After a failed
:write file-that-already-exists
a user might want to type ":<up> -f<ret>" to force-overwrite.
This doesn't work because :write's switches must precede the filename.
It's dual :edit does not have this restriction.
Some commands require switches to precede positional arguments for a
good reason; for example because positional arguments might start with
"-" (like ":echo 1 - 1").
There seems to be no reason for the :write restriction, so remove
it. Same for :enter-user-mode.
Thanks to alexherbo2 for reporting.
I dedicate any and all copyright interest in this software to the
public domain. I make this dedication for the benefit of the public at
large and to the detriment of my heirs and successors. I intend this
dedication to be an overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity of all
present and future rights to this software under copyright law.
I dedicate any and all copyright interest in this software to the
public domain. I make this dedication for the benefit of the public at
large and to the detriment of my heirs and successors. I intend this
dedication to be an overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity of all
present and future rights to this software under copyright law.
Running %sYeti<ret>casdf on file
[example.journal.txt](https://github.com/mawww/kakoune/issues/4685#issuecomment-1193243588)
can cause noticeable lag. This is because we insert text at 6000
selections, which means we need to update highlighters in those lines.
The runtime for updating range highlighters is quadratic in the
number of selections: for each selection, we call on_new_range(),
which calls add_matches(), which calls std::rotate(), which needs
needs linear time.
Fix the quadratic runtime by calling std::inplace_merge() once instead
of repeatedly calling std::rotate(). This is works because ranges
are already sorted.
I used this script to benchmark the improvements.
(In hindsight I could have just used "-ui json" instead of tmux).
#!/bin/sh
set -ex
N=${1:-100}
kak=${2:-./kak.opt}
for i in $(seq "$N")
do
echo -n "\
2022-02-06 * Earth
expense:electronics:audio 116.7 USD
liability:card -116.7 USD
2022-02-06 * Blue Yeti USB Microphone
expense:electronics:audio 116.7 USD
liability:card -116.7 USD
"
done > big-journal.ledger
echo > .empty-tmux.conf 'set -sg escape-time 5'
test_tmux() {
tmux -S .tmux-socket -f .empty-tmux.conf "$@"
}
test_tmux new-session -d "$kak" big-journal.ledger
test_tmux send-keys '%sYeti' Enter c 1234567890
sleep .2
test_tmux send-keys Escape
while ! test_tmux capture-pane -p | grep 123
do
sleep .1
done
test_tmux send-keys ':wq' Enter
while test_tmux ls
do
sleep .1
done
rm -f .tmux-socket .empty-tmux.conf
This script's runtime used to grow super-linearly but now it grows
linearly:
kak.old kak.new
N=10000 1.142 0.897
N=20000 2.879 1.400
Detailed results:
$ hyperfine -w 1 './bench.sh 10000 ./kak.opt.'{old,new}
Benchmark 1: ./bench.sh 10000 ./kak.opt.old
Time (mean ± σ): 1.142 s ± 0.072 s [User: 0.252 s, System: 0.059 s]
Range (min … max): 1.060 s … 1.242 s 10 runs
Benchmark 2: ./bench.sh 10000 ./kak.opt.new
Time (mean ± σ): 897.2 ms ± 19.3 ms [User: 241.6 ms, System: 57.4 ms]
Range (min … max): 853.9 ms … 923.6 ms 10 runs
Summary
'./bench.sh 10000 ./kak.opt.new' ran
1.27 ± 0.09 times faster than './bench.sh 10000 ./kak.opt.old'
$ hyperfine -w 1 './bench.sh 20000 ./kak.opt.'{old,new}
Benchmark 1: ./bench.sh 20000 ./kak.opt.old
Time (mean ± σ): 2.879 s ± 0.065 s [User: 0.553 s, System: 0.126 s]
Range (min … max): 2.768 s … 2.963 s 10 runs
Benchmark 2: ./bench.sh 20000 ./kak.opt.new
Time (mean ± σ): 1.400 s ± 0.018 s [User: 0.428 s, System: 0.083 s]
Range (min … max): 1.374 s … 1.429 s 10 runs
Summary
'./bench.sh 20000 ./kak.opt.new' ran
2.06 ± 0.05 times faster than '../repro.sh 20000 ./kak.opt.old'
LineRangeSet::add_range() calls Vector::erase() in a loop over the
same vector. This could cause performance problems when there are many
selections. Fix this by only calling Vector::erase() once. I didn't
measure anything because my benchmark is dominated by another issue
(see next commit).
LineRangeSet::remove_range() also has a suspicious call to erase()
but that one is only used in test code, so it doesn't matter.
I dedicate any and all copyright interest in this software to the
public domain. I make this dedication for the benefit of the public at
large and to the detriment of my heirs and successors. I intend this
dedication to be an overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity of all
present and future rights to this software under copyright law.
There have been proposals to add more language aliases to markdown.kak
(#4592) and allow users to add their own aliases (#4489).
To recap: various markdown implementations allow specifying aliases
for languages. For example, here is a code block that should be
highlighted as filetype "haskell" but isn't:
```hs
-- highlight as haskell
```
There are lots of aliases out in the wild - "pygmentize -L" lists
some but I don't think there is a canonical list.
Today we have a hardcoded list of supported filetypes. This is hard
to mainta, extend, and it can impact performance.
This patch simply attempts to load the module "hs" and the shared
highlighter "hs". This means that users can use this (obvious?) snippet
to add their own aliases:
provide-module hs %{
require-module haskell
add-highlighter shared/hs ref haskell
}
Untrusted Markdown files can load arbitrary modules, but that was
already true before, and modules are assumed to be trusted anyway.
Since language highlighters are now loaded *after* the generic
code-block highlighter, we need to make sure the language highlighters
take precedence. Do this by making them sub-regions of the generic one.
Closes#4489
This improves performance on the [5MB Markdown
file](https://github.com/mawww/kakoune/issues/4685#issuecomment-1208129806).
$ HOME=$PWD hyperfine -w 1 'git checkout HEAD'{~,}' -- :/rc/filetype/markdown.kak && ./kak.opt big_markdown.md -e "hook global NormalIdle .* quit" -ui dummy'
Benchmark 1: git checkout HEAD~ -- :/rc/filetype/markdown.kak && ./kak.opt big_markdown.md -e "hook global NormalIdle .* quit" -ui dummy
Time (mean ± σ): 3.225 s ± 0.074 s [User: 3.199 s, System: 0.027 s]
Range (min … max): 3.099 s … 3.362 s 10 runs
Benchmark 2: git checkout HEAD -- :/rc/filetype/markdown.kak && ./kak.opt big_markdown.md -e "hook global NormalIdle .* quit" -ui dummy
Time (mean ± σ): 1.181 s ± 0.030 s [User: 1.162 s, System: 0.021 s]
Range (min … max): 1.149 s … 1.234 s 10 runs
Summary
'git checkout HEAD -- :/rc/filetype/markdown.kak && ./kak.opt big_markdown.md -e "hook global NormalIdle .* quit" -ui dummy' ran
2.73 ± 0.09 times faster than 'git checkout HEAD~ -- :/rc/filetype/markdown.kak && ./kak.opt big_markdown.md -e "hook global NormalIdle .* quit" -ui dummy'
(These numbers depend on another optimization.)
Filetypes markdown and restructuredtext reuse highlighters from other
filetypes to highlight code blocks. For example, to highlight a code
block of language foo they essentially do
require-module foo
add-highlighter [...] ref foo
This works great if the module name matches the shared
highlighter. This is the case almost all scripts in rc/filetype*.
The only exception is kakrc.kak: the highlighter is named "kakrc"
(just like the filetype) but the module is named "kak".
This requires weird hacks in markdown/restructuredtext. Ideally we
could remove this inconsistency by renaming both the filetype and the
highlighter to "kak" but that's a breaking change. Until we do that,
let's add an alias so we can treat filetypes uniformly. This helps
the following commits, which otherwise would need to add ugly extra
code for kakrc highlighters.
The following commit will generalize this approach, allowing users
to add arbitrary aliases.
clang/clangd complain about the new HashSet type:
hash_map.cc:98:20: warning: braces around scalar initializer [-Wbraced-scalar-init]
set.insert({10});
^~~~
The argument to HashSet<int>::insert is just an int, so we don't
need braces. Only an actual HashMap would need braces to construct
a HashItem object.
When passing a filename parameter to "write", the -force parameter
allows overwriting an existing file.
The "write!" variant (which allows writing files where the current
user does not have write permissions) already implies -force.
All other variants (like write-quit or write-all) do not take a
file parameter.
Hence -force is relevant only for "write". Let's hide it from the
autoinfo of the other commands.
It's difficult to avoid duplication when constructing the constexpr
SwitchMap because String is not constexpr-enabled. Today, all our
SwitchMap objects are known at compile time, so we could make SwitchMap
use StringView to work around this. In future we might want to allow
adding switches at runtime, which would need String again to avoid
lifetime issues.
As reported in
https://github.com/mawww/kakoune/issues/4685#issuecomment-1200530001
ledger.kak defines a region end that matches every character of
the buffer. This causes performance issues for large buffers.
Since the affected regions are only ever filled with a single color,
just use a regex highlighter instead of a region highlighter.
This improves performance when loading the file for the first time.
Speedup on [example.journal.txt](https://github.com/mawww/kakoune/issues/4685#issuecomment-1193243588)
$ HOME=$PWD hyperfine -w 1 'git checkout HEAD'{~,}' -- :/rc/filetype/ledger.kak && ./kak.opt example.journal.txt -e "modeline-parse; hook global NormalIdle .* quit" -ui dummy'
Benchmark 1: git checkout HEAD~ -- :/rc/filetype/ledger.kak && ./kak.opt example.journal.txt -e "modeline-parse; hook global NormalIdle .* quit" -ui dummy
Time (mean ± σ): 362.1 ms ± 5.1 ms [User: 336.6 ms, System: 30.2 ms]
Range (min … max): 352.6 ms … 369.1 ms 10 runs
Benchmark 2: git checkout HEAD -- :/rc/filetype/ledger.kak && ./kak.opt example.journal.txt -e "modeline-parse; hook global NormalIdle .* quit" -ui dummy
Time (mean ± σ): 271.2 ms ± 16.7 ms [User: 252.8 ms, System: 24.0 ms]
Range (min … max): 253.9 ms … 305.0 ms 10 runs
Summary
'git checkout HEAD -- :/rc/filetype/ledger.kak && ./kak.opt example.journal.txt -e "modeline-parse; hook global NormalIdle .* quit" -ui dummy' ran
1.33 ± 0.08 times faster than 'git checkout HEAD~ -- :/rc/filetype/ledger.kak && ./kak.opt example.journal.txt -e "modeline-parse; hook global NormalIdle .* quit" -ui dummy'
Instead of storing regexes in each regions, move them to the core
highlighter in a hash map so that shared regexes between different
regions are only applied once per update instead of once per region
Also change iteration logic to apply all regex together to each
changed lines to improve memory locality on big buffers.
For the big_markdown.md file described in #4685 this reduces
initial display time from 3.55s to 2.41s on my machine.
This wording was valid for an old version of that patch that foolishly
add a switch to "map" to allow recording history. Happily we found
a better solution. Now commands inside user mappings never add to
prompt history (unless you use "set-register"), so be clear about that.
When I wrote this line I wanted to avoid adding the array size but
I didn't know about make_array().
I had unsuccessfully tried some alternatives, for example
Array{"a", "b", "c"}
which doesn't work because we need StringView (c.f. git blame on
this line)
also
Array<StringView>{"a", "b", "c"}
doesn't work because it's missing a template argument.