Since panics still regularly "destroy" the terminal, it is hard to get a
stack trace for panics you do not anticipate. This commit adds a panic
handler that automatically creates a logfile inside the current working
directory.
It has to be added to every goroutine that is started and will repair
the terminal on a panic.
Signed-off-by: Moritz Poldrack <git@moritz.sh>
Acked-by: Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc>
The kept socket after crashes or unclean exits can lead to a unexpected
behaviour. This commit just removes dangling sockets if they exist.
Since the "does not exist" error is the best case scenario error
handling was deemed unnecessary.
Signed-off-by: Moritz Poldrack <git@moritz.sh>
Acked-by: Robin Jarry <robin@jarry.cc>
If the message doesn't contain ':', we don't properly discard the
message, so we end up slicing it like msg[:-1].
This can be reproduced if one runs 'aerc foo', as the server receives
'foo' as the message.
'aerc foo' still doesn't do anything very user friendly, but at least it
doesn't panic horribly.
While at it, do the 'got message' log at the very beginning, so that the
user can see what message the server got before reporting the command as
invalid.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Martí <mvdan@mvdan.cc>
When Reto Brunners patch is applied (which works really well for me), the user gets to see the message
returned by AercServer. Since this is nil if no errors were thrown it
prints "result: <nil>" to the cmd. This patch fixes that by just
returning success instead of the error message when err != nil.