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Cross-platform, fast, feature-rich, GPU based terminal
c683725434
It is not needed with a pure state machine. Note that drag scrolling still has to be ported from using timers. |
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kitty | ||
kitty_tests | ||
logo | ||
terminfo | ||
__main__.py | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
=template.py | ||
build-terminfo | ||
count-lines-of-code | ||
key_encoding.asciidoc | ||
LICENSE | ||
linux-launcher.c | ||
Makefile | ||
preprocess-readme.py | ||
protocol-extensions.asciidoc | ||
publish.py | ||
README.asciidoc | ||
screenshot.png | ||
session.vim | ||
setup.cfg | ||
setup.py | ||
test-launcher.c | ||
test.py |
= kitty - A terminal emulator :toc: :toc-placement!: // START_SHORTCUT_BLOCK :sc_close_tab: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+q`] :sc_close_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+w`] :sc_copy_to_clipboard: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+c`] :sc_eighth_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+8`] :sc_fifth_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+5`] :sc_first_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+1`] :sc_fourth_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+4`] :sc_move_tab_backward: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+,`] :sc_move_tab_forward: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+.`] :sc_move_window_backward: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+b`] :sc_move_window_forward: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+f`] :sc_move_window_to_top: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+``] :sc_new_tab: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+t`] :sc_new_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+enter`] :sc_next_layout: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+l`] :sc_next_tab: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+right`] :sc_next_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+]`] :sc_ninth_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+9`] :sc_paste_from_clipboard: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+v`] :sc_paste_from_selection: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+s` or `shift+insert`] :sc_previous_tab: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+left`] :sc_previous_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+[`] :sc_scroll_end: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+end`] :sc_scroll_home: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+home`] :sc_scroll_line_down: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+down` or `ctrl+shift+j`] :sc_scroll_line_up: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+up` or `ctrl+shift+k`] :sc_scroll_page_down: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+page_down`] :sc_scroll_page_up: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+page_up`] :sc_second_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+2`] :sc_seventh_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+7`] :sc_show_scrollback: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+h`] :sc_sixth_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+6`] :sc_tenth_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+0`] :sc_third_window: pass:quotes[`ctrl+shift+3`] // END_SHORTCUT_BLOCK ++++ <img align="left" role="left" src="logo/kitty.png?raw=true"/> ++++ image::https://travis-ci.org/kovidgoyal/kitty.svg?branch=master[Build status, link=https://travis-ci.org/kovidgoyal/kitty] == Major Features * Supports tiling multiple terminal windows side by side in different layouts without needing to use an extra program like tmux * Supports all modern terminal features: unicode, true-color, mouse protocol, focus tracking, bracketed paste and so on. * Allows you to view the scrollback buffer in a separate window using your favorite pager program such as less * Support startup sessions which allow you to specify the window/tab layout, working directories and programs to run on startup. * Easily hackable (UI layer written in python, inner loops in C for speed). Less than fifteen thousand lines of code. * Uses OpenGL for rendering, offloads rendering work to the GPU for lower system load. * Cross-platform support: kitty currently works on Linux and macOS, but because it uses only OpenGL for rendering, it should be trivial to port to other platforms. image::screenshot.png?raw=true[Screenshot, showing three programs in the "Tall" layout] toc::[] == Installation kitty is designed to run from source, for easy hackability. Make sure the following dependencies are installed first. === Dependencies * python >= 3.5 * glfw >= 3.2 * libunistring * glew >= 2.0 (not needed on macOS) * fontconfig (not needed on macOS) * xrdb and xsel (only on X11 based systems) * gcc or clang (required only for building) * pkg-config (required only for building) === Install and run from source .... git clone https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty && cd kitty .... Now build the C parts of kitty with the following command: .... python3 setup.py build .... You can run kitty, as: .... python3 /path/to/kitty/folder .... === Linux packages * Arch linux: AUR git package https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/kitty-git/ === macOS packages kitty is available as a macOS `dmg` file for easy installation from the link:../../releases[releases page]. You can also run kitty directly from source using the above install from source instructions, after installing its two dependencies (`python >= 3.5` and `glfw >= 3.2` using http://brew.sh/[brew] or a similar package manager) == Design philosophy kitty is designed for power keyboard users. To that end all its controls work with the keyboard (although it fully supports mouse interactions as well). Its configuration is a simple, human editable, single file for easy reproducability (I like to store config files in source control). The code in kitty is designed to be simple, modular and hackable. It is written in a mix of C (for performance sensitive parts) and Python (for easy hackability of the UI). It does not depend on any large and complex UI toolkit, using only OpenGL for rendering everything. Finally, kitty is designed from the ground up to support all modern terminal features, such as unicode, true color, bold/italic fonts, text formatting, etc. It even extends existing text formatting escape codes, to add support for features not available elsewhere, such as colored and styled (curly) underlines. One of the design goals of kitty is to be easily extensible so that new features can be added in the future with relatively less effort. == Tabs and Windows kitty is capable of running multiple programs organized into tabs and windows. The top level of organization is the _Tab_. Each tab consists of one or more _windows_. The windows can be arranged in multiple different layouts, like windows are organized in a tiling window manager. The keyboard controls (which are all customizable) for tabs and windows are: [[scrolling-shortcuts]] [options="header"] === Scrolling |=== |Action |Shortcut |Scroll line up | {sc_scroll_line_up} |Scroll line down | {sc_scroll_line_down} |Scroll page up | {sc_scroll_page_up} |Scroll page down | {sc_scroll_page_down} |Scroll to top | {sc_scroll_home} |Scroll to bottom | {sc_scroll_end} |=== [options="header"] === Tabs |=== |Action |Shortcut |New tab | {sc_new_tab} |Close tab | {sc_close_tab} |Next tab | {sc_next_tab} |Previous tab | {sc_previous_tab} |Next layout | {sc_next_layout} |Move tab forward | {sc_move_tab_forward} |Move tab backward | {sc_move_tab_backward} |=== [options="header"] === Windows |=== |Action |Shortcut |New window | {sc_new_window} |Close window | {sc_close_window} |Next window | {sc_next_window} |Previous window | {sc_previous_window} |Move window forward | {sc_move_window_forward} |Move window backward | {sc_move_window_backward} |Move window to top | {sc_move_window_to_top} |Focus specific window (windows are counted clockwise from the top left corner) | {sc_first_window}, {sc_second_window} ... {sc_tenth_window} |=== == The scrollback buffer kitty supports scrolling back to view history, just like most terminals. You can use either the <<scrolling-shortcuts,keyboard shortcuts>> or the mouse scroll wheel to do so. However, kitty has an extra, neat feature. Sometimes you need to explore the scrollback buffer in more detail, maybe search for some text or refer to it side-by-side while typing in a follow-up command. kitty allows you to do this by pressing the {sc_show_scrollback} key-combination, which will open the scrollback buffer in a new window, using your favorite pager program (which is `less` by default). You can then explore the scrollback buffer using whatever program you normally use. Colors and text formatting are preserved. == Miscellaneous features You can double click to select a word and triple click to select a line. You can also hold down `ctrl+shift` and click on a URL to open it in a browser. == Layouts Currently, there are two layouts available, * Stack -- Only a single maximized window is shown at a time * Tall -- One window is shown full height on the left, the rest of the windows are shown one below the other on the right. You can switch between layouts using the {sc_next_layout} key combination. Writing a new layout only requires about thirty lines of code, so if there is some layout you want, take a look at link:kitty/layout.py[layout.py] and submit a pull request! == Configuration kitty is highly customizable, everything from keyboard shortcuts, to painting frames-per-second. See the heavily commented link:kitty/kitty.conf[default config file]. By default kitty looks for a config file in the OS config directory (usually `~/.config/kitty/kitty.conf` on Linux and `~/Library/Preferences/kitty/kitty.conf` on macOS) but you can pass a specific path via the `--config` option. == Startup Sessions You can control the tabs, window layout, working directory, startup programs, etc. by creating a "session" file and using the `--session` command line flag. For example: .... # Set the window layout for the current tab layout tall # Set the working directory for the current tab cd ~ # Create a window and run the specified command in it launch zsh launch vim launch irssi --profile x # Create a new tab (the part after new_tab is the optional tab name which will # be displayed in the tab bar, if omitted, the title of the active window will # be used instead) new_tab my tab cd ~/somewhere # Set the layouts allowed in this tab enabled_layouts tall, stack # Set the current layout layout stack launch zsh # Make the current window the active (focused) window focus launch emacs .... == Protocol Extensions kitty has a few extensions to the xterm protocol, to enable advanced features, see link:protocol-extensions.asciidoc[Protocol Extensions]. == Font control kitty has extremely flexible and powerful font selection features. You can specify individual families for the regular, bold, italic and bold+italic fonts. You can even specify specific font families for specific ranges of unicode characters. This allows precise control over text rendering. It can come in handy for applications like powerline, without the need to use patched fonts. See the various font related configuration directives in the link:kitty/kitty.conf[config file]. == Performance The main goals for kitty performance are user perceived latency while typing and "smoothness" while scrolling. kitty tries hard to optimize these. To that end it keeps a cache of each rendered glyph in video RAM so that font rendering is not a bottleneck. Interaction with child programs takes place in a separate thread from rendering, to improve smoothness. You can generate detailed per-function performance data using link:https://github.com/gperftools/gperftools[gperftools]. Build kitty with the `--profile` flag which will create an executable called `kitty-profile`. Run that and perform the task you want to analyse, for example, scrolling a large file with `less`. After you quit, function call statistics will be printed to `stdout` and you can use tools like *kcachegrind* for more detailed analysis. == Note for Linux/macOS packagers While kitty does use python, it is not a traditional python package, so please do not install it in site-packages. Instead run, ``` python3 setup.py linux-package ``` This will install kitty into the directory `linux-package`. You can run kitty with `linux-package/bin/kitty`. All the files needed to run kitty will be in `linux-package/lib/kitty`. The terminfo file will be installed into `linux-package/share/terminfo`. Simply copy these files into `/usr` to install kitty. In other words, `linux-package` is the staging area into which kitty is installed. You can choose a different staging area, by passing the `--prefix` argument to `setup.py`. You should probably split kitty into two packages, `kitty-terminfo` that installs the terminfo file and `kitty` that installs the main program. This allows users to install the terminfo file on servers into which they ssh, without needing to install all of kitty. This applies to creating packages for kitty for macOS package managers such as brew or MacPorts as well. == A tribute While over the decades I am sure many people have contributed to the development of the terminal emulator space, there is one individual in particular I would like to thank. link:http://invisible-island.net[Thomas E. Dickey], the creator of xterm. xterm is the most comprehensive and feature-rich terminal emulator I have had the pleasure of using. As I worked on kitty, I ran headlong into more and more gnarly corners of terminal behavior. On all those occasions, either the excellent documentation at link:http://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html[xterm-ctlseqs] or investigating the behavior and code of xterm or vttest were invaluable tools to aid my understanding. My achievements, if any, in developing kitty would not have been possible without his prior work and the generous sharing of knowledge accumulated over decades. Thank you. == Resources on terminal behavior http://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C0_and_C1_control_codes http://vt100.net/