restic/internal/ui/termstatus/status.go
Alexander Neumann b2208bb9c2 Rework termstatus
This now keeps the cursor at the first column of the first status line
so that messages printed to stdout or stderr by some other part of the
progarm will still be visible. The message will overwrite the status
lines, but those are easily reprinted on the next status update.
2018-05-07 21:40:07 +02:00

324 lines
7 KiB
Go

package termstatus
import (
"bufio"
"bytes"
"context"
"fmt"
"io"
"os"
"strings"
)
// Terminal is used to write messages and display status lines which can be
// updated. When the output is redirected to a file, the status lines are not
// printed.
type Terminal struct {
wr *bufio.Writer
fd uintptr
errWriter io.Writer
buf *bytes.Buffer
msg chan message
status chan status
canUpdateStatus bool
// will be closed when the goroutine which runs Run() terminates, so it'll
// yield a default value immediately
closed chan struct{}
clearCurrentLine func(io.Writer, uintptr)
moveCursorUp func(io.Writer, uintptr, int)
}
type message struct {
line string
err bool
}
type status struct {
lines []string
}
type fder interface {
Fd() uintptr
}
// New returns a new Terminal for wr. A goroutine is started to update the
// terminal. It is terminated when ctx is cancelled. When wr is redirected to
// a file (e.g. via shell output redirection) or is just an io.Writer (not the
// open *os.File for stdout), no status lines are printed. The status lines and
// normal output (via Print/Printf) are written to wr, error messages are
// written to errWriter. If disableStatus is set to true, no status messages
// are printed even if the terminal supports it.
func New(wr io.Writer, errWriter io.Writer, disableStatus bool) *Terminal {
t := &Terminal{
wr: bufio.NewWriter(wr),
errWriter: errWriter,
buf: bytes.NewBuffer(nil),
msg: make(chan message),
status: make(chan status),
closed: make(chan struct{}),
}
if disableStatus {
return t
}
if d, ok := wr.(fder); ok && canUpdateStatus(d.Fd()) {
// only use the fancy status code when we're running on a real terminal.
t.canUpdateStatus = true
t.fd = d.Fd()
t.clearCurrentLine = clearCurrentLine(wr, t.fd)
t.moveCursorUp = moveCursorUp(wr, t.fd)
}
return t
}
// Run updates the screen. It should be run in a separate goroutine. When
// ctx is cancelled, the status lines are cleanly removed.
func (t *Terminal) Run(ctx context.Context) {
defer close(t.closed)
if t.canUpdateStatus {
t.run(ctx)
return
}
t.runWithoutStatus(ctx)
}
type stringWriter interface {
WriteString(string) (int, error)
}
// run listens on the channels and updates the terminal screen.
func (t *Terminal) run(ctx context.Context) {
var status []string
for {
select {
case <-ctx.Done():
if IsProcessBackground() {
// ignore all messages, do nothing, we are in the background process group
continue
}
t.undoStatus(len(status))
return
case msg := <-t.msg:
if IsProcessBackground() {
// ignore all messages, do nothing, we are in the background process group
continue
}
t.clearCurrentLine(t.wr, t.fd)
var dst io.Writer
if msg.err {
dst = t.errWriter
// assume t.wr and t.errWriter are different, so we need to
// flush clearing the current line
err := t.wr.Flush()
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "flush failed: %v\n", err)
}
} else {
dst = t.wr
}
var err error
if w, ok := dst.(stringWriter); ok {
_, err = w.WriteString(msg.line)
} else {
_, err = dst.Write([]byte(msg.line))
}
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "write failed: %v\n", err)
continue
}
t.writeStatus(status)
err = t.wr.Flush()
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "flush failed: %v\n", err)
}
case stat := <-t.status:
if IsProcessBackground() {
// ignore all messages, do nothing, we are in the background process group
continue
}
status = status[:0]
status = append(status, stat.lines...)
t.writeStatus(status)
}
}
}
func (t *Terminal) writeStatus(status []string) {
for _, line := range status {
t.clearCurrentLine(t.wr, t.fd)
_, err := t.wr.WriteString(line)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "write failed: %v\n", err)
}
// flush is needed so that the current line is updated
err = t.wr.Flush()
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "flush failed: %v\n", err)
}
}
if len(status) > 0 {
t.moveCursorUp(t.wr, t.fd, len(status)-1)
}
err := t.wr.Flush()
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "flush failed: %v\n", err)
}
}
// runWithoutStatus listens on the channels and just prints out the messages,
// without status lines.
func (t *Terminal) runWithoutStatus(ctx context.Context) {
for {
select {
case <-ctx.Done():
return
case msg := <-t.msg:
var err error
var flush func() error
var dst io.Writer
if msg.err {
dst = t.errWriter
} else {
dst = t.wr
flush = t.wr.Flush
}
if w, ok := dst.(stringWriter); ok {
_, err = w.WriteString(msg.line)
} else {
_, err = dst.Write([]byte(msg.line))
}
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "write failed: %v\n", err)
}
if flush == nil {
continue
}
err = flush()
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "flush failed: %v\n", err)
}
case _ = <-t.status:
// discard status lines
}
}
}
func (t *Terminal) undoStatus(lines int) {
for i := 0; i < lines; i++ {
t.clearCurrentLine(t.wr, t.fd)
_, err := t.wr.WriteRune('\n')
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "write failed: %v\n", err)
}
// flush is needed so that the current line is updated
err = t.wr.Flush()
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "flush failed: %v\n", err)
}
}
t.moveCursorUp(t.wr, t.fd, lines)
err := t.wr.Flush()
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "flush failed: %v\n", err)
}
}
// Print writes a line to the terminal.
func (t *Terminal) Print(line string) {
// make sure the line ends with a line break
if line[len(line)-1] != '\n' {
line += "\n"
}
select {
case t.msg <- message{line: line}:
case <-t.closed:
}
}
// Printf uses fmt.Sprintf to write a line to the terminal.
func (t *Terminal) Printf(msg string, args ...interface{}) {
s := fmt.Sprintf(msg, args...)
t.Print(s)
}
// Error writes an error to the terminal.
func (t *Terminal) Error(line string) {
// make sure the line ends with a line break
if line[len(line)-1] != '\n' {
line += "\n"
}
select {
case t.msg <- message{line: line, err: true}:
case <-t.closed:
}
}
// Errorf uses fmt.Sprintf to write an error line to the terminal.
func (t *Terminal) Errorf(msg string, args ...interface{}) {
s := fmt.Sprintf(msg, args...)
t.Error(s)
}
// SetStatus updates the status lines.
func (t *Terminal) SetStatus(lines []string) {
if len(lines) == 0 {
return
}
width, _, err := getTermSize(t.fd)
if err != nil || width < 0 {
// use 80 columns by default
width = 80
}
// make sure that all lines have a line break and are not too long
for i, line := range lines {
line = strings.TrimRight(line, "\n")
if len(line) >= width-2 {
line = line[:width-2]
}
line += "\n"
lines[i] = line
}
// make sure the last line does not have a line break
last := len(lines) - 1
lines[last] = strings.TrimRight(lines[last], "\n")
select {
case t.status <- status{lines: lines}:
case <-t.closed:
}
}