parse_msgpack() closes a channel's stream on EOF error and the stream's
close callback close_cb() is queued for the next libuv loop iteration.
When parse_msgpack() returns, it has freed the channel and the queued
stream callback will access this freed memory.
To prevent this, increase the channel's reference count and let the
stream's close callback call decref().
Fixes#3128
os_get_user_name() requires getuid(), which is only available in UNIX. Return
FAIL for non UNIX systems.
On FAIL os_get_user_name() fills the buffer with the uid. In Windows libuv
uses 0 for uid in stat structs, so 0 is used here too.
Also move introduction to Nvim and topic overview to nvim.txt.
Reviewed-by: Michael Reed <Pyrohh@users.noreply.github.com>
Reviewed-by: Justin M. Keyes <justinkz@gmail.com>
Compiler warning was found in [QuickBuild logs][1] from [this page][2]. GCC and
clang on travis appear to be fine. Relevant log parts:
Step Log (master>buildall>build-node?testNode=linux-64>build-and-run-tests>build-and-run-tests-parameterized?buildType=Release>configure-neovim-and-build-nvim)
<…>
16:26:31,364 WARN - /home/quickbuild/buildagent/workspace/root/neovim/pull-requests-automated/src/nvim/eval.c: In function ‘f_msgpackdump’:
16:26:31,364 WARN - /home/quickbuild/buildagent/workspace/root/neovim/pull-requests-automated/src/nvim/eval.c:12371:26: error: ‘cur_tv’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=uninitialized]
16:26:31,364 WARN - /home/quickbuild/buildagent/workspace/root/neovim/pull-requests-automated/src/nvim/eval.c:12328:21: note: ‘cur_tv’ was declared here
16:26:31,938 WARN - cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
[1]: http://neovim-qb.szakmeister.net/wicket/page?4-1.ILinkListener-content-buildTab-panel-errorContainer-steps-5-logLink
[2]: http://neovim-qb.szakmeister.net/build/2099/overview
This is a port of my original contribution to Vim, added in 7.4.687
(https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/v7-4-687). The TUI code has been
heavily refactored (see esp. 25ceadab37),
so this required some translation, but the logic is the same.
Currently, there are two functions in the UI API that are called when
the mode changes: insert_mode() and normal_mode(). These can be folded
into a single mode_change() entrypoint which can do whatever it wants
based on the mode it is passed, limited to INSERT and NORMAL for now.
The python-client has it's own test suite, and this isn't even run: see
the has('nvim') call.
Taken from
1acf4ace52
with minor modifications.
"Now that you've done the necessary cleanup, why not go ahead and merge
this." @bfredl
A menu item can have separate bindings for each Vim mode.
:emenu checks to see which binding it should execute. But, it assumes
it can only be called from Normal mode, so its mode detection is based
on some guesswork. For instance, it detects if you've just used C-O
and, if so, uses the Insert mode binding.
Now that :emenu can be called from any mode (via vim_command), this
commit has it check the actual mode we're in, and simply use the
binding for that mode if we aren't in Normal mode.
Neither setting the 'columns' and 'lines' options nor using the
`:winsize` command resized the terminal window, which caused display
glitches.
Re: #2863
The test is also split in several blocks and heavily modernized. This was
done to prevent the following quoting and escaping problems during migration:
- the vim command `put =...` treats double quotes as the start of a comment so
they have to be escaped with a backslash
- when inserting control characters on the command line they have to be
escaped with <C-V>
The parts one and two of the test are functional identical so they are wrapped
in a local function. The only difference was which letters where used to test
the same feature.
Part six did test a flag in 'cpoptions' that has been removed in neovim. It
has therefore been removed as well.
Reviewed-by: Michael Reed <Pyrohh@users.noreply.github.com>
There are more terminals which have bracketed paste support and it
doesnt seem to do any harm with terminals that dont support it eg screen
Reviewed-by: Marco Hinz <mh.codebro@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Reed <Pyrohh@users.noreply.github.com>
"+1 Let's see what happens" Justin M. Keyes <justinkz@gmail.com>