master/shell/shell_common.c#L529

# User-Facing Changes
```
nushell on  ulimit is 📦 v0.88.2 via 🦀 v1.72.1                                                                                                [3/246]
❯ ulimit -a
╭────┬──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┬───────────┬───────────╮
│  # │                               description                                │   soft    │   hard    │
├────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┼───────────┼───────────┤
│  0 │ Maximum size of core files created                              (kB, -c) │ unlimited │ unlimited │
│  1 │ Maximum size of a process's data segment                        (kB, -d) │ unlimited │ unlimited │
│  2 │ Controls of maximum nice priority                                   (-e) │         0 │         0 │
│  3 │ Maximum size of files created by the shell                      (kB, -f) │ unlimited │ unlimited │
│  4 │ Maximum number of pending signals                                   (-i) │     55273 │     55273 │
│  5 │ Maximum size that may be locked into memory                     (kB, -l) │      8192 │      8192 │
│  6 │ Maximum resident set size                                       (kB, -m) │ unlimited │ unlimited │
│  7 │ Maximum number of open file descriptors                             (-n) │      1024 │    524288 │
│  8 │ Maximum bytes in POSIX message queues                           (kB, -q) │       800 │       800 │
│  9 │ Maximum realtime scheduling priority                                (-r) │         0 │         0 │
│ 10 │ Maximum stack size                                              (kB, -s) │      8192 │ unlimited │
│ 11 │ Maximum amount of CPU time in seconds                      (seconds, -t) │ unlimited │ unlimited │
│ 12 │ Maximum number of processes available to the current user           (-u) │     55273 │     55273 │
│ 13 │ Maximum amount of virtual memory available to each process      (kB, -v) │ unlimited │ unlimited │
│ 14 │ Maximum number of file locks                                        (-x) │ unlimited │ unlimited │
│ 15 │ Maximum contiguous realtime CPU time                                (-y) │ unlimited │ unlimited │
╰────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┴───────────┴───────────╯
nushell on  ulimit is 📦 v0.88.2 via 🦀 v1.72.1
❯ ulimit -s
╭───┬─────────────────────────────┬──────┬───────────╮
│ # │         description         │ soft │   hard    │
├───┼─────────────────────────────┼──────┼───────────┤
│ 0 │ Maximum stack size (kB, -s) │ 8192 │ unlimited │
╰───┴─────────────────────────────┴──────┴───────────╯
nushell on  ulimit is 📦 v0.88.2 via 🦀 v1.72.1
❯ ulimit -s 100
nushell on  ulimit is 📦 v0.88.2 via 🦀 v1.72.1
❯ ulimit -s
╭───┬─────────────────────────────┬──────┬──────╮
│ # │         description         │ soft │ hard │
├───┼─────────────────────────────┼──────┼──────┤
│ 0 │ Maximum stack size (kB, -s) │  100 │  100 │
╰───┴─────────────────────────────┴──────┴──────╯
nushell on  ulimit is 📦 v0.88.2 via 🦀 v1.72.1
```

# Tests + Formatting
- [x] add commands::ulimit::limit_set_soft1
- [x] add commands::ulimit::limit_set_soft2
- [x] add commands::ulimit::limit_set_hard1
- [x] add commands::ulimit::limit_set_hard2
- [x] add commands::ulimit::limit_set_invalid1
- [x] add commands::ulimit::limit_set_invalid2
- [x] `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting
(`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes)
- [x] `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used`
to check that you're using the standard code style
- [x] `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))
- [x] `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing run-tests --path
crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
2023-12-15 07:11:17 -06:00
Andrej Kolchin
78f52e8b66
Replace bash with POSIX sh in tests (#11293)
Just my small pet peeve. This allows to run tests without bash
installed.

There were only two minor tests which required a change.
2023-12-15 14:53:19 +08:00
Eric Hodel
5b01685fc3
Enforce required, optional, and rest positional arguments start with an uppercase and end with a period. (#11285)
# Description

This updates all the positional arguments (except with
`--features=dataframe` or `--features=extra`) to start with an uppercase
letter and end with a period.

Part of #5066, specifically [this
comment](/nushell/nushell/issues/5066#issuecomment-1421528910)

Some arguments had example data removed from them because it also
appears in the examples.

There are other inconsistencies in positional arguments I noticed while
making the tests pass which I will bring up in #5066.

# User-Facing Changes

Positional arguments are now consistent

# Tests + Formatting

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

# After Submitting

Automatic documentation updates
2023-12-15 14:32:37 +08:00
Eric Hodel
ecb3b3a364
Ensure that command usage starts uppercase and ends period (#11278)
# Description

This repeats #8268 to make all command usage strings start with an
uppercase letter and end with a period per #5056

Adds a test to ensure that commands won't regress

Part of #5066

# User-Facing Changes

Command usage is now consistent

# Tests + Formatting

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

# After Submitting

Automatic documentation updates
2023-12-10 08:28:54 -06:00
Ian Manske
fa5d7babb9
Fix replacement closures for update, insert, and upsert (#11258)
# Description
This PR addresses #11204 which points out that using a closure for the
replacement value with `update`, `insert`, or `upsert` does not work for
lists.

# User-Facing Changes
- Replacement closures should now work for lists in `upsert`, `insert`,
and `update`. E.g., `[0] | update 0 {|i| $i + 1 }` now gives `[1]`
instead of an unhelpful error.
- `[1 2] | insert 4 20` no longer works. Before, this would give `[1, 2,
null, null, 20]`, but now it gives an error. This was done to match the
intended behavior in `Value::insert_data_at_cell_path`, whereas the
behavior before was probably unintentional. Following
`Value::insert_data_at_cell_path`, inserting at the end of a list is
also fine, so the valid indices for `upsert` and `insert` are
`0..=length` just like `Vec::insert` or list inserts in other languages.

# Tests + Formatting
Added tests for `upsert`, `insert`, and `update`:
- Replacement closures for lists, list streams, records, and tables
- Other list stream tests
2023-12-09 15:22:45 -06:00
Andrej Kolchin
5d5088b5d5
Match ++= capabilities with ++ (#11130)
Allow `++=` to work in all situations `++` does, namely for appending
single elements: `$list ++= 1`.

Resolve #11087

# Description

Bring `++=` to parity with `++`.

# User-Facing Changes

It is now possible to do `$list ++= 1` (appending a single element).
Similarly, this can be done:

```Nushell
~> mut a = [1]
~> $a ++= 2
~> a
╭───┬───╮
│ 0 │ 1 │
│ 1 │ 2 │
╰───┴───╯
```

# Tests + Formatting

Added two tests:

- `commands::assignment::append_assign::append_assign_single_element`
- `commands::assignment::append_assign::append_assign_to_single_element`
2023-12-07 05:46:37 +08:00
Andrej Kolchin
05d7d6d6ad
Do not create help for wrapped command (#11235)
Pretty self-explanatory.  The commit is only one `if`.

Fix #11096
2023-12-05 13:04:36 -06:00
WindSoilder
fb3350ebc3
Error on use path item1 item2, if item1 is not a module (#11183)
# Description
Fixes: #11143

# User-Facing Changes
Take the following as example:
```nushell
module foo { export def bar [] {}; export def baz [] {} }
```

`use foo bar baz` will be error:
```
❯ use foo c d
Error: nu::parser::wrong_import_pattern

  × Wrong import pattern structure.
   ╭─[entry #2:1:1]
 1 │ use foo c d
   ·           ┬
   ·           ╰── Trying to import something but the parent `c` is not a module, maybe you want to try `use <module> [<name1>, <name2>]`
   ╰────
```

# Tests + Formatting
Done
2023-12-05 11:38:45 +01:00
Poliorcetics
fc06afd051
feat: Add default docs for aliases, generated from the command they point to (#10825) 2023-12-04 20:56:46 +02:00
nibon7
b227eea668
Add checks for ports (#11214)
# Description
This PR adds checks for ports. This fixes unexpected output similar to
the one in the comment
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/11210#issuecomment-1837152357.

* before

```console
/data/source/nushell> port 65536 99999                                                                                        
41233
```

* after

```console
/data/source/nushell> port 65536 99999                                                                                             
Error: nu:🐚:cant_convert

  × Can't convert to u16.
   ╭─[entry #1:1:1]
 1 │ port 65536 99999
   ·      ──┬──
   ·        ╰── can't convert usize to u16
   ╰────
  help: out of range integral type conversion attempted (min: 0, max: 65535)
```

# User-Facing Changes
N/A

# Tests + Formatting
* [x] add `port_out_of_range` test

# After Submitting
N/A
2023-12-03 08:07:15 -06:00
Ian Manske
35e8db160d
Fix get -i ignoring errors for only the first cellpath (#11213)
# Description
Fixes issue #11212 where only the first cellpath supplied to `get -i` is
treated as optional, and the rest of the cell paths are treated as
non-optional.

# Tests
Added one test.
2023-12-02 11:01:08 -06:00
nibon7
7d8df4ba9e
Fix capacity overflow caused by large range of ports (#11210)
<!--
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Try to fix capacity overflow caused by large range of ports. 

```
$ port 1024 999999999999999999                                                                                 12/02/23 20:03:14 PM
thread 'main' panicked at 'capacity overflow', library/alloc/src/raw_vec.rs:524:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
```

# 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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2023-12-02 09:17:14 -06:00
WindSoilder
80881c75f9
When using redirection, if a command generates non-zero exit code, the script should stop running (#11191)
# Description
Fixes: #11153

To make sure scripts stop from running on non-zero exit code, we need to
invoke `might_consume_external_result` on
`PipelineData::ExternalStream`, so it can tell nushell if this command
exists with non-zero exit code.

And this pr also adjusts some test cases.

# User-Facing Changes
```nushell
^false out> /dev/null; print "ok"
```

After this pr, it shouldn't print ok.

# Tests + Formatting
Done
2023-11-30 18:52:02 +01:00
Renan Ribeiro
54d73748e4
Remove file I/O from tests that don't need it (#11182)
# Description

This PR implements modifications to command tests that write unnecessary
json and csv to disk then load it with open, by using nuon literals
instead.

- Fixes #7189



# User-Facing Changes
None

# Tests + Formatting
This only affects existing tests, which still pass.
2023-11-29 23:21:34 +01:00
WindSoilder
182b0ab4fb
add echo_env_mixed testbin to reduce windows only tests (#11172)
# Description
We have seen some test cases which requires to output message to both
stdout and stderr, especially in redirection scenario.

This pr is going to introduce a new echo_env_mixed testbin, so we can
have less tests which only runs on windows.

# User-Facing Changes
NaN

# Tests + Formatting
NaN

# After Submitting
NaN
2023-11-28 06:42:35 -06:00
WindSoilder
077d1c8125
Support o>>, e>>, o+e>> to append output to an external file (#10764)
# Description
Close: #10278

This pr introduces `o>>`, `e>>`, `o+e>>` to allow redirection to append
to a file.
Examples:
```nushell
echo abc o>> a.txt
echo abc o>> a.txt
cat asdf e>> a.txt
cat asdf e>> a.txt
cat asdf o+e>> a.txt
```

~~TODO:~~
~~1. currently internal commands with `o+e>` redirect to a variable is
broken: `let x = "a.txt"; echo abc o+e> $x`, not sure when it was
introduced...~~
~~2. redirect stdout and stderr with append mode doesn't supported yet:
`cat asdf o>>a.txt e>>b.ext`~~

~~For these 2 items, I'd like to fix them in different prs.~~
Already done in this pr
2023-11-27 07:52:39 -06:00
Artemiy
1ff8c2d81d
Cp target expansion (#11152)
# Description
This PR addresses issue with cp brough up on
[discord](https://discord.com/channels/601130461678272522/614593951969574961/1177669443917189130)
where target of cp is not correctly expanded.
If one has directory `test` with file `file.txt` in it then the
following command (in one line or inside a `do` block):
```nu
cd test; let file = 'copy.txt'; cp file.txt $file
```
will create a `copy.txt` in `.` not in `test` instead. This happens
because target of `cp` is a variable which is not expanded unlike a
string literal

# User-Facing Changes
`cp` will correctly parse realative target paths

# Tests + Formatting
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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:

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2023-11-25 09:42:20 -06:00
WindSoilder
57808ca7cc
Redirect: support redirect stderr with piping stdout to next commands. (#10851)
# Description
Fixes: #10271

Given the following script:
```shell
# test.sh
echo aaaaa
echo bbbbb 1>&2
echo cc
```

This pr makes the following command possible:
```nushell
bash test.sh err> /dev/null | lines | each {|line| $line | str length}
```


## General idea behind the change:
When nushell redirect stderr message to external file
1. it take stdout of external stream, and pass this stream to next
command, so it won't block next pipeline command from running.
2. relative stderr stream are handled by `save` command

These two streams are handled separately, so we need to delegate a
thread to `save` command, or else we'll have a chance to hang nushell,
we have meet a similar before: #5625.

### One case to consider
What if we're failed to save to an external stream? (Like we don't have
a permission to save to a file)?
In this case nushell will just print a waning message, and don't stop
the following scripts from running.

# User-Facing Changes
## Before
```nushell
❯ bash test2.sh err> /dev/null | lines | each {|line| $line | str length}
aaaaa
cc
```

## After
```nushell
❯ bash test2.sh err> /dev/null | lines | each {|line| $line | str length}
╭───┬───╮
│ 0 │ 5 │
│ 1 │ 2 │
╰───┴───╯
```

BTY, after this pr, the following commands are impossible either, it's
important to make sure that the implementation doesn't introduce too
much costs:
```nushell
❯ echo a e> a.txt e> a.txt
Error:   × Can't make stderr redirection twice
   ╭─[entry #1:1:1]
 1 │ echo a e> a.txt e> a.txt
   ·                 ─┬
   ·                  ╰── try to remove one
   ╰────

❯ echo a o> a.txt o> a.txt
Error:   × Can't make stdout redirection twice
   ╭─[entry #2:1:1]
 1 │ echo a o> a.txt o> a.txt
   ·                 ─┬
   ·                  ╰── try to remove one
   ╰────
```
2023-11-23 10:11:00 +08:00
Eric Hodel
d5677625a7
Add is-terminal to determine if stdin/out/err are a terminal (#10970)
# Description

I'm not sure if "is-terminal" is the best name for this command as there
is also "term size". Uses
[`is_terminal()`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/trait.IsTerminal.html#tymethod.is_terminal)
which is cross-platform.

Possible alternative names:
* `term is-tty --stdout`
* `term is-tty stdout`
* `term is-terminal stdout`

If multiple streams are provided an error is returned. The error span
covers all arguments as the incompatible one is not known. This may be
new?

Fixes #10517

# User-Facing Changes

* Add `is-terminal` to check if stdin, stdout, or stderr are a terminal
(TTY)

# Tests + Formatting

The nu tests always redirect stdin, stdout, and stderr so a positive
test case is not possible without extra work

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

# After Submitting

The new command will be added automatically

---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-11-21 20:48:39 -06:00
Ian Manske
12effd9b4e
Refactor Value cell path functions to fix bugs (#11066)
# Description
Slightly refactors the cell path functions (`insert_data_at_cell_path`,
etc.) for `Value` to fix a few bugs and ensure consistent behavior.
Namely, case (in)sensitivity now applies to lazy records just like it
does for regular `Records`. Also, the insert behavior of `insert` and
`upsert` now match, alongside fixing a few related bugs described below.
Otherwise, a few places were changed to use the `Record` API.

# Tests
Added tests for two bugs:
- `{a: {}} | insert a.b.c 0`: before this PR, doesn't create the
innermost record `c`.
- `{table: [[col]; [{a: 1}], [{a: 1}]]} | insert table.col.b 2`: before
this PR, doesn't add the field `b: 2` to each row.
2023-11-19 21:46:41 +01:00
Taylor
494a5a5286
Add mktemp command (#11005)
closes #10845 

I've opened this a little prematurely to get some questions answered
before I cleanup the code.

As I started trying to better understand GNUs `mktemp` I've realized its
kind of peculiar and we might want to change its behavior to introduce
it to nushell.

#### quiet and dry run

Does it make sense to keep the `quiet` and `dry_run` flags? I don't
think so. The GNU documentation says this about the dry run flag "Using
the output of this command to create a new file is inherently unsafe, as
there is a window of time between generating the name and using it where
another process can create an object by the same name." So yeah why keep
it? As far as quiet goes, does it make sense to silence the errors in
nushell?

#### other confusing flags

According to the [gnu
docs](https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/manual/html_node/mktemp-invocation.html),
the `-t` flag is deprecated and the `-p`/ `--tempdir` are the same flag
with the only difference being `--tempdir` takes an optional path, Given
that, I've broken the `-p` away from `--tempdir`. Now there is one
switch `--tmpdir`/`-t` and one named param `--tmpdir-path`/`-p`.

GNU mktemp
```
  -p DIR, --tmpdir[=DIR]  interpret TEMPLATE relative to DIR; if DIR is not
                        specified, use $TMPDIR if set, else /tmp.  With
                        this option, TEMPLATE must not be an absolute name;
                        unlike with -t, TEMPLATE may contain slashes, but
                        mktemp creates only the final component
  -t                  interpret TEMPLATE as a single file name component,
                        relative to a directory: $TMPDIR, if set; else the
                        directory specified via -p; else /tmp [deprecated]

```
to
nushell mktemp
```
  -p, --tmpdir-path <Filepath> # named param, must provide a path
  -t, --tmpdir                 # a switch
```

Is this a terrible idea?

What should I do?

---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-11-17 19:30:53 -06:00
Jakub Žádník
d1137cc700
Send only absolute paths to uu_cp (#11080)
# Description
Fixes https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/10832

Replaces: https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/10843
2023-11-17 07:30:57 +08:00
Ian Manske
3966c0a9fd
Fix rm path handling (#11064)
# Description
Fixes issue #11061 where `rm` fails to find a file after a `cd`. It
looks like the new glob functions do not return absolute file paths
which we forgot to account for.

# Tests
Added a test (fails on current main, but passes with this PR).

---------

Co-authored-by: Jakub Žádník <kubouch@gmail.com>
2023-11-17 07:30:15 +08:00
Antoine Stevan
dbdb1f6600
remove the unfold command (#10773)
follow-up to:
- https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/10771

> **Important**
> wait for between 0.87 and 0.88 to land this

# Description
after deprecation comes the removal... this PR removes `unfold` in favor
of `generate` 🥳

# User-Facing Changes
users should use `generate` now, `unfold` will stop working.

# Tests + Formatting

# After Submitting
2023-11-17 06:50:20 +08:00
Antoine Stevan
84cdc0d521
remove size command in favor of str stats (#10784)
follow-up to
- https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/10798

> **Important**
> wait for between 0.87 and 0.88 to land this

# Description
once again, after deprecation comes removal 😌 

# User-Facing Changes
`size` is now removed and `str size` should be used

# Tests + Formatting

# After Submitting
2023-11-17 06:49:19 +08:00
Darren Schroeder
e93e51d672
bump rust-toolchain to 1.72.1 (#11079)
# Description

This PR follows our process of staying 2 releases behind rust. 1.74.0
was released today so we update to 1.72.1.

Reference https://releases.rs/

# 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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2023-11-16 15:14:45 -06:00
Maxim Zhiburt
a1dfc35968
Fix #11047 (#11054)
close #11047
2023-11-16 05:28:54 -06:00
Maxim Zhiburt
e9c298713e
nu-table/ Add -t/theme argument && Replace -n/start-number with -i/index (#11058)
ref #11054

cc: @fdncred 

I've not figured out how to be able to have a flag option as `table -i`
:(

```nu
~/bin/nushell> [[a b, c]; [1 [2 3 3] 3] [4 5 [1 2 [1 2 3]]]] | table -e --width=80 --theme basic -i false

+---+-------+-----------+
| a |   b   |     c     |
+---+-------+-----------+
| 1 | +---+ |         3 |
|   | | 2 | |           |
|   | +---+ |           |
|   | | 3 | |           |
|   | +---+ |           |
|   | | 3 | |           |
|   | +---+ |           |
+---+-------+-----------+
| 4 |     5 | +-------+ |
|   |       | |     1 | |
|   |       | +-------+ |
|   |       | |     2 | |
|   |       | +-------+ |
|   |       | | +---+ | |
|   |       | | | 1 | | |
|   |       | | +---+ | |
|   |       | | | 2 | | |
|   |       | | +---+ | |
|   |       | | | 3 | | |
|   |       | | +---+ | |
|   |       | +-------+ |
+---+-------+-----------+
```

```nu
~/bin/nushell> [[a b, c]; [1 [2 3 3] 3] [4 5 [1 2 [1 2 3]]]] | table -e --width=80 --theme basic -i 100

+-----+---+-------------+-----------------------+
|   # | a |      b      |           c           |
+-----+---+-------------+-----------------------+
| 100 | 1 | +-----+---+ |                     3 |
|     |   | | 100 | 2 | |                       |
|     |   | +-----+---+ |                       |
|     |   | | 101 | 3 | |                       |
|     |   | +-----+---+ |                       |
|     |   | | 102 | 3 | |                       |
|     |   | +-----+---+ |                       |
+-----+---+-------------+-----------------------+
| 101 | 4 |           5 | +-----+-------------+ |
|     |   |             | | 100 |           1 | |
|     |   |             | +-----+-------------+ |
|     |   |             | | 101 |           2 | |
|     |   |             | +-----+-------------+ |
|     |   |             | | 102 | +-----+---+ | |
|     |   |             | |     | | 100 | 1 | | |
|     |   |             | |     | +-----+---+ | |
|     |   |             | |     | | 101 | 2 | | |
|     |   |             | |     | +-----+---+ | |
|     |   |             | |     | | 102 | 3 | | |
|     |   |             | |     | +-----+---+ | |
|     |   |             | +-----+-------------+ |
+-----+---+-------------+-----------------------+
```
2023-11-15 17:41:18 -06:00
Ian Manske
33a7bc405f
Refactor drop columns to fix issues (#10903)
# Description
This PR refactors `drop columns` and fixes issues #10902 and #6846.
Tables with "holes" are now handled consistently, although still
somewhat awkwardly. That is, the columns in the first row are used to
determine which columns to drop, meaning that the columns displayed all
the way to the right by `table` may not be the columns actually being
dropped. For example, `[{a: 1}, {b: 2}] | drop column` will drop column
`a` instead of `b`. Before, this would give a list of empty records.

# User-Facing Changes
`drop columns` can now take records as input.
2023-11-09 13:51:46 +01:00
Ian Manske
1fd3bc1ba6
Add exec command for Windows (#11001)
# Description
Based of the work and discussion in #10844, this PR adds the `exec`
command for Windows. This is done by simply spawning a
`std::process::Command` and then immediately exiting via
`std::process::exit` once the child process is finished. The child
process's exit code is passed to `exit`.

# User-Facing Changes
The `exec` command is now available on Windows, and there should be no
change in behaviour for Unix systems.
2023-11-08 14:50:25 -06:00
Eric Hodel
c039e4b3d0
Update description and error types for split-by (#10865)
# Description

`split-by` only works on a `Record`, the error type was updated to
match, and now uses a more-specific type. (Two type fixes for the price
of one!)

The `usage` was updated to say "record" as well

# User-Facing Changes

* Providing the wrong type to `split-by` now gives an error messages
with the correct required input type

Previously:

```
❯ ls | get name | split-by type
Error:   × unsupported input
   ╭─[entry #267:1:1]
 1 │ ls | get name | split-by type
   ·      ─┬─
   ·       ╰── requires a table with one row for splitting
   ╰────
```

With this PR:

```
❯ ls | get name | split-by type
Error: nu:🐚:type_mismatch

  × Type mismatch.
   ╭─[entry #1:1:1]
 1 │ ls | get name | split-by type
   ·      ─┬─
   ·       ╰── requires a record to split
   ╰────
```

# Tests + Formatting

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

# After Submitting

Only generated commands need to be updated

---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-11-07 16:27:10 +01:00
Christopher Durham
9b202d560d
Limit run-external --redirect-combine sh test to not(Windows) (#10905)
# Description

Limit the test `-p nu-command --test main
commands::run_external::redirect_combine` which uses `sh` to running on
`not(Windows)` like is done for other tests assuming unixy CLI items;
`sh` doesn't exist on Windows.

# User-Facing Changes

None; this is a change to tests only.

# Tests + Formatting

- 🟢 `toolkit fmt`
- 🟢 `toolkit clippy`
- 🟢 `toolkit test`
- 🟢 `toolkit test stdlib`
2023-11-07 16:35:24 +08:00
Andrej Kolchin
1a864ea6f4
Refactor error make (#10923)
- Replaced `start`/`end` with span.
- Fixed standard library.
- Add `help` option.
- Add a couple more errors for invalid record types.

Resolve #10914


# Description



# User-Facing Changes

- **BREAKING CHANGE:** `error make` now takes in `span` instead of
`start`/`end`:

  ```Nushell
  error make {
      msg: "Message"
      label: {
          text: "Label text"
          span: (metadata $var).span
      }
  }
  ```
- `error make` now has a `help` argument for custom error help.
2023-11-03 10:09:33 -05:00
Stefan Holderbach
0569a9c92e
Disallow duplicated columns in table literals (#10875)
# Description
Pretty much all operations/commands in Nushell assume that the column
names/keys in a record and thus also in a table (which consists of a
list of records) are unique.
Access through a string-like cell path should refer to a single column
or key/value pair and our output through `table` will only show the last
mention of a repeated column name.

```nu
[[a a]; [1 2]]
╭─#─┬─a─╮
│ 0 │ 2 │
╰───┴───╯
```

While the record parsing already either errors with the
`ShellError::ColumnDefinedTwice` or silently overwrites the first
occurence with the second occurence, the table literal syntax `[[header
columns]; [val1 val2]]` currently still allowed the creation of tables
(and internally records with more than one entry with the same name.

This is not only confusing, but also breaks some assumptions around how
we can efficiently perform operations or in the past lead to outright
bugs (e.g. #8431 fixed by #8446).

This PR proposes to make this an error.
After this change another hole which allowed the construction of records
with non-unique column names will be plugged.

## Parts
- Fix `SE::ColumnDefinedTwice` error code
- Remove previous tests permitting duplicate columns
- Deny duplicate column in table literal eval
- Deny duplicate column in const eval
- Deny duplicate column in `from nuon`

# User-Facing Changes
`[[a a]; [1 2]]` will now return an error:

```
Error: nu:🐚:column_defined_twice

  × Record field or table column used twice
   ╭─[entry #2:1:1]
 1 │ [[a a]; [1 2]]
   ·   ┬ ┬
   ·   │ ╰── field redefined here
   ·   ╰── field first defined here
   ╰────
```

this may under rare circumstances block code from evaluating.

Furthermore this makes some NUON files invalid if they previously
contained tables with repeated column names.

# Tests + Formatting
Added tests for each of the different evaluation paths that materialize
tables.
2023-11-01 21:25:35 +01:00
Andrej Kolchin
72f7b9b7cc
Add umkdir command (#10785)
A `mkdir` command, which uses `uu_mkdir` as backend.

close #10515.
2023-10-30 07:59:48 -05:00
Antoine Stevan
01d8961eb7
use to_lowercase in str downcase (#10850)
# Description
as we can see in the [documentation of
`str.to_lowercase`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.str.html#method.to_lowercase),
not only ASCII symbols have lower and upper variants.

- `str upcase` uses the correct method to convert the string

7ac5a01e2f/crates/nu-command/src/strings/str_/case/upcase.rs (L93)
- `str downcase` incorrectly converts only ASCII characters

7ac5a01e2f/crates/nu-command/src/strings/str_/case/downcase.rs (L124)

this PR uses `str.to_lower_case` instead of `str.to_ascii_lowercase` in
`str downcase`.

# User-Facing Changes
- upcase still works fine
```nushell
~ l> "ὀδυσσεύς" | str upcase
ὈΔΥΣΣΕΎΣ
```
- downcase now works

👉 before
```nushell
~ l> "ὈΔΥΣΣΕΎΣ" | str downcase
ὈΔΥΣΣΕΎΣ
```
👉 after
```nushell
~ l> "ὈΔΥΣΣΕΎΣ" | str downcase
ὀδυσσεύς
```

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

adds two tests
- `non_ascii_upcase`
- `non_ascii_downcase`

# After Submitting
2023-10-27 19:16:17 +02:00
WindSoilder
f35741d50e
redirection: fix internal commands error with o+e> redirection (#10816)
# Description
Currently the following command is broken:
```nushell
echo a o+e> 1.txt
```

It's because we don't redirect output of `echo` command. This pr is
trying to fix it.
2023-10-25 16:35:51 +02:00
Ludwig Austermann
8429aec57f
readd update flag to cp command (#10824)
# Description
- this PR should close #10819


# User-Facing Changes
Behaviour is similar to pre 0.86.0 behaviour of the cp command and
should as such not have a user-facing change, only compared to the
current version, were the option is readded.


# After Submitting
I guess the documentation will be automatically updated and as this
feature is no further highlighted, probably, no more work will be needed
here.

# Considerations
coreutils actually allows a third option:
```
pub enum UpdateMode {
    // --update=`all`,
    ReplaceAll,
    // --update=`none`
    ReplaceNone,
    // --update=`older`
    // -u
    ReplaceIfOlder,
}
```
namely `ReplaceNone`, which I have not added. Also I think that
specifying `--update 'abc'` is non functional.
2023-10-25 11:30:13 +02:00
WindSoilder
f043a8a8ff
redirect should have a target (#10835)
# Description
Fixes:  #10830 

The issue happened during lite-parsing, when we want to put a
`LiteElement` to a `LitePipeline`, we do nothing if relative redirection
target is empty.

So the command `echo aaa o> | ignore` will be interpreted to `echo aaa |
ignore`.

This pr is going to check and return an error if redirection target is
empty.

# User-Facing Changes
## Before
```
❯ echo aaa o> | ignore   # nothing happened
```

## After
```nushell
❯ echo aaa o> | ignore
Error: nu::parser::parse_mismatch

  × Parse mismatch during operation.
   ╭─[entry #1:1:1]
 1 │ echo aaa o> | ignore
   ·          ─┬
   ·           ╰── expected redirection target
   ╰────
```
2023-10-25 11:19:35 +02:00
Hudson Clark
78b4472b32
Support pattern matching null literals (#10829)
# Description
Support pattern matching against the `null` literal.  Fixes #10799 

### Before
```nushell
> match null { null => "success", _ => "failure" }
failure
```

### After
```nushell
> match null { null => "success", _ => "failure" }
success
```

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
Users can pattern match against a `null` literal.
2023-10-25 06:30:45 +08:00
Hudson Clark
cb754befe9
fix: Ensure consistent vals and cols when parsing with --flexible (#10814)
# Description
`from tsv` and `from csv` both support a `--flexible` flag. This flag
can be used to "allow the number of fields in records to be variable".

Previously, a record's invariant that `rec.cols.len() == rec.vals.len()`
could be broken during parsing. This can cause runtime errors as in
#10693. Other commands, like `select` were also affected.

The inconsistencies are somewhat hard to see, as most nushell code
assumes an equal number of columns and values.

# Before

### Fewer values than columns
```nushell
> let record = (echo "one,two\n1" | from csv --flexible | first)
# There are two columns
> $record | columns | to nuon
[one, two]
# But only one value
> $record | values | to nuon
[1]
# And printing the record doesn't show the second column!
> $record | to nuon
{one: 1}
```

### More values than columns
```nushell
> let record = (echo "one,two\n1,2,3" | from csv --flexible | first)
# There are two columns
> $record | columns | to nuon
[one, two]
# But three values
> $record | values | to nuon
[1, 2, 3]
# And printing the record doesn't show the third value!
> $record | to nuon
{one: 1, two: 2}
```
# After

### Fewer values than columns
```nushell
> let record = (echo "one,two\n1" | from csv --flexible | first)
# There are two columns
> $record | columns | to nuon
[one, two]
# And a matching number of values
> $record | values | to nuon
[1, null]
# And printing the record works as expected
> $record | to nuon
{one: 1, two: null}
```

### More values than columns
```nushell
> let record = (echo "one,two\n1,2,3" | from csv --flexible | first)
# There are two columns
> $record | columns | to nuon
[one, two]
# And a matching number of values
> $record | values | to nuon
[1, 2]
# And printing the record works as expected
> $record | to nuon
{one: 1, two: 2}
```

# User-Facing Changes
Using the `--flexible` flag with `from csv` and `from tsv` will not
result in corrupted record state.

# Tests + Formatting
<!--
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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:

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sure to [enable developer
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

> **Note**
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> ```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
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2023-10-24 15:54:26 -05:00
Gaëtan
0588a4fc19
Make debug info lazy (#10728)
<!--
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# Description
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* Makes the `debug info` lazy which greatly improves performance.
* Adds a `thread id` attribute

![Screenshot 2023-10-15
211940](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/25441359/b8457a30-ebf7-4731-9e13-17635501f029)

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/25441359/010ed35b-9f50-4fc6-8650-b68b29d5a9cd)


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

`threadid` column added.

---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-10-24 12:48:05 -05:00
Hofer-Julian
d0dc6986dd
Use long options for string (#10777) 2023-10-19 22:08:09 +02:00
Hofer-Julian
11480c77be
Add long options for path (#10775) 2023-10-19 22:07:01 +02:00
Hofer-Julian
4fd2b702ee
Add long options for platform and random (#10776) 2023-10-19 22:04:33 +02:00
Antoine Stevan
030e55acbf
add unfold back with a deprecation warning (#10771)
related to
- https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/10770

# Description
because some people look into `unfold` already (myself included lol) and
there will be 4 weeks with that new command which has a decent section
in the release note, i fear that
https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/10770 is a bit too brutal,
removing `unfold` without any warning...

this PR brings `unfold` back to life.
the `unfold` command will have a deprecation warning and will be removed
in 0.88.

# User-Facing Changes
`unfold` is only deprecated, not removed.

# Tests + Formatting

# After Submitting
2023-10-19 19:23:06 +02:00
Hofer-Julian
54bc662e0e
Add long options for generators and math (#10752) 2023-10-19 18:17:42 +02:00
Darren Schroeder
adb99938f7
rename unfold to generate (#10770)
# Description

This PR renames the `unfold` command to `generate`.
closes #10760

# 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
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sure to [enable developer
mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

> **Note**
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automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```
-->

# After Submitting
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documentation](https://github.com/nushell/nushell.github.io) after the
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-->
2023-10-19 09:30:34 -05:00
Oscar
0a8f27f6f2
Allow empty list inputs in group-by and return empty record (#10730)
# Description

Changed `group-by` behavior to accept empty list as input and return an
empty record instead of throwing an error. I also replaced
`errors_if_input_empty()` test to reflect the new expected behavior.

See #10713 

# User-Facing Changes
`[] | group-by` or `[] | group-by a` now returns empty record


# Tests + Formatting
1 test for emptied table i.e. list

---------

Signed-off-by: Oscar <71343264+0scvr@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-10-19 12:20:52 +02:00
Tilen Gimpelj
9692240b4f
Add --ignore-error to reject (#10737)
Add `--ignore-errors` flag to reject.

This is a PR in reference to #10215 as select has the flag, but reject
hasn't

user can now add `-i` or `--ignore-errors` flag to turn every cell path
into option.

```nushell
> let arg = [0 5 a c]
> [[a b];[1 2] [3 4] [5 6]] | reject $a | to nuon
error index to large
# ----
> let arg = [0 5 a c]
> [[a b];[1 2] [3 4] [5 6]] | reject $a -i | to nuon
[[a, b]; [1, 2], [3, 4], [5, 6]]
```
2023-10-19 06:28:47 +08:00
Bob Hyman
09b3dab35d
Allow filesystem commands to access files with glob metachars in name (#10694)
(squashed version of #10557, clean commit history and review thread)

Fixes #10571, also potentially: #10364, #10211, #9558, #9310,


# Description
Changes processing of arguments to filesystem commands that are source
paths or globs.
Applies to `cp, cp-old, mv, rm, du` but not `ls` (because it uses a
different globbing interface) or `glob` (because it uses a different
globbing library).

The core of the change is to lookup the argument first as a file and
only glob if it is not. That way,
a path containing glob metacharacters can be referenced without glob
quoting, though it will have to be single quoted to avoid nushell
parsing.

Before: A file path that looks like a glob is not matched by the glob
specified as a (source) argument and takes some thinking about to
access. You might say the glob pattern shadows a file with the same
spelling.
```
> ls a*
╭───┬────────┬──────┬──────┬────────────────╮
│ # │  name  │ type │ size │    modified    │
├───┼────────┼──────┼──────┼────────────────┤
│ 0 │ a[bc]d │ file │  0 B │ 34 seconds ago │
│ 1 │ abd    │ file │  0 B │ now            │
│ 2 │ acd    │ file │  0 B │ now            │
╰───┴────────┴──────┴──────┴────────────────╯

> cp --verbose 'a[bc]d' dest
copied /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/abd to /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/dest/abd
copied /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/acd to /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/dest/acd

> ## Note -- a[bc]d *not* copied, and seemingly hard to access.
> cp --verbose 'a\[bc\]d' dest
Error:   × No matches found
   ╭─[entry #33:1:1]
 1 │ cp --verbose 'a\[bc\]d' dest
   ·              ─────┬────
   ·                   ╰── no matches found
   ╰────

> #.. but is accessible with enough glob quoting.
> cp --verbose 'a[[]bc[]]d' dest
copied /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/a[bc]d to /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/dest/a[bc]d
```
Before_2: if file has glob metachars but isn't a valid pattern, user
gets a confusing error:

```
> touch 'a[b'
> cp 'a[b' dest
Error:   × Pattern syntax error near position 30: invalid range pattern
   ╭─[entry #13:1:1]
 1 │ cp 'a[b' dest
   ·    ──┬──
   ·      ╰── invalid pattern
   ╰────
```

After: Args to cp, mv, etc. are tried first as literal files, and only
as globs if not found to be files.

```
> cp --verbose 'a[bc]d' dest
copied /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/a[bc]d to /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/dest/a[bc]d
> cp --verbose '[a][bc]d' dest
copied /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/abd to /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/dest/abd
copied /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/acd to /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/dest/acd
```
After_2: file with glob metachars but invalid pattern just works.
(though Windows does not allow file name to contain `*`.).

```
> cp --verbose 'a[b' dest
copied /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/a[b to /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r4/dest/a[b
```

So, with this fix, a file shadows a glob pattern with the same spelling.
If you have such a file and really want to use the glob pattern, you
will have to glob quote some of the characters in the pattern. I think
that's less confusing to the user: if ls shows a file with a weird name,
s/he'll still be able to copy, rename or delete it.

# User-Facing Changes
Could break some existing scripts. If user happened to have a file with
a globbish name but was using a glob pattern with the same spelling, the
new version will process the file and not expand the glob.

# Tests + Formatting
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> ```
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# 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>
2023-10-18 13:31:15 -05:00
Gaëtan
1751ac12f4
allow multiple extensions (#10593)
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# Description
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This PR allows `open` to handle files with multiple extensions; i.e it
will try to call `from tar.gz`, `from gz` when calling
```nu
open file.tar.gz
```

# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
No breaking changes.
2023-10-13 13:45:36 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
0ba81f1d51
rename nushell's cp command to cp-old making coreutils the default cp (#10678)
# Description

This PR renames nushell's `cp` command to `cp-old` to make room for
`ucp` to be renamed to `cp`, making the coreutils version of `cp` the
default for nushell. After some period of time, we should remove
`cp-old` entirely.

# 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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2023-10-10 18:13:28 -05:00
WindSoilder
0c67d742f0
fix clippy (#10659)
This pr fix clippy warnings in latest clippy version(1.72.0):

Unfortunally it's not easy to handle for [try
fold](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/manual_try_fold)
warning in `start command`

Refer to known issue:
> This lint doesn’t take into account whether a function does something
on the failure case, i.e., whether short-circuiting will affect
behavior. Refactoring to try_fold is not desirable in those cases.

That's the case for our code, which does something on the failure case.

So this pr is making a little refactor on `try_commands`.
2023-10-10 03:31:15 +13:00
Hofer-Julian
765b303689
Add long options for formats (#10645) 2023-10-08 19:07:09 +02:00
Hofer-Julian
ff6c0fcb81
Add long options for filters (#10641) 2023-10-08 13:12:46 +02:00
David Matos
7827b1fb87
ucp: Change error when directory is specified but not recursive (#10609)
# Description
Closes #10537. Basically error message was unhelpful, and this temporary
measure adds back the nice previous nushell error message. Ideally, we
would like to add a more permanent solution mentioned in the issue
[comments](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/10537#issuecomment-1743686122),
but since we want to have `ucp` as `cp` on new release, this is hackier
but way simpler so this fix should do it.

Only downside is that now behavior differs from `uutils` in the sense
that:
```
uutils:
> cp a foo/ bar
ls bar
# foo/a

nushell:
>ucp a foo/ bar
# directory error (not copied) ....
```
So, since its non fatal error, uutils copies a, but nushell errors out
with nothing copied. If we go to option 3 mentioned above, then we can
decide what we want to do, and perhaps continue on a non fatal error.


# 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:

- [X] `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting
(`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes)
- [X] `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used`
to check that you're using the standard code style
- [X] `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))
- [X] `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

---------

Co-authored-by: amtoine <stevan.antoine@gmail.com>
2023-10-06 18:59:46 +02:00
Lucas Chaim
a03c1c266c
Add url decode command (#10611)
Implemented URL decoding as a url subcommand, created corresponding unit
tests. The logic, examples and descriptions were based on the existing
`url encode` command.

Resolves #10563

# Description
Added a new `url decode` command to compliment the existing `url
encode`, as proposed by myself in #10563.
It takes a string, list of strings or cell path and produces the
corresponding decoded strings.

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/4030336/815a34e9-7ceb-4d09-9d74-e700ba513b17)

# User-Facing Changes
New url subcommand `url decode`, as described above.

# Tests + Formatting
I've added unit tests for the new subcommand and ensured all actions
outlined below showed no issues.
- [x] `cargo fmt --all -- --check`
- [x] `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used`
- [x] `cargo test --workspace`
- [x] `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing run-tests --path
crates/nu-std"`
2023-10-05 18:43:58 +02:00
Stefan Holderbach
7c1487e18d
Use int type name consistently (#10579)
# Description
When referring to the type use `int` consistently. Only when referring
to the concept of integer numbers use `integer`.

- Fix `random integer` to `random int` tests
  - Forgot in #10520
- Use int instead of integer in error messages
- Use int type name in bits commands
- Fix messages in `for` examples
- Use int typename in `into` commands
- Use int typename in rest of commands
- Report errors in `nu-protocol` with int typename

Work for #10332 

# User-Facing Changes
User errorrs should now use `int` so you can easily find the necessary
commands or type annotations.

# Tests + Formatting
Only two tests found that needed updating
2023-10-03 18:24:32 +02:00
JT
844cb1213b
Remove cd w/ abbreviations (#10588)
# Description

This removes the old style "cd with abbreviations" that would attempt to
guess what directory you wanted to `cd` to. This would sometimes have
false positives, so we left it off by default in the config.

In the current main, we have much-improved path completions
(https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/10543) so you can now do `cd
a/b<tab>` and get a much better experience (because you can see the
directory you're about to cd to). This removes the need for the previous
abbreviation system.

# User-Facing Changes

This does remove the old abbreviation system. It will likely mean that
old config files that have settings for abbreviations will now get
errors.

update: here's an example of the error you'll see:


![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/547158/6847a25d-895a-4b92-8251-278a57e8d29a)

# Tests + Formatting
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Make sure you've run and fixed any issues with these commands:

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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))
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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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2023-10-03 10:51:46 +13:00
Jakub Žádník
eb6870cab5
Add --env and --wrapped flags to def (#10566) 2023-10-02 21:13:31 +03:00
Hudson Clark
fa2e6e5d53
feat: Add unfold command (#10489)
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# Description
<!--
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Description of your pull request goes here. **Provide examples and/or
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> [!NOTE]
> This PR description originally used examples where the `generator`
closure returned a list. It has since been updated to use records
instead.

The `unfold` command allows users to dynamically generate streams of
data. The stream is generated by repeatedly invoking a `generator`
closure. The `generator` closure accepts a single argument and returns a
record containing two optional keys: 'out' and 'next'. Each invocation,
the 'out' value, if present, is added to the stream. If a 'next' key is
present, it is used as the next argument to the closure, otherwise
generation stops.

The name "unfold" is borrowed from other functional-programming
languages. Whereas `fold` (or `reduce`) takes a stream of values and
outputs a single value, `unfold` takes a single value and outputs a
stream of values.

### Examples

A common example of using `unfold` is to generate a fibbonacci sequence.
See
[here](6ffdac103c/src/sources.rs (L65))
for an example of this in rust's `itertools`.

```nushell
> unfold [0, 1] {|fib| {out: $fib.0, next: [$fib.1, ($fib.0 + $fib.1)]} } | first 10
───┬────
 0 │  0
 1 │  1
 2 │  1
 3 │  2
 4 │  3
 5 │  5
 6 │  8
 7 │ 13
 8 │ 21
 9 │ 34
───┴────
```

This command is particularly useful when consuming paginated APIs, like
Github's. Previously, nushell users might use a loop and buffer
responses into a list, before returning all responses at once. However,
this behavior is not desirable if the result result is very large. Using
`unfold` avoids buffering and allows subsequent pipeline stages to use
the data concurrently, as it's being fetched.

#### Before
```nushell
mut pages = []
for page in 1.. {
  let resp = http get (
    {
      scheme: https,
      host: "api.github.com",
      path: "/repos/nushell/nushell/issues",
      params: {
	page: $page,
	per_page: $PAGE_SIZE
      }
    } | url join)

  $pages = ($pages | append $resp)

  if ($resp | length) < $PAGE_SIZE {
    break
  }
}
$pages
```

#### After
```nu
unfold 1 {|page|
  let resp = http get (
    {
      scheme: https,
      host: "api.github.com",
      path: "/repos/nushell/nushell/issues",
      params: {
	page: $page,
	per_page: $PAGE_SIZE
      }
    } | url join)

  if ($resp | length) < $PAGE_SIZE {
    {out: $resp}
  } else {
    {out: $resp, next: ($page + 1)}
  }
}
```


# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->
- An `unfold` generator is added to the default context.

# 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` to
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.
-->

Given the complexity of the `generator` closure's return value, it would
be good to document the semantics of `unfold` and provide some in-depth
examples showcasing what it can accomplish.
2023-09-30 09:08:06 -05:00
WindSoilder
d34581db4a
Rename: change the SyntaxShape of -c flag from list to record (#10526)
# Description
Fixes: #7085 
Also closes: #7526 

# User-Facing Changes
After this change, we need to use `-c` flag like this:
```nushell
[[a, b, c]; [1, 2, 3]] | rename -c { a: ham }
```
But we can rename many columns easily, here is another example:
```nushell
[[a, b, c]; [1, 2, 3]] | rename -c { a: ham, b: ham2 }
```
2023-09-30 08:59:47 -05:00
poketch
16453b6986
Making open case-insensitive to file extensions (#10451)
# Description

Closes #10441 

Uses `String::to_lowercase()` when the file's extension `ext` is parsed
to allow `from_decl(format!("from {ext}"))` to return the desired output
regardless of extension case.

It doesn't work with sqlite files since those are handled earlier in the
parsing but I think is good- since there's no standard file extension
used by sqlite so a user will likely want case sensitivity in that case.

This also has the (possibly undesired) effect of making `open`
completely case insensitive, e.g. `open foo.JSON` will work on a file
named `foo.json` and vice versa. This is good on Windows as it treats
`foo.json` and `foo.JSON` as the same file, but may not be the desired
behaviour on Unix.

If this behaviour is undesired I assume it would be fixed with a
`#[cfg(not(unix))]` attribute on the `to_lowercase()` operation but that
produces slightly "uglier" code that I didn't wish to submit unless
necessary. 

old behaviour:

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/79598494/261df577-e377-44ac-bef3-f6384bceaeb5)

new behaviour: 

![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/79598494/04271740-a46f-4613-a3a6-1e220ef7f829)


# User-Facing Changes

`open` will now present a table when `open`-ing files with captitalized
extensions rather than the file's raw data

# Tests + Formatting

new test: `parses_file_with_uppercase_extension` which tests the desired
behaviour

---------

Co-authored-by: Stefan Holderbach <sholderbach@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-29 17:20:59 +02:00
Bob Hyman
9a0c6f2e02
glob with ../ prefix now works; (#10504)
Fixes #10503 
Also improves link to metacharacter help;

# Description
`glob` code was using pattern as provided by user. If that had leading
`..\`, `wax::Glob` is documented to treat them as literal chars to be
matched.
Fix is to use `wax::Glob.partition()` to split such invariant prefixes
off the pattern and tack them onto the working directory computed
separately.

Before
```
> ls ..
╭───┬───────┬──────┬──────┬───────────────╮
│ # │ name  │ type │ size │   modified    │
├───┼───────┼──────┼──────┼───────────────┤
│ 0 │ ../r1 │ dir  │  7 B │ 3 hours ago   │
│ 1 │ ../r2 │ dir  │  3 B │ a day ago     │
│ 2 │ ../r3 │ dir  │ 13 B │ 4 minutes ago │
╰───┴───────┴──────┴──────┴───────────────╯
> glob ../r*
╭────────────╮
│ empty list │
╰────────────╯
```
After 
```
> glob ../r*
╭───┬──────────────────────────────╮
│ 0 │ /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r2 │
│ 1 │ /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r1 │
│ 2 │ /home/bobhy/src/rust/work/r3 │
╰───┴──────────────────────────────╯
```

# User-Facing Changes
None

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

# 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.
-->

---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-29 06:48:55 -05:00
WindSoilder
9c52b93975
allow early return outside of main (#10514)
# Description
Fixes: #9792

When evaluating file, we need to allow early return if we evaluate
script file first.
2023-09-28 18:49:42 +02:00
Antoine Stevan
6c026242d4
remove the $nothing variable (#10478)
related to 
- https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/9973
- https://github.com/nushell/nushell/pull/9918

thanks to @jntrnr and their super useful tips on this PR, i learned
about the parser + evaluation, so 🙏

# Description
because we already have `null` as the value of the type `nothing` and as
a followup to the two other attempts of mine, i propose to remove the
redundant `$nothing` built-in variable 😋

this PR is the first step, deprecating `$nothing`.
a followup PR will remove it altogether and wait for 0.87 👍 

⚙️ **details**: a new `NOTHING_VARIABLE_ID = 3` has been added,
parsing `$nothing` will create it, finally a `Value::Nothing` will be
produced and a warning will be reported.

this PR already fixes the `toolkit.nu` module so that it does not throw
a bunch of warnings each time 👌

# User-Facing Changes
`$nothing` is now deprecated and will be removed in 0.87
```nushell
> $nothing
Error:   × Deprecated variable
   ╭─[entry #1:1:1]
 1 │ $nothing
   · ────┬───
   ·     ╰── `$nothing` is deprecated and will be removed in 0.87.
   ╰────
  help: Use `null` instead
```

# Tests + Formatting
tests have been updated, especially
- `nothing_fails_string`
- `nothing_fails_int`
which use a variable called `nil` now to make sure `nothing` does not
support cell paths 👍

# After Submitting
classic deprecation mention 👍
2023-09-26 18:49:28 +02:00
Antoine Stevan
feef612388
show the full directory / file path in "directory not found" error (#10430)
should close https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/10406

# Description
when writing a script, with variables you try to `ls` or `open`, you
will get a "directory not found" error but the variable won't be
expanded and you won't be able to see which one of the variable was the
issue...

this PR adds this information to the error.

# User-Facing Changes
let's define a variable
```nushell
let does_not_exist = "i_do_not_exist_in_the_current_directory"
```
### before
```nushell
> open $does_not_exist
Error: nu:🐚:directory_not_found

  × Directory not found
   ╭─[entry #7:1:1]
 1 │ open $does_not_exist
   ·      ───────┬───────
   ·             ╰── directory not found
   ╰────
```
```nushell
> ls $does_not_exist
Error: nu:🐚:directory_not_found

  × Directory not found
   ╭─[entry #8:1:1]
 1 │ ls $does_not_exist
   ·    ───────┬───────
   ·           ╰── directory not found
   ╰────
```

### after
```nushell
> open $does_not_exist
Error: nu:🐚:directory_not_found

  × Directory not found
   ╭─[entry #3:1:1]
 1 │ open $does_not_exist
   ·      ───────┬───────
   ·             ╰── directory not found
   ╰────
  help: /home/amtoine/documents/repos/github.com/amtoine/nushell/i_do_not_exist_in_the_current_directory does not exist
```
```nushell
> ls $does_not_exist
Error: nu:🐚:directory_not_found

  × Directory not found
   ╭─[entry #4:1:1]
 1 │ ls $does_not_exist
   ·    ───────┬───────
   ·           ╰── directory not found
   ╰────
  help: /home/amtoine/documents/repos/github.com/amtoine/nushell/i_do_not_exist_in_the_current_directory does not exist
```

# Tests + Formatting
shouldn't harm anything 🤞 

# After Submitting
2023-09-26 17:38:58 +08:00
Maxim Zhiburt
65074ec449
nu-table: Fix failing test (relied on termwidth assumptions) (#10492)
close #10468

You can check on different term sizes.
2023-09-25 18:17:42 +02:00
Poliorcetics
a19cac2673
Command: Add config env/nu --default to print defaults (#10480)
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# Description
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Closes #5436

When I opened this issue more than a year ago, I mainly wanted the
following capacity: easily access the full env and have the hability to
update it when a new version of `nushell` comes out.

With this PR I can now do the following:

```nu
source-env ~/.config/nushell/defaults/env.nu
source     ~/.config/nushell/defaults/config.nu

# Update nushell default config & env file (run this after a version update)
def update-defaults [] {
    config env --default | save -f ~/.config/nushell/defaults/env.nu
    config nu  --default | save -f ~/.config/nushell/defaults/config.nu
}
```

Which is more than enough for me. Along with `nushell` respecting the
XDG spec on macOS (`dirs-next` should be banned for CLI tools on macOS),
this should be one of the last hurdle before fully switching for me!

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

Two new switches to existing commands:

```nu
config env --default # Print the default env embedded at compile time in the binary
config nu  --default # Print the default config embedded at compile time in the binary
```

# 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` to
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
> ```
-->

- Added a test for the output of `config env --default`
- Added a test for the output of `config nu --default`

# 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.
-->

Are the docs for commands generated automatically or do I need to make a
PR there too ? It's no problem if so, just point me at instructions if
there are any :)
2023-09-25 08:00:59 -05:00
WindSoilder
d2c87ad4b4
differentiating between --x and --x: bool (#10456)
# Description
Fixes: #10450 

This pr differentiating between `--x: bool` and `--x`

Here are examples which demostrate difference between them:
```nushell
def a [--x: bool] { $x };
a --x    # not allowed, you need to parse a value to the flag.
a        # it's allowed, and the value of `$x` is false, which behaves the same to `def a [--x] { $x }; a`
```

For boolean flag with default value, it works a little bit different to
#10450 mentioned:
```nushell
def foo [--option: bool = false] { $option }
foo                  # output false
foo --option         # not allowed, you need to parse a value to the flag.
foo --option true    # output true
```

# User-Facing Changes
After the pr, the following code is not allowed:
```nushell
def a [--x: bool] { $x }; a --x
```

Instead, you have to pass a value to flag `--x` like `a --x false`. But
bare flag works in the same way as before.

## Update: one more breaking change to help on #7260 
```
def foo [--option: bool] { $option == null }
foo
```
After the pr, if we don't use a boolean flag, the value will be `null`
instead of `true`. Because here `--option: bool` is treated as a flag
rather than a switch

---------

Co-authored-by: amtoine <stevan.antoine@gmail.com>
2023-09-23 10:20:48 +02:00
George Padley
1c677c9577
Map DirectoryNotFound to FileNotFound for open command (#10089)
# Description


This PR should close #10085
Maps `DirectoryNotFound` errors to `FileNotFound`. All other errors are
left unchanged.

# User-Facing Changes

This means a user will see `FileNotFound` instead of `DirectoryNotFound`
which is more meaning full to the user.
2023-09-21 20:17:44 +02:00
Stefan Holderbach
0c7a8e3634
Remove dead BSON related tests (#10458)
Those tests where behind a feature flag `bson` that is never defined in
`Cargo.toml`

Remove them.
2023-09-21 20:01:49 +02:00
Maxim Zhiburt
7cfd4d2cfa
nu-table: Add table option --abbreviated (#10399)
- Added `--abbreviated`/`-a` option
- Adedd `abbreviate_if_longer_than` config opt for it.

```nu
ls | table -a 3
```

```
╭───┬────────────────────┬──────┬───────────┬──────────────╮
│ # │        name        │ type │   size    │   modified   │
├───┼────────────────────┼──────┼───────────┼──────────────┤
│ 0 │ CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md │ file │   3.4 KiB │ 4 days ago   │
│ 1 │ CONTRIBUTING.md    │ file │  18.3 KiB │ 2 weeks ago  │
│ 2 │ Cargo.lock         │ file │ 144.3 KiB │ 15 hours ago │
│ 3 │ ...                │ ...  │ ...       │ ...          │
│ 4 │ tests              │ dir  │   4.0 KiB │ 4 months ago │
│ 5 │ toolkit.nu         │ file │  14.6 KiB │ 5 days ago   │
│ 6 │ wix                │ dir  │   4.0 KiB │ 2 months ago │
╰───┴────────────────────┴──────┴───────────┴──────────────╯
```

```nu
$env | table -a 3
```

```
╭──────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────╮
│ BROWSER          │ firefox                                                                  │
│ CARGO            │ /home/maxim/.rustup/toolchains/1.70.0-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/bin/cargo │
│ CARGO_HOME       │ /home/maxim/.cargo                                                       │
│ ...              │ ...                                                                      │
│ XDG_SESSION_TYPE │ x11                                                                      │
│ XDG_VTNR         │ 7                                                                        │
│ _                │ /home/maxim/.cargo/bin/cargo                                             │
╰──────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────╯
```

close #10393

PS: Maybe as a separate issue (good candidate for `GOOD FIRST ISSUE`)
add a config option to change a default `...` truncation sign to a
custom? (which would be applicable not only for `--abbreviated` but all
kind of tables)

---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-20 12:59:08 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
29e809ad77
allow values command to support LazyRecords (#10418)
# Description

This PR allows the `values` command to support lazy records.

closes https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/10417

### Before
```nushell
sys | values
Error: nu:🐚:only_supports_this_input_type

  × Input type not supported.
   ╭─[entry #1:1:1]
 1 │ sys | values
   · ─┬─   ───┬──
   ·  │       ╰── only record or table input data is supported
   ·  ╰── input type: record<host: record<name: string, os_version: string, long_os_version: string, kernel_version: string, hostname: string, uptime: duration, boot_time: string, sessions: list<any>>, cpu: table<name: string, brand: string, freq: int, cpu_usage: float, load_average: string, vendor_id: string>, disks: table<device: string, type: string, mount: string, total: filesize, free: filesize, removable: bool, kind: string>, mem: record<total: filesize, free: filesize, used: filesize, available: filesize, swap total: filesize, swap free: filesize, swap used: filesize>, temp: list<any>, net: table<name: string, sent: filesize, recv: filesize>>
   ╰────
```

### After
```nushell
❯ sys | values
╭─┬─────────────────╮
│0│{record 8 fields}│
│1│[table 16 rows]  │
│2│[table 1 row]    │
│3│{record 7 fields}│
│4│[list 0 items]   │
│5│[table 5 rows]   │
╰─┴─────────────────╯
```

# 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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2023-09-20 12:57:29 -05:00
WindSoilder
bf40f035f6
don't overrite arg's type if it's annotated explicitly (#10424)
# Description
Fixes: #10410 

So the following script is possible:
```nushell
def a [b: any = null] { let b = ($b | default "default_b"); }
a "given_b"
```

## About the change
When parsing signature, and nushell meets something like `a: any`, it
force the parser to treat `a` as `any` type. This is what
`arg_explicit_type` means, it's only set when we goes into
`ParseMode::TypeMode`, and it will be reset to `false` if the token goes
to next argument.

so, when we have something like this: `def a [b: any = null] { $b }`,
the type of `$b` won't be overwritten.

But if we have something like this: `def a [b = null] { $b }`, the type
of `$b` is not annotated, so we make it to be `nothing`(which is the
type of null)
2023-09-21 03:58:29 +12:00
Stefan Holderbach
19d732f313
Clippy in tests (#10394)
Running `cargo clippy --workspace --tests`

We should move that to CI as well
2023-09-16 21:49:10 +02:00
Darren Schroeder
a9a82de5c4
fix some new chrono warnings (#10384)
# Description

This PR cleans up some warnings on the latest chrono dependency.

# 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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sure to [enable developer
mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

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2023-09-15 15:46:25 -05:00
JT
026e18399e
fix 'let' to properly redirect (#10360)
# Description

Fixes a bug in `let` where the pipeline wasn't being properly
redirected.

fixes #9767

# User-Facing Changes

Shouldn't have any breaking changes, as this should be better for
expected use cases.

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

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> ```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
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-->
2023-09-14 10:18:29 +12:00
Stefan Holderbach
bbf0b45c59
Update internal use of decimal to float (#10333)
# Description
We made the decision that our floating point type should be referred to
as `float` over `decimal`.
Commands were updated by #9979 and #10320

Now make the internal codebase consistent in referring to this data type
as `float`.

Work for #10332

# User-Facing Changes

`decimal` has been removed as a type name/symbol. 

Instead of 
```nushell
def foo [bar: decimal] decimal -> decimal {}
```
use 
```nushell
def foo [bar: float] float -> float {}
```

Potential effect of `SyntaxShape`'s `Display` implementation now also
referring to `float` instead of `decimal`

# Details
- Rename `SyntaxShape::Decimal` to `Float`
- Update `Display for SyntaxShape` to `float`
- Update error message + fn name in dataframe code
- Fix docs in command examples
- Rename tests that are float specific
- Update doccomment on `SyntaxShape`
- Update comment in script

# Tests + Formatting
Updates the names of some tests
2023-09-13 23:53:55 +02:00
Gonçalo Gomes
ce4ea16c08
fix #10319: allow json request of value type list (#10356)
# Description

this commit adds the handling of Value::List when BodyType is Json
it also adds the corresponding test (trying to send a list)

Fixes #10319

# User-Facing Changes

Added the ability to send a json list in the POST message

# Tests + Formatting
- [x] `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting
(`cargo fmt --all` applies these changes)
- [x] `cargo clippy --workspace -- -D warnings -D clippy::unwrap_used`
to check that you're using the standard code style
- [x] `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))
- [x] `cargo run -- -c "use std testing; testing run-tests --path
crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

Also ran `nc -l -p 8080` in other terminal and `http post -fe -t
application/json http://localhost:8080 [{ field: true }]` I see the
following appear in the output of nc:
```
POST / HTTP/1.1
Host: localhost:8080
User-Agent: nushell
Accept: */*
Content-Type: application/json
accept-encoding: gzip
Content-Length: 16

[{"field":true}]%
```
2023-09-13 16:54:03 +02:00
Maxim Zhiburt
73d3708006
Patch restore lead trail space bg color (#10351)
```nu
 $env.config.color_config.leading_trailing_space_bg = { bg: 'white' }; [[a b, 'c   ']; ['  1  ' '    2' '3    '] ['  4  ' "hello   \n  world  " ['  1  ' 2 [1 '  2  ' 3]]]] | table --expand
```


![image](https://github.com/nushell/nushell/assets/20165848/01a35042-0e36-4c51-99a9-3011fabb551b)

ref: #2794
close: #10317

note: test are not actually make scenes cause `nu!` strips colors.
(Ideally it would need a flag to not do so)
note: It does does does ... slower down quite a bit rendering... (

PS: Maybe it's better being a flag to `table` rather then a
configuration option?
PS: I am not sure why the logic was removed in a first place
2023-09-13 07:47:53 -05:00
Tilen Gimpelj
bbea7da669
Remove select error if same row/column is provided (#10350)
This PR is in reference to #10215.

This PR changes `select` to work even if multiple equal items were
provided.
This would previously error, but now works
```nushell
let arg = [ 1 a ]
[[a b c]; [1 2 3] [4 5 6] [7 8 9]] 
| select $arg

```
# User-Facing Changes

Nothing too radical, just experience improvements. Users won't need to
pass the values through `unique` beforehand.
2023-09-13 13:49:55 +02:00
Stefan Holderbach
7f39609d9a
Remove python-like string multiplication (#10293)
# Description
Currently we support "multiplication" of strings, resulting in a terse
way to repeat a particular string.
This can have unintended side effects when dealing with mixed data (e.g.
after parsing data that is not all numbers).
Furthermore as we frequently fall-back to strings while parsing source
code, this introduced a runaway edge case in const evaluation (#10212)

Work for #10233

## Details
- Remove python-like string multiplication.
- Workaround for indentation
  - This should probably be addressed with a purpose built command
- Remove special const-eval error test

# User-Facing Changes
**Major breaking change!**
`"string" * 42` will stop working. (This was used for example in the
stdlib)

We should bless a good alternative before landing this

---------

Co-authored-by: JT <547158+jntrnr@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-13 19:52:04 +12:00
Stefan Holderbach
3e14dc3eb8
Remove pythonic int * list behavior (#10292)
# Description
The pythonism that multiplying a scalar integer with a list results in a
repeated concatenation of the list, is ambiguous with other possible
interpretations and thus actively harmful to clear semantics in nushell.

Another possible reading of this scalar/vector product would be trying
to perform elementwise multiplication with the scalar.

Before we bless this alternative as a more reasonable design the best
course of action is to remove this pythonism.

Work related to #10233


# User-Facing Changes
Breaking change as this turns `int * list` or `list * int` into hard
errors.

# Tests + Formatting
Remove the associated test
2023-09-13 10:43:49 +12:00
JT
451a9c64d3
Change echo to print when not redirected (#10338)
# Description

This changes `echo` to work more closely to what users of other shells
would expect:

* when redirected, `echo` works as before and sends values through the
pipeline
* when not redirected, `echo` will print values to the screen/terminal

# User-Facing Changes

A standalone `echo` now will print to the terminal, if not redirected.

The `echo` command is no longer const eval-able, as it will now print to
the terminal in some cases.

# 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
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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**
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> ```bash
> use toolkit.nu # or use an `env_change` hook to activate it
automatically
> toolkit check pr
> ```
-->

# After Submitting
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2023-09-13 06:35:01 +12:00
Stefan Holderbach
d53b0a99d0
Rename random decimal to random float (#10320)
# Description
Similar to #9979

# User-Facing Changes
`random decimal` will now raise a warning and can be removed in an
upcoming release.

New command is named `random float`

# Tests + Formatting
Tests updated and improved.
2023-09-12 13:03:05 +02:00
Stefan Holderbach
1fb4f9e455
Rename into decimal to into float (#9979)
# Description
We keep "into decimal" for a release and warn through a message that it
will be removed in 0.86.

All tests are updated to use `into float`

# User-Facing Changes
`into decimal` raises a deprecation warning, will be removed soon.
Use `into float` as the new functionally identical command instead.

```
~/nushell> 2 | into decimal
Error:   × Deprecated command
   ╭─[entry #1:1:1]
 1 │ 2 | into decimal
   ·     ──────┬─────
   ·           ╰── `into decimal` is deprecated and will be removed in 0.86.
   ╰────
  help: Use `into float` instead


2
```

# Tests + Formatting
Updated

---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-12 13:02:47 +02:00
Stefan Holderbach
6e9b6f22c9
Deref &String arguments to &str where appropriate (#10321)
# Description
This generally makes for nicer APIs, as you are not forced to use an
existing allocation covering the full `String`.

Some exceptions remain where the underlying type requirements favor it.

# User-Facing Changes
None
2023-09-12 14:06:56 +08:00
David Matos
ce378a68a6
Fix variables not allowed in ucp (#10304)
<!--
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with
them by using one of the [*linking
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# Description
Fixes #10300 , where using variables didnt work with `ucp` as it was
only expecting a `Expr::FilePath`.

Before: (from the issue)
```
❯ ucp -r $var $folder
Error:   × Missing file operand
   ╭─[entry #40:1:1]
 1 │ ucp -r $var $folder
   · ─┬─
   ·  ╰── Missing file operand
   ╰────
  help: Please provide source and destination paths
```
Now:
```
`ucp -r $var $folder`
# success
```

Also added the test to ensure its working:) . Oh, and I tweaked again
slightly the messages on two tests because now the whole `path` is
printed rather than `a`. Say:
```
#before
`cp a a` --> 'a' and 'a' are the same file 
# now
`cp a a` --> /home/current/location/a and /home/current/location/a are the same file
```
<!--
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guide](../CONTRIBUTING.md) and talk to the core team before making major
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Description of your pull request goes here. **Provide examples and/or
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# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
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# Tests + Formatting
Don't forget to add tests that cover your changes.

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

- [X] `cargo fmt --all -- --check` to check standard code formatting
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to check that you're using the standard code style
- [X] `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))
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library
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2023-09-10 17:54:33 -05:00
Darren Schroeder
762fdb98ac
silence some ucp warnings (#10294)
# Description

This PR fixes some ucp warnings.

# 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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sure to [enable developer
mode](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/get-started/developer-mode-features-and-debugging))
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crates/nu-std"` to run the tests for the standard library

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> ```
-->

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2023-09-09 19:41:53 -05:00
Tilen Gimpelj
6811700b90
update reject to be able to recive arg list (#10216)
This PR is in relation to #10215 

# Description

This PR introduces `reject` to receive list of columns or rows as
argument.
This change is similar to change of `select` and the code used is
similar.

# User-Facing Changes
The user will be able to pass a list as rejection arguments.
```nushell
let arg = [ type size ]
[[name type size]; [ cargo.toml file 20mb ] [ Cargo.lock file 20mb] [src dir 100mb]] | reject $arg
```
2023-09-09 15:01:25 -05:00
Tilen Gimpelj
248aca7a44
reject multiple row args support (#10163)
# Description
This PR fixes `reject` failing when providing row items in ascending
order.


# User-Facing Changes
users can now `reject` multiple rows independently of each other.
```nushell
let foo = [[a b]; [ 1 2] [3 4] [ 5 6]]
# this will work independant of the order
print ($foo | reject 2 1)
print ($foo | reject 1 2)
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Antoine Stevan <44101798+amtoine@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-09 13:59:31 -05:00
David Matos
fed4233db4
use uutils/coreutils cp command in place of nushell's cp command (#10097)
<!--
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# Description
Hi. Basically, this is a continuation of the work that @fdncred started.
Given some nice discussions on #9463 , and [merged uutils
PR](https://github.com/uutils/coreutils/pull/5152) from @tertsdiepraam
we have decided to give the `cp` command the `crawl` stage as it was
named.

> [!NOTE] 
Given that the `uutils` crate has not made the release for the merged
PR, just make sure you checkout latest and put it in the required place
to make this PR work.

The aim of this PR is for is to see how to move forward using `uutils`
crate. In order to getting this started, I have made the current
`nushell cp tests` pass along with some extra ones I copied over from
the `uutils` repo.

With all of that being said, things that would be nice to decide, and
keep working on:

Crawl:
- Handling of certain `named` flags, with their long and short
forms(e.g. --update, --reflink, --preserve, etc), and using default
values. Maybe `-u` can already have a `default_missing_value`.
- Should we maybe just support one single option `switch` flags (see
`--backup` in code) as a contrast to the other named args.
- Complete test coverage from `uutils`. They had > 100 tests, and I
could only port like 12 as they are a bit time consuming given they
cannot be straight up copy pasted. Maybe we do not need all >100, but
maybe the more relevant to what we want.
- Refactor this code

Walk:
- Non fatal errors on `copy` from `utils`. Currently it just sends it to
stdout but errors have no span
- Better integration 

An added possibility is the addition of `SyntaxShape::OneOf()` for
`Named` arguments which was briefly mentioned in the discord server, but
that is still to be decided. This could greatly improve some of the
integration. This would enable something like `cp --preserve [all
timestamp]` or `cp --preserve all` to both work.

I did not want to keep holding on this, and wait till I was happy with
the code because I think its nice if everyone can start up and suggest
refactors, but the main important part now was getting it out the door,
as if I take my sweet time this will take way longer 😛

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changes.

Description of your pull request goes here. **Provide examples and/or
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# User-Facing Changes
<!-- List of all changes that impact the user experience here. This
helps us keep track of breaking changes. -->

# Tests + Formatting

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

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

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<!-- If your PR had any user-facing changes, update [the
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---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-08 13:57:38 -05:00
Antoine Stevan
7486850357
rename the types with spaces in them to use - (#9929)
# Description
before this PR,
```nushell
> $.a.b | describe
cell path
```
which feels inconsistent with the `cell-path` type annotation, like in
```nushell
> def foo [x: cell-path] { $x | describe }; foo $.a.b
cell path
```

this PR changes the name of the "cell path" type from `cell path` to
`cell-path`

# User-Facing Changes
`cell path` is now `cell-path` in the output of `describe`.
this might be a breaking change in some scripts.

same goes with
- `list stream` -> `list-stream`
- `match pattern` -> `match-pattern`

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

this PR adds a new `cell_path_type` test to make sure it stays equal to
`cell-path` in the future.

# After Submitting

---------

Co-authored-by: Darren Schroeder <343840+fdncred@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-06 13:22:12 -05:00
Antoine Stevan
f433b3102f
fix default after an empty where (#10240)
should close https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/10237

# Description
this is @fdncred's findings 😋 
i just made the PR 😌 

# User-Facing Changes
```nushell
[a b] | where $it == 'c' | last | default 'd'
```
now works and gives `d`


# Tests + Formatting
adds a new `default_after_empty_filter` test.

# After Submitting
2023-09-06 16:39:35 +08:00