It's not so much the total number of commits that matters here, it's just
whether we are on the first one. (This includes the other condition.)
This allows us to get rid of the condition in rebase.go.
Instead of rebasing from the commit below the current one and then setting the
current one to "edit", we rebase from the current one and insert a "break" after
it. In most cases the behavior is exactly the same as before, except that the
new method also works if the current commit is a merge commit. This is useful if
you want to create a new commit at the very beginning of your branch (by editing
the last commit before your branch).
There are two reasons for doing this:
1. The view cursor position is often out of sync with the selected line; see
first commit of this branch.
2. The highlighting is already turned off when the view loses focus, and never
turned back on thereafter. So just turn it off from the start then.
We already have this very convenient behavior of jumping to the next stageable
line after staging something. However, while this worked well for staging
single lines or hunks, it didn't work correctly when staging a range of lines;
in this case we want to start searching from the first line of the range.
While we try to keep the view's cursor position in sync with the context state's
selectedLineIdx (at least when pressing up or down), there are enough situations
where the two run out of sync; for example when initially opening the view, or
after staging a hunk, or when scrolling the view using the wheel. While it would
be possible to fix these situations to keep them always in sync, it doesn't seem
worth it, because the view's cursor position isn't really used for anything
else. So we rather special-case the SelectedLine/SelectedLineIdx functions of
ViewDriver to query the context state's selectedLineIdx directly if it is a
patch explorer context.
There's no need for refreshing anything; all that's needed is to re-focus the
selected list item. This way it will also work in other panels, which we are
about to add in the next commit.
The 8.2 release of OpenSSH added support for FIDO/U2F hardware
authenticators, which manifests in being able to create new types of SSH
key, named `ecdsa-sk` nad `ed25519-sk`. This is relevant to lazygit,
as those SSH keys can be used to authorise git operations over SSH, as
well as signing git commits. Actual code changes are required for
correct support, as the authentication process for these types of keys
is different than the process for types supported previously.
When an operation requiring credentials is initialised with a U2F
authenticator-backed key, the first prompt is:
Enter PIN for ${key_type} key ${path_to_key}:
at which point the user is supposed to enter a numeric (and secret) PIN,
specific to the particular FIDO/U2F authenticator using which the SSH
keypair was generated. Upon entering the correct key, the user is
supposed to physically interact with the authenticator to confirm
presence. Sometimes this is accompanied by the following text prompt:
Confirm user presence for key ${key_type} ${key_fingerprint}
This second prompt does not always occur and it is presumed that the
user will know to perform this step even if not prompted specifically.
At this stage some authenticator devices may also begin to blink a LED
to indicate that they're waiting for input.
To facilitate lazygit's interoperability with these types of keys, add
support for the first PIN prompt, which allows "fetch", "pull", and
"push" git operations to complete.
test: add an integration test for checkout branch by name
fix: fix full ref name of detached head
refactor: refactor current branch loader
chore: use field name explicitly