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$SHELL is invalid in Vim when run via git commit
#498
Comments
I guess that we should keep saying "yes" when |
I traced this down a bit. It seems that when vim is started by Git, as in As for whether |
git commit
This is most likely due to MSys2's runtime converting the For the record: this issue has been mentioned before (BTW thank you for providing precise and correct title and description in this ticket, I really appreciate this). I have a hunch that the best place to patch would be https://github.com/git-for-windows/msys2-runtime/blob/e87aaa7d59deb2f4e5bff9cb114a0c45d1ae1a5e/winsup/cygwin/environ.cc#L317-L333 To test this hypothesis, you might find https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/wiki/Building-msys2-runtime to be a useful resource. |
We added the following to
Unfortunately, the issue persists. To verify that we were indeed compiling and moving the correct library into place, we removed the conversion for Perhaps there's something special about |
Oh wow. I guess it must be, but I cannot find any verbatim mention of the term |
Here's an interesting discovery: from the SDK shell, |
Well, I was curious and replicated your findings. This is what I got when I typed
in Git for Windows, and in the SDK:
This leads me to believe that it happens to work if Git is installed into a path that does not contain spaces, and fails otherwise. To test this hypothesis, I called SHELL=/c/PROGRA~1/Git/usr/bin/bash git commit in Git for Windows and all of a sudden,
This leads me more and more to the conclusion that |
And indeed, a simple test in a Linux VM proves my hypothesis: vim interprets $ mkdir with\ spaces
$ ln -s $(which bash) with\ spaces/
$ SHELL=$(pwd)/with\ spaces/bash vi and then executing
When substituting |
Great find! We've opened an issue with vim. |
Better to provide a patch. |
In reading the vim documentation for
What I'm not sure of is whether I tried to set my login shell to a shell containing spaces, but I'm not sure where this leaves us. It doesn't seem like a patch to vim would be well received, and I'm not certain escaping the |
A hacky work-around would be to set Not sure I like that as a permanent "solution", though. |
Well, the more I think about it, the more I am convinced that we have to find out where |
This could be troublesome on 64bit systems because |
@rimrul oh, I was thinking about Having said that, in the meantime I came to the conclusion that we need to find the gateway that is responsible for transforming the |
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
Not sure if the above commits that reference this have fixed it, but as the ticket's open I thought I'd include a better workaround (that doesn't depend on program files and so will always work on x64): You can just put
in your .vimrc (you don't need to include program files). |
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
When calling a non-MSys2 binary, all of the environment is converted from POSIX to Win32, including the SHELL environment variable. In Git for Windows, for example, `SHELL=/usr/bin/bash` is converted to `SHELL=C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe` when calling the `git.exe` binary. This is appropriate because non-MSys2 binaries would not handle POSIX paths correctly. Under certain circumstances, however, `git.exe` calls an *MSys2* binary in turn, such as `git config --edit` calling `vim.exe` unless Git is configured to use another editor specifically. Now, when this "improved vi" calls shell commands, it uses that $SHELL variable *without quoting*, resulting in a nasty error: C:\Program: No such file or directory Many other programs behave in the same manner, assuming that $SHELL does not contain spaces and hence needs no quoting, unfortunately including some of Git's own scripts. Therefore let's make sure that $SHELL gets "posified" again when entering MSys2 programs. Earlier attempts by Git for Windows contributors claimed that adding `SHELL` to the `conv_envvars` array does not have the intended effect. These reports just missed that the `conv_start_chars` array (which makes the code more performant) needs to be adjusted, too. Note that we set the `immediate` flag to `true` so that the environment variable is set immediately by the MSys2 runtime, i.e. not only spawned processes will see the POSIX-ified `SHELL` variable, but the MSys2 runtime *itself*, too. This fixes git-for-windows/git#542, git-for-windows/git#498, and git-for-windows/git#468. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <[email protected]>
Any vimscripts that use
has("unix")
orhas("win32")
etc will incorrectly detect that the Vim bundled with this project is not running Windows.This code in particular for the Syntastic plugin is causing issues for me: https://github.com/scrooloose/syntastic/blob/50d0315835047c35a1f6f6edf214e612d6eae3dd/autoload/syntastic/util.vim#L11-L13
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