I started from the 78ec8e commit then cherry-picked and squashed
commits that have been done in master since then, except the bad
commits that overwrote the tree (in master) with the tree in maint.
This commit also bumps the version number to 7.8.06.
The only "fix" that was made between 78ec8e and the previous commit
is e0072f which has been reported to break stuff.
This fixes a wrong merge that should not have happened:
commit 7e903a merges the master branch into the maint branch,
while we really want to keep the maint branch a bugfix-only
branch.
This commit reverts back the maint branch to its state before
merging the master branch. From there, we will fix remaining
problems with the maint branch (e.g. copyright issues) then
release this maint branch as Org-mode 7.8.05.
Also remove blank lines before the ";;; org*el ends here" declarations.
Having a "Version" header forced us to update every file when releasing a
new version of Org; it also forced us to update every file when merging Org
with Emacs trunk, thus cluttering the diffs between the previously merged
version and the new one with useless information.
Glenn Morris suggested this in emacs-devel:
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2011-08/msg00322.html
These languages are capable of writing results to file; for several of
them this is their only mode of operation. These changes cause the
languages to return to ob.el either the computed result, or nil, when
they have written results to file themselves. This is in place of the
previous method of returning the output file name as a string to
ob.el.
* lisp/ob-asymptote.el (org-babel-execute:asymptote): Return nil to
signal that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-ditaa.el (org-babel-execute:ditaa): Return nil to signal
that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-dot.el (org-babel-execute:dot): Return nil to signal that
the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-gnuplot.el (org-babel-execute:gnuplot): Return nil to signal
that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-latex.el (org-babel-execute:latex): Return nil to signal
that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-mscgen.el (org-babel-execute:mscgen): Return nil to
signal that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-octave.el (org-babel-execute:octave): Return result; not
name of output file.
* lisp/ob-plantuml.el (org-babel-execute:plantuml): Return nil to
signal that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-python.el (org-babel-execute:python): Return result; not
name of output file.
* lisp/ob-ruby.el (org-babel-execute:ruby): Return result; not
name of output file.
* lisp/ob-sass.el (org-babel-execute:sass): Return nil if result has
been written to file
* ob.el (org-babel-process-file-name): New function
(org-babel-maybe-remote-file): Delete function
* ob-sql.el (org-babel-execute:sql):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-scheme.el (org-babel-execute:scheme):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-sass.el (org-babel-execute:sass):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-ruby.el (org-babel-ruby-evaluate):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-python.el (org-babel-python-evaluate-external-process):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
(org-babel-python-evaluate-session):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-plantuml.el (org-babel-execute:plantuml):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-perl.el (org-babel-perl-evaluate):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-octave.el (org-babel-octave-evaluate-external-process):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
(org-babel-octave-evaluate-session):
Use org-babel-process-file-name,
don't use org-babel-maybe-remote-file
* ob-lisp.el (org-babel-execute:lisp):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-ledger.el (org-babel-execute:ledger):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-js.el (org-babel-execute:js):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-haskell.el (org-babel-haskell-export-to-lhs):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-gnuplot.el (org-babel-execute:gnuplot):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-eval.el (org-babel-eval-read-file): Don't use
org-babel-maybe-remote-file
* ob-dot.el (org-babel-execute:dot):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-ditaa.el (org-babel-execute:ditaa):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-clojure.el (org-babel-clojure-evaluate-external-process):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-asymptote.el (org-babel-execute:asymptote):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-R.el (org-babel-R-assign-elisp): Don't use
org-babel-maybe-remote-file, use org-babel-process-file-name
(org-babel-R-evaluate-external-process):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
(org-babel-R-evaluate-session):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
* ob-C.el (org-babel-C-execute):
Use org-babel-process-file-name
In addition to passing the file path through `expand-file-name',
tramp-style remote file names are converted to conventional (local)
file paths. The reason is that, if a tramp file name was in use in
emacs, then the shell command will be executing on the remote machine
in question. Further, by default the file name is passed through
`shell-quote-argument'.
Thanks to Michael Gauland for pointing out this fix
* lisp/ob-plantuml.el (org-babel-execute:plantuml): wrapping in-file
and out-file in shell-quote-argument
* Makefile (LISPF): now compiling and installing ob-plantuml.el
* contrib/scripts/.gitignore : ignores the plantuml.jar file, so that
it can be located next to ditaa.jar
* lisp/ob-plantuml.el: adding copyright notice and FSF attribution
(org-plantuml-jar-path): now a defcustom
(org-babel-execute:plantuml): now using org-babel-eval which
displays error messages
* lisp/org.el (org-babel-load-languages): ob-plantuml is now part of
org-babel-load-languages