This should no longer go into dill, but instead be controlled by drum
directly, since that's where system output gets rendered now (in the
common/default case).
Dill's new %logs endpoint can be used to receive system output as $told
nouns. Dill no longer prints system output itself, leaving the display
of it up to terminal handlers (or the runtime). For now, to maintain the
status quo, drum subscribes to dill %logs, and prints them inline in the
default session.
This modifies the %rake task in %gall, to select what kind of
subscriptions we try to close:
=mode %o: kill old pre-nonce subscriptions
=mode %z: kill old pre-nonce subscriptions, including sub-nonce = 0
=mode %r: kills all stale resubscription flows
It also adds a dry-run option to both tasks (%kroc in ames, %rake in gall)
It's often useful to |merge a desk, but if you're still getting updates
from your sync source, you may get overwritten in the future. In this
case, you want to merge and clear the sync source. With this change,
you can do this with:
```
|install ~ship %desk, =once &
```
anytime a gate prints with a complicated sample or product type it is
frequently extremely long. 3 is probably too low of a cutoff number, but
ideally a future version will have verbosity settings that will help
control this.
some small issues and debugging tools. also puts some more doccords on dprint types.
also adds use the language server pretty printer to print the types of arms
+find-item-in-type and everything it called was pretty bad spaghetti and
it wasn't clear that it was doing this right thing besides that it
passed tests. this refactors most of that functionality into a door that
has the type and search terms as the sample, and should be much easier
to follow.
the remaining functionality related to arm docs ought to be refactored
as well
this makes it so that when an arm matches a search query in
+find-item-in-type, it checks to see if the arm builds a core with an
arm other than %$. if so, a %core item is returned rather than an %arm
item.
the name of the core will then be considered to be the name of the arm
that builds it
since cores can't be given names in v0 doccords, this changes the main
search function in lib/dprint to check if the summary of a core
description matches the search term, along with other appropriate
changes downstream of this.
still to be done: use .name in a %core item for either this summary name
or the name of the arm that built the core, if appropriate
The faliing test was expecting ames to give a %done to %gall
but https://github.com/urbit/urbit/pull/5977, changed that,
so %ames doesnt give %done for %cork acks.