Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Replaced dlist linelist with continuous memory blocks. This will allow
editing huge files without billion mallocs. File is first opened with
mmap() and mapped region is fully described in block_list as one block.
Currently "valid" data is described as slices, when first loading file
there is only one slice that points to memory existing in block_list.
When cutting text, block_list is not freed or modified, but instead
slice_list is modified to have "hole" between 2 slices. when inserting
new mem_block is added, previos slices are cut in cursor position and
new slice is added...
Added functions to handling data inside block_list+slice_list
insert_str(), cut_str() are used for all delete and add operations
text_strrchr(), text_strchr() are used for searching lineendings
text_byte(), text_codepoint(), text_getline() are for simple data access
Implemented: more or less all previous functionality
Implemented more proper file write:
file is saved to .swp, blocks are unloaded, file permissions are copied,
and atomic rename is called, block is reloaded
chmod some defaults(rw-rw-r--) if original file could not be fstat (does
not exist)
FIX make all tests pass
Removed: Some unused functions
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(A git build takes it from "git describe".)
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makes those two remaining tests pass.
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Test file integrity after load, move, delete and save+exit. Drawing
of buffer is not tested yet.
Added -s script option, accept file that is run as startup script of
commands. File is parsed byte at time and handled as you had typed it.
If EOF has been reached without editor close command, editing is
continued normally using keyboard. This functionality is in vim and
neovim, but not in POSIX vi standard. nvi (vi used in some macs) has
-s with different meaning...
Some simple tests added, dw last line test fails, so test is disabled.
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fix: first line delete
fix: delete with e move
fix: statusline 1 row lower, remove eol
cleanup: use dlist_pop on delete
cleanup: move globals into GLOBALS
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^D is the opposite of ^U in vi (the ^D/^U pair is the half-screen
version of ^F/^B). ^C is unbound in vi. It's pretty surprising for these
to cause toybox vi to exit, and it's annoying as long as toybox vi
unconditionally exits rather than checks whether there are unsaved
modifications!
(I'm tempted to implement ^D/^U and ^F/^B, but I don't want to make
Jarno's rebase of his in-progress changes any harder.)
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used uninitalized" warning, move flow control character detection to the
right place, change scratch zeroing to the same way main() does it.
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All of this was fine on LP64 where `long` and `long long` are the same
length, but breaks the LP32 build with -Wformat.
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The "historical" variant is still the only one in use on Android right
now. We still need to switch to the numbers we agreed on with the other
System V ABI users.
See https://groups.google.com/g/generic-abi/c/bX460iggiKg for the
original discussion on RELR.
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mbtowc(0, 0, 4) is weird, and ignoring the result is weird. Avoid all
this by just reusing the toybox lib utf8 functions.
Also fix the row/column display on the status line to count from 1 and
correctly distinguish bytes and characters in non-ASCII, and change the
mode output to only explicitly say when we're in insert mode, in the
same way that vim does. (Every time I saw the old blue-on-black text for
COMMAND I thought toybox vi had crashed!)
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Basic readelf(1) implementation, with output close enough to the binutils
version to be usable with scripts that expect the binutils version. This
started as an implementation of nm(1) until I realized that I almost always
want readelf instead, and that you actually have to do much of the work
needed for readelf just to implement nm. Arguably nm (being part of POSIX)
belongs in toybox while readelf doesn't. An argument could also be made that
neither really belongs in toybox, belonging in a separate set of development
tools (such as binutils or the LLVM binutils).
Doesn't support most of the architecture-specific stuff, most notably
relocations, but is aware of things like ARM exidx sections and the common
register state notes in core dumps for the "big four" architectures: arm,
arm64, x86, and x86-64.
Doesn't support symbol versions (but probably should).
Doesn't support section groups or the -t "section details" (which is a long
form of -S "section headers" that I've never seen used in practice and which
isn't part of -a). Doesn't support dumping unwind info or the hash table
bucket histograms.
Reuses the table of ELF architectures from file(1).
Not fuzzed, but successfully parses all the ELF files in my Ubuntu 18.04
system's lib directories. Attempts to exit with an error when presented with
an invalid ELF file rather than struggle on as binutils seems to.
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set $HOME $PWD and $OLDPWD, fix prompt \w, shuffle some functions around
to avoid prototypes, implement tilde expansion, add FORCE_COPY.
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a full block.
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output #definable.
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Move longopts after their corresponding shortopts instead of before
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Includes new tests.
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add: linelist unload
fix: proper utf8 handling on insert mode backspace
fix: free allocated data at exit
cleanup: rename some variables to be describive but short
cleanup: reorganize some variables in main
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Added: parsing of redirectation responses, will now follow redirectation
path until maximum of 10 jumps. This will probably lead to server
advertising user the https url.
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fix: force redraw after :set (no)list
fix: force redraw after insert
fix: split on zero cursor position
fix: yank and push with utf-8 content
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Scroll visual buffer up and down using standard escapes when content
has not changed, instead of redrawing every keypress.
Sidescroll now moves all the lines instead of only cursor one.
Side scrolling long lines unfortunately causes redraw to whole screen.
-Jarno
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Branch wget to xexec ftpget given an ftp url. Rename the output flag -O
like in other wgets. Add mock wget --no-check-certificate to satisfy
pkgsrc. Ifdef the version output in wget because the nonexistent
constant fails single builds and mkroot.
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Added: yank and push
Rewrote: delete operations
Minor cleanups:
Rewrote delete operations to use one delete function instead of having
separate behavior here and there.
Now delete and yank both always move cursor and then clip the whole
cursor area into yank register. For example x is just ld or jd depeding
are we right edge or not, and dd is jd with some special flags etc.
Now only default yank register is implemented, but implemeting
yank register list should be trivial since cmd execution already passes
register char.
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Replaced: draw_str_until with lib/crunch_str() where possible
Removed: Unused char draw functions.
Implemented: crunch_nstr() which is crunch_str with additional check
for byte length, this can be used to draw substrings or non null
terminated strings. (This can be moved to lib/ if its useful for others)
Reimplemented: Buffer drawing without line wrapping. Now too long lines are
drawn with @ in end. And cursor line scrolls left and right when hitting
right margin point. This will simplify buffer handling alot.
Linewrapping can be reimplemented later if needed but will add
complexity
Implemented: set list and set nolist ex commands, set list will show
escape codes such as tabs
Fix: Bug on splitting 2 lines, split was 1 byte off.
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Add: tabs, follows tabstop variable currently hardcoded to 8. Should be adjustable with :set tabstop N according to man page
fix: search, issue with searching substring that is more left than
cursor position on following lines.
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DNS responses were limited to 512 bytes back when they were UDP only,
but if you have a TCP connection you can get up to 64KiB.
Also use the existing constant for the size of rrname.
Also update the help text.
Also consistently use `sizeof(T)` rather than `sizeof T`.
Also use consistently use `ARRAY_LEN`.
Fixes #56.
Test: `toybox host value.testing.express`
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I really needed to be able to edit a file on the device, and this was
the nearest thing handy, and it turns out to be more or less usable for
basic editing, so...
Support cursor keys.
Support :q (since there's currently no record of whether the file's
modified or not, :q is the same as :q!).
Add 'A' to insert at end of line.
Add 'n' to find next after '/'.
Fix backspace all the way to get out of ex command mode.
Fix escape sequences to not hard-code assumptions about the terminal's
default background and foreground colors.
Fix 'spesial' typo for 'special', and remove explicit array sizes.
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as unusual timestamp formats
After further research and testing, I've produced a patch which handles
all filenames with special characters by copying the GNU quoting
behavior, and also treats anything following a tab as a timestamp. This
increases both ability to handle possible filenames and ability to
apply patches found in the field.
In diff, quote and escape filenames according to the following rules.
* Surround the filename with quotes if it contains a byte less than 0x20,
a byte greater than or equal to 0x80, space, backslash, or quote.
* Replace alert, backspace, form feed, newline, carriage return, tab, vertical
tab, backslash, and quote with \a, \b, \f, \n, \r, \t, \v, \\, and \",
respectively.
* Replace other bytes less than 0x20 or greater than or equal to 0x80 with a
backslash followed by the three octal digits representing the value of the
byte.
* Treat valid UTF-8 characters involving sequences of bytes greater than or
equal to 0x80 the same as other sequences of such bytes.
In patch, process quoted and escaped filenames according to the following
rules.
* If the filename does not begin with a quote, do not modify the filename.
* Remove quotes surrounding the filename.
* In quoted filenames, replace \a, \b, \f, \n, \r, \t, \v, \\, and \" with
alert, backspace, form feed, newline, carriage return, tab, vertical tab,
backslash, and quote, respectively.
* In quoted filenames, replace a backslash followed by octal digits with the
byte with that value in octal.
Also, in patch, treat anything on a +++ or --- line following a tab character
after the beginning of the filename as a timestamp, rather than part of the
filename.
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if true; then if false; then echo one; elif echo two; then echo three; else echo four; fi; fi
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The "info" pages are something very different from the "intro" pages :-)
do_lines already closes the fd.
Also improve the error message for `man`.
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You can now run:
echo hello;
if true; then echo hello; fi;
while true; do echo hello; done
It's got the start of for loops but needs environment variable resolver
to do much with them.
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