Mercurial > vim
view runtime/defaults.vim @ 33947:f4d88db48a63 v9.0.2168
patch 9.0.2168: Moving tabpages on :drop may cause an endless loop
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/df12e39b8b9dd39056e22b452276622cb7b617fd
Author: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Date: Sat Dec 16 13:55:32 2023 +0100
patch 9.0.2168: Moving tabpages on :drop may cause an endless loop
Problem: Moving tabpages on :drop may cause an endless loop
Solution: Disallow moving tabpages on :drop when cleaning up the arglist
first
Moving tabpages during drop command may cause an endless loop
When executing a :tab drop command, Vim will close all windows not in
the argument list. This triggers various autocommands. If a user has
created an 'au Tabenter * :tabmove -' autocommand, this can cause Vim to
end up in an endless loop, when trying to iterate over all tabs (which
would trigger the tabmove autocommand, which will change the tpnext
pointer, etc).
So instead of blocking all autocommands before we actually try to edit
the given file, lets simply disallow to move tabpages around. Otherwise,
we may change the expected number of events triggered during a :drop
command, which users may rely on (there is actually a test, that expects
various TabLeave/TabEnter autocommands) and would therefore be a
backwards incompatible change.
Don't make this an error, as this could trigger several times during the
drop command, but silently ignore the :tabmove command in this case (and
it should in fact finally trigger successfully when loading the given
file in a new tab). So let's just be quiet here instead.
fixes: #13676
closes: #13686
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 16 Dec 2023 14:00:05 +0100 |
parents | 4027cefc2aab |
children |
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" The default vimrc file. " " Maintainer: The Vim Project <https://github.com/vim/vim> " Last change: 2023 Aug 10 " Former Maintainer: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> " " This is loaded if no vimrc file was found. " Except when Vim is run with "-u NONE" or "-C". " Individual settings can be reverted with ":set option&". " Other commands can be reverted as mentioned below. " When started as "evim", evim.vim will already have done these settings. if v:progname =~? "evim" finish endif " Bail out if something that ran earlier, e.g. a system wide vimrc, does not " want Vim to use these default values. if exists('skip_defaults_vim') finish endif " Use Vim settings, rather than Vi settings (much better!). " This must be first, because it changes other options as a side effect. " Avoid side effects when it was already reset. if &compatible set nocompatible endif " When the +eval feature is missing, the set command above will be skipped. " Use a trick to reset compatible only when the +eval feature is missing. silent! while 0 set nocompatible silent! endwhile " Allow backspacing over everything in insert mode. set backspace=indent,eol,start set history=200 " keep 200 lines of command line history set ruler " show the cursor position all the time set showcmd " display incomplete commands set wildmenu " display completion matches in a status line set ttimeout " time out for key codes set ttimeoutlen=100 " wait up to 100ms after Esc for special key " Show @@@ in the last line if it is truncated. set display=truncate " Show a few lines of context around the cursor. Note that this makes the " text scroll if you mouse-click near the start or end of the window. set scrolloff=5 " Do incremental searching when it's possible to timeout. if has('reltime') set incsearch endif " Do not recognize octal numbers for Ctrl-A and Ctrl-X, most users find it " confusing. set nrformats-=octal " For Win32 GUI: remove 't' flag from 'guioptions': no tearoff menu entries. if has('win32') set guioptions-=t endif " Don't use Q for Ex mode, use it for formatting. Except for Select mode. " Revert with ":unmap Q". map Q gq sunmap Q " CTRL-U in insert mode deletes a lot. Use CTRL-G u to first break undo, " so that you can undo CTRL-U after inserting a line break. " Revert with ":iunmap <C-U>". inoremap <C-U> <C-G>u<C-U> " In many terminal emulators the mouse works just fine. By enabling it you " can position the cursor, Visually select and scroll with the mouse. " Only xterm can grab the mouse events when using the shift key, for other " terminals use ":", select text and press Esc. if has('mouse') if &term =~ 'xterm' set mouse=a else set mouse=nvi endif endif " Only do this part when Vim was compiled with the +eval feature. if 1 " Enable file type detection. " Use the default filetype settings, so that mail gets 'tw' set to 72, " 'cindent' is on in C files, etc. " Also load indent files, to automatically do language-dependent indenting. " Revert with ":filetype off". filetype plugin indent on " Put these in an autocmd group, so that you can revert them with: " ":autocmd! vimStartup" augroup vimStartup autocmd! " When editing a file, always jump to the last known cursor position. " Don't do it when the position is invalid, when inside an event handler " (happens when dropping a file on gvim), for a commit or rebase message " (likely a different one than last time), and when using xxd(1) to filter " and edit binary files (it transforms input files back and forth, causing " them to have dual nature, so to speak) autocmd BufReadPost * \ let line = line("'\"") \ | if line >= 1 && line <= line("$") && &filetype !~# 'commit' \ && index(['xxd', 'gitrebase'], &filetype) == -1 \ | execute "normal! g`\"" \ | endif augroup END " Quite a few people accidentally type "q:" instead of ":q" and get confused " by the command line window. Give a hint about how to get out. " If you don't like this you can put this in your vimrc: " ":autocmd! vimHints" augroup vimHints au! autocmd CmdwinEnter * \ echohl Todo | \ echo gettext('You discovered the command-line window! You can close it with ":q".') | \ echohl None augroup END endif " Switch syntax highlighting on when the terminal has colors or when using the " GUI (which always has colors). if &t_Co > 2 || has("gui_running") " Revert with ":syntax off". syntax on " I like highlighting strings inside C comments. " Revert with ":unlet c_comment_strings". let c_comment_strings=1 endif " Convenient command to see the difference between the current buffer and the " file it was loaded from, thus the changes you made. " Only define it when not defined already. " Revert with: ":delcommand DiffOrig". if !exists(":DiffOrig") command DiffOrig vert new | set bt=nofile | r ++edit # | 0d_ | diffthis \ | wincmd p | diffthis endif if has('langmap') && exists('+langremap') " Prevent that the langmap option applies to characters that result from a " mapping. If set (default), this may break plugins (but it's backward " compatible). set nolangremap endif