If $DOOMPATH is malformed or set to a value that does not contain a
valid path to Doom's CLI library in $EMACSDIR/lisp/cli (see #7608),
bin/doom no longer functions, emitting "a subcommand is required"
errors.
This change ensures that the CLI library is always the last (implicit)
element in doom-cli-load-path, and ensures $DOOMPATH is never written to
the user's envvar file (in case they try to use bin/doom from inside a
terminal within a Doom Emacs session), which should ensure users -- at
least -- never find themselves stranded without the Doom CLI.
Fix: #7608
Co-authored-by: bpizzi <bpizzi@users.noreply.github.com>
Causing the envvar file to be generated to wrong place, and thus never
be updated/properly loaded at runtime.
This new setting is for later, where I'll integrate the envvar generate
into the profile generator proper.
This commit reduces the debug log noise, makes it easier to
read/parse/search, and soft-introduces a convention for doom-log
messages, where they are prefixed with a unique identifier loosely named
after it's running context or calling function.
I haven't enforced it everywhere doom-log is used yet, but this is a
start.
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