Next: Using the With-Editor package [Contents][Index]
The library with-editor
makes it easy to use the Emacsclient as the
$EDITOR
of child processes, making sure they know how to call home.
For remote processes a substitute is provided, which communicates with
Emacs on standard output instead of using a socket as the Emacsclient
does.
This library was written because Magit has to be able to do the above to allow the user to edit commit messages gracefully and to edit rebase sequences, which wouldn’t be possible at all otherwise.
Because other packages can benefit from such functionality, this library is made available as a separate package. It also defines some additional functionality which makes it useful even for end-users, who don’t use Magit or another package which uses it internally.
This manual is for With-Editor version 3.4.1.
Copyright (C) 2015-2024 Jonas Bernoulli <emacs.with-editor@jonas.bernoulli.dev>
You can redistribute this document and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
Next: Using With-Editor as a library, Previous: With-Editor User Manual, Up: With-Editor User Manual [Contents][Index]
The With-Editor
package is used internally by Magit when editing
commit messages and rebase sequences. It also provides some commands
and features which are useful by themselves, even if you don’t use
Magit.
For information about using this library in your own package, see Using With-Editor as a library.
Next: Using With-Editor commands, Up: Using the With-Editor package [Contents][Index]
With-Editor tries very hard to locate a suitable emacsclient
executable, so ideally you should never have to customize the option
with-editor-emacsclient-executable
. When it fails to do so, then the
most likely reason is that someone found yet another way to package
Emacs (most likely on macOS) without putting the executable on $PATH
,
and we have to add another kludge to find it anyway.
The emacsclient
executable used as the editor by child processes of
this Emacs instance. By using this executable, child processes can
call home to their parent process.
This option is automatically set at startup by looking in exec-path
,
and other places where the executable could be installed, to find
the emacsclient
executable most suitable for the current Emacs
instance.
You should not customize this option permanently. If you have to do it, then you should consider that a temporary kludge and inform the Magit maintainer as described in Debugging.
If With-Editor fails to find a suitable emacsclient
on your system,
then this should be fixed for all users at once, by teaching
with-editor-locate-emacsclient
how to do so on your system and
systems like yours. Doing it this way has the advantage, that you
won’t have do it again every time you update Emacs, and that other
users who have installed Emacs the same way as you have, won’t have
to go through the same trouble.
Note that there also is a nuclear option; setting this variable to
nil
causes the "sleeping editor" described below to be used even for
local child processes. Obviously we don’t recommend that you use
this except in "emergencies", i.e., before we had a change to add a
kludge appropriate for your setup.
The function used to set the initial value of the option
with-editor-emacsclient-executable
. There’s a lot of voodoo here.
The emacsclient
cannot be used when using Tramp to run a process on a
remote machine. (Theoretically it could, but that would be hard to
setup, very fragile, and rather insecure).
With-Editor provides an alternative "editor" which can be used by
remote processes in much the same way as local processes use an
emacsclient
executable. This alternative is known as the "sleeping
editor" because it is implemented as a shell script which sleeps until
it receives a signal.
The sleeping editor is a shell script used as the editor of child
processes when the emacsclient
executable cannot be used.
This fallback is used for asynchronous processes started inside the
macro with-editor
, when the process runs on a remote machine or for
local processes when with-editor-emacsclient-executable
is nil
.
Where the latter uses a socket to communicate with Emacs’ server,
this substitute prints edit requests to its standard output on
which a process filter listens for such requests. As such it is
not a complete substitute for a proper emacsclient
, it can only
be used as $EDITOR
of child process of the current Emacs instance.
Some shells do not execute traps immediately when waiting for a child process, but by default we do use such a blocking child process.
If you use such a shell (e.g., csh
on FreeBSD, but not Debian), then
you have to edit this option. You can either replace sh
with bash
(and install that), or you can use the older, less performant
implementation:
"sh -c '\ echo \"WITH-EDITOR: $$ OPEN $0$1 IN $(pwd)\"; \ trap \"exit 0\" USR1; \ trap \"exit 1\" USR2; \ while true; do sleep 1; done'"
Note that the unit separator character () right after the file name ($0) is required.
Also note that using this alternative implementation leads to a
delay of up to a second. The delay can be shortened by replacing
sleep 1
with sleep 0.01
, or if your implementation does not support
floats, then by using nanosleep
instead.
Previous: Configuring With-Editor, Up: Using the With-Editor package [Contents][Index]
This section describes how to use the with-editor
library outside of
Magit. You don’t need to know any of this just to create commits
using Magit.
The commands with-editor-async-shell-command
and
with-editor-shell-command
are intended as drop in replacements for
async-shell-command
and shell-command
. They automatically export
$EDITOR
making sure the executed command uses the current Emacs
instance as "the editor". With a prefix argument these commands
prompt for an alternative environment variable such as $GIT_EDITOR
.
This command is like async-shell-command
, but it runs the shell
command with the current Emacs instance exported as $EDITOR
.
This command is like shell-command
, but if the shell command ends
with &
and is therefore run asynchronously, then the current Emacs
instance is exported as $EDITOR
.
To always use these variants add this to your init file:
(keymap-global-set "<remap> <async-shell-command>" #'with-editor-async-shell-command) (keymap-global-set "<remap> <shell-command>" #'with-editor-shell-command)
Alternatively use the global shell-command-with-editor-mode
.
When this mode is active, then $EDITOR
is exported whenever
ultimately shell-command
is called to asynchronously run some shell
command. This affects most variants of that command, whether they
are defined in Emacs or in some third-party package.
The command with-editor-export-editor
exports $EDITOR
or another
such environment variable in shell-mode
, eshell-mode
, term-mode
and
vterm-mode
buffers. Use this Emacs command before executing a shell
command which needs the editor set, or always arrange for the current
Emacs instance to be used as editor by adding it to the appropriate
mode hooks:
(add-hook 'shell-mode-hook 'with-editor-export-editor) (add-hook 'eshell-mode-hook 'with-editor-export-editor) (add-hook 'term-exec-hook 'with-editor-export-editor) (add-hook 'vterm-mode-hook 'with-editor-export-editor)
Some variants of this function exist; these two forms are equivalent:
(add-hook 'shell-mode-hook (apply-partially 'with-editor-export-editor "GIT_EDITOR")) (add-hook 'shell-mode-hook 'with-editor-export-git-editor)
When invoked in a shell-mode
, eshell-mode
, term-mode
or vterm-mode
buffer, this command teaches shell commands to use the current Emacs
instance as the editor, by exporting $EDITOR
.
This command is like with-editor-export-editor
but exports
$GIT_EDITOR
.
This command is like with-editor-export-editor
but exports
$HG_EDITOR
.
Next: Debugging, Previous: Using the With-Editor package, Up: With-Editor User Manual [Contents][Index]
This section describes how to use the with-editor
library outside of
Magit to teach another package how to have its child processes call
home, just like Magit does. You don’t need to know any of this just
to create commits using Magit. You can also ignore this if you use
with-editor
outside of Magit, but only as an end-user.
For information about interactive use and options that affect both interactive and non-interactive use, see Using the With-Editor package.
This macro arranges for the emacsclient
or the sleeping editor to be
used as the editor of child processes, effectively teaching them to
call home to the current Emacs instance when they require that the
user edits a file.
This is done by establishing a local binding for process-environment
and changing the value of the EDITOR
environment variable in that
scope. This affects all (asynchronous) processes started by forms
(dynamically) inside BODY.
If BODY begins with a literal string, then that variable is set
instead of EDITOR
.
This macro is like with-editor
, except that the ENVVAR argument is
required and that it is evaluated at run-time.
This function is like set-process-filter
but ensures that adding the
new FILTER does not remove the with-editor-process-filter
. This is
done by wrapping the two filter functions using a lambda, which
becomes the actual filter. It calls FILTER first, which may or
may not insert the text into the PROCESS’s buffer. Then it calls
with-editor-process-filter
, passing t
as NO-STANDARD-FILTER.
Next: Function and Command Index, Previous: Using With-Editor as a library, Up: With-Editor User Manual [Contents][Index]
With-Editor tries very hard to locate a suitable emacsclient
executable, and then sets option with-editor-emacsclient-executable
accordingly. In very rare cases this fails. When it does fail, then
the most likely reason is that someone found yet another way to
package Emacs (most likely on macOS) without putting the executable on
$PATH
, and we have to add another kludge to find it anyway.
If you are having problems using with-editor
, e.g., you cannot commit
in Magit, then please open a new issue at
https://github.com/magit/with-editor/issues and provide information
about your Emacs installation. Most importantly how did you install
Emacs and what is the output of M-x with-editor-debug RET
.
Next: Variable Index, Previous: Debugging, Up: With-Editor User Manual [Contents][Index]
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