* Implement first round of support for GitHub Actions
This commit adds:
gh actions
gh run list
gh run view
gh job view
as part of our first round of actions support. These commands are
unlisted and considered in beta.
* review feedback
* tests for exit status on job view
* spinner tracks io itself
* review feedback
* fix PR matching
* enable pager for job log viewing
* add more colorf functions
* add AnnotationSymbol
* hide job, run
* do not add method to api.Client
* remove useless cargo coded copypasta
Sometimes, due to rounding errors, after calculating the width of each
column in a table, the sum of all columns would be shorter that the
total available width in the terminal. This reimplements the elastic
column resizing algorithm to ensure that all available space has been
filled.
As a bonus fix, columns that contain URLs are never truncated.
This commit is part of work to make gh more scriptable. It includes both
some general purpose helpers towards this goal as well as improvements
to the issue commands. Other commands will follow.
- Adds `utils/terminal.go` for finding out about gh's execution environment
- introduces `stubTerminal` for either faking being attached to a tty or not during tests
- updates issue commands to behave better when not attached to a tty:
- issue list doesn't print fuzzy dates
- issue list doesn't print header
- issue list prints state explicitly
- issue create no longer hangs
- issue create fails with clear error unless both -t and -b are specified
- issue view prints raw issue body
- issue view prints metadata in a consistent, linewise format
If a command does `fmt.Print(...)` for output that contains ANSI color
codes, this not safe on Windows. We have to ensure that we always use
the `fmt.Fprint*` family of functions with a writer that was transformed
using `utils.NewColorable()`.
This makes the approach from `pr list` reusable across other commands
that may benefit from table-based output, e.g. `issue list` or `pr status`
The idea is: instantiate a printer, connect it to stdout, feed it some
data, and it does the rest: colored, truncated column output that fits
into a terminal, or tab-delimited output (no color, no truncation) for
scripts.