This commit expands the toml file definition to include
metadata for the origin url, author and name.
A new sync utility fills out that metadata when it pulls from the iterm2
color schemes repo.
The utility also pulls down the scheme data json maintained by
the Gogh project: https://gogh-co.github.io/Gogh/ and converts
it to wezterm's format.
About 50% of Gogh overlaps with iterm2; we take the iterm2 versions
of those schemes by default because the iterm2 data has more info
about things like cursor and selection colors.
The sync utility is responsible for compiling the de-duplicated
set of scheme data into a form that is used by wezterm and its
docs.
Currently implemented on X11 only, this function returns information
about the geometry of the screen(s).
This is taken from the same source of information we use for the
`--position` CLI argument to `wezterm start`.
```
> wezterm.window.screens()
{
"by_name": {
"DisplayPort-1": {
"height": 2160,
"name": "DisplayPort-1",
"width": 3840,
"x": 0,
"y": 0,
},
},
"main": {
"height": 2160,
"name": "DisplayPort-1",
"width": 3840,
"x": 0,
"y": 0,
},
"origin_x": 0,
"origin_y": 0,
"virtual_height": 2160,
"virtual_width": 3840,
}
```
Using the newly exposed-to-lua mux apis, you may now run some lua code
at GUI startup and/or mux startup, just prior to any default windows
being created.
If you happen to spawn any panes as a result of this, wezterm will
skip creating the default program.
```lua
local wezterm = require 'wezterm'
local mux = wezterm.mux
-- This produces a window split horizontally into three equal parts
wezterm.on("gui-startup", function()
wezterm.log_info("doing gui startup")
local tab, pane, window = mux.spawn_window{}
mux.split_pane(pane, {size=0.3})
mux.split_pane(pane, {size=0.5})
end)
wezterm.on("mux-startup", function()
wezterm.log_info("doing mux startup")
local tab, pane, window = mux.spawn_window{}
mux.split_pane(pane, {size=0.5, direction="Top"})
end)
return {
unix_domains = {
{name="unix"}
},
}
```
refs: #674
refs: #1949
The intent is to expose Mux related functions to lua, so `wezterm.mux`
will be that module table.
In order to test this out in the debug overlay, I realized that the
overlay was running functions in a different thread and didn't have
access to the mux, so this commit also tweaks the debug overlay repl to
execute the input in the main thread.
The result is that it is now possible to do
`wezterm.mux.active_workspace()` in the debug overlay to print the
active workspace name.
More functions will follow.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/225
Main thing to note here is that the open crate has deprecated
open::that_in_background, but made open::that non-blocking.
I think this is OK, but I'm a little cagey about what will
happen with this on Windows. We may need to spawn our own
thread for this if things go awry.
This allows moving past a number of outdated deps, but importantly,
allows updating miow to a version that has the correct memory layout
for SocketAddr, and satisfies a dependabot alert.
This appeases some dependabot warnings regarding the use of
an old version of parking_lot that has some unsoundness issues.
ratelimit_meter is frozen and is succeeded by governor which has
a mostly similar API.
The hope here is that the nvidia-specific resize issue might have
a workaround if it is emitting some other events that we were
previously not listening for.
This commit optionally enables the Present extension and listens
for its version of CONFIGURE_NOTIFY, routing it through the same
logic as the base CONFIGURE_NOTIFY event.
On my AMD hardware under Gnome, I see something like:
```
18:04:26.476 TRACE window::os::x11::window > Present::ConfigureNotify: width 1168 -> 1180, height 858 -> 873, dpi 124.7998046875 -> 124.7998046875
18:04:26.478 TRACE window::os::x11::window > Ignoring X::ConfigureNotify (1180x873 dpi=124.7998046875) because width,height,dpi are unchanged
```
with the Present event firing before the X event.
Let's see how this goes.
refs: #2063
refs: #1992
My windows build didn't work this morning, complaining:
; cargo build
Updating crates.io index
error: failed to select a version for the requirement `libgit2-sys = "^0.13.4"`
candidate versions found which didn't match: 0.13.2+1.4.2, 0.13.1+1.4.2, 0.13.0+1.4.1, ...
location searched: crates.io index
required by package `git2 v0.14.4`
... which satisfies dependency `git2 = "^0.14"` (locked to 0.14.4) of package `config v0.1.0 (C:\Users\wez\wez-personal\wezterm\config)`
... which satisfies path dependency `config` (locked to 0.1.0) of package `codec v0.1.0 (C:\Users\wez\wez-personal\wezterm\codec)`
... which satisfies path dependency `codec` (locked to 0.1.0) of package `wezterm v0.1.0 (C:\Users\wez\wez-personal\wezterm\wezterm)`
The cargo update downgraded the dep, but looking at crates.io the
requested revs look ok. Something is fishy.
I upgraded rust and ran cargo update again to get back on the
same git rev, so now this commit captures the other things
that changed.
Avoid using serde for mapping between Lua and Rust for the `Config`
struct.
This improves the build speed of the config crate by 2x; it goes down
from 30 seconds to 9 seconds on my 5950x.
This cleans up the `cargo audit` output on linux because the `clipboard`
crate (which hasn't been updated in 3 years) depends on xcb=0.8.2
which is flagged by cargo audit.
We don't use `clipboard` on any platform except macos
This commit switches to the `clipboard_macos` crate; that appears to
use a copy and paste of the macos specific code from the `clipboard`
crate, so this shouldn't have any change in functionality.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1952
I think I'd like to make a config option for this, but for the moment,
this first pass unconditionally updates the base environment with
data from the registry.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1848
Use some heuristics to verify the data that is about to be parsed;
this can help to detect eg: data being output to stdout prior
to us sending any encoded data to the remote mux.
In addition, add a timeout to help avoid waiting forever in
the case that we didn't detect a problem.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1860
I wanted to use the Target::Pipe feature of env_logger so that we could
log to a log file as well as stderr, but it just doesn't work
(https://github.com/env-logger-rs/env_logger/issues/208).
Since we were already composing over the top of the logger in order
to capture data for our ringlog, this commit embraces that and makes
our logger responsible for both stderr and log file printing.
Thankfully, we can use the filter parsing code from env_logger to
avoid having to get too crazy with this.
Logs are stored in the runtime directory and look something like:
/run/user/1000/wezterm/wezterm-gui-log-596324.txt
Logs are collected on all platforms.
There isn't currently a thing to clean up logs.
Go directly to the underlying env_logger crate, as pretty_env_logger
hasn't been updated in some time, and I'd like to be able to redirect
the log output to a file more directly, and that feature is in a newer
version of the env logger than pretty_env_logger was pulling in.
We were pinned on the revision where I had added dual source blending,
because I wanted that feature ahead of the crate being published.
Since then a couple of releases have been made so we can unpin.
On Windows 11, we had a report of glium complaining about the opengl
version. I can't find that error message string in the current version
of the code so it's possible that that situation has been resolved.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1813
* termwiz: add support for kitty image using shm mode
* termwiz: kitty image shm cleanup error handling
* termwiz: kitty image shm create wrapper for HANDLE and impl Drop for it
* termwiz: kitty image shm refactor windows implementation
Signed-off-by: Shreesh Adiga <16567adigashreesh@gmail.com>
There were a a couple of issues:
* `ImageData::hash` would re-hash the image on every call, and this was
called for every cell that comprised an image on the mux server side
* `SerializedLine` needed to understand how to remove the `Arc<ImageData>`
image attachments so that we didn't serialize a complete copy of the
image per cell that comprised the image.
A new RPC was introduced to attempt to fetch `ImageData` given its
content hash and pane, row and cell index as a hint to locate it.
A client side LRU of content hash to `ImageData` is used to avoid
issuing repeat calls to that new RPC.
refs: #1237
freetype can't handle a wide range of encodings for
font names and can return strings like `?????` when
the family name is only present in the font as a non-unicode encoding,
such as Chinese.
This commit improves our handling of the font name table
and prefers to use results from processing that over the
results returned for eg: font family directly from the
freetype API.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1761
The metadata is useful from a troubleshooting/diagnostic perspective.
`.cast` isn't on github's list of allowed file name suffixes, so make
it a simple text file for convenience.
These are intended to replace the `wt-record` and `wt-replay` scripts
that are primarily for me to diagnose wezterm issues.
The thinking is that this gives a cross platform implementation of
this functionality and squashes out some of the pain of dealing with
different versions and file formats.
The new subcommands use the asciicast v2 file format, meaning that
wezterm can record for asciicast/asciinema and vice-versa.
This commit only handles unix; windows support will follow in
a separate commit.
This helper extracts the concrete set of hosts and their configurations
from the ssh config, and arranges to reload the wezterm config if they
are changed.
This is useful when constructing ssh domain configs.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/discussions/1731
This change also allows removing the dep on the palette crate,
which I found to be difficult to use (API changed often, and relied
on a lot of `.into` that was hard to follow and reconcile across
upgrades). We already pulled in the csscolorparse crate as an indirect
dep of colorgrad, so we can replace the color conversion we need for
sixel with that crate while we're in here.
refs: #1615
This commit allows the following configuration:
```
wezterm -n --config 'colors = { selection_fg = "clear", selection_bg = "rgba:50% 50% 50% 50%" }'
```
which sets the selection_bg to fully transparent, and selection_bg to
50% transparent gray.
When selection_fg is fully transparent we'll use the normal fg color.
When selection_bg is partially (or fully!) transparent, it will be
alpha blended over the current cell background color.
To support this, the config file will now accept rgba colors specified
as 4 whitespace delimited numeric values. If a value ends with `%` it
is interpreted as a number in the range 0-100. Otherwise, it is
interpreted as a number in the range 0-255. The 4 values are
red, green, blue, alpha.
At this time, only the selection_fg and selection_bg settings accept
alpha values.
refs: #1615
Resolves a little bit of the awkward duplication of color types
between some of the crates by factoring them a little bit better.
This is prep for allowing specifying alpha for some colors
in the config.
This commit refines bidi property handling:
* experimental_bidi has been split into two new configuration settings;
`bidi_enabled` (which controls whether the terminal performs implicit
bidi processing) and `bidi_direction` which specifies the base
direction and whether auto detection is enabled.
* The `Line` type can now store those bidi properties (they are actually
split across 3 bits representing enabled, auto-detection and
direction)
* The terminal now has a concept of active bidi properties and default
bidi properties
* The default properties are pulled from the wezterm configuration
* active bidi properties are potentially set via escape sequences,
BDSM (which sets bidi_enabled) and SCP (which sets bidi_direction).
We don't support the 2501 temporary dec private mode suggested by
the BIDI recommendation doc at this time.
* When creating new `Line`'s or clearing from the start of a `Line`, the
effective bidi properties are computed (from the active props,
falling back to default propr) and applied to the `Line`.
* When rendering the line, we now look at its bidi properties instead
of just the global config.
The default bidi properties are `bidi_enabled: false` and
`bidi_direction: LeftToRight` which corresponds to the typical
bidi-unaware mode of most terminals.
It is possible to live reload the config to change the effective
defaults, but note that they apply, by design, to new lines being
processed through the terminal. That means existing output is
left unaffected by a config reload, but subsequently printed lines
will respect it. Pressing CTRL-L or otherwise contriving to have
the running application refresh its display should cause the
refreshed display to update and apply the new bidi mode.
refs: #784
This commit is larger than it appears to due fanout from threading
through bidi parameters. The main changes are:
* When clustering cells, add an additional phase to resolve embedding
levels and further sub-divide a cluster based on the resolved bidi
runs; this is where we get the direction for a run and this needs
to be passed through to the shaper.
* When doing bidi, the forced cluster boundary hack that we use to
de-ligature when cursoring through text needs to be disabled,
otherwise the cursor appears to push/rotate the text in that
cluster when moving through it! We'll need to find a different
way to handle shading the cursor that eliminates the original
cursor/ligature/black issue.
* In the shaper, the logic for coalescing unresolved runs for font
fallback assumed LTR and needed to be adjusted to cluster RTL.
That meant also computing a little index of codepoint lengths.
* Added `experimental_bidi` boolean option that defaults to false.
When enabled, it activates the bidi processing phase in clustering
with a strong hint that the paragraph is LTR.
This implementation is incomplete and/or wrong for a number of cases:
* The config option should probably allow specifying the paragraph
direction hint to use by default.
* https://terminal-wg.pages.freedesktop.org/bidi/recommendation/paragraphs.html
recommends that bidi be applied to logical lines, not physical
lines (or really: ranges within physical lines) that we're doing
at the moment
* The paragraph direction hint should be overridden by cell attributes
and other escapes; see 85a6b178cf
and probably others.
However, as of this commit, if you `experimental_bidi=true` then
```
echo This is RTL -> عربي فارسی bidi
```
(that text was sourced from:
https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/538#issuecomment-677017322)
then wezterm will display the text in the same order as the text
renders in Chrome for that github comment.
```
; ./target/debug/wezterm --config experimental_bidi=false ls-fonts --text "عربي فارسی ->"
LeftToRight
0 ع \u{639} x_adv=8 glyph=300 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
2 ر \u{631} x_adv=3.78125 glyph=273 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
4 ب \u{628} x_adv=4 glyph=244 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
6 ي \u{64a} x_adv=4 glyph=363 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
8 \u{20} x_adv=8 glyph=2 wezterm.font("Operator Mono SSm Lig", {weight="DemiLight", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/Users/wez/.fonts/OperatorMonoSSmLig-Medium.otf, FontDirs
9 ف \u{641} x_adv=11 glyph=328 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
11 ا \u{627} x_adv=4 glyph=240 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
13 ر \u{631} x_adv=3.78125 glyph=273 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
15 س \u{633} x_adv=10 glyph=278 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
17 ی \u{6cc} x_adv=4 glyph=664 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
19 \u{20} x_adv=8 glyph=2 wezterm.font("Operator Mono SSm Lig", {weight="DemiLight", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/Users/wez/.fonts/OperatorMonoSSmLig-Medium.otf, FontDirs
20 - \u{2d} x_adv=8 glyph=276 wezterm.font("Operator Mono SSm Lig", {weight="DemiLight", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/Users/wez/.fonts/OperatorMonoSSmLig-Medium.otf, FontDirs
21 > \u{3e} x_adv=8 glyph=338 wezterm.font("Operator Mono SSm Lig", {weight="DemiLight", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/Users/wez/.fonts/OperatorMonoSSmLig-Medium.otf, FontDirs
```
```
; ./target/debug/wezterm --config experimental_bidi=true ls-fonts --text "عربي فارسی ->"
RightToLeft
17 ی \u{6cc} x_adv=9 glyph=906 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
15 س \u{633} x_adv=10 glyph=277 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
13 ر \u{631} x_adv=4.78125 glyph=272 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
11 ا \u{627} x_adv=4 glyph=241 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
9 ف \u{641} x_adv=5 glyph=329 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
8 \u{20} x_adv=8 glyph=2 wezterm.font("Operator Mono SSm Lig", {weight="DemiLight", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/Users/wez/.fonts/OperatorMonoSSmLig-Medium.otf, FontDirs
6 ي \u{64a} x_adv=9 glyph=904 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
4 ب \u{628} x_adv=4 glyph=243 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
2 ر \u{631} x_adv=5 glyph=273 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
0 ع \u{639} x_adv=6 glyph=301 wezterm.font(".Geeza Pro Interface", {weight="Regular", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/System/Library/Fonts/GeezaPro.ttc index=2 variation=0, CoreText
LeftToRight
0 \u{20} x_adv=8 glyph=2 wezterm.font("Operator Mono SSm Lig", {weight="DemiLight", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/Users/wez/.fonts/OperatorMonoSSmLig-Medium.otf, FontDirs
1 - \u{2d} x_adv=8 glyph=480 wezterm.font("Operator Mono SSm Lig", {weight="DemiLight", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/Users/wez/.fonts/OperatorMonoSSmLig-Medium.otf, FontDirs
2 > \u{3e} x_adv=8 glyph=470 wezterm.font("Operator Mono SSm Lig", {weight="DemiLight", stretch="Normal", italic=false})
/Users/wez/.fonts/OperatorMonoSSmLig-Medium.otf, FontDirs
;
```
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/784
In order to support RTL/BIDI, wezterm needs a bidi implementation. I
don't think a well-conforming rust implementation exists today; what I
found were implementations that didn't pass 100% of the conformance
tests.
So I decided to port "bidiref", the reference implementation of the UBA
described in http://unicode.org/reports/tr9/ to Rust.
This implementation focuses on conformance: no special measures have
been taken to optimize it so far, with my focus having been to ensure
that all of the approx 780,000 test cases in the unicode data for
unicode 14 pass. Having the tests passing 100% allows for making
performance improvements with confidence in the future.
The API isn't completely designed/fully baked. Until I get to hooking
it up to wezterm's shaper, I'm not 100% sure exactly what I'll need.
There's a good discussion on API in
https://github.com/open-i18n/rust-unic/issues/273 that suggests omitting
"legacy" operations such as reordering. I suspect that wezterm may
actually need that function to support monospace text layout in some
terminal scenarios, but regardless: reordering is part of the
conformance test suite so it remains a part of the API.
That said: the API does model the major operations as separate
phases, so you should be able to pay for just what you use:
* Resolving the embedding levels from a paragraph
* Returning paragraph runs of those levels (and their directions)
* Returning the whitespace-level-reset runs for a line-slice within the
paragraph
* Returning the reordered indices + levels for a line-slice within the
paragraph.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/784
refs: https://github.com/kas-gui/kas-text/issues/20
`ScrollByPage` can accept non-integer values in the configuration.
This allows fractional page scrolling, such as by half a page.
The default remains the same, at 1 page.
Define a way to compute a client ID and pass that through to the
mux server when verifying version compatibility.
Once associated, the session handler will keep some metadata
updated in the mux.
A new cli subcommand exposes the info:
```
; ./target/debug/wezterm cli list-clients
USER HOST PID CONNECTED IDLE WORKSPACE
wez mba.localdomain 52979 30.009225s 1.009225s
```
refs: #1531
Using the new publish/discovery stuff from the past couple of commits,
if we can find a matching socket path for a running gui, and the
configuration is likely a match, then use the mux protocol to talk
to the already running gui and ask it to spawn the equivalent program
into the same process.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/discussions/1486
ConPTY emits a sequence that sets the title to the name of the
program that is initially launched into it.
This commit tries to ignore that sequence in that circumstance,
so that the logic in b5d156c282
can more dynamically set the tab title.
Add `get_foreground_process_name` to both Pane and the lua wrapper.
Add `foreground_process_name` and `current_working_dir` fields to
`PaneInformation`. In order for those to be dynamically fetched,
switch the lua conversion for `PaneInformation` to be a UserData
with field access methods. It's a little more verbose but allows
us to lazily compute these two new fields.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/discussions/1421
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/915
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/876
This commit expands quick select mode so that you can trigger it
with distinct sets of patterns (eg: urls on one key assignment,
hashes on a different key assignment), different alphabets,
and lastly, the option to perform a different action from
the default copy action.
You can pair this with `action_callback` to run lua code to
do something with the selected text.
This commit also adds `wezterm.open_with`, a helper function
for opening documents/URLs.
refs: #846
refs: #1362
Adds some plumbing to allow the GUI to implement a download handler
and connect that up for iterm2 image/file transfers that have their
inline property set to false.
Previously we'd just log an error.
Now we will by default download the file to the user's download
directory.
This behavior can be turned off via the new `allow_download_protocols`
configuration setting.
File transfers can be initiated on a remote host via the
https://iterm2.com/utilities/it2dl script.
When the download completes, a toast notification is shown that will
open the file when clicked.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/discussions/1450
This commit adds plumbing to support mapping the process tree to
lua objects which in turn allows a new `mux-is-process-stateful`
event to be defined by the user for finer control over closing
prompt behavior.
refs: #1412
It looks like the debian 9 test failures with libssh are the
same underlying issue as https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1262
Poking around in the debug output, and then spelunking through the code,
we can use the `pubkeyacceptedtypes` ssh config option to add the key
type to the list of keys. This doesn't appear to be a documented
option in the current versions of openssh.
I'm not 100% sure that this is right, but it's worth a shot.
Route logging via the `log` crate because on Windows there is
no stderr visible to libssh.
libssh will override any explicitly set options when it parses
the config file, so we need to apply those after we've loaded it.
A recent cargo update caused openssl-sys to do a minor semver update
from 0.9.71 -> 0.9.72, but that release downgraded from openssl 3
to openssl 1 to resolve a performance regression:
<https://github.com/sfackler/rust-openssl/pull/1578>
That in turn caused libssh to fail to build because the ENGINE
feature required by libssh isn't compiled in in openssl-src 1
crate when vendoring on windows.
For now, my libssh git repo is constrained to openssl-sys 0.9.71,
and we're pointing to that from the wezterm repo.
In the mux layer, we have some code that takes a `Child` and then
does a bit of naughty reaching through the abstraction to get at
the pid/handle of the child so that we can send it signals even
if the child is itself mutably (and thus exclusively) borrowed
for the purposes of waiting.
That worked fine for local processes spawned in the mux, but we also
use LocalPane to wrap around arbitrary `Child`ren, such as Ssh,
that are not local and that don't have a local process id, which
meant that this hack wouldn't work for them.
To make things a bit worse, those ssh ptys were used to ssh2 days
where we didn't have a way to signal the remote process and just
did nothing, leading to confusing situations such as
https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1197
This commit graduates the hack mentioned in the first paragraph
to its own ChildKiller trait. This makes the concept of waiting
for the Child distinct from signalling it and explicitly allows
getting a separate object that can be used for signalling.
With that in place, we're forced to implement something appropriate
for the ssh pty implementations; one in the pty crate itself,
one in wezterm-ssh and the wrapper that we use in the mux crate.
The upshot of this is that the `CloseCurrentPane` action now operates
correctly on panes that were the result of split operations.
This is a fairly far-reaching commit. The idea is:
* Introduce a unicode_version config that specifies the default level
of unicode conformance for each newly created Terminal (each Pane)
* The unicode_version is passed down to the `grapheme_column_width`
function which interprets the width based on the version
* `Cell` records the width so that later calculations don't need to
know the unicode version
In a subsequent diff, I will introduce an escape sequence that allows
setting/pushing/popping the unicode version so that it can be overridden
via eg: a shell alias prior to launching an application that uses a
different version of unicode from the default.
This approach allows output from multiple applications with differing
understanding of unicode to coexist on the same screen a little more
sanely.
Note that the default `unicode_version` is set to 9, which means that
emoji presentation selectors are now by-default ignored. This was
selected to better match the level of support in widely deployed
applications.
I expect to raise that default version in the future.
Also worth noting: there are a number of callers of
`unicode_column_width` in things like overlays and lua helper functions
that pass `None` for the unicode version: these will assume the latest
known-to-wezterm/termwiz version of unicode to be desired. If those
overlays do things with emoji presentation selectors, then there may be
some alignment artifacts. That can be tackled in a follow up commit.
refs: #1231
refs: #997
We rely on using freetype in order to support more fonts in more
situations, and we have a deeper existing integration with harfbuzz.
I'm unlikely to come back to allsorts to complete our integration,
and in the meantime, it just adds overhead to build/test and those
builds are taking longer and longer.
I loved the idea of using pure rust for all the font stuff, but
its time is not now.
closes: #587closes: #66