It now outputs something that you could conceivably put into
your config file, although the intent is to show the canonical
way to reference the individual fonts that were found, rather
than to specify a fully baked list to paste into a config.
eg:
```
; ./target/debug/wezterm ls-fonts
Primary font:
wezterm.font_with_fallback({
-- /home/wez/.fonts/OperatorMonoSSmLig-Medium.otf, FontDirs
{family="Operator Mono SSm Lig", weight="DemiLight"},
-- /home/wez/.fonts/OperatorMonoSSmLig-Medium.otf, FontConfig
{family="Operator Mono SSm Lig", weight="DemiLight"},
-- /home/wez/.fonts/MaterialDesignIconsDesktop.ttf, FontDirs
"Material Design Icons Desktop",
-- /home/wez/.fonts/terminus-bold.otb, FontDirs
{family="Terminus", weight="Bold"},
-- /home/wez/.fonts/JetBrainsMono-Regular.ttf, FontDirs
"JetBrains Mono",
-- /home/wez/.fonts/NotoColorEmoji.ttf, FontDirs
"Noto Color Emoji",
-- /home/wez/.fonts/MaterialDesignIconsDesktop.ttf, FontConfig
"Material Design Icons Desktop",
-- /usr/share/fonts/terminus-fonts/ter-u32n.otb, FontConfig
"Terminus",
-- /home/wez/.fonts/JetBrainsMono-Regular.ttf, FontConfig
"JetBrains Mono",
-- /home/wez/.fonts/NotoColorEmoji.ttf, FontConfig
"Noto Color Emoji",
-- <built-in>, BuiltIn
"Last Resort High-Efficiency",
})
```
we now compute the ratio of the cap height (the height of a capital
letter) vs. the em-square (which relates to our chosen point size) to
understand what proportion of the font point-size that a given font
occupies when rendered.
When rendering glyphs from secondary fonts we can use the cap height
ratios of both to scale the secondary font such that its effective
cap height matches that of the primary font.
In plainer-english: if you mix say bold, italic and regular text
style in the same line, and you have different font families for
those fonts, then they will now appear to be the same height where
previously they may have varied more noticeably.
For emoji and symbol fonts there may not be a cap-height metric
encoded in the font. We can however, improve our scaling: prior
to this commit we'd use the ratio of the cell metrics of the two
fonts to scale the icon/emoji glyph, but this could cause the glyph
to be slightly oversized as seen in https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/624
If we know the cap-height of the primary font then we can additionaly
apply that factor to scale the emoji to better fit the cell.
While looking at this, I noticed that the aspect ratio calculation
for when to apply to the allow_square_glyphs_to_overflow_width option
had width and height flipped :-(
See also: https://tonsky.me/blog/font-size/
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/624
This addresses the render artifacts aspect of https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/671
For whatever reason, some font(s) cannot be loaded on that system
and that results in the paint routine erroring out.
This commit avoids the error by substituting a blank glyph
instead of the glyph that failed to load.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/671
This commit allows the x11 window implementation to detect changes
in the DPI that occur after a window is created.
These can occur when changing desktop resolution or when changing
the accessibility option for "Large Text" in gnome.
In order to avoid continually polling for the value on every resize,
we look for the `_GTK_EDGE_CONSTRAINTS` atom in our property change
notifications. This seems to be sent at least as often as the
dpi/scaling changes.
It's also worth noting that some dpi changes don't generate resize
events, so we can't just read the dpi value on every resize, because
we'd miss some of those changes.
Part of this commit changes the font scaling logic: previously
we'd keep a notion of "dpi scale" to apply. That dates from an
earlier time in wezterm where we didn't think that we knew an
actual dpi value.
The way that worked was that we'd compare our current guestimate
of the DPI against what we though the baseline OS dpi should be to
produce a scaling factor.
On X11 that dpi value is global and we'd effectively always produce
a revised scaling factor of 1 after we'd set up the initial window.
This commit changes that logic to just pass down the actual DPI value
to the font code. That DPI value already accounts for HiDPI scaling
so this is hopefully a NOP change for the other systems.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/667
This was broken by b441be3ac9
For whatever reason, the breakage was only visible with the Iosveka
font on Windows. I couldn't reproduce it on my other systems, even
though the code technically applies to any system.
The breakage was: the metrics resulted in a difference of about 0.4
pixels being used for the descender with that particular font, resulting
in weird vertical alignment problems.
The offset needs to be computed against the ceil of the cell height,
which removes the fractional offset.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/661
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/582
The repro scenario for this case was:
* open GNU nano
* hit enter twice
* type hello
* move the text cursor to the top line
* double click on hello
* hit enter
Prior to this commit, the selection would remain on the now-blank line
that previously held `hello`.
refs: #644
This has been a commonly requested feature in the past week,
and it's a reasonable one. The mux server inherited the
close-when-done behavior from when it used to be an alternate
front-end in the same executable as the gui, but it doesn't
need to be that way any more.
We also need to accomodate that case in the client: if the
newly attached domain doesn't result in any panes being imported,
we need to spawn a new command there in order to keep the client
alive. The pre-existing check for whether the mux was empty had
false positives because the local mux may still reference the
pane from the connection UI, which would finish closing out shortly
after we had decided not to spawn anything, and then the client
would close.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/631
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/507
When line_height is specified, rather than applying the offset
to just the top of the cell, apply it in equal parts to the top
and the bottom so that the cell is vertically centered.
closes: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/582
This replicates `last-window` in tmux. To pull this off, I
deliberately store the last tab whenever I'm activating a new one or
spawning a new one. I had to do this explicitly rather than hooking
set_active, because we end up setting the active tab briefly for some
common operations like moving a tab.
Allow overriding ssh config options from the command line.
I don't want to replicate the many options that `ssh(1)` has;
this just exposes the `-oNAME=VALUE` syntax. The config names
are those from `man ssh_config`; `IdentityFile` rather than `-i`.
refs: #457
I wonder how long this has been broken... rather than spawning
into domain "local" it would try to spawn into "`local`" and fail
silently because the error message wasn't logged.
So let's log it, and let's fix it.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/468
There are a few notable changes as a result:
* A number of `.ssh/config` options are now respected; host matching
and aliasing and identity file are the main things
* The authentication prompt is inline in the window, rather than
popping up a separate authentication window
Refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/457
These now operate in terms of logical lines so they deal with
lines that have wrapped outside the viewport better than in
previous releases.
closes: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/408
Rust 1.51 allows addressesing a long-standing TODO which was that we
shouldn't need to build a vendored copy of openssl on most sensible unix
systems.
We do require a vendored copy on macOS and Windows, but due to the way
that Cargo's feature resolver worked, it wasn't possible for this
requirement to be respected.
Rust 1.51 introduces `resolver="2"` which can deal with this feature
resolution!
https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/cargo/reference/features.html#feature-resolver-version-2
The upshot of this is that building wezterm on real unix systems that
are not macos will now link against the system libssl, resulting in both
a shorter compile time and less headaches arising from having a slightly
different openssl used by wezterm than the rest of the system.
cc: @jsgf
If shaping can't resolve some glyphs, queue the font locator
fallback resolution to another thread; meanwhile, a last resort
glyph is used.
That thread can trigger an invalidation once the fallback resolve
is complete, the window is invalidated and the last resort glyph
is replaced by the resolve glyph.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/559
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/508
Default `allow_square_glyphs_to_overflow_width="WhenFollowedBySpace"`,
and expand its meaning from mostly square glyphs to glyphs that are
also wider than they are tall.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/565
There's something fishy with colorspaces and blending.
This commit removes the `window::Color` type and replaces
it and the confusing array of color types exposed by the
`palette` crate with a pair of much simpler types:
`LinearRgb` - a tuple of f32 linear color components
`SrgbaPixel` - the u32 sRGBA pixel representation
This doesn't change anything about rendering, it just
makes it a bit simpler and makes the SrgbaPixel -> LinearRgb
conversion happen slightly earlier which shaves off some
ad-hoc conversions.
Refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/544
hoist the underlyine glyph retrieval out of the loop.
Precompute some color conversions (less effective until
the gamma branch is merged).
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/546
Switches from using a dynamic vertex buffer to an immutable
vertex buffer. This feels counter-intuitive to me; the purpose
of dynamic is to sustain frequent updates, but mapping the buffer
needs to synchronize with the GPU, and if we are rapidly invalidating
the window that can stall painting by tens of milliseconds.
Switching to an immutable buffer avoids the stall and makes
quad mapping more consistently < 10ms, but its still not
ideal.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/546
* Make window invalidation more efficient by avoiding spawning a call
that spawns a call to invalidate the window. Just directly mark as
invalidated.
* Suppress default background erase
* hoist the bg_color calc for quads that don't have Cells outside of
its loop.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/546
I'm not convinced that this is 100% good, but @fanzeyi reported
some latency when using tmux to mirror two sessions. The session
that was accepting interactive input responded quickly, but the
mirroring session was laggy.
This change connects the mux pane output event to window invalidation,
which should cause repaints to happen more often.
I couldn't reproduce the scenario above on my M1 mac, but that may
just be because M1 has dark magicks.
A casualty of b8dcfba9a4 was that
the decoded gif would get reset each time the texture filled up.
Take care to move that cached into the newly minted glyphcache.
Continuing along the same lines as the prior commit, the goal
of this commit is to remove the buffer transformation that was
part of uploading the texture to the GPU provided surface.
In order to do so:
* The sense of our local textures needs to change from bgra32 to rgba32.
bgra32 was a hangover from earlier versions of our window crate that
allowed direct-to-fb writes in software mode. We had to pick bgra32
for that for the broadest OS compatibility. I believe that that
constraint has been totally removed, although there is a chance that
this will flip the colors on macos.
* There was an additional linear-to-srgb conversion inlined in that
buffer transformation. I have no idea where that is needed because
the source data is carefully constructed as SRGB. I don't yet know
how to signal that, but for now I've moved that gamma correction
into the shader when we sample the texture.
With this change, timg playback now has vtparse as the hottest
region of code.
refs: #537