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
Remove special case for blocks where we switched it out for a blank
sprite and instead varied the cell background.
We now always render a matching cursor sprite as a separate layer
over the top of the text background color, but below the text
foreground layer.
This is preparing for https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1432
Make bar/line cursors use the text foreground color when reverse
video cursors are enabled, per @VKondakoff:
https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1076#issuecomment-978214136
`wezterm.font` and `wezterm.font_with_fallback` can now specify
harfbuzz_features and freetype load/render target and flags as
options on a per-font basis.
This allows you to do things such as adjust shaping (eg: ligatures) or
rendering (eg: disable bitmaps, or adjust hinting) for a single font in
a fallback rather than globally for all fonts.
This commit teaches `RgbColor::from_rgb_str` to support
colors in the form `hsl:235 100 50`, an HSL colorspace
color specification.
While banging my head on why my test wasn't passing, I realized
that this was producing 10 bpc color and the code to convert
those to RGB was incorrectly multiplying conversion terms!
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1436
The error message in this issue sounds a lot like the freetype
regression that caused bitmap fonts to fail to render in a recent
freetype release.
Our workaround for that is to used our understanding of whether
a font is a bitmap font or not to avoid calling render.
What we normally see for bitmap TTFs is that setting the scale
fails and we then fall back to using a bitmap.
For Monaco.dfont it appears as though setting the scale succeeds.
This commit introduces some skepticism and prefers to use bitmaps
when available.
This might potentially cause problems in the future if there are
fonts that legitimately have both scaled and bitmap fonts, but
lets see if this helps for now.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1419
Finally getting around to fixing this usability wart: this commit
changes the behavior of Window closing so that you can close a window
containing multiplexer panes without prompting and without killing
off those panes.
This is achieved through some plumbing:
* The mux can now advise Domains about an impending window closure,
giving them the opportunity to "do things" in readiness.
* The mux client domain informs the container ClientPane instances
to ignore the next Pane::kill call, which would otherwise inform
the mux server to kill the remote pane
* Pane:can_close_without_prompting now requires a CloseReason.
* ClientPane's can_close_without_prompting impl allows Window closing
without prompting on the assumption that the ignore-next-kill hack
above is working
refs: #848
refs: #917
refs: #1224
The mux client just returns a dummy reader, and some overlays
have panicking stubs: just allow for them to return None
instead of potentially spawning a useless thread.
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
Previously, we would only look at the `check_for_updates` config
on startup.
This commit adjusts the update checker logic so that we always
start it, and that we respect config reloads.
Only show the update window and/or generate a toast notification
is the current wezterm-gui process is the eldest of the set of
running wezterm-guis.
This avoids spamming the user with update information.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1402
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.
```
thread 'e2e::sftp::canonicalize_should_either_return_resolved_path_or_error_if_missing' panicked at 'Unexpected result from canonicalize: Err(LibSsh(Sftp(SftpError(2))))', wezterm-ssh/tests/e2e/sftp.rs:615:14
```
We can't currently match that error because the LibSsh SftError(x) error
code is private.
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.
For some reason, winapi's HANDLE type isn't compatible with the core
rust ffi HANDLE type when cross compiling.
This commit adds some casts.
```
cd pty
cargo build --release --target x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
```
refs: #1389