![]() Then a few minutes later, I might make another edit. When I use the “local to remote sync,” it opens a connection and works flawlessly. I can’t really imagine how Jon could provide an API that would be less general. And that would be the general functionality one could use to implement all the other things I mentioned. ![]() “Just”? I haven’t looked at how your sftp plugin does things, but I would expect that Jon would need to provide an API to add arbitrary entries to the side bar, and to have arbitrary code run when they are accessed. I was just referring to create “fake” file entries for remote files and folders, that is all! I know there are a whole host of ways plugins could change and augment the side bar. With any luck I will have version 1.7.0 out later tonight or tomorrow which will include some features to help in capturing info about previously unreported errors. ![]() The changelog includes a rather lengthy list of the number of releases I’ve made that include fixes for various disconnection error modes. So far I’ve tracked down at least 10 different ways python will fail with an FTP disconnection using ftplib and a whole host of separate issues with the OpenSSH sftp program and psftp. Please visit detecting disconnections has been more complicated than I would have guessed. ![]() Sublime SFTP does automatically reconnect when a disconnection occurs – it just appears you’ve run into some situation that no-one else has run into and sent me info about. It would be nice if Sublime SFTP would just auto-reconnect when a connection timeout occurred. This is pretty common in any ftp access where there isn’t a keep-alive setting on the server or ftp client. If I restart st2, and the press local to remote sync, it works again flawlessly. When I press “local to remote sync,” it connects, prompts me if I want to overwrite, I select yes, then it gives my a timeout error. This could be classes and methods for programming languages and sections and subsections for, say, LaTeX documents.Ĭ0D312 wrote:I seem to have discovered a small issue. It would be nice if the side bar could show an outline of the current document, such as the list of things shown by Command+R. Or maybe even a history browser that displays the output of “hg log” (or equivalent) and would allow me to navigate to each change set to inspect it more closely (the detail would be shown on the right). the repository (as per “hg status”, for example), or the list of patches as in “hg qseries -v”. It would be nice if the side bar could be used for version control, such as showing the version when a file was last modified, whether the file is modified w.r.t. It would be nice if plugins could add additional information to the side bar, such as file modes, file size, file mtime. The downside is that there aren’t many, if any, other plugins that would need to manipulate the sidebar in such a way, so it is of limited use. I’ve had quite a number of requests for this, so I plan on asking Jon if that is something he would consider adding. Unfortunately it is not currently possible to manipulate the sidebar via an API in Sublime.
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