This can be useful if you want to find the commit that fixed a bug (you'd use
"broken/fixed" instead of "good/bad" in this case), or if you want to find the
commit that brought a big performance improvement (use "slow/fast"). It's pretty
mind-bending to have to use "good/bad" in these cases, and swap their meanings
in your head.
Thankfully, lazygit already had support for using custom terms during the bisect
(for the case that a bisect was started on the command-line, I suppose), so all
that's needed is adding a way to specify them in lazygit.
Now that we run code concurrently in our loaders, we need to handle that in our tests.
We could enforce a deterministic ordering by mocking waitgroup or something like that,
but I think it's fine to let our tests handle some randomness given that prod itself
will have that randomness.
I've removed the patch test file because it was clunky, not providing much value, and
it would have been hard to refactor to the new pattern
We're:
* using concurrency with wait groups
* avoiding regex
* processing lines of input as they come rather than storing everything in one string
* avoiding an inner loop by creating a mapping of remote names to branches
The speedup is most noticeable on first load, when we haven't yet fetched out main branches.
I saw a speedup from 105ms to 60ms. On subsequent loads the gain is more modest;
54ms to 40ms
This reverts commit 90613056ce, or the part that removed
a goroutine at least.
Reverting because this has caused an infinite wait for push/pull on windows.
We'll need to find out why that happens separately
Previously we used a single-line prompt for a tag annotation. Now we're using the commit message
prompt.
I've had to update other uses of that prompt to allow the summary and description labels to
be passed in
Previously, we would only show the authors based on local commits, but sometimes you want to set a commit author
to that of a commit on another branch. Now, so long as you've viewed the branch's commits, the author will appear
as a suggestion.
This happens consistently for my when I close my MacBook's lid. It seems that
MacOS locks the user's keychain in this case, and since I have my keychain
provide the pass phrases for my ssh keys, fetching fails because it tries to
prompt me for a pass phrase.
This all worked correctly already, we have the FailOnCredentialRequest()
mechanism specifically for this situation, so all is great. The only problem was
that it was trying to pause the ongoing task while prompting the user for input;
but the task is nil for a background fetch (and should be).
As discussed in https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit/pull/2599, it
makes more sense to have the user specify whether they want verbose
commits from their own git config, rather than lazygit config.
This means that we can remove all the code (including test coverage)
associated with the custom verbose flag, and lazygit will just inherit
the .gitconfig settings automatically.
Save has been deprecated for a while, push is the recommended way to save a
stash. Push has been available since 2.13, so we can use it without problems.
The code in getHydratedRebasingCommits relied on the assumption that the
git-rebase-todo file contains full SHAs. This has only been true from 2.25.2 on,
before that it would contain abbreviated SHAs. Fix this by storing fullCommits
in a slice instead of a map, and using a linear search.
I don't know why we're getting index.lock errors but they're impossile to stop
anyway given that other processes can be calling git commands. So we're retrying
a few times before re-raising. To do this we need to clone the command and the current
implementation for that is best-effort.
I do worry about the maintainability of that but we'll see how it goes.
Also, I thought you'd need to clone the task (if it exists) but now I think not;
as long as you don't call done twice on it you should be fine, and you shouldn't
be done'ing a task as part of running a command: that should happen higher up.
It's not clear what was happening but it seemed like we sometimes weren't
fully writing to our stdout buffer (which is used for the error message)
even though we had returned from cmd.Wait().
Not sure what the cause was but removing an unnecessary goroutine fixed it.
The global counter approach is easy to understand but it's brittle and depends on implicit behaviour that is not very discoverable.
With a global counter, if any goroutine accidentally decrements the counter twice, we'll think lazygit is idle when it's actually busy.
Likewise if a goroutine accidentally increments the counter twice we'll think lazygit is busy when it's actually idle.
With the new approach we have a map of tasks where each task can either be busy or not. We create a new task and add it to the map
when we spawn a worker goroutine (among other things) and we remove it once the task is done.
The task can also be paused and continued for situations where we switch back and forth between running a program and asking for user
input.
In order for this to work with `git push` (and other commands that require credentials) we need to obtain the task from gocui when
we create the worker goroutine, and then pass it along to the commands package to pause/continue the task as required. This is
MUCH more discoverable than the old approach which just decremented and incremented the global counter from within the commands package,
but it's at the cost of expanding some function signatures (arguably a good thing).
Likewise, whenever you want to call WithWaitingStatus or WithLoaderPanel the callback will now have access to the task for pausing/
continuing. We only need to actually make use of this functionality in a couple of places so it's a high price to pay, but I don't
know if I want to introduce a WithWaitingStatusTask and WithLoaderPanelTask function (open to suggestions).
I don't know if this is a hack or not: we run a git command and increment the pending action
count to 1 but at some point the command requests a username or password, so we need to prompt
the user to enter that. At that point we don't want to say that there is a pending action,
so we decrement the action count before prompting the user and then re-increment it again afterward.
Given that we panic when the counter goes below zero, it's important that it's not zero
when we run the git command (should be impossible anyway).
I toyed with a different approach using channels and a long-running goroutine that
handles all commands that request credentials but it feels over-engineered compared to this
commit's approach.
The first line of the diff pane would show branch heads (e.g.
commit dd9100ccc8b69a8b14b21a84e34854b5acfb871a (mybranch, origin/mybranch)
only when a pager is used. The reason is that the default of the --decorate
option to git show is "auto", which means to show the decoration only when
output goes to a tty. Lazygit uses a pty only when a pager is used, so the
decoration wouldn't show when no pager is used.
Since the branch head annotation is useful and we always want to see it, force
it by explicitly passing --decorate.
This solves three problems:
1. When the local main branch is behind its upstream, the merged status of
commits of a feature branch sitting on origin/main was not correct. This can
easily happen when you rebase a branch onto origin/main instead of main, and
don't bother keeping local main up to date.
2. It works when you don't have the main branch locally at all. This could
happen when you check out a colleague's feature branch that goes off of
"develop", but you don't have "develop" locally yourself because you normally
only work on "main".
3. It also works when you work on a main branch itself, e.g. by committing to it
directly, or by merging a branch locally. These local commits on a main
branch would previously be shown in green instead of red; this broke with
910a61dc46.