2007-06-29 04:33:14 +00:00
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<?php
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2014-06-01 17:50:34 +00:00
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/**
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* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
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* (at your option) any later version.
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*
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* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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* GNU General Public License for more details.
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*
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* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
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* with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
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* 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
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* http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html
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*/
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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use KzykHys\Pygments\Pygments;
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2007-06-29 04:33:14 +00:00
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class SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi {
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2008-01-11 09:05:18 +00:00
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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/** @var const The maximum number of lines that may be selected for highlighting. **/
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const HIGHLIGHT_MAX_LINES = 1000;
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/** @var const Maximum input size for the highlighter (100 kB). **/
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const HIGHLIGHT_MAX_BYTES = 102400;
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/** @var const CSS class for syntax-highlighted code. **/
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const HIGHLIGHT_CSS_CLASS = 'mw-highlight';
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2015-06-23 15:54:19 +00:00
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/** @var const Cache version. Increment whenever the HTML changes. */
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const CACHE_VERSION = 1;
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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/** @var array Mapping of MIME-types to lexer names. **/
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private static $mimeLexers = array(
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'text/javascript' => 'javascript',
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'application/json' => 'javascript',
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'text/xml' => 'xml',
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);
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2007-06-29 04:33:14 +00:00
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2015-06-20 01:04:36 +00:00
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public static function onSetup() {
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global $wgPygmentizePath;
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// If $wgPygmentizePath is unset, use the bundled copy.
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if ( $wgPygmentizePath === false ) {
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$wgPygmentizePath = __DIR__ . '/pygments/pygmentize';
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}
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2015-06-25 22:46:22 +00:00
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if ( file_exists( __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php' ) ) {
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require_once __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';
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}
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2015-06-20 01:04:36 +00:00
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}
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2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
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/**
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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* Get the Pygments lexer name for a particular language.
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*
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* @param string $lang Language name.
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* @return string|null Lexer name, or null if no matching lexer.
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2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
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*/
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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private static function getLexer( $lang ) {
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static $lexers = null;
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2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
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if ( $lang === null ) {
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return null;
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}
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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if ( !$lexers ) {
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$lexers = require __DIR__ . '/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi.lexers.php';
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2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
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}
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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$lexer = strtolower( $lang );
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if ( in_array( $lexer, $lexers ) ) {
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return $lexer;
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2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
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}
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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2015-06-22 20:29:54 +00:00
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// Check if this is a GeSHi lexer name for which there exists
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// a compatible Pygments lexer with a different name.
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if ( isset( GeSHi::$compatibleLexers[$lexer] ) ) {
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$lexer = GeSHi::$compatibleLexers[$lexer];
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if ( in_array( $lexer, $lexers ) ) {
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return $lexer;
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}
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}
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|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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return null;
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2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
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}
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/**
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* Register parser hook
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*
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* @param $parser Parser
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* @return bool
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*/
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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public static function onParserFirstCallInit( Parser &$parser ) {
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foreach ( array( 'source', 'syntaxhighlight' ) as $tag ) {
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$parser->setHook( $tag, array( 'SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi', 'parserHook' ) );
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}
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2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
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}
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2007-06-29 04:33:14 +00:00
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/**
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* Parser hook
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*
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* @param string $text
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* @param array $args
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* @param Parser $parser
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* @return string
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*/
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public static function parserHook( $text, $args = array(), $parser ) {
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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global $wgUseTidy;
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2008-07-11 18:12:48 +00:00
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// Don't trim leading spaces away, just the linefeeds
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Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
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$out = preg_replace( '/^\n+/', '', rtrim( $text ) );
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2011-09-16 17:52:28 +00:00
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2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
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// Convert deprecated attributes
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if ( isset( $args['enclose'] ) ) {
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if ( $args['enclose'] === 'none' ) {
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$args['inline'] = true;
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}
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unset( $args['enclose'] );
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}
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2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
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$lexer = isset( $args['lang'] ) ? $args['lang'] : '';
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
$result = self::highlight( $out, $lexer, $args );
|
|
|
|
if ( !$result->isGood() ) {
|
|
|
|
$parser->addTrackingCategory( 'syntaxhighlight-error-category' );
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
$out = $result->getValue();
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// HTML Tidy will convert tabs to spaces incorrectly (bug 30930).
|
|
|
|
// But the conversion from tab to space occurs while reading the input,
|
|
|
|
// before the conversion from 	 to tab, so we can armor it that way.
|
|
|
|
if ( $wgUseTidy ) {
|
|
|
|
$out = str_replace( "\t", '	', $out );
|
2007-06-29 04:33:14 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
|
|
|
// Allow certain HTML attributes
|
|
|
|
$htmlAttribs = Sanitizer::validateAttributes( $args, array( 'style', 'class', 'id', 'dir' ) );
|
|
|
|
if ( !isset( $htmlAttribs['class'] ) ) {
|
|
|
|
$htmlAttribs['class'] = self::HIGHLIGHT_CSS_CLASS;
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
$htmlAttribs['class'] .= ' ' . self::HIGHLIGHT_CSS_CLASS;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if ( !( isset( $htmlAttribs['dir'] ) && $htmlAttribs['dir'] === 'rtl' ) ) {
|
|
|
|
$htmlAttribs['dir'] = 'ltr';
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if ( isset( $args['inline'] ) ) {
|
|
|
|
// Enforce inlineness. Stray newlines may result in unexpected list and paragraph processing
|
|
|
|
// (also known as doBlockLevels()).
|
|
|
|
$out = str_replace( "\n", ' ', $out );
|
|
|
|
$out = Html::rawElement( 'code', $htmlAttribs, $out );
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
// Not entirely sure what benefit this provides, but it was here already
|
|
|
|
$htmlAttribs['class'] .= ' ' . 'mw-content-' . $htmlAttribs['dir'];
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Unwrap Pygments output to provide our own wrapper. We can't just always use the 'nowrap'
|
|
|
|
// option (pass 'inline'), since it disables other useful things like line highlighting.
|
2015-07-07 21:06:08 +00:00
|
|
|
// Tolerate absence of quotes for Html::element() and wgWellFormedXml=false.
|
2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
|
|
|
$m = array();
|
2015-07-07 21:06:08 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( preg_match( '/^<div class="?mw-highlight"?>(.*)<\/div>$/s', trim( $out ), $m ) ) {
|
2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
|
|
|
$out = trim( $m[1] );
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
throw new MWException( 'Unexpected output from Pygments encountered' );
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Use 'nowiki' strip marker to prevent list processing (also known as doBlockLevels()).
|
|
|
|
// However, leave the wrapping <div/> outside to prevent <p/>-wrapping.
|
|
|
|
$marker = $parser::MARKER_PREFIX . '-syntaxhighlightinner-' .
|
|
|
|
sprintf( '%08X', $parser->mMarkerIndex++ ) . $parser::MARKER_SUFFIX;
|
|
|
|
$parser->mStripState->addNoWiki( $marker, $out );
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$out = Html::openElement( 'div', $htmlAttribs ) .
|
|
|
|
$marker .
|
|
|
|
Html::closeElement( 'div' );
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
// Register CSS
|
|
|
|
$parser->getOutput()->addModuleStyles( 'ext.pygments' );
|
|
|
|
|
2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
|
|
|
return $out;
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
|
|
* Highlight a code-block using a particular lexer.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* @param string $code Code to highlight.
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
* @param string|null $lang Language name, or null to use plain markup.
|
2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
|
|
|
* @param array $args Associative array of additional arguments.
|
|
|
|
* If it contains a 'line' key, the output will include line numbers.
|
|
|
|
* If it includes a 'highlight' key, the value will be parsed as a
|
|
|
|
* comma-separated list of lines and line-ranges to highlight.
|
|
|
|
* If it contains a 'start' key, the value will be used as the line at which to
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
* start highlighting.
|
2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
|
|
|
* If it contains a 'inline' key, the output will not be wrapped in `<div><pre/></div>`.
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
* @return Status Status object, with HTML representing the highlighted
|
|
|
|
* code as its value.
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
protected static function highlight( $code, $lang = null, $args = array() ) {
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
global $wgPygmentizePath;
|
|
|
|
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
$status = new Status;
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$lexer = self::getLexer( $lang );
|
|
|
|
if ( $lexer === null && $lang !== null ) {
|
|
|
|
$status->warning( 'syntaxhighlight-error-unknown-language', $lang );
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$length = strlen( $code );
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( strlen( $code ) > self::HIGHLIGHT_MAX_BYTES ) {
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
$status->warning( 'syntaxhighlight-error-exceeds-size-limit',
|
|
|
|
$length, self::HIGHLIGHT_MAX_BYTES );
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$lexer = null;
|
2009-06-24 05:25:32 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2015-06-22 23:19:25 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( wfShellExecDisabled() !== false ) {
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
$status->warning( 'syntaxhighlight-error-pygments-invocation-failure' );
|
2015-06-22 23:19:25 +00:00
|
|
|
wfWarn(
|
|
|
|
'MediaWiki determined that it cannot invoke Pygments. ' .
|
|
|
|
'As a result, SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi will not perform any syntax highlighting. ' .
|
|
|
|
'See the debug log for details: ' .
|
|
|
|
'https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:$wgDebugLogFile'
|
|
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
$lexer = null;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
|
|
|
$inline = isset( $args['inline'] );
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if ( $lexer === null ) {
|
|
|
|
if ( $inline ) {
|
2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
|
|
|
$status->value = htmlspecialchars( trim( $code ), ENT_NOQUOTES );
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
$pre = Html::element( 'pre', array(), $code );
|
2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
|
|
|
$status->value = Html::rawElement( 'div', array( 'class' => self::HIGHLIGHT_CSS_CLASS ), $pre );
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
return $status;
|
2009-06-24 05:25:32 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2008-09-28 15:30:45 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$options = array(
|
|
|
|
'cssclass' => self::HIGHLIGHT_CSS_CLASS,
|
|
|
|
'encoding' => 'utf-8',
|
|
|
|
);
|
2008-09-28 15:30:45 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2008-07-11 18:12:48 +00:00
|
|
|
// Line numbers
|
2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( isset( $args['line'] ) ) {
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$options['linenos'] = 'inline';
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if ( $lexer === 'php' && strpos( $code, '<?php' ) === false ) {
|
|
|
|
$options['startinline'] = 1;
|
2007-06-29 04:33:14 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Highlight specific lines
|
2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( isset( $args['highlight'] ) ) {
|
2008-07-10 20:55:02 +00:00
|
|
|
$lines = self::parseHighlightLines( $args['highlight'] );
|
2011-12-02 17:00:19 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( count( $lines ) ) {
|
2015-06-23 13:49:16 +00:00
|
|
|
$options['hl_lines'] = implode( ' ', $lines );
|
2010-08-09 06:56:38 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2008-07-10 12:45:20 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2007-06-29 04:33:14 +00:00
|
|
|
// Starting line number
|
2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( isset( $args['start'] ) ) {
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$options['linenostart'] = $args['start'];
|
2010-08-09 06:56:38 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2011-11-20 18:07:20 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( $inline ) {
|
|
|
|
$options['nowrap'] = 1;
|
|
|
|
}
|
2011-02-10 01:59:14 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$cache = wfGetMainCache();
|
2015-06-23 15:54:19 +00:00
|
|
|
$cacheKey = self::makeCacheKey( $code, $lexer, $options );
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$output = $cache->get( $cacheKey );
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if ( $output === false ) {
|
2015-06-25 01:11:54 +00:00
|
|
|
try {
|
|
|
|
$pygments = new Pygments( $wgPygmentizePath );
|
|
|
|
$output = $pygments->highlight( $code, $lexer, 'html', $options );
|
|
|
|
} catch ( RuntimeException $e ) {
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
$status->warning( 'syntaxhighlight-error-pygments-invocation-failure' );
|
|
|
|
wfWarn(
|
|
|
|
'Failed to invoke Pygments. Please check that Pygments is installed ' .
|
|
|
|
'and that $wgPygmentizePath is accurate.'
|
|
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
$status->value = self::highlight( $code, null, $args )->getValue();
|
|
|
|
return $status;
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
$cache->set( $cacheKey, $output );
|
|
|
|
}
|
2011-02-10 01:59:14 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( $inline ) {
|
2015-07-03 13:42:46 +00:00
|
|
|
$output = trim( $output );
|
2007-06-29 04:33:14 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2011-02-10 01:59:14 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
$status->value = $output;
|
|
|
|
return $status;
|
2010-08-09 06:56:38 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2011-02-10 01:59:14 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-06-23 15:54:19 +00:00
|
|
|
/**
|
|
|
|
* Construct a cache key for the results of a Pygments invocation.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* @param string $code Code to be highlighted.
|
|
|
|
* @param string $lexer Lexer name.
|
|
|
|
* @param array $options Options array.
|
|
|
|
* @return string Cache key.
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
private static function makeCacheKey( $code, $lexer, $options ) {
|
|
|
|
$optionString = FormatJson::encode( $options, false, FormatJson::ALL_OK );
|
|
|
|
$hash = md5( "{$code}|{$lexer}|{$optionString}|" . self::CACHE_VERSION );
|
|
|
|
if ( function_exists( 'wfGlobalCacheKey' ) ) {
|
|
|
|
return wfGlobalCacheKey( 'highlight', $hash );
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
return 'highlight:' . $hash;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2008-07-10 20:55:02 +00:00
|
|
|
/**
|
|
|
|
* Take an input specifying a list of lines to highlight, returning
|
|
|
|
* a raw list of matching line numbers.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* Input is comma-separated list of lines or line ranges.
|
|
|
|
*
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
* @param string $lineSpec
|
|
|
|
* @return int[] Line numbers.
|
2008-07-10 20:55:02 +00:00
|
|
|
*/
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
protected static function parseHighlightLines( $lineSpec ) {
|
2008-07-10 20:55:02 +00:00
|
|
|
$lines = array();
|
2015-06-23 13:49:16 +00:00
|
|
|
$values = array_map( 'trim', explode( ',', $lineSpec ) );
|
|
|
|
foreach ( $values as $value ) {
|
|
|
|
if ( ctype_digit( $value ) ) {
|
|
|
|
$lines[] = (int)$value;
|
|
|
|
} elseif ( strpos( $value, '-' ) !== false ) {
|
|
|
|
list( $start, $end ) = array_map( 'trim', explode( '-', $value ) );
|
|
|
|
if ( self::validHighlightRange( $start, $end ) ) {
|
|
|
|
for ($i = intval( $start ); $i <= $end; $i++ ) {
|
|
|
|
$lines[] = $i;
|
|
|
|
}
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if ( count( $lines ) > self::HIGHLIGHT_MAX_LINES ) {
|
|
|
|
$lines = array_slice( $lines, 0, self::HIGHLIGHT_MAX_LINES );
|
|
|
|
break;
|
2008-09-28 15:30:45 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
return $lines;
|
2008-09-28 15:30:45 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-06-23 13:49:16 +00:00
|
|
|
/**
|
|
|
|
* Validate a provided input range
|
|
|
|
* @param $start
|
|
|
|
* @param $end
|
|
|
|
* @return bool
|
|
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
protected static function validHighlightRange( $start, $end ) {
|
|
|
|
// Since we're taking this tiny range and producing a an
|
|
|
|
// array of every integer between them, it would be trivial
|
|
|
|
// to DoS the system by asking for a huge range.
|
|
|
|
// Impose an arbitrary limit on the number of lines in a
|
|
|
|
// given range to reduce the impact.
|
|
|
|
return
|
|
|
|
ctype_digit( $start ) &&
|
|
|
|
ctype_digit( $end ) &&
|
|
|
|
$start > 0 &&
|
|
|
|
$start < $end &&
|
|
|
|
$end - $start < self::HIGHLIGHT_MAX_LINES;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2012-10-16 10:33:26 +00:00
|
|
|
/**
|
|
|
|
* Hook into Content::getParserOutput to provide syntax highlighting for
|
|
|
|
* script content.
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* @return bool
|
|
|
|
* @since MW 1.21
|
|
|
|
*/
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
public static function onContentGetParserOutput( Content $content, Title $title,
|
|
|
|
$revId, ParserOptions $options, $generateHtml, ParserOutput &$output ) {
|
2012-10-16 10:33:26 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
global $wgParser, $wgTextModelsToParse;
|
2012-10-16 10:33:26 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( !$generateHtml ) {
|
|
|
|
// Nothing special for us to do, let MediaWiki handle this.
|
|
|
|
return true;
|
|
|
|
}
|
2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
|
2012-10-16 10:33:26 +00:00
|
|
|
// Determine the language
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$extension = ExtensionRegistry::getInstance();
|
|
|
|
$models = $extension->getAttribute( 'SyntaxHighlightModels' );
|
2012-10-16 10:33:26 +00:00
|
|
|
$model = $content->getModel();
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( !isset( $models[$model] ) ) {
|
2012-10-16 10:33:26 +00:00
|
|
|
// We don't care about this model, carry on.
|
|
|
|
return true;
|
|
|
|
}
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$lexer = $models[$model];
|
2012-10-16 10:33:26 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Hope that $wgSyntaxHighlightModels does not contain silly types.
|
2014-09-15 04:50:20 +00:00
|
|
|
$text = ContentHandler::getContentText( $content );
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( !$text ) {
|
2014-07-30 19:09:05 +00:00
|
|
|
// Oops! Non-text content? Let MediaWiki handle this.
|
|
|
|
return true;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Parse using the standard parser to get links etc. into the database, HTML is replaced below.
|
|
|
|
// We could do this using $content->fillParserOutput(), but alas it is 'protected'.
|
|
|
|
if ( $content instanceof TextContent && in_array( $model, $wgTextModelsToParse ) ) {
|
|
|
|
$output = $wgParser->parse( $text, $title, $options, true, true, $revId );
|
2012-10-16 10:33:26 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
$status = self::highlight( $text, $lexer );
|
|
|
|
if ( !$status->isOK() ) {
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
return true;
|
2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
$out = $status->getValue();
|
2015-05-20 21:36:13 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$output->addModuleStyles( 'ext.pygments' );
|
|
|
|
$output->setText( '<div dir="ltr">' . $out . '</div>' );
|
2012-10-16 10:33:26 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
// Inform MediaWiki that we have parsed this page and it shouldn't mess with it.
|
|
|
|
return false;
|
2014-09-17 19:32:35 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
|
|
* Hook to provide syntax highlighting for API pretty-printed output
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* @param IContextSource $context
|
|
|
|
* @param string $text
|
|
|
|
* @param string $mime
|
|
|
|
* @param string $format
|
|
|
|
* @since MW 1.24
|
|
|
|
*/
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
public static function onApiFormatHighlight( IContextSource $context, $text, $mime, $format ) {
|
|
|
|
if ( !isset( self::$mimeLexers[$mime] ) ) {
|
|
|
|
return true;
|
2014-09-17 19:32:35 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$lexer = self::$mimeLexers[$mime];
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
$status = self::highlight( $text, $lexer );
|
|
|
|
if ( !$status->isOK() ) {
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
return true;
|
2012-10-16 10:33:26 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
$out = $status->getValue();
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
if ( preg_match( '/^<pre([^>]*)>/i', $out, $m ) ) {
|
|
|
|
$attrs = Sanitizer::decodeTagAttributes( $m[1] );
|
|
|
|
$attrs['class'] .= ' api-pretty-content';
|
|
|
|
$encodedAttrs = Sanitizer::safeEncodeTagAttributes( $attrs );
|
|
|
|
$out = '<pre' . $encodedAttrs. '>' . substr( $out, strlen( $m[0] ) );
|
2010-08-09 06:56:38 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
$output = $context->getOutput();
|
|
|
|
$output->addModuleStyles( 'ext.pygments' );
|
|
|
|
$output->addHTML( '<div dir="ltr">' . $out . '</div>' );
|
2013-02-13 20:15:37 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
// Inform MediaWiki that we have parsed this page and it shouldn't mess with it.
|
|
|
|
return false;
|
2014-04-16 20:23:12 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-06-23 20:46:35 +00:00
|
|
|
/**
|
|
|
|
* Reject parser cache values that are for GeSHi since those
|
|
|
|
* ResourceLoader modules no longer exist
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
* @param ParserOutput $parserOutput
|
2015-06-23 21:56:33 +00:00
|
|
|
* @param WikiPage|Article $page
|
2015-06-23 20:46:35 +00:00
|
|
|
* @param ParserOptions $popts
|
|
|
|
* @return bool
|
|
|
|
*/
|
2015-06-23 21:56:33 +00:00
|
|
|
public static function onRejectParserCacheValue( ParserOutput $parserOutput, $page, ParserOptions $popts ) {
|
2015-06-23 20:46:35 +00:00
|
|
|
foreach ( $parserOutput->getModuleStyles() as $module ) {
|
|
|
|
if ( strpos( $module, 'ext.geshi.' ) === 0 ) {
|
2015-06-24 01:09:19 +00:00
|
|
|
$page->getTitle()->purgeSquid();
|
2015-06-23 20:46:35 +00:00
|
|
|
return false;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return true;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
/** Backward-compatibility shim for extensions. */
|
|
|
|
public static function prepare( $text, $lang ) {
|
2014-05-10 21:28:07 +00:00
|
|
|
wfDeprecated( __METHOD__ );
|
2015-06-26 21:39:15 +00:00
|
|
|
return new GeSHi( self::highlight( $text, $lang )->getValue() );
|
2007-07-21 01:26:43 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2009-07-01 19:34:01 +00:00
|
|
|
|
Highlight using Pygments rather than Geshi
GeSHi is unmaintained, lacks support for many popular modern languages, and
suffers from deep architectural flaws, chief among them the inconsistent
tokenization of different languages, each of which requires a custom
stylesheet.
Pygments is a well-maintained alternative. It is, by my count, the most popular
syntax highlighting library around. It is BSD-licensed, actively maintained,
and is widely used in PHP projects.
To keep this easy to review, this change does not include update for l10n
files, and it does not delete the geshi/ directory. I will do those in a
separate patch.
The chief change between this and the previous implementation is that errors
result in the code block not being highlighted, as opposed to not being printed
at all, having been replaced by an angry red error message. I think that is the
right user experience. If you go to StackOverflow or GitHub and try to mark up
your code block as being written in some language that their highlighter
doesn't know about, you don't get an error message -- the code simply doesn't
get highlighted.
Because we don't recursively load dependencies for extensions, to test this,
you will need to create a composer.local.json in $IP and add:
{
"extra": {
"merge-plugin": {
"include": [
"extensions/SyntaxHighlight_GeSHi/composer.json"
]
}
}
}
Then run `composer update`.
Bug: T85794
Change-Id: I07446ec9893fae3d1e394f435d3d95cf8be6bc33
2015-06-16 03:52:58 +00:00
|
|
|
/** Backward-compatibility shim for extensions. */
|
|
|
|
public static function buildHeadItem( $geshi ) {
|
|
|
|
wfDeprecated( __METHOD__ );
|
|
|
|
$geshi->parse_code();
|
|
|
|
return '';
|
2014-04-16 20:23:12 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
2011-08-14 06:59:35 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|