Do not try to analyze if the current process can write network location
on Windows. There's no way on Windows to tell if we can write a network
location because it's not being controlled by the OS itself. Thus now
the lock symbol is never shown on network locations.
This PR introduces a new unsafe call.
Fixes git repo path contractions in two situations:
1. When path obtained from `PWD` is a logical path but git libraries
return physical paths.
2. When a git repository's subdirectory is symlinked to ouside of the
repository tree.
(1) is fixed by implementing a realpath()-like function, then reparsing
the (possibly logical) `PWD` using realpath() to convert logical
components into physical ones. The physical paths are then matched
against each other.
In the case of (2), the default behavior has been changed by simply
contracting to the home directory, exactly the same as if we are not in
a repo at all. Because determining the correct contraction is not
obvious, we bail out and just pretend we are not in a repo at all.
* Avoid confusing modules with PowerShell paths
* Avoid confusing modules with PowerShell paths
Powershell supports PSDrives (https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/module/microsoft.powershell.management/new-psdrive?view=powershell-7) that allow to create "logical" drives mapped to actual Windows drives.
* Preserve Windows directories
* Preserve logical paths for Powershell
* Fix formating with cargo fmt
* Fix directory_in_root test
Co-authored-by: Jean Gautier <jean.gautier@ssi.gouv.fr>
* Get pathbuf from logical path. (fixes #204)
(also fixes #397)
* fix: Update directory module so that use_logical_path will work properly
* Remove test directory::use_logical_and_physical_paths
* Fix merge errors
Co-authored-by: Matan Kushner <hello@matchai.me>
A couple of optimizations are done in this PR. One, we now will check config ahead of time to see if a module is disabled before running any module code. Also, we won't try to discover a git repository unless the module requests access to it.
Prior to this change, starship would use inconsistent slashes when displaying the working directory. With this change, starship uses Unix-style slashes on all platforms. This is consistent with the Git Bash and Cygwin prompts on Windows.
• Add support for the disabled configuration option
This will allow you to selectively disable modules that you don't want or need. 😄
• Overwrite starship configuration file path with STARSHIP_CONFIG environment variable
• Write tests for the two configuration options that are available
- Create `Config` struct that is added to `Context` when initialized
- Read `~/.confg/starship.toml` during initialization (can be updated later to also look at `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME`)
- `Context` now has a method for creating modules. This allows us to provide modules with a reference to the configuration specific to that module
### Changed
- Added current_dir param to segments to make them more testable
- Moved all existing integration tests to a `tests/` dir
### Added
- A whole bunch of new integration tests