Refresh is one of those functions that shouldn't require error handling (similar
to triggering a redraw of the UI, see
https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit/issues/3887).
As far as I see, the only reason why Refresh can currently return an error is
that the Then function returns one. The actual refresh errors, e.g. from the git
calls that are made to fetch data, are already logged and swallowed. Most of the
Then functions do only UI stuff such as selecting a list item, and always return
nil; there's only one that can return an error (updating the rebase todo file in
LocalCommitsController.startInteractiveRebaseWithEdit); it's not a critical
error if this fails, it is only used for setting rebase todo items to "edit"
when you start an interactive rebase by pressing 'e' on a range selection of
commits. We simply log this error instead of returning it.
This was added after this PR comment:
https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit/pull/3276#discussion_r1469077611
> Can we do a refresh after this reset so that the screen shows that the patch
> has been cancelled? That way, if we cancel on the next popup, the screen will
> be in a valid state.
I don't understand what "cancel on the next popup" means; there is no further
popup after this code.
I took the set of enabled checks from revive's recommended configuration [1],
and removed some that I didn't like. There might be other useful checks in
revive that we might want to enable, but this is a nice improvement already.
The bulk of the changes here are removing unnecessary else statements after
returns, but there are a few others too.
[1] https://github.com/mgechev/revive?tab=readme-ov-file#recommended-configuration
The function would return "head/branchname" when there was either a tag or a
remote with the same name.
While fixing this we slightly change the semantic of the function (and of
determineCheckedOutBranchName, which calls it): for a detached head it now
returns an empty string rather than the commit hash. I actually think this is
better.
The icon will appear when there's a tag with the same name as the current branch
(that's what we're testing here), or even when there's a remote with the same
name. I'm not adding a test for this latter case, but this was actually how I
discovered the issue.
This would crash with an index-out-of-range error.
I double-checked that all other callers of PrepareInteractiveRebaseCommand
already call getBaseHashOrRoot, so this was the only one that was broken.
I decided not to add a test for this as the scenario is not a very common one.
Instead, pass the entire Mutexes struct by pointer to controllers.
This is better because Mutexes now has a zero value and doesn't need to be
initialized.
Pretty basic fix, didn't seem to have any complications.
I only added the refs/ prefix to the FullRefName() method
to align with other similar methods, and to make this change
not impact any user facing modals.
Fixes: https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit/issues/4634
Also adds a test demonstrating that the stash show behavior is now fixed
Previously we would call pullFiles() from the pick() handler if we were not in a
rebase, assuming that the default keybinding for both is "p". This needn't be
the case of course, if the user has remapped one or the other.
The consequence of this was that swapping the keybindings for "pullFiles" and
"pushFiles" would work in all panels except the Commits panel (unless "pick" was
also remapped in the same way).
Fix this by using the new AllowFurtherDispatching mechanism of DisabledReasons
to pass the keybinding on to the next handler.
If a DisabledReason has its AllowFurtherDispatching flag set, it is returned as
a ErrKeybindingNotHandled error, instead of shown as a toast right away. This
allows gocui to continue to dispatch the keybinding, and we can unwrap the error
at the other end (in our global ErrorHandler) and display it then.
This allows having keybindings for the same key at the local and global levels,
and they will continue to be dispatched even if the first one returns a
DisabledReason. It is opt-in, so we only use it for cases where we know that a
local and a global handler share the same (default) keybinding.
There was no reason to declare a variable for disabledReason, assign it inside
the "if binding.GetDisabledReason != nil" statement, and then check its value
again after that if statement. Move all that code inside the first if statement
to make the control flow easier to understand.
Adaptions are for this gocui commit:
Cleanup: remove Is* error functions
- Use errors.Is instead of quality comparisons. This is better because it
matches wrapped errors as well, which we will need later in this branch.
- Inline the errors.Is calls at the call sites. This is idiomatic go, we don't
need helper functions for this.
See https://go.dev/blog/go1.13-errors for more about this.
When switching between repos, each repo might have a different focused panel; in
this case, the previously focused panel would show the "inactive" highlight. By
default this is only bold text, so it's barely noticeable, but it becomes more
pronounced when setting e.g.
gui:
theme:
inactiveViewSelectedLineBgColor:
- "#666666"
I noticed this especially when entering or leaving submodules; for example,
enter a submodule by pressing enter in the Files panel, then switch to the
Commits panel in the submodule, then press Esc to go back to the parent repo.
This would put the focus back into the Files panel, but keep the inactive
highlight in the Commits panel.
In the unlikely scenario that you have a remote branch on `origin` called
`foo`, and a local tag called `origin/foo`, git changes the behavior of
the previous command such that it produces
```
$ git for-each-ref --sort=refname --format=%(refname:short) refs/remotes
origin/branch1
remotes/origin/foo
```
with `remotes/` prepended. Presumably this is to disambiguate it from
the local tag `origin/foo`. Unfortunately, this breaks the existing
behavior of this function, so the remote branch is never shown.
By changing the command, we now get
```
$ git for-each-ref --sort=refname --format=%(refname) refs/remotes
refs/remotes/origin/branch1
refs/remotes/origin/foo
```
This allows easy parsing based on the `/`, and none of the code outside
this function has to change.
----
We previously were not showing remote HEADs for modern git versions
based on how they were formatted from "%(refname:short)".
We have decided that this is a feature, not a bug, so we are building
that into the code here.
Moving the getter of the suggested branch name to a separate function
allows us to reuse it in situations where we are not calling the regular
create new branch function, such as move commits to a new branch
Signed-off-by: Elias Assaf <elyas51000@gmail.com>
When refreshing the branches list, we have code to keep the same branch selected
even when the refresh changes the sort order; this code remembers the selected
branch before the refresh, and then tries to select it again afterwards (looking
it up by name) if it is still there.
However, we stored the previously selected branch too early, before even
obtaining the branches list; if the user moved the selection between that point
and the end of the refresh, it would jump back. Fix this by remembering the
previous selection only at the last moment, right before assigning the new
branches slice.
We still have a race condition here between the UI code that manages the
selection as the user presses arrow keys, and the background thread doing the
refresh that reads and restores the selection; however, the race was there
before, and we make it neither better nor worse with this PR. It doesn't seem to
be a problem in practice.
Previously we would enter a newline at the password prompt, which would cause
the fetch to fail. The problem with this was that if you have many remotes, the
fetch would sometimes hang for some reason; I don't totally understand how that
happened, but I guess the many ssh processes requesting passwords would somehow
interfere with each other. Avoid this by simply killing the git fetch process
the moment it requests the first password.
We will need a user config in the file tree in the next commit, and passing the
entire common is the easiest way to do that while ensuring hot-reloading when
users change the config while lazygit is running.
This is a regression introduced with a199ed1396c; it is important to use a PTY
even with credentialStrategy=FAIL, otherwise the fetch command will spew the
credentials request into the UI and then hang.
This fixes the problem that background fetching makes lazygit hang when the
fetch request needs to prompt for a passphrase. For Mac users who use the
keychain to store their ssh passphrases, this can happen when lazygit is running
while the machine goes to sleep, because macOS looks the keychain in that case.
The click handler of MainViewController was registered as a global handler, so
it was used when a side panel was focused that doesn't have a
SwitchToFocusedMainViewController attached (e.g. Status, Worktrees, or
Submodules). This handler would then push the main view context, but with the
code that is meant only for toggling between the main view pair contexts, i.e.
with taking over the parentContext from the otherContext, which doesn't have one
at that point. This would later lead to a crash in onClick because the
parentContext was nil.
Fix this by splitting the click handler in two, one for when it already has the
focus, and one for toggling from the other view, and make these focus specific.