newest_slice is no longer needed after the completion refactor. Now that
history is based on the SQL backend, LIMIT is used instead.
StatusBar._option is not used, though I'm not sure why vulture only caught it
now.
The new function-based completion API introduced a circular import:
config -> keyconf -> miscmodels -> config.
config only depended on keyconf so it could initialize it as part of
config.init. This can be resolved by moving this to keyconf.init and
initializing keyconf as part of app.init.
test_history.test_init also leaked state by leaving the instantiated history as
the parent of the QApp, which was causing test_debug to fail because it was
trying to dump the history object left from test_history.
test_selectors and test_get_all_objects were running fine on my machine, but
for some reason is failing with "Driver not loaded" on Travis. Let's try
initializing SQL and see what happens.
Change the logging to report the completion function name and have the end2end
tests check for this.
Remove the tests for realtime completion, as it was decided this is not an
important feature and the code is much simpler without it.
This just forwards canFetchMore and fetchMore to the underlying tables.
It seems to be returning True and fetching in some cases (with a large
history), so I guess it is useful?
Instead of returning a regular tuple and trying to remember which index maps to
which field, return named tuples that allow accessing the fields by name.
Allow categories to specify a WHERE clause that applies in addition to the
pattern filter. This allows the url completion model to filter out redirect
entries.
This also fixed the usage of ESCAPE so it applies to all the LIKE statements.
A SQL completion category can now provide a customized column expression for
the select statement. This enables the url model to format timestamps, as well
as rearrange the name and url in the quickmark section.
This allows setting the query as a QSqlQuery instead of a string, which allows:
- Escaping quotes
- Using LIMIT (needed for history-max-items)
- Using ORDER BY (needed for sorting history)
- SELECTing columns (needed for quickmark completion)
- Creating a custom select (needed for history timestamp formatting)
From @TheCompiler:
To expand on this: I think it's fine to use KeyError on a lower level, i.e.
with the SqlTable object with a dict-like interface. However, on this higher
level, I think it makes sense to re-raise them as more specific exceptions.
- Adjust _check_completions to work for CompletionModel and SqlCompletionModel
- Move sql initialization into a reusable fixture
- Remove the bookmark/quickmark/history stubs, as they're now handled by sql
- Disable quickmark/bookmark model tests until their completion is ported to
sql.
- Disable urlmodel tests for features that have to be implemented in SQL:
- LIMIT (for history-max-items)
- Configurable column order (for quickmarks)
- Configurable formatting (for timestamp-format
SQL is included in the Archlinux pyqt5 package, but not in Debian.
We need this so the debian-based CI builds will pass with the new
sql-based completion implementation.
For URL completion, time-based sorting is handled by the SQL model.
All the other models use simple alphabetical sorting. This allowed cleaning up
some logic in the sortfilter, removing DUMB_SORT, and removing the
completion.Role.sort.
This also removes the userdata completion field as it was only used in url
completion and is no longer necessary with the SQL model.
Store quickmarks and bookmarks in an in-memory sql database instead of a
python dict. Long-term storage is not affected, bookmarks and
quickmarks are still persisted in a text file.
The added and deleted signals were removed, as once sql completion
models are used the models will no longer need to update themselves.
This will set the stage for SQL-based history completion.
See #1765.
The browser-wide in-memory web history is now stored in an in-memory sql
database instead of a python dict. Long-term storage is not affected, it
is still persisted in a text file of the same format.
This will set the stage for SQL-based history completion.
See #1765.
When qutebrowser starts, it creates an in-memory sqlite database. One
can instantiate a SqlTable to create a new table in the database. The
object provides an interface to query and modify the table.
This intended to serve as the base class for the quickmark, bookmark,
and history manager objects in objreg. Instead of reading their data
into an in-memory dict, they will read into an in-memory sql table.
Eventually the completion models for history, bookmarks, and quickmarks
can be replaced with SqlQuery models for faster creation and filtering.
See #1765.
The new completion API no longer needs either of these. Instead of
referencing an enum member, cmdutils.argument.completion now points to
a function that returnsthe desired completion model.
This vastly simplifies the addition of new completion types. Previously
it was necessary to define the new model as well as editing usertypes
and completion.models.instances. Now it is only necessary to define a
single function under completion.models.
This is the next step of Completion Model/View Revamping (#74).
There was a circular import from
config -> keyconf -> miscmodels -> config.
This is resolved by scoping config's keyconf import to the one function
that uses it.
First step of Completion Model/View revamping (#74). Rewrite the
completion models as functions that each return an instance of a
CompletionModel class.
Caching is removed from all models except the UrlModel. Models other
than the UrlModel can be generated very quickly so caching just adds
needless complexity and can lead to incorrect results if one forgets to
wire up a signal.