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).
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
Fixes an edge case where --profile, --doomdir, --emacsdir, and --debug
were ignored if used in a nested bin/doom call. Now possible thanks to
49d3f1e.
Ref: 49d3f1e96c
- Fixes Doom's former inability to (trivially) juggle multiple profiles
based on the same EMACSDIR (see #6593).
- Adds '--profile NAME' switch to bin/doom (also recognized
$DOOMPROFILE).
- Adds new doom-profile* variables. These will eventually replace
doom-{local,etc,cache}-dir and doom-{autoloads,env}-file.
This is intentionally messy to ensure backwards compatibility for a
little while longer. This will be fixed over the next couple weeks.
Ref: #6593
The global options (like --debug and --pager) weren't recognized for
pseudo command like :help and :version (in particular, rendering --pager
ineffective).
Fix: #6526
--pager incorrectly expected a boolean argument, when it should accept
any arbitrary pager command (set to a blank string to disable the
pager).
Ref: #6526
doom-debug-p and doom-interactive-p have always been intentionally
redundant, because changing the variables they replaced had other
side-effects, which made writing tests for them difficult. Since our
new (yet unpublished) tests lean heavily toward integration testing more
than unit testing, this becomes an implementation detail.
And doom-init-p's only use was refactor out at some point in the past,
so it's no longer used.
Also done to reduce Doom's footprint, in general.
I've removed these CLI properties because they were either
unused (:deprecated and :since) or poorly implemented (:stub and
:obsolete). And I'd rather have fewer magical properties, and instead
delegate these roles to the defobsolete! and (new) defstub! macros.
Also, in the future, the help API will ascertain :since dynamically, so
it won't be very useful.
In summary:
- Use defstub! instead of :stub
- Use defobsolete! instead of :obsolete or :deprecated
- This removes the doom-cli-deprecated-error type (it's not really an
error to begin with).
- Removes :stub, :obsolete, :deprecated, and :since
This killed the script prematurely (without displaying the error) if
Emacs failed to execute. In versions prior to bash 4, set -e would not
terminate the script if a non-zero exit code occurred within a subshell,
but it will in bash 4+.
In any case, we don't need this fallback to begin with. The script
handles its errors sufficiently otherwise.
I had missed the fact that -Q implies not only
--no-site-file (intended), but --no-site-lisp (unintended). Without the
latter, no site-lisp directory is left in load-path, and any attempt to
load it after-the-fact (which I do in core-cli.el) will fail. Thanks to
@yamanq for noticing this!
Fix: #6473Fix: #4198
Co-authored-by: Yaman Qalieh <yamanq@users.noreply.github.com>
$DOOMDIR/init.el had to be loaded earlier, so we could read the active
module list. This indirectly fixes an issue where users' literate
configs weren't being tangled on 'doom sync'.
Fix: #6479
This fixes an issue where, on some systems, `tput cols lines` does not
produce "N\nM" (where N = number of columns in the terminal and M =
number of lines), and instead produces "N\n", causing parsing errors.
If no EMACSDIR is given, assume ../ is the Emacs config we want to
operate out of, taking after bin/doom.
And use bash. This script was designed for the convenience of other
scripters on unix systems, so it can afford a small hit to portability.
- An improper autoload was preventing 'doom clean' from being
recognized.
- 'doom compile' hadn't been updated to reflect changes introduced
recently in 1402db5.
Amend: 6c0b7e1530
Ref: 1402db5129
Meant as a simple elisp interpreter with Doom's CLI framework preloaded.
Can be used as a shebang line:
#!/usr/bin/env doomscript
(princ "hello world!")
This isn't used for bin/doom because it requires doomscript be in your
$PATH, and any attempt to resolve its location in bin/doom's shebang
line would reduce its portability. Neither of these should be an issue
for the type of user who'd find this useful.
BREAKING CHANGE: this changes Doom's CLI framework in subtle ways, which
is listed in greater detail below. If you've never extended Doom's CLI,
then this won't affect you, but otherwise it'd be recommended you read
on below.
This commit focuses on the CLI framework itself and backports some
foundational changes to its DSL and how it resolves command line
arguments to CLIs, validates input, displays documentation, and persists
state across sessions -- and more. This is done in preparation for the
final stretch towarding completing the CLI rewrite (see #4273).
This is also an effort to generalize Doom's CLI (both its framework and
bin/doom), to increase it versatility and make it a viable dev tool for
other Doom projects (on our Github org) and beyond.
However, there is a *lot* to cover so I'll try to be brief:
- Refactor: generalize Doom's CLI framework by moving all bin/doom
specific configuration/commands out of core-cli into bin/doom. This
makes it easier to use bin/doom as a project-agnostic development
tool (or for users to write their own).
- Refactor: change the namespace for CLI variables/functions from
doom-cli-X to doom-X.
- Fix: subcommands being mistaken as arguments. "doom make index" will
resolve to (defcli! (doom make index)) if it exists,
otherwise (defcli! (doom make)) with "index" as an argument. Before
this, it would resolve to the latter no matter what. &rest can
override this; with (defcli! (doom make) (&rest args)), (defcli! (doom
make index)) will never be invoked.
- Refactor!: redesign our output library (was core/autoload/output.el,
is now core/autoload/print.el), and how our CLI framework buffers and
logs output, and now merges logs across (exit! ...) restarts.
- Feat: add support for :before and :after pseudo commands. E.g.
(defcli! (:before doom help) () ...)
(defcli! (:after doom sync) () ...)
Caveat: unlike advice, only one of each can be defined per-command.
- Feat: option arguments now have rudimentary type validation (see
`doom-cli-option-arg-types`). E.g.
(defcli! (doom foo) ((foo ("--foo" num))) ...)
If NUM is not a numeric, it will throw a validation error.
Any type that isn't in `doom-cli-option-arg-types` will be treated as a
wildcard string type. `num` can also be replaced with a specification,
e.g. "HOST[:PORT]", and can be formatted by using symbol quotes:
"`HOST'[:`PORT']".
- Feat: it is no longer required that options *immediately* follow the command
that defines them (but it must be somewhere after it, not before). E.g.
With:
(defcli! (:before doom foo) ((foo ("--foo"))) ...)
(defcli! (doom foo baz) () ...)
Before:
FAIL: doom --foo foo baz
GOOD: doom foo --foo baz
FAIL: doom foo baz --foo
After:
FAIL: doom --foo foo baz
GOOD: doom foo --foo baz
GOOD: doom foo baz --foo
- Refactor: CLI session state is now kept in a doom-cli-context struct (which
can be bound to a CLI-local variable with &context in the arglist):
(defcli! (doom sync) (&context context)
(print! "Command: " (doom-cli-context-command context)))
These contexts are persisted across sessions (when restarted). This is
necessary to support seamless script restarting (i.e. execve
emulation) in post-3.0.
- Feat: Doom's CLI framework now understands "--". Everything after it will be
treated as regular arguments, instead of sub-commands or options.
- Refactor!: the semantics of &rest for CLIs has changed. It used to be "all
extra literal, non-option arguments". It now means *all* unprocessed
arguments, and its use will suppress "unrecognized option" errors, and
tells the framework not to process any further subcommands. Use &args
if you just want "all literal arguments following this command".
- Feat: add new auxiliary keywords for CLI arglists: &context, &multiple,
&flags, &args, &stdin, &whole, and &cli.
- &context SYM: binds the currently running context to SYM (a
`doom-cli-context` struct). Helpful for introspection or passing
along state when calling subcommands by hand (with `call!`).
- &stdin SYM: SYM will be bound to a string containing any input piped
into the running script, or nil if none. Use
`doom-cli-context-pipe-p` to detect whether the script has been
piped into or out of.
- &multiple OPTIONS...: allows all following OPTIONS to be repeated. E.g. "foo
-x a -x b -x c" will pass (list ("-x" . "a") ("-x" . "b") ("-x" .
"c")) as -x's value.
- &flags OPTIONS...: All options after "&flags" get an implicit --no-* switch
and cannot accept arguments. Will be set to :yes or :no depending on which flag is
provided, and nil if the flag isn't provided. Otherwise, a default
value can be specified in that options' arglist. E.g.
(defcli! (doom foo) (&flags (foo ("--foo" :no))) ...)
When called, this command sets FOO to :yes if --foo, :no if --no-foo, and
defaults to :no otherwise.
- &args SYM: this replaces what &rest used to be; it binds to SYM a
list of all unprocessed (non-option) arguments.
- &rest SYM: now binds SYM to a list of all unprocessed arguments, including
options. This also suppresses "unrecognized option" errors, but will render
any sub-commands inaccessible. E.g.
(defcli! (doom make) (&rest rest) ...)
;; These are now inaccessible!
(defcli! (doom make foo) (&rest rest) ...)
(defcli! (doom make bar) (&rest rest) ...)
- &cli SYM: binds SYM to the currently running `doom-cli` struct. Can also be
obtained via `(doom-cli-get (doom-cli-context-command context))`. Possibly
useful for introspection.
- feat: add defobsolete! macro for quickly defining obsolete commands.
- feat: add defalias! macro for quickly defining alias commands.
- feat: add defautoload! macro for defining an autoloaded command (won't
be loaded until it is called for).
- refactor!: rename defcligroup! to defgroup! for consistency.
- fix: CLIs will now recursively inherit plist properties from parent
defcli-group!'s (but will stack :prefix).
- refactor!: remove obsolete 'doom update':
- refactor!: further generalize 'doom ci'
- In an effort to generalize 'doom ci' (so other Doom--or
non-doom--projects can use it), all its subcommands have been
changed to operate on the current working directory's repo instead
of $EMACSDIR.
- Doom-specific CI configuration was moved to .github/ci.el.
- All 'doom ci' commands will now preload one of \$CURRENT_REPO_ROOT/ci.el or
\$DOOMDIR/ci.el before executing.
- refactor!: changed 'doom env'
- 'doom env {-c,--clear}' is now 'doom env {clear,c}'
- -r/--reject and -a/--allow may now be specified multiple times
- refactor!: rewrote CLI help framework and error handling to be more
sophisticated and detailed.
- feat: can now initiate $PAGER on output with (exit! :pager) (or use
:pager? to only invoke pager is output is longer than the terminal is
tall).
- refactor!: changed semantics+conventions for global bin/doom options
- Single-character global options are now uppercased, to distinguish them from
local options:
- -d (for debug mode) is now -D
- -y (to suppress prompts) is now -!
- -l (to load elisp) is now -L
- -h (short for --help) is now -?
- Replace --yes/-y switches with --force/-!
- -L/--load FILE: now silently ignores file errors.
- Add --strict-load FILE: does the same as -L/--load, but throws an error if
FILE does not exist/is unreadable.
- Add -E/--eval FORM: evaluates arbitrary lisp before commands are processed.
- -L/--load, --strict-load, and -E/--eval can now be used multiple times in
one command.
- Add --pager COMMAND to specify an explicit pager. Will also obey
$DOOMPAGER envvar. Does not obey $PAGER.
- Fix#3746: which was likely caused by the generated post-script overwriting
the old mid-execution. By salting the postscript filenames (with both an
overarching session ID and a step counter).
- Docs: document websites, environment variables, and exit codes in
'doom --help'
- Feat: add imenu support for def{cli,alias,obsolete}!
Ref: #4273Fix: #3746Fix: #3844
When launching Doom via 'doom run', the child process inherits
bin/doom's environment. This change restricts this sub-environment to
the intended target: straight and its use of git.
Fix: #6320
So they don't interfere with straight in odd, unpredictable ways. If
you *really* know what you're doing, set DOOMGITCONFIG to the path of a
gitconfig file. This envvar may be renamed in the future, however.
Close: #5640
Co-authored-by: M. Yas. Davoodeh <Davoodeh@users.noreply.github.com>
The current string presented breaks the address on how to upgrade Emacs:
```
❯ doom install
Detected Emacs 26.3 (at emacs).
Doom only supports Emacs 27.1 and newer. A guide to install a newer version
of Emacs can be found at:
https://doomemacs.org/docs/getting_started.org#on-linuxAborting...
```
Just adding a `\n` at the end of the string would solve it.
Emacs 27.x has been the stable version of Emacs for nearly a year, and
introduces a litany of bugfixes, performance, and quality-of-life
improvements that significantly reduce Doom's maintenance burden (like
XDG support, early-init.el, image manipulation without imagemagick, a
native JSON library, harfbuzz support, pdumper, and others).
With so many big changes on Doom's horizon, I like having one less (big)
thing to worry about.
Also reverts bb677cf7a (#5232) as it is no longer needed.
More in line with Emacs' built-in practice of storing a variable's
standard-value in a symbol property of the same name, with the added
benefit of less global state.
org-capture foo bar baz
will fail with:
org/capture: line 33: [: too many arguments
Adding quotes to the expansion of $str will ensure that test -z has
only one argument.