This refactors how Doom captures and redirects its output (to stdout and
stderr) into a more general with-output-to! macro, and:
- Simplifies the "print level" system. The various doom-print-*-level
variables have been removed.
- Adds a new print level: notice, which will be the default level for
all standard output (from print!, doom-print, prin[ct1], etc).
- Adds a with-output-to! macro for capturing and redirecting
output to multiple streams (without suppressing it from stdout). It
can also be nested.
- Changes the following about doom-print:
- Default :format changed to nil (was t)
- Default :level changed to t (was `doom-print-level`)
- No longer no-ops if OUTPUT is only whitespace
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: If anyone is using Doom's CLI framework and are
defining their own CLIs with any of the following macros, they'll need
to be updated to their new names:
- defautoload! -> defcli-autoload!
- defgroup! -> defcli-group!
- defstub! -> defcli-stub!
- defalias! -> defcli-alias!
- defobsolete! -> defcli-obsolete!
These were renamed to make their relationship with CLIs more obvious;
they were too ambiguous otherwise.
Writing a debugger for Elisp is too much hassle. `debug` itself isn't
very customizable without a *lot* of boilerplate, so instead of writing
my own, it's more effective to advise debug instead. Certainly, I don't
do anything with it yet, but I will soon.
This allows us to load them via doom-require. Why not use normal
features? Because Doom's libraries are designed to be loaded as part of
Doom, and will openly rely on Doom state if needed; this is a contract I
want to enforce by ensuring their only entry points are through
`doom-require` or autoloading.
I will add them to the rest of the libraries later.
Site-node: this also adds Commentary+Code to the comment headings, as I
want a space to use that space to describe the library, when I get
around to it.
This is a regression from 948f946, where a bunch of mkdir calls were
removed prematurely. In v3, other processes are responsible for creating
these directories, but those haven't been implemented yet.
Fix: #6756
Amend: 948f9461a7
I prefer to be more explicit about these variables' defaults, then to
rely on proper load order and unverified global state to ensure they're
properly set.
This was done to purge superfluous files from Doom's project structure
and simplify its entry points. And with early-init.el now acting as
Doom's universal bootstrapper (see c05e615), we don't have enough
bootstrap logic to warrant being its own file.
Also removes the redundant version check, given doom.el is assured to be
loaded before doom-cli, and performs its own check.
Ref: c05e61536e
doom-etc-dir will be renamed to doom-data-dir, to better reflect its
purpose, and align it with XDG_DATA_HOME (where it will be moved to in
v3, where Doom will begin to obey XDG directory conventions more
closely).
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