* Working towards a PoC for wasm
* Move bson and sqlite to plugins
* proof of concept now working
* tests are green
* Add CI test for --no-default-features
* Fix some tests
* Fix clippy and windows build
* More fixes
* Fix the windows build
* Fix the windows test
* Fix autoenv executing scripts multiple times
Previously, if the user had only specified entry or exitscripts the scripts
would execute many times. This should be fixed now
* Add tests
* Run exitscripts
* More tests and fixes to existing tests
* Test solution with visited dirs
* Track visited directories
* Comments and fmt
* add test basic_autoenv_vars_are_added
* Tests
* Entry and exit scripts
* Recursive set and overwrite
* Make sure that overwritten vals are restored
* Move tests to autoenv
* Move tests out of cli crate
* Tests help, apparently. Windows has issues
On windows, .nu-env is not applied immediately after running autoenv trust.
You have to cd out of the directory for it to work.
* Sort paths non-lexicographically
* Sibling dir test
* Revert "Sort paths non-lexicographically"
This reverts commit 72e4b856af.
* Rename test
* Change conditions
* Revert "Revert "Sort paths non-lexicographically""
This reverts commit 71606bc62f.
* Set vars as they are discovered
This means that if a parent directory is untrusted,
the variables in its child directories are still set properly.
* format
* Fix cleanup issues too
* Run commands in their separate functions
* Make everything into one large function like all the cool kids
* Refactoring
* fmt
* Debugging windows path issue
* Canonicalize
* Trim whitespace
* On windows, use echo nul instead of touch to create file in test
* Avoid cloning by using drain()
Our own custom escaping unfortunately is far too simple to cover all cases.
Instead, the parser will now do no transforms on the args passed to an external
command, letting the process spawning library deal with doing the appropriate
escaping.
For example, when running the following:
crates/nu-cli/src
nushell currently parses this as an external command. Before running the command, we check to see if
it's a directory. If it is, we "auto cd" into that directory, otherwise we go through normal
external processing.
If we put a trailing slash on it though, shells typically interpret that as "user is explicitly
referencing directory". So
crates/nu-cli/src/
should not be interpreted as "run an external command". We intercept a trailing slash in the head
position of a command in a pipeline as such, and inject a `cd` internal command.
* WIP: move to bytes codec
* Progress on adding collect helpers
* Progress on adding collect helpers
* Add in line splitting back to lines
* Lines outputting line primitives
* Close to ready?
* Finish fixing lines
* clippy fixes
* fmt fixes
* removed unused code
* Cleanup a few bits
* Cleanup a few bits
* Cleanup a few more bits
* Fix failing test with corrected test case
In particular, one thing that we can't (properly) do before this commit
is consuming an infinite input stream. For example:
```
yes | grep y | head -n10
```
will give 10 "y"s in most shells, but blocks indefinitely in nu. This PR
resolves that by doing blocking I/O in threads, and reducing the `await`
calls we currently have in our pipeline code.
* Switch to using `shell`
Switch to using the shell for subprocess to enable more natural shelling out.
* Update external.rs
* This is a test with .shell() for external
* El pollo loco's PR
* co co co
* Attempt to fix windows
* Fmt
* Less is more?
Co-authored-by: Andrés N. Robalino <andres@androbtech.com>
This commit changes the way we shell out externals when using the `"$it"` argument. Also pipes per row to an external's stdin if no `"$it"` argument is present for external commands.
Further separation of logic (preparing the external's command arguments, getting the data for piping, emitting values, spawning processes) will give us a better idea for lower level details regarding external commands until we can find the right abstractions for making them more generic and unify within the pipeline calling logic of Nu internal's and external's.