For hash map, using fnv1a is faster as it is a much simpler algorithm
we can afford to inline. For files murmur3 should win as it processes
bytes 4 by 4.
When doing :write -method replace, make sure we've set the correct mode,
uid and gid on the replacement file before attempting to rename it on
top of the original. This means that the original file is left in place
with correct permissions if anything fails, rather than ending up with
0700 permissions from mkstemp().
When a privileged :write is used with -method replace, it silently resets
the ownership of files to root:root. Restore the original owner and group
in the same way we restore the original permissions. Ownership needs to
be restored before permissions to avoid setuid and setgid bits being set
while the file is still owned by root, and to avoid them being subsequently
lost again on chmod(2).
If a user attempts to save a file without write permission for the
containing directory, with writemethod set as 'replace' or an explicit
':write -method replace' command, kak crashes with "terminating due to
uncaught exception of type Kakoune:runtime_error". (Note this doesn't
happen with a forced write, which fails earlier when it tries to enable
u+w permission.)
Don't raise another exception when already bailing out with a runtime
error for failing to create a temporary file or open the existing file.
Instead, make a best-efforts attempt to restore the file permissions
before raising the first exception, and only report the runtime chmod
exception if that step fails on the non-error path.
When Kakoune's terminal is shown on my laptop monitor and I plug
in my external monitor, the terminal's workspace will move to that
external monitor. When this happens, Kakoune may segfault.
There are multiple resize events (SIGWINCH) in quick succession;
it crashes because we handle SIGWINCH during rendering.
The problem happens during execution of "TerminalUI::Screen::output"
(frame #18). When we receive SIGWINCH while writing to stdout, write(2)
fails with EAGAIN, prompting us to handle pending events (See ae001a1f9
(Run EventManager whenever writing to a file descriptor would block,
2022-05-10)). We update the screen size in check_resize() here:
#4 Kakoune::TerminalUI::check_resize (force=<optimized out>) at terminal_ui.cc:683
#5 Kakoune::TerminalUI::get_next_key () at terminal_ui.cc:719
#6 operator() (__closure=0x555555984198) at terminal_ui.cc:484
#7 std::__invoke_impl<void, Kakoune::TerminalUI::TerminalUI()::<lambda(Kakoune::FDWatcher&, Kakoune::FdEvents, Kakoune::EventMode)>&, Kakoune::FDWatcher&, Kakoune::FdEvents, Kakoune::EventMode> (__f=...) at /usr/include/c++/12.2.1/bits/invoke.h:61
#8 std::__invoke_r<void, Kakoune::TerminalUI::TerminalUI()::<lambda(Kakoune::FDWatcher&, Kakoune::FdEvents, Kakoune::EventMode)>&, Kakoune::FDWatcher&, Kakoune::FdEvents, Kakoune::EventMode> (__fn=...) at /usr/include/c++/12.2.1/bits/invoke.h:111
#9 std::_Function_handler<void(Kakoune::FDWatcher&, Kakoune::FdEvents, Kakoune::EventMode), Kakoune::TerminalUI::TerminalUI()::<lambda(Kakoune::FDWatcher&, Kakoune::FdEvents, Kakoune::EventMode)> >::_M_invoke(const std::_Any_data &, Kakoune::FDWatcher &, Kakoune::FdEvents &&, Kakoune::EventMode &&) (__functor=..., __args#0=..., __args#1=<optimized out>, __args#2=<optimized out>) at /usr/include/c++/12.2.1/bits/std_function.h:290
#10 std::function<void (Kakoune::FDWatcher&, Kakoune::FdEvents, Kakoune::EventMode)>::operator()(Kakoune::FDWatcher&, Kakoune::FdEvents, Kakoune::EventMode) const (__args#2=<optimized out>, __args#1=<optimized out>, __args#0=...) at /usr/include/c++/12.2.1/bits/std_function.h:591
#11 Kakoune::FDWatcher::run (mode=Kakoune::EventMode::Urgent, events=<optimized out>) at event_manager.cc:28
#12 Kakoune::EventManager::handle_next_events (mode=mode@entry=Kakoune::EventMode::Urgent, sigmask=sigmask@entry=0x0, block=<optimized out>, block@entry=false) at event_manager.cc:143
#13 Kakoune::write (fd=1, data=...) at file.cc:273
#14 Kakoune::BufferedWriter<4096>::flush () at string.hh:236
#15 Kakoune::BufferedWriter<4096>::write (data="t file.hh:145
#16 Kakoune::TerminalUI::Screen::set_face (face=..., writer=...) at terminal_ui.cc:255
#17 operator() (line=..., __closure=<synthetic pointer>) at terminal_ui.cc:326
#18 Kakoune::TerminalUI::Screen::output (force=force@entry=true, synchronized=<optimized out>, writer=...) at terminal_ui.cc:402
#19 Kakoune::TerminalUI::redraw (force=force@entry=true) at terminal_ui.cc:571
#20 Kakoune::TerminalUI::refresh (force=<optimized out>) at terminal_ui.cc:592
#21 Kakoune::Client::redraw_ifn () at client.cc:282
#22 Kakoune::ClientManager::redraw_clients () at client_manager.cc:232
#23 Kakoune::run_server (session=..., server_init=..., client_init=..., init_buffer="fish-rust/src/ast.rs", init_coord=..., flags=Kakoune::ServerFlags::None, ui_type=Kakoune::UIType::Terminal,
debug_flags=<optimized out>, files=ArrayView<Kakoune::StringView> = {...}) at main.cc:893
#24 main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at main.cc:1243
Thereafter, "TerminalUI::Screen::output" resumes and crashes due to
a buffer overflow in "lines" which has been resized.
When the file system runs out of space, "write -force" will fail but
doesn't print "No space left on device".
Let's fix this by including such an underlying error. Untested.
Backstory: I alias "w" to a command that runs "write -force %arg{@}".
so I can overwrite files that already exist outside the editor (I
should probably get used to the new behavior).
Commit 69053d962 (Use menu behavior when completing change-directory,
2022-07-19) made ":cd dir/" actually run ":cd dir/first-subdir",
which can be surprising.
This is usually irrelevant because you rarely type the trailing slash.
However it does happen after correcting an error with `<backspace>`
and friends. For for example,
:cd d<tab>/f<backspace>
results in
:cd dir/
We should probably fix user expectations here. Do this by adding "dir/"
as valid completion. This requires us to allow empty candidates in
"RankedMatch" but there's no harm in that. This means we need to
filter out empty completions from shell-script-candidates elsewhere.
Alternative fix: we could revert 69053d962. This would remove the
convenient menu behavior but that wouldn't be a huge deal.
Fixes#4775
This approach is not very elegant as it hooks into the event manager
deep inside the call graph, but solves the exiting issue and is an
okay stop gap solution until a better design comes up.
Fixes#4605
The real technical limit is with lines bigger than 2 GiB and buffers
with more than 2 Gi lines, refactor buffer loading to make it possible
to load those files.
Fix an overflow with the hash_data function at the same time
file.cc:390:21: error: use of undeclared identifier 'rename'; did you mean 'devname'?
if (replace and rename(temp_filename, zfilename) != 0)
^~~~~~
devname
/usr/include/stdlib.h:277:7: note: 'devname' declared here
char *devname(__dev_t, __mode_t);
^
file.cc:390:28: error: cannot initialize a parameter of type '__dev_t' (aka 'unsigned long') with an lvalue of type 'char [1024]'
if (replace and rename(temp_filename, zfilename) != 0)
^~~~~~~~~~~~~
/usr/include/stdlib.h:277:22: note: passing argument to parameter here
char *devname(__dev_t, __mode_t);
^
2 errors generated.
---
highlighters.cc:1110:13: error: use of undeclared identifier 'snprintf'; did you mean 'vswprintf'?
snprintf(buffer, 16, format, std::abs(line_to_format));
^~~~~~~~
vswprintf
/usr/include/wchar.h:139:5: note: 'vswprintf' declared here
int vswprintf(wchar_t * __restrict, size_t n, const wchar_t * __restrict,
^
highlighters.cc:1110:22: error: cannot initialize a parameter of type 'wchar_t *' with an lvalue of type 'char [16]'
snprintf(buffer, 16, format, std::abs(line_to_format));
^~~~~~
/usr/include/wchar.h:139:35: note: passing argument to parameter here
int vswprintf(wchar_t * __restrict, size_t n, const wchar_t * __restrict,
^
2 errors generated.
---
json_ui.cc:60:13: error: use of undeclared identifier 'sprintf'; did you mean 'swprintf'?
sprintf(buf, "\\u%04x", *next);
^~~~~~~
swprintf
/usr/include/wchar.h:133:5: note: 'swprintf' declared here
int swprintf(wchar_t * __restrict, size_t n, const wchar_t * __restrict,
^
json_ui.cc:60:21: error: cannot initialize a parameter of type 'wchar_t *' with an lvalue of type 'char [7]'
sprintf(buf, "\\u%04x", *next);
^~~
/usr/include/wchar.h:133:34: note: passing argument to parameter here
int swprintf(wchar_t * __restrict, size_t n, const wchar_t * __restrict,
^
json_ui.cc:74:9: error: use of undeclared identifier 'sprintf'
sprintf(buffer, R"("#%02x%02x%02x")", color.r, color.g, color.b);
^
3 errors generated.
---
regex_impl.cc:1039:9: error: use of undeclared identifier 'sprintf'; did you mean 'swprintf'?
sprintf(buf, " %03d ", count++);
^~~~~~~
swprintf
/usr/include/wchar.h:133:5: note: 'swprintf' declared here
int swprintf(wchar_t * __restrict, size_t n, const wchar_t * __restrict,
^
regex_impl.cc:1039:17: error: cannot initialize a parameter of type 'wchar_t *' with an lvalue of type 'char [20]'
sprintf(buf, " %03d ", count++);
^~~
/usr/include/wchar.h:133:34: note: passing argument to parameter here
int swprintf(wchar_t * __restrict, size_t n, const wchar_t * __restrict,
^
regex_impl.cc:1197:17: error: use of undeclared identifier 'puts'
{ if (dump) puts(dump_regex(*this).c_str()); }
^
regex_impl.cc:1208:18: note: in instantiation of member function 'Kakoune::(anonymous namespace)::TestVM<Kakoune::RegexMode::Forward>::TestVM' requested here
TestVM<> vm{R"(a*b)"};
^
regex_impl.cc:1197:17: error: use of undeclared identifier 'puts'
{ if (dump) puts(dump_regex(*this).c_str()); }
^
regex_impl.cc:1283:56: note: in instantiation of member function 'Kakoune::(anonymous namespace)::TestVM<5>::TestVM' requested here
TestVM<RegexMode::Forward | RegexMode::Search> vm{R"(f.*a(.*o))"};
^
regex_impl.cc:1197:17: error: use of undeclared identifier 'puts'
{ if (dump) puts(dump_regex(*this).c_str()); }
^
regex_impl.cc:1423:57: note: in instantiation of member function 'Kakoune::(anonymous namespace)::TestVM<6>::TestVM' requested here
TestVM<RegexMode::Backward | RegexMode::Search> vm{R"(fo{1,})"};
^
5 errors generated.
---
remote.cc:829:9: error: use of undeclared identifier 'rename'; did you mean 'devname'?
if (rename(old_socket_file.c_str(), new_socket_file.c_str()) != 0)
^~~~~~
devname
/usr/include/stdlib.h:277:7: note: 'devname' declared here
char *devname(__dev_t, __mode_t);
^
remote.cc:829:16: error: cannot initialize a parameter of type '__dev_t' (aka 'unsigned long') with an rvalue of type 'const char *'
if (rename(old_socket_file.c_str(), new_socket_file.c_str()) != 0)
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/usr/include/stdlib.h:277:22: note: passing argument to parameter here
char *devname(__dev_t, __mode_t);
^
2 errors generated.
---
string_utils.cc:126:20: error: use of undeclared identifier 'sprintf'; did you mean 'swprintf'?
res.m_length = sprintf(res.m_data, "%i", val);
^~~~~~~
swprintf
/usr/include/wchar.h:133:5: note: 'swprintf' declared here
int swprintf(wchar_t * __restrict, size_t n, const wchar_t * __restrict,
^
string_utils.cc:126:28: error: cannot initialize a parameter of type 'wchar_t *' with an lvalue of type 'char [15]'
res.m_length = sprintf(res.m_data, "%i", val);
^~~~~~~~~~
/usr/include/wchar.h:133:34: note: passing argument to parameter here
int swprintf(wchar_t * __restrict, size_t n, const wchar_t * __restrict,
^
string_utils.cc:133:20: error: use of undeclared identifier 'sprintf'; did you mean 'swprintf'?
res.m_length = sprintf(res.m_data, "%u", val);
^~~~~~~
swprintf
[...]
This permit to choose if files should be written by overwriting their
content (the default), or by writing to a separate temporary file
and rename it to the current file.
As discussed in #2036
Seems to work on openbsd 6.3-current but needs more testing. Had to
hardcode the binary path as openbsd considers getting the executable
path at runtime a security flaw.
In the end, % is not that painful to work with as its only set seldomly,
and we usually dont need to use expansion at the same time. Moreover, it
just requires a single \ to be escaped.
Fixes#1562