Commit 1e0ee4087e (completion: add and use
__git_compute_first_level_config_vars_for_section, 2024-02-10) uses an
indirect variable syntax that is only valid for Bash, but the Zsh
completion code relies on the Bash completion code to function. Zsh
supports a different indirect variable expansion using ${(P)var}, but in
`emulate ksh` mode does not support Bash's ${!var}.
This manifests as completing strange config options like
"__git_first_level_config_vars_for_section_remote" as a choice for the
command line
git config set remote.
Using Zsh's C-x ? _complete_debug widget with the cursor at the end of
that command line captures a trace, in which we see (some details
elided):
+__git_complete_config_variable_name:7> __git_compute_first_level_config_vars_for_section remote
+__git_compute_first_level_config_vars_for_section:7> local section=remote
+__git_compute_first_level_config_vars_for_section:7> __git_compute_config_vars
+__git_compute_config_vars:7> test -n $'add.ignoreErrors\nadvice.addEmbeddedRepo\nadvice.addEmptyPathspec\nadvice.addIgnoredFile[…]'
+__git_compute_first_level_config_vars_for_section:7> local this_section=__git_first_level_config_vars_for_section_remote
+__git_compute_first_level_config_vars_for_section:7> test -n __git_first_level_config_vars_for_section_remote
+__git_complete_config_variable_name:7> local this_section=__git_first_level_config_vars_for_section_remote
+__git_complete_config_variable_name:7> __gitcomp_nl_append __git_first_level_config_vars_for_section_remote remote. '' ' '
+__gitcomp_nl_append:7> __gitcomp_nl __git_first_level_config_vars_for_section_remote remote. '' ' '
+__gitcomp_nl:7> emulate -L zsh
+__gitcomp_nl:7> compset -P '*[=:]'
+__gitcomp_nl:7> compadd -Q -S ' ' -p remote. -- __git_first_level_config_vars_for_section_remote
We perform the test for __git_compute_config_vars correctly, but the
${!this_section} references are not expanded as expected.
Instead, portably expand indirect references through the new
__git_indirect. Contrary to some versions you might find online [1],
this version avoids echo non-portabilities [2] [3] and correctly quotes
the indirect expansion after eval (so that the result is not split or
globbed before being handed to printf).
[1]: https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/41409/301073
[2]: https://askubuntu.com/questions/715765/mysterious-behavior-of-echo-command#comment1056038_715769
[3]: https://mywiki.wooledge.org/CatEchoLs
The following demo program demonstrates how this works:
b=1
indirect() {
eval printf '%s' "\"\$$1\""
}
f() {
# Comment this out to see that it works for globals, too. Or, use
# a value with spaces like '2 3 4' to see how it handles those.
local b=2
local a=b
test -n "$(indirect $a)" && echo nice
}
f
When placed in a file "demo", then both
bash -x demo
and
zsh -xc 'emulate ksh -c ". ./demo"' |& tail
provide traces showing that "$(indirect $a)" produces 2 (or 1, with the
global, or "2 3 4" as a single string, etc.).
Signed-off-by: D. Ben Knoble <ben.knoble+github@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Philippe Blain <levraiphilippeblain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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