This failed because dict.get('level') returned None with no level
parameter, and the subsequent [0] raised:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File ".../qutebrowser/utils/utils.py", line 624, in wrapper
return func(*args, **kwargs)
File ".../qutebrowser/browser/network/networkmanager.py", line 445, in createRequest
op, req, outgoing_data)
File ".../qutebrowser/browser/network/qutescheme.py", line 107, in createRequest
data = handler(self._win_id, request)
File ".../qutebrowser/browser/network/qutescheme.py", line 189, in qute_log
level = urllib.parse.parse_qs(request.url().query()).get('level')[0]
TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not subscriptable
- Add log.LOG_LEVELS to map names to levels (instead of using
logging._levelToName)
- Test that log pages do not contain messages below the requested level
- Use pythons urllib.parse.parse_qs instead of Qt's UrlQuery
- Document tab, bg, window args for :messages
- Clean up style
This adds a 'level' query parameter to qute://log and qute://plainlog.
For example, qute://log?level=warning will show an html page containing
log entries with severity warning or greater.
If the query is omitted, the original behavior of qute://log is
preserved.
:messages [level] is a command that opens qute://log?level=<level>.
By default, level defaults to 'error' as an easy way to see missed
error messages.
Issue 1413
This happens when the networkmanager is used by something that has no
tab_id, like the generic DownloadManager. In this case, we should just
skip the webview connection (as it makes no sense) instead of crashing
(which is the last thing we want to do).
Issue #1334
The problem was that there were too few slashes. On Linux, absolute
paths start with /, so
file:// + /home
gives file:///home, which is a valid path. On windows however, absolute
paths start with a drive letter, so
file:// + C:/Users
gives file://C:/Users, which is parsed as "host C, path Users", which is
why it could be written as file://c/Users (strip out the empty "port"),
giving us an invalid path.
The solution is to add the third slash in the template, and strip the
redundant slash on unix systems.
Additionally, this fixes a bug where navigating from '/home/' to the
parent directory would give '/home' instead of '/'