## Problem
Credential and cookie files were world-readable (0644), passwords
transited via `CP_CREDENTIALS` env var (visible in `/proc/PID/environ`),
and Kattis/USACO echoed passwords back through stdout unnecessarily.
## Solution
Set 0600 permissions on `cp-nvim.json` and `cookies.json` after every
write, pass credentials via stdin pipe instead of env var, and stop
emitting passwords in ndjson from Kattis/USACO `LoginResult` (CSES token
emission unchanged).
## Problem
Language version coverage was incomplete across all platforms, AtCoder
submit used a stale cookie fast-path that caused silent failures, and
raw
`vim.notify` calls throughout the codebase produced inconsistent or
missing `[cp.nvim]:` prefixes.
## Solution
Remove cookie persistence from AtCoder login/submit (always fresh
login),
increase the submit nav timeout to 40s, and switch to in-memory buffer
upload with the correct per-language extension from a full
`_LANGUAGE_ID_EXTENSION`
map covering all 116 AtCoder languages. Expand `LANGUAGE_VERSIONS` in
`constants.lua` with all AtCoder languages, 15 new CF languages with
full
version variants, and 50+ Kattis languages. Fix AtCoder `prolog` ID
(`6079`→`6081`, was Pony) and remove the non-existent `racket` entry.
Replace all raw `vim.notify` calls with `logger.log`. Simplify the
submit
language doc to point at `constants.lua` rather than maintaining a
static table.
## Problem
`LANGUAGE_VERSIONS` only covered cpp and python. Several platform IDs
were wrong — CodeChef used `C++ 17`/`Python 3` (correct: `C++`/`PYTH
3`), USACO listed nonexistent c++20/c++23 options, and CSES only had
C++17.
## Solution
Verify every platform's submit page and update all language ID tables.
Add java and rust entries where supported, fix incorrect CodeChef and
USACO IDs, and expand CSES `CSES_LANGUAGES` dict with
C++11/C++20/PyPy3/Java/Rust variants.
## Problem
`LANGUAGE_VERSIONS` mapped CF `c++17` to `89` (actually GNU G++20) and
defaulted to `c++17`, which didn't match any CF entry. Helpdocs listed
CF as having only `c++17`.
## Solution
Fix CF version map to `c++17 → 54`, `c++20 → 89`, `c++23 → 91`, add
`pypy3 → 70`. Change `DEFAULT_VERSIONS.cpp` to `c++20` (no behavioral
change — `89` was already the submit default). Update helpdocs. Fix
StyLua formatting in `race.lua`.
## Problem
Race was the only command using `:CP <action> <platform> <contest>`
syntax while every other platform+contest command uses `:CP <platform>
<contest> [flags]`.
## Solution
Make race a `--race` flag on the existing contest setup flow. Remove
`:CP race stop` — starting a new race auto-cancels any active one.
Remove `<Plug>(cp-race-stop)` keymap. Update tab completion and docs
accordingly.
## Problem
Two gaps in the plugin: (1) contest pickers have no way to know whether
a contest supports countdown (race), so the UI can't surface that
affordance; (2) `:CP submit` hardcodes a single language ID per platform
with no way to choose C++ standard or override the platform ID.
## Solution
**Race countdown** (`4e709c8`): Add `supports_countdown` boolean to
`ContestListResult` and wire it through CSES/USACO scrapers, cache, race
module, and pickers.
**Language version selection** (`b90ac67`): Add `LANGUAGE_VERSIONS` and
`DEFAULT_VERSIONS` tables in `constants.lua`. Config gains `version` and
`submit_id` fields validated at setup time. `submit.lua` resolves the
effective config to a platform ID (priority: `submit_id` > `version` >
default). Helpdocs add `*cp-submit-language*` section. Tests cover
`LANGUAGE_IDS` completeness.
## Problem
Supplying any `platforms` table silently dropped all unlisted platforms,
making it easy to accidentally disable platforms. Invoking a disabled
platform produced no user-facing error.
## Solution
Switch to a merge model: all six platforms are enabled by default and
user entries are deep-merged on top. Set a platform key to `false` to
disable it explicitly. Add a `check_platform_enabled` guard in
`handle_command` for contest fetch, login, logout, and race actions.
## Problem
`open_url` automatically opened the browser on contest load and problem
change, which is now redundant with `:CP open`.
## Solution
Remove the `open_url` field from `cp.Config`, its default, its
validation, and the call site in `setup_contest`. Remove documentation
from `cp.nvim.txt`.
## Problem
Codeforces submit was a stub. CSES submit re-ran the full login flow on
every invocation (~1.5s overhead).
## Solution
**Codeforces**: headless browser submit via StealthySession (same
pattern as AtCoder). Solves Cloudflare Turnstile on login, uploads
source via file input, caches cookies at
`~/.cache/cp-nvim/codeforces-cookies.json` so repeat submits skip login.
**CSES**: persist the API token in credentials via a `credentials`
ndjson event. Subsequent submits validate the cached token with a single
GET before falling back to full login.
Also includes a vimdoc table of contents.
## Problem
`:CP credentials login/logout/clear` is verbose and inconsistent with
other
actions that are all top-level (`:CP run`, `:CP submit`, etc.). The
clear-all
subcommand is also unnecessary since re-logging in overwrites existing
credentials.
## Solution
Replace `:CP credentials {login,logout,clear}` with `:CP login
[platform]`
and `:CP logout [platform]`. Remove the clear-all command and the
credentials
subcommand dispatch — login/logout are now regular actions routed
through the
standard action dispatcher.
## Problem
The `set` and `clear` subcommands don't clearly convey their intent —
`set`
reads like a generic setter rather than an auth action, and `clear`
overloads
single-platform and all-platform semantics in one subcommand.
## Solution
Rename `set` to `login`, split `clear` into `logout` (per-platform,
defaults
to active) and `clear` (all platforms).
New API:
- `:CP credentials login [platform]` — prompt and save credentials
- `:CP credentials logout [platform]` — remove credentials for one
platform
- `:CP credentials clear` — remove all stored credentials
Problem: :CP login was a poor API — no way to clear credentials without
raw Lua, and the single command didn't scale to multiple operations.
Solution: replace login with a :CP credentials subcommand following the
same pattern as :CP cache. :CP credentials set [platform] prompts and
saves; :CP credentials clear [platform] removes one or all platforms.
Add cache.clear_credentials(), rename login.lua to credentials.lua,
update parse/dispatch/tab-complete, and rewrite vimdoc accordingly.
Problem: credentials were only set implicitly on first :CP submit.
There was no way to update wrong credentials, log out, or set
credentials ahead of time without editing the cache JSON manually.
Solution: add :CP login [platform] which always prompts for username
and password and overwrites any saved credentials for that platform.
Omitting the platform falls back to the active platform. Wire the
command through constants, parse_command, handle_command, and add
tab-completion (suggests platform names). Document in vimdoc under
the SUBMIT section and in the commands reference.
Problem: vimdoc only covered AtCoder, Codeforces, and CSES, and had no
entries for race, stress, or submit — all of which shipped in this
branch. The platform list was also stale and the workflow example
pointed users to the AtCoder website to submit manually.
Solution: add CodeChef, USACO, and Kattis to the supported platforms
list and platform-specific usage section (including Kattis's
dual single-problem/full-contest behavior). Document :CP stress,
:CP race, and :CP submit in the commands section, add their <Plug>
mappings, and add dedicated STRESS TESTING, RACE, and SUBMIT sections.
Update get_active_panel() to list its return values, add the
cp.race.status() API under the statusline section, and update the
workflow example step 8 to use :CP submit.
Problem: cp.nvim exposed no documentation showing how to integrate its
runtime state into a statusline. Users had to discover the state module
API by reading source.
Solution: add a STATUSLINE INTEGRATION section to the vimdoc with a
state API reference and recipes for vanilla statusline, lualine, and
heirline. Also anchors the *cp.State* help tag referenced in prose
elsewhere in the doc.
Also fix contest-change detection so URL open logic triggers when either platform or contest changes. This makes :CP next/:CP prev and problem jumps open the correct page when open_url is enabled.
Co-authored-by: Codex <noreply@openai.com>
Problem: the vimdoc had no setup section, and configuration was buried
after commands and mappings.
Solution: add a cp-setup section with lazy.nvim example and move both
setup and configuration above commands for better discoverability.
Problem: users who want keybindings must call vim.cmd('CP run') or
reach into internal Lua modules directly. There is no stable,
discoverable, lazy-load-friendly public API for key binding.
Solution: define 7 <Plug> mappings in plugin/cp.lua that dispatch
through the same handle_command() code path as :CP. Document them
in a new MAPPINGS section in the vimdoc with helptags and an example
config block.