Rather than just quitting the app and potentially silently killing off
a number of panes that might be running in other workspaces, we now
will pick one of those workspaces and activate it.
refs: #1531
This action causes the active workspace for the gui to change.
If the name is omitted a random name will be generated.
If the workspace doesn't exist, it will be be created.
The optional spawn parameter can be used to launch a specific
program into the new workspace; if omitted, the default prog
will be used.
The gui only supports a single active workspace. Switching workspaces
will repurpose existing gui windows and re-assign them to windows
in the new workspace, adjusting their size to fit those windows,
spawning new windows or closing unused windows as required.
The gui now exits when there are no panes in the active workspace,
rather than no panes at all.
refs: #1531
This commit updates the last input time for the active client
id when calling into local pane. That time is visible in the
`wezterm cli list-clients` output.
The mux now has a notion of which client is actively doing things.
This allows, for example, newly spawned windows to take on the
active workspace for a given client.
The gui now assigns a client id on startup, and sets the active
workspace to `default`.
The mux server temporarily overrides the active id to that of
the currently dispatching client when processing PDUs.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1531
Tidies up some code duplication within the mux protocol handler.
Move some of the logic into Mux, remove legacy Spawn Pdu to reduce
more duplication.
I want to dedup some of the similar logic that exists in the gui
spawn implementation as well in a follow up.
This is not exposed through any UX; the mux api allows setting
the workspace and propagating information about windows whose
workspace has changed.
Windows start with a blank workspace name.
This is just plumbing; nothing uses it yet.
refs: #1531
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
If we know that the remote host is a unix system, and that it uses some
version of the posix shell, then we can adjust our command line to cd to
the requested directory (as set by OSC 7) and then exec the requested
command.
That's what SshDomain::assume_unix indicates and what this commit does.
If an ssh domain is set to use_multiplexer=false, it is now
possible to `wezterm connect` to it.
Previously, it was only possible to connect to domains that
used the mux client.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1456
They have their own versions of these options, and logically it doesn't
make sense to use the default_prog from the `local` domain with a wsl
domain.
refs: #1242
The idea is that we want to be able to spawn into wsl with the
convenience of a local domain, but without the awkwardness of
it having a different filesystem namespace.
It would also be great to be able to spawn a new tab or pane
in the same domain and pick up the cwd of the existing one.
The WslDomain allows the user to explicitly list WslDomains
and control eg: default shell, username and so on, but wezterm
will pre-fill a default list of domains based on the `wsl -l`
output that we were already using in the launcher menu.
The existing LocalDomain has been augmented to understand that
it may need to fixup a command invocation and that gives it
the opportunity to rewrite the command so that we can launch
it via `wsl.exe` and pass down the cwd and so on.
This same technique might be extensible to eg: docker instances
in the future.
This commit:
* Introduces `wsl_domains` config and its default list of wsl
distributions
* Creates LocalDomain instances from that list
* The launcher menu allows spawning a new tab via one of those domains
We need 100% of the info for it to work correctly, so this commit:
* Exposes the keyboard encoding mode via the Pane trait
* Adds the scan code to the RawKeyEvent
* Has the GUI perform the encoding if the keyboard is set that way
* Removes the basic encoder from termwiz in favor of the gui level one
The net result is that we bypass the Pane::key_up/Pane::key_down methods
in almost all cases when the encoding mode is set to win32-input-mode.
There is now a config option: allow_win32_input_mode that can be
used to prevent using this mode.
refs: #1509
Nothing generates them right now, and the mux client has no
way to represent them on the wire.
I'm considering constraining them to just win32 for now.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1509
When considering the fg process, we don't want a newly spawned
notepad.exe to show as the fg process in a cmd/pwsh pane, as it
runs async from the console and isn't attached to it.
We can extract the console handle from the process information and
use a 0 value handle to indicate win32 apps that are not attached
to any console.
We cannot compare console handle values directly: without probing
deeper into the handle we don't know that two differently valued
handles refer to different consoles, because a handle can be
duplicated into another with a different numeric value.
I noticed that sysinfo failed to yield info about 50% of the time on
macos!
Just go direct to the underlying system function; we don't need all
of the info that sysinfo collects in any case.
Previously, we would implicitly set it to the special SEQ_ZERO
value, but since that value always flags the row as changed,
it causes some over-invalidation issues downstream in wezterm.
This commit makes that parameter required, so that the code that
is creating a new Line always passes down the seqno from that event.
refs: #1472
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.
If the pane title is the default `wezterm`, then return the
process basename instead. This makes the tab titles more useful
by default, although on Windows, conpty will set the title
to the initial executable path and defeat this.
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
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
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