Unsetting file-name-handler-alist around a `load` call prevents any
change to this variable from surviving that file's evaluation (e.g. by
packages loaded therein). Since the user's config files are loaded with
this macro, this affects users' configs, which is unacceptable.
Since this optimization is already done in early-init.el, we can get
away with being more selective here.
See 6f1c0f7cc7 for part 1.
Turns out startup.elc likely exists on most Emacs installations (and,
since it's so integral to Emacs, it likely gets special treatment), so
it was a poor heuristic for this fix. Instead, a more variable target
would be calc-loaddefs.el.
On some systems, only calc-loaddefs.el.gz exists (in which case, we
should turn off the optimization). On others, calc-loaddefs.el
exists (so I'll assume it's safe to leave them on). I won't check for
calc-loaddefs.elc because it doesn't matter; calc.el explicitly
calls (load "calc-loaddefs.el") so it is never loaded.
Of course, you can sidestep the entire issue by building Emacs with
--without-compress-install, but it's not practical for users to
know/want to do that.
Amend: 6f1c0f7cc7
Some installs of Emacs do not come with byte-compiled versions of its
bundled elisp files, so when loading them, Emacs falls back to loading
its *.el.gz files. This would be fine if it were not for a startup
optimization Doom employs, where it sets file-name-handler-alist to
nil (and by doing so, robs Emacs of the ability to read compressed
elisp). This causes "symbol's value as variable is void: \213" errors at
startup.
With this commit, Doom now disables this optimization early if it
suspects this applies to your install. But time will tell if it's early
enough.
Ref: https://mail.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2022-08/msg00234.html
Since fd 8.3.0 has low availability across distros (see repology link
below), I don't want to make it Doom's minimum supported version.
Instead, I do a quick version check and adjust accordingly. I'll think
up a more elegant solution after v3.
Ref: https://repology.org/project/fd-find/versionsFix: #6618Fix: #6600Close: #6597
- Rename doom-docs--display-header-h -> doom-docs--display-menu-h to
better represent what it does.
- Add comments to describe the purpose of lib/docs, and TODO annotations
to hint at its future and remind me later.
BREAKING CHANGE: Before, 'doom ci' would load
$GIT_WORKING_TREE/.github/ci.el, to give users/projects an opportunity
to provide project-local configuration for bin/doom (mainly for CI/CD).
Now, this ci.el file is no longer loaded and instead, *all* bin/doom
sessions will walk up the file tree and load the first .doomrc it finds.
This gives bin/doom users a more general place configure all of its
commands, and not just 'doom ci' commands.
Extras:
- Adds .doomrc to auto-mode-alist (so that it starts in
emacs-lisp-mode).
- Adds -o/--file option,
- If -o/--file is passed a dash, print codeowners to stdout,
- Adds --dryrun option,
- Will accept literal string entries in doom-make-codeowners as
standalone lines (useful for comments).
CLIs can now use this for implicit validation for options that take a
file path or - to signal "print to stdout", like so:
(defcli! (doom command) ((outfile ("--out" (file stdout))))
(if (equal outfile "-")
(print! "output")
(with-temp-file outfile
(insert "output"))))
If OUTFILE is not an existing file path or a -, you'll see an this
helpful error:
Error: -o/--file received invalid value "FOO"
Validation errors:
- Must be a dash to signal stdout.
- File does not exist.
See 'doom h[elp] make codeowners' or 'doom make codeowners {-?,--help}' for documentation.
Now you can specify more than one allowed (implicit) for a CLI option:
(defcli! (doom somecommand) ((foo ("--foo" (file int)))))
This will test FOO to ensure it is either an existing file path or an
integer. If neither is true, you'll see this helpful error:
Error: -o/--file received invalid value "FOO"
Validation errors:
- Not an integer.
- Not a valid path to an existing file.
doom-enlist is now a deprecated alias for ensure-list, which is built
into Emacs 28.1+ and is its drop-in replacement. We've already
backported it for 27.x users in doom-lib (in 4bf4978).
Ref: 4bf49785fd
20d5440 introduced a regression where options would be lost when a CLI
session is restarted. :config literate users, for example, would run
'doom sync -u' only for the -u option to be ignored, because it was
discarded after the literate module restarts the session.
Amend: 20d5440023
I've omitted docs/*.org from this merge, as there is still work left to
do there, but I am pushing the module docs early so folks can benefit
from the new docs sooner.
In some edge cases, an early call to doom-log will cause an autoload
error because of one or more of the following is true:
- The autoloads file hasn't been generated or loaded,
- The autoloads file is out of date (especially relevant after
b9933e6),
- doom-cli hasn't loaded lib/files eagerly yet.
To avoid this, and due to how prolific doom-log's uses are, and how
trivial the dependency is, I simply remove the dependency.
Amend: b9933e6637
In the future, should doom-core-dir or {doom-core-dir}/packages.el
change, 'doom upgrade' won't leave the repo in a broken state.
Unfortunately, this cannot retroactively prevent the issue; users will
experience this as soon as they update to b9933e6 or beyond, so users
will have to upgrade manually to overcome it:
cd ~/.emacs.d
git reset --hard 35a89bdfa6
git pull origin master
doom sync -u
Fix: #6598
Amend: b9933e6637
BREAKING CHANGE: This restructures the project in preparation for Doom
to be split into two repos. Users that have reconfigured Doom's CLI
stand a good chance of seeing breakage, especially if they've referred
to any core-* feature, e.g.
(after! core-cli-ci ...)
To fix it, simply s/core-/doom-/, i.e.
(after! doom-cli-ci ...)
What this commit specifically changes is:
- Renames all core features from core-* to doom-*
- Moves core/core-* -> lisp/doom-*
- Moves core/autoloads/* -> lisp/lib/*
- Moves core/templates -> templates/
Ref: #4273