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# Description Contributors to this projects will have a test failure if their `umask` is not set to `0022`. Apparently on Debian (at least on my install), it is set to `0002` which makes my test fail. While `0022` is safer than the value I have, I want to reduce the amount if issue new contributors could have. I am making this test not assuming anything and instead, reading the user umask. # Related discussion I see that the `umask` command implementation has been discussed in #12256 . We could use this and enforce a umask for tests who rely on this. I believe however (let me know what you think) that hard coded values are harder to read in the test. # User-Facing Changes N/A # Tests + Formatting All green on my side after this MR 👍 # After Submitting Documentation is not impacted --------- Co-authored-by: Stefan Holderbach <sholderbach@users.noreply.github.com> |
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.. | ||
nu_plugin_custom_values | ||
nu_plugin_example | ||
nu_plugin_formats | ||
nu_plugin_gstat | ||
nu_plugin_inc | ||
nu_plugin_nu_example | ||
nu_plugin_polars | ||
nu_plugin_python | ||
nu_plugin_query | ||
nu_plugin_stress_internals | ||
nu-cli | ||
nu-cmd-base | ||
nu-cmd-extra | ||
nu-cmd-lang | ||
nu-cmd-plugin | ||
nu-color-config | ||
nu-command | ||
nu-derive-value | ||
nu-engine | ||
nu-explore | ||
nu-glob | ||
nu-json | ||
nu-lsp | ||
nu-parser | ||
nu-path | ||
nu-plugin | ||
nu-plugin-core | ||
nu-plugin-engine | ||
nu-plugin-protocol | ||
nu-plugin-test-support | ||
nu-pretty-hex | ||
nu-protocol | ||
nu-std | ||
nu-system | ||
nu-table | ||
nu-term-grid | ||
nu-test-support | ||
nu-utils | ||
nuon | ||
README.md |
Nushell core libraries and plugins
These sub-crates form both the foundation for Nu and a set of plugins which extend Nu with additional functionality.
Foundational libraries are split into two kinds of crates:
- Core crates - those crates that work together to build the Nushell language engine
- Support crates - a set of crates that support the engine with additional features like JSON support, ANSI support, and more.
Plugins are likewise also split into two types:
- Core plugins - plugins that provide part of the default experience of Nu, including access to the system properties, processes, and web-connectivity features.
- Extra plugins - these plugins run a wide range of different capabilities like working with different file types, charting, viewing binary data, and more.