Eventually, Emacs will process any files passed to it via the command
line, and will do so *really* early in the startup process. These might
contain special file paths like TRAMP paths (e.g.
/sudo://etc/ssh/ssh_config), so restore `file-name-handler-alist' just
for this small portion of startup.
There are still a few edge cases where inhibit-redisplay is never
reset (usually involving errors at startup), leaving Emacs as a blank
screen until the user performs an action that forces it to redraw (e.g.
pressing M-x). This tries to address more of those.
The motivations for delaying the site-lisp files are different between
interactive and non-interactive sessions. I've revised these comments to
reflect that.
These checks and warnings were added on some recent commit of Emacs.
They're annoying to deal with and the end-user typically can't do much
about them (e.g. old packages), so I suppress them across the board.
That said, there are a few we cannot catch in non-interactive
sessions (where they aren't delayed), and those early warnings don't
respect delayed-warnings-list. This ought to be considered a bug
upstream.
I revisit all our startup optimizations to see how they fair in Emacs
29.x and 30.x. Most of them still hold up. I've revised and updated most
of the accompanying comments to better explain them, given what I know
now compared to when I first wrote them.
Before this, startup optimizations were disabled in debug mode, but more
often than not, this just made it difficult to reproduce some errors at
startup.
One various OSes, Emacs ships with site-lisp files that load
OS/architecture-specific config (like native-comp config), or load-lines
for Emacs packages installed via your OS package manager (like mu4e).
Output from these are rarely suppressed, for some reason, which causes
noise in *Messages* at startup, which triggers a redraw, which can be
very expensive during startup, depending on your window system.
BREAKING CHANGE: This deprecates the IS-(MAC|WINDOWS|LINUX|BSD) family
of global constants in favor of a native `featurep` check:
IS-MAC -> (featurep :system 'macos)
IS-WINDOWS -> (featurep :system 'windows)
IS-LINUX -> (featurep :system 'linux)
IS-BSD -> (featurep :system 'bsd)
The constants will stick around until the v3 release so folks can still
use it -- and there are still some modules that use it, but I'll phase
those uses out gradually.
Fix: #7479
Ensures that lexical contexts are never taken into account, in the case
where Doom's core is loaded in an isolated environment (e.g. the
sandbox). Also improves my startup time by 10%? I'll take it.
Silences some byte-compiler warnings about:
- 'nreverse on constant list' on add-hook! calls.
- inhibit-changing-match-data deprecation warning.
- unescaped quotes in docstring in some doom-*-dir variables.
- Variable non-essential should be quoted (though it isn't referring to
a variable).
- CONTEXT -> CONTEXTS to match argument name.
In later versions of Emacs 29, this variable has been renamed without a
deprecation alias, causing void-variable errors wherever it is used.
Since it could potentially be used outside of Doom, I'll use a variable
alias until we formally drop 28 support (not for a long time).
Close: #7090
Co-authored-by: AdoPi <AdoPi@users.noreply.github.com>
warning-suppress-types' pre-29 documentation suggests that it accepts a
list of symbols, but a recent, upstream correction changes this.
Ref: emacs-mirror/emacs@d5ee49c25c
Amend: 8c442d84b9