The wrapper for "git blame" creates flags for each line of the buffer.
It parses the output from git and would send a flag (or a series of
flags) each time the commit to blame for a line differs from the
previous one. For files that were touched by a large number of commits,
this results in a high number of kakoune processes being launched, and
may take some time. This is visible in the session through the flags for
the different commits appearing on the lines one by one, possibly during
several seconds.
To speed up the process, batch flags before passing them to the kak
session. One solution could be to send all flags at once, but this might
delay the appearance of commit info for too long if "git blame" really
takes a long time. The alternative solution retained for this commit
consists in grouping as many flags as we can during one second
(roughly), to pass them to kakoune, and then to move on to the next
flags. This way, a new batch of commit information flags appears every
second or so in the client, until all information is added. This should
be much faster than lauching a kakoune process for each commit
reported by "git blame": tests have shown that blaming a large file in
the Linux repository goes 4.5 times faster when batching flags.
Co-authored-by: Johannes Altmanninger <aclopte@gmail.com>
adds the ability to press <ret> within a hunk and navigate to the original
source code. This can be useful because one often needs to go back and forth
between the diff and the full source code.
- You can press <ret> anywhere _within_ a hunk i.e. lines that start with
` `, `+`, `-`. You will be taken to the exact line in the source that corresponds
to where you pressed <ret> in the hunk. It actually does not make sense
to press <ret> on a `-` line because that does not exist anymore but
in that case you are taken to a nearby line in the hope this is still useful.
- You can also press <ret> on a range line (lines that
look like @@ ... @@). If you press <ret> on anywhere on a range line e.g.
```
@@ -120,3 +123,4 @@ fn some_function {
```
The code will try to navigate to the section heading "fn some_function {"
Note that the section heading is _not_ necessarily located at the
range line (in the above example the range line is 123).
- You can press <ret> on a +++ line also and you will be taken the first
line of the file
Caveats:
- Navigation to the original source file will be accurate only if any edits to
the original source file have been saved to disk, because otherwise
they will not be detected by the `:git diff` or `:git show` commands
- This feature should work well for most typical uses e.g. `:git diff`, `:git diff HEAD^`
`:git diff <some-sha1>`. In fact this feature should work in all scenarios when
the *current files* on disk are being compared _with_ some arbitrary git revision/staging.
It will be less useful in other scenarios when two arbitrary revisions are being
compared to each other or when you are trying to compare staging to some revision.
For example when you invoke `:git diff --staged` you are trying to compare staging
with HEAD but are navigating to what is currently on disk (which may be different
from staging).
Co-authored-by: Johannes Altmanninger <aclopte@gmail.com>
This adds two things I forgot in
9a7d8df4 (Avoid accidentally using environment variables in sh scopes)
Mea culpa, the problem was that I was skipping matches with "filetype"
because that's usually just a hook parameter as in "WinSetOption filetype=.."
rg --pcre2 '\b(?!filetype=)\w+=' rc/
So I missed these two cases where a shell variable is actually called "filetype".
The one in git.kak was not a problem because show_git_cmd_output is only
ever called with sane inputs. However, file.kak does use the filetype
environment variable for many mime types, for example:
filetype=somefiletype\''; echo -debug injection; nop '\' kak /dev/null
Will run the echo since /dev/null has mime type "inode/chardevice"
Looks like hyphens and periods are sometimes printed as part of
git-log(1)’s graphing feature; for example, in this repository:
git log --graph 55e7f857
Adds support for highlighting git-status(1) output in short format
(--short) and with branch name (--branch), including file renames and
commits ahead/behind information.
Change regular expression in git blame, removing braces. New expression is supported on various awk engines used in some distributions as default ones. As trade-off, the new expression accepts more input character sequences.
adding init to git.kak
removing git init EOF line
git ls-files on on git.kak
no candidates for git-init, removed function
removed candidates for git-init