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mirror of https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit.git synced 2025-05-31 23:19:40 +02:00

455 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex March
e354a9bb48 Deprecate git.log.showGraph and git.log.order config
Added identical properties to AppState that should eventually have their defaults set.
2024-02-16 13:23:35 +01:00
Stefan Haller
3b7f32db95 Avoid crash when hitting enter on an update-ref todo 2024-02-16 13:06:24 +01:00
Aaron Hoffman
c431698dba Fix range select bug
After discarding file changes from the commit, the was still referencing
these indexes as being part of the range select. The consequence was
needing to hit escape twice to exit commit files in some situations.
Canceling the range select after discarding changes fixes that.
2024-02-13 09:10:15 -06:00
Aaron Hoffman
d138f7ce86 Clean up test case
I'm combining the delete single file case from `discard_old_file_change`
with the content of `discard_range_select` and calling that
`discard_old_file_changes`. Hopefully that cleans things up a little
bit.

This also adds a check that the custom patch is getting reset properly.
2024-02-13 09:10:15 -06:00
Aaron Hoffman
15d5261933 Support range select removing files from a commit 2024-02-13 09:10:15 -06:00
Stefan Haller
b1d05b6371 Change default of git.log.showGraph to 'always'
Most people seem to prefer it to be on.
2024-02-13 14:34:40 +01:00
Aaron Hoffman
fdc54b7455 Fix cherrypick demo
Cherrypick selections are now cleared after pasting (#3240), so the demo
needs a tiny change to reflect that.
2024-01-30 09:27:44 -06:00
molejnik88
ee173ff7c9 Clear cherry-picked commits after pasting
It can be tedious after each cherry-pick opearation to clear the
selection by pressing escape in order for lazygit to stop displaying
info about copied commits. Also, it seems to be a rare case to
cherry-pick commits to more than one destination.

The simplest solution to address this issue is to clear the selection
upon paste.

The only exception is a merge conflict. Initially, I wanted to clear
selected commits in this scenario too. During a discussion we found out
that it may be convenient to have the copied commits still around.
Aborting the rebase and pasting the commits in the middle of a branch
can be a valid use case.
2024-01-30 09:21:12 +11:00
Stefan Haller
b133318b40 Add command to squash all fixups in the current branch
To do that, change the "Apply fixup commits" command to show a menu with the two
choices "in current branch" and "above the selected commit"; we make "in current
branch" the default, as it's the more useful one most of the time, even though
it is a breaking change for those who are used to "shift-S enter" meaning
"squash above selected".
2024-01-29 09:37:47 +01:00
Stefan Haller
e8e7ddea45 Fix typo 2024-01-28 09:49:56 +01:00
Aaron Hoffman
510f9a1ae1 Support selecting file range in patch builder
test: add move_range_to_index

test: add toggle_range
2024-01-28 12:00:47 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
0f9d9e13d1 Show mode-specific keybinding suggestions
As part of making lazygit more discoverable, there are certain keys which you almost certainly
need to press when you're in a given mode e.g. 'v' to paste commits when cherry-picking. This
commit prominently shows these keybinding suggestions alongside the others in the option view.

I'm using the same colours for these keybindings as is associated with the mode elsewhere e.g.
yellow for rebasing and cyan for cherry-picking. The cherry-picking one is a bit weird because
we also use cyan text to show loaders and app status at the bottom left so it may be confusing,
but I haven't personally found it awkward from having tested it out myself.

Previously we would render these options whenever a new context was activated, but now that we
need to re-render options whenever a mode changes, I'm instead rendering them on each screen
re-render (i.e. in the layout function). Given how cheap it is to render this text, I think
it's fine performance-wise.
2024-01-28 08:33:13 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
7bddf53223 Improve keybinding descriptions
This adds a bunch of tooltips to keybindings and updates some keybinding descriptions (i.e. labels).

It's in preparation for displaying more keybindings on-screen (in the bottom right of the screen),
and so due in part to laziness it shortens some descriptions so that we don't need to manage both
a short and long description (for on-screen vs in-menu). Nonetheless I've added a ShortDescription
field for when we do want to have both a short and long description.

You'll notice that some keybindings I deemed unworthy of the options view have longer descriptions,
because I could get away with it.
2024-01-28 08:12:01 +11:00
Stefan Haller
f9876c9742 Keep same selection range when quick-starting an interactive rebase
This is useful if you want to move a range of commits, so you select them, and
then realize it's better to do it in an interactive rebase. Pressing 'i'
preserves the range now.
2024-01-26 11:18:13 +01:00
Stefan Haller
d28a2ec059 Add tests for preserving the selection when pressing 'i'
Preserving the selection for a non-range selection already works as expected;
however, the test for a selection range shows an undesired behavior.
2024-01-26 11:18:06 +01:00
Jesse Duffield
0402674ee7 Fix error message for selected lines
We had the actual and expected lines swapped around erroneously
2024-01-25 11:34:59 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
269ef7f250 Support range select for staging/discarding files
As part of this, you must now press enter on a merge conflict file
to focus the merge view; you can no longer press space and if you do
it will raise an error.
2024-01-25 11:34:59 +11:00
John Whitley
3d9f1e02e5 Refactor repo_paths.go to use git rev-parse
This changes GetRepoPaths() to pull information from `git rev-parse`
instead of effectively reimplementing git's logic for pathfinding. This
change fixes issues with bare repos, esp. versioned homedir use cases,
by aligning lazygit's path handling to what git itself does.

This change also enables lazygit to run from arbitrary subdirectories of
a repository, including correct handling of symlinks, including "deep"
symlinks into a repo, worktree, a repo's submodules, etc.

Integration tests are now resilient against unintended side effects from
the host's environment variables. Of necessity, $PATH and $TERM are the
only env vars allowed through now.
2024-01-24 08:40:01 +01:00
Jesse Duffield
f0de880136 Support range select in rebase actions 2024-01-23 17:23:56 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
44e2542e4a Better assertion logic for line selection
Previously if we marked a line with IsSelected() we would check if it was selected, but
we would not check if other lines were unexpectedly selected. Now, if you use IsSelected(),
we ensure that _only_ the lines you marked as such are the selected lines.
2024-01-23 13:43:39 +11:00
Stefan Haller
2c9b4770bc Keep same branch selected when refreshing branches
This wasn't necessary before, because the only available branch sorting option
was by recency, so the sort order couldn't change except by checking out
branches. Now, you can sort by committer date, so the branch order can change by
fetching; in this case it's important to keep the same branch selected. One
important use case is to rebase the checked-out branch onto master; you select
master, press "f" to fetch it (this can now change its position in the list),
and then press "r" to rebase. To make this work smoothly it's important to keep
master selected after pressing "f".
2024-01-19 09:25:07 +01:00
Stefan Haller
9867180202 Add test showing how branch should stay selected after fetching (but doesn't yet) 2024-01-19 09:23:55 +01:00
Jesse Duffield
51fb82d6bf Enforce single-item selection in various actions
We want to show an error when the user tries to invoke an action that expects only
a single item to be selected.

We're using the GetDisabledReason field to enforce this (as well as DisabledReason
on menu items).

I've created a ListControllerTrait to store some shared convenience functions for this.
2024-01-19 10:50:49 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
280b4d60f8 Support select range for cherry pick
This requires us to change the 'v' keybinding for paste to something else,
now that 'v' is used globally for toggling range select. So I'm using
'shift+v' and I'm likewise changing 'c' to 'shift+c' for copying, so
that they're consistent.

We will need to clearly communicate this change in keybindings.
2024-01-19 10:50:49 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
d08fafb1c4 Clear range select upon pressing 'escape'
This is the highest priority of the escape actions because it's the thing you're
most likely to want to do upon hitting escape if you have a range selected.

Applying this to the staging/patch-building views is tricky: if we want this logic
for when a range of lines is selected, we'll also need to apply it when a hunk
is selected too. I still think it's worth it though: I've often accidentally
escaped from the staging view when trying to cancel a range selection.
2024-01-19 10:47:21 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
f3eb180f75 Standardise display of range selection across views
We're not fully standardising here: different contexts can store their range state however
they like. What we are standardising on is that now the view is always responsible for
highlighting the selected lines, meaning the context/controller needs to tell the view
where the range start is.

Two convenient benefits from this change:
1) we no longer need bespoke code in integration tests for asserting on selected lines because
we can just ask the view
2) line selection in staging/patch-building/merge-conflicts views now look the same as in
list views i.e. the highlight applies to the whole line (including trailing space)

I also noticed a bug with merge conflicts not rendering the selection on focus though I suspect
it wasn't a bug with any real consequences when the view wasn't displaying the selection.

I'm going to scrap the selectedRangeBgColor config and just let it use the single line
background color. Hopefully nobody cares, but there's really no need for an extra config.
2024-01-19 10:47:21 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
24a4302c52 Add range selection ability on list contexts
This adds range select ability in two ways:
1) Sticky: like what we already have with the staging view i.e. press v then use arrow keys
2) Non-sticky: where you just use shift+up/down to expand the range

The state machine works like this:
(no range, press 'v') -> sticky range
(no range, press arrow) -> no range
(no range, press shift+arrow) -> nonsticky range
(sticky range, press 'v') -> no range
(sticky range, press arrow) -> sticky range
(sticky range, press shift+arrow) -> nonsticky range
(nonsticky range, press 'v') -> no range
(nonsticky range, press arrow) -> no range
(nonsticky range, press shift+arrow) -> nonsticky range
2024-01-19 10:47:21 +11:00
Stefan Haller
83337d9fa8 Allow showing Disabled errors as error panel instead of toast 2024-01-14 17:45:35 +01:00
Stefan Haller
09a24ee97d Use ErrorToast instead of error panel when invoking a disabled command 2024-01-14 17:45:35 +01:00
Stefan Haller
8ca8a43968 Make it mandatory to acknowledge toasts in tests 2024-01-14 17:42:03 +01:00
Stefan Haller
9fa43394fe Make it possible to handle toasts in integration tests
Use it in two selected tests to demonstrate what it looks like.
2024-01-14 17:42:03 +01:00
Jesse Duffield
53a8bd2e3f Add ability to start an interactive rebase onto an appropriate base
A common issue I have is that I want to move a commit from the top of my branch
all the way down to the first commit on the branch. To do that, I need to navigate
down to the first commit on my branch, press 'e' to start an interactive rebase,
then navigate back up to the top of the branch, then move my commit back down to
the base. This is annoying.

Similarly annoying is moving the commit one-by-one without explicitly starting
an interactive rebase, because then each individual step is its own rebase which
takes a while in aggregate.

This PR allows you to press 'i' from the commits view to start an interactive
rebase from an 'appropriate' base. By appropriate, we mean that we want to start
from the HEAD and stop when we reach the first merge commit or commit on the main
branch. This may end up including more commits than you need, but it doesn't make
a difference.
2024-01-13 12:57:49 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
a1ce6029c1 Pass -f as single arg in integration test
For some bizarre reason `pkg/integration/tests/filter_by_path/cli_arg.go` is failing as of 8c716184 like so:

```
test_lazygit

  Usage:
    test_lazygit [git-arg]

  Positional Variables:
    git-arg   Panel to focus upon opening lazygit. Accepted values (based on git terminology): status, branch, log, stash. Ignored if --filter arg is passed.
  Flags:
    -h --help               Displays help with available flag, subcommand, and positional value parameters.
    -p --path               Path of git repo. (equivalent to --work-tree=<path> --git-dir=<path>/.git/)
    -f --filter             Path to filter on in `git log -- <path>`. When in filter mode, the commits, reflog, and stash are filtered based on the given path, and some operations are restricted
    -v --version            Print the current version
    -d --debug              Run in debug mode with logging (see --logs flag below). Use the LOG_LEVEL env var to set the log level (debug/info/warn/error) (default: false)
    -l --logs               Tail lazygit logs (intended to be used when `lazygit --debug` is called in a separate terminal tab)
    -c --config             Print the default config
    -cd --print-config-dir   Print the config directory
    -ucd --use-config-dir     override default config directory with provided directory
    -w --work-tree          equivalent of the --work-tree git argument
    -g --git-dir            equivalent of the --git-dir git argument
    -ucf --use-config-file    Comma separated list to custom config file(s)

Unknown arguments supplied:  filterFile
```

where the CLI args are:
```
([]string) (len=5 cap=5) {
 (string) (len=25) "/tmp/lazygit/test_lazygit",
 (string) (len=6) "-debug",
 (string) (len=108) "--use-config-dir=/Users/jesseduffieldduffield/repos/lazygit/test/_results/filter_by_path/cli_arg/used_config",
 (string) (len=2) "-f",
 (string) (len=10) "filterFile"
}
```

This appears to be a bug in flaggy itself. I've updated to the latest version but it still breaks. Bizarrely it works fine on CI and
only fails locally. Running lazygit locally with `lg -f pkg/gui/controllers/helpers/refresh_helper.go` it works fine. So I don't
know what's going on there. At any rate, I'm just going to get the test passing by passing `-f=filterFile` as a single argument.
2024-01-12 20:19:50 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
8c716184c1 Set working directory in lazygit test command
We need to fetch our list of tests both outside of our test binary and within. We need
to get the list from within so that we can run the code that drives the test and runs
assertions. To get the list of tests we need to know where the root of the lazygit repo
is, given that the tests live in files under that root.

So far, we've used this GetLazyRootDirectory() function for that, but it assumes that
we're not in a test directory (it just looks for the first .git dir it can find). Because
we didn't want to properly fix this before, we've been setting the working directory of
the test command to the lazygit root, and using the --path CLI arg to override it when
the test itself ran. This was a terrible hack.

Now, we're passing the lazygit root directory as an env var to the integration test, so
that we can set the working directory to the actual path of the test repo; removing the
need to use the --path arg.
2024-01-12 19:59:31 +11:00
Stefan Haller
6255728e63 Add a method GitVersion.IsAtLeast 2024-01-10 09:18:38 +01:00
Stefan Haller
b35f8776e1 Warn when there are hunks with only added lines
The algorithm works by blaming the deleted lines, so if a hunk contains only
added lines, we can only hope that it also belongs in the same commit. Warn the
user about this.

Note: the warning might be overly agressive, we'll have to see if this is
annoying. The reason is that it depends on the diff context size whether added
lines go into their own hunk or are grouped together with other added or deleted
lines into one hunk. However, our algorithm uses a diff context size of 0,
because that makes it easiest to parse the diff; this results in hunks having
only added lines more often than what the user sees. For example, moving a line
of code down by two lines will likely result in a single hunk for the user, but
in two hunks for our algorithm. On the other hand, being this strict makes the
warning consistent. We could consider using the user's diff context size in the
algorithm, but then it would depend on the current context size whether the
warning appears, which could be confusing. Plus, it would make the algorithm
quite a bit more complicated.
2024-01-10 09:11:40 +01:00
Stefan Haller
8ca78412ac Add command to find base commit for creating a fixup 2024-01-10 09:11:40 +01:00
Stefan Haller
cd50c79ae4 Preserve the commit message correctly even if the description has blank lines
There are two possible fixes for this bug, and they differ in behavior when
rewording a commit. The one I chose here always splits at the first line feed,
which means that for an improperly formatted commit message such as this one:

   This is a very long multi-line subject,
   which you shouldn't really use in git.

   And this is the body (we call it "description" in lazygit).

we split after the first line instead of after the first paragraph. This is
arguably not what the original author meant, but splitting after the first
paragraph doesn't really work well in lazygit, because we would try to put both
lines into the one-line subject field of the message panel, and you'd only see
the second and not even know that there are more.

The other potential fix would have been to join subject and description with two
line feeds instead of one in JoinCommitMessageAndDescription; this would have
fixed our bug in the same way, but would result in splitting the above message
after the second line instead of the first. I think that's worse, so I decided
for the first fix.

While we're at it, simplify the code a little bit; strings.Cut is documented to
return (s, "") when the separator is not found, so there's no need to do this on
our side.

We do have to trim spaces on the description now, to support the regular reword
case where subject and body are separated by a blank line.
2024-01-09 14:31:53 +01:00
Stefan Haller
3ebba5f32c Add test demonstrating a bug with preserving the commit message
SplitCommitMessageAndDescription splits at the first '\n\n' that it finds (if
there is one), which in this case is between the two paragraphs of the
description. This is wrong.
2024-01-09 14:31:53 +01:00
Stefan Haller
9a423c388d Remove unused function
I think this is a left-over from before we had the new commit message panel. It
no longer makes sense to add a newline to the commit subject.
2024-01-09 14:31:53 +01:00
Stefan Haller
f244ec8251 Fix checking out a tag when a branch with the same name exists 2024-01-09 14:18:35 +01:00
Stefan Haller
2b97f0fb43 Add test demonstrating the problem
When there's a branch with the same name as the tag, the branch gets checked out
instead of the tag.
2024-01-09 14:18:35 +01:00
Alex March
21334fa889 Add integration test for local branch sort order 2023-12-27 15:25:29 +01:00
AzraelSec
bc330b8ff3 feat: add age on stash lines 2023-12-27 11:21:49 +01:00
Stefan Haller
1e3935cbaf Add integration test for remote branch sort order 2023-12-22 16:30:20 +09:00
AzraelSec
c7012528fc feat: introduce a copy menu into the file view 2023-12-07 08:30:03 +01:00
Jesse Duffield
2162e5ff64
Re-enable 'Unset upstream' option when upstream branch is missing (#3086) 2023-12-06 15:58:11 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
dee1ff007d
fixed typo in test description (#3101) 2023-12-02 09:37:49 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
aaecd6cc40 Add coverage arg for integration tests
This PR captures the code coverage from our unit and integration tests. At the
moment it simply pushes the result to Codacy, a platform that assists with
improving code health. Right now the focus is just getting visibility but I want
to experiment with alerts on PRs when a PR causes a drop in code coverage.

To be clear: I'm not a dogmatist about this: I have no aspirations to get to
100% code coverage, and I don't consider lines-of-code-covered to be a perfect
metric, but it is a pretty good heuristic for how extensive your tests are.

The good news is that our coverage is actually pretty good which was a surprise
to me!

As a conflict of interest statement: I'm in Codacy's 'Pioneers' program which
provides funding and mentorship, and part of the arrangement is to use Codacy's
tooling on lazygit. This is something I'd have been happy to explore even
without being part of the program, and just like with any other static analysis
tool, we can tweak it to fit our use case and values.

## How we're capturing code coverage

This deserves its own section. Basically when you build the lazygit binary you
can specify that you want the binary to capture coverage information when it
runs. Then, if you run the binary with a GOCOVERDIR env var, it will write
coverage information to that directory before exiting.

It's a similar story with unit tests except with those you just specify the
directory inline via `-test.gocoverdir`.

We run both unit tests and integration tests separately in CI, _and_ we run them
parallel with different OS's and git versions. So I've got each step uploading
the coverage files as an artefact, and then in a separate step we combine all
the artefacts together and generate a combined coverage file, which we then
upload to codacy (but in future we can do other things with it like warn in a PR
if code coverage decreases too much).

Another caveat is that when running integration tests, not only do we want to
obtain code coverage from code executed by the test binary, we also want to
obtain code coverage from code executed by the test runner. Otherwise, for each
integration test you add, the setup code (which is run by the test runner, not
the test binary) will be considered un-covered and for a large setup step it may
appear that your PR _decreases_ coverage on net. Go doesn't easily let you
exclude directories from coverage reports so it's better to just track the
coverage from both the runner and the binary.

The binary expects a GOCOVERDIR env var but the test runner expects a
test.gocoverdir positional arg and if you pass the positional arg it will
internally overwrite GOCOVERDIR to some random temp directory and if you then
pass that to the test binary, it doesn't seem to actually write to it by the
time the test finishes. So to get around that we're using LAZYGIT_GOCOVERDIR and
then within the test runner we're mapping that to GOCOVERDIR before running the
test binary. So they both end up writing to the same directory. Coverage data
files are named to avoid conflicts, including something unique to the process,
so we don't need to worry about name collisions between the test runner and the
test binary's coverage files. We then merge the files together purely for the
sake of having fewer artefacts to upload.

## Misc

Initially I was able to have all the instances of '/tmp/code_coverage' confined
to the ci.yml which was good because it was all in one place but now it's spread
across ci.yml and scripts/run_integration_tests.sh and I don't feel great about
that but can't think of a way to make it cleaner.

I believe there's a use case for running scripts/run_integration_tests.sh
outside of CI (so that you can run tests against older git versions locally) so
I've made it that unless you pass the LAZYGIT_GOCOVERDIR env var to that script,
it skips all the code coverage stuff.

On a separate note: it seems that Go's coverage report is based on percentage of
statements executed, whereas codacy cares more about lines of code executed, so
codacy reports a higher percentage (e.g. 82%) than Go's own coverage report
(74%).
2023-11-30 12:58:41 +11:00
Jesse Duffield
7e5f25e415 Use args struct for RunTests
There were too many position arguments
2023-11-29 11:39:10 +11:00