This commit allows specifying a scaling factor as part of the font
attribute definition. This scaling factor is fed through to the
rasterizer and the shaper to adjust the actual font size that is
loaded.
The intent is to provide manual control for situations where the
fallback font has a different scale to the primary font and renders
either too small or too large.
The concrete example is
https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1761#issuecomment-1079708207 where
the CJK fallback looks too small.
The scaling factor doesn't influence font metrics so it may also be
desirable to configure line height.
```lua
local wezterm = require 'wezterm'
return {
line_height = 1.2,
font = wezterm.font_with_fallback({
"JetBrains Mono",
{family="Microsoft YaHei", scale=1.5},
}),
}
```
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.
If the WM has never confirmed our size and we're about to paint,
explicitly query it and generate a resize event so that we stand
a better chance of showing the right stuff.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1710
The issue appears to be due to a rogue trailing semicolon in the input
data. Support for this appears to be mixed: an online converter didn't
produce valid output, but image magick's convert utility accepted it.
This commit allows an optional trailing semicolon at the end of the
color definition regex and enables wezterm to render the image.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1711
Separates out window vs pane click-to-focus behavior more distinctly,
and fixes up the behavior when
swallow_mouse_click_on_window_focus=false.
refs: #1540
When the user switches to another virtual console and then back into a
Wayland session, a number of seat updates are received by the listener
installed by `Environment::listen_for_seats()`. These updates
essentially flip the keyboard and pointer flags off and then back on in
the seat data, which indicates that new handlers need to be assigned to
the keyboard and pointer objects.
However, because one update is received for _each_ flag being toggled,
this means that the listener is fired twice with `has_keyboard` set to
true, which means that two keyboard handlers end up being installed.
Users then experience each keypress being delivered twice to the
terminal.
This commit adds a map to track the keyboard object that has been
assigned on each seat, thereby preventing duplicate assignments and (by
extension) duplicate keypresses being registered. This logic is
essentially the same as what's used in the `kbd_input` example in SCTK,
which doesn't have this issue.
Something similar is required for pointer handling, which also breaks
after switching to another virtual console and back into Wayland, but I
was scared off by the TODO in the `listen_for_seats` callback and didn't
investigate this further.
wezterm cli spawn, and wezterm cli split-pane can use this information
to pick a default for the pane id when invoked from outside of wezterm.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1531
On Windows in FRA layout, `^^SPACE` results in `^^SPACE`, whereas
on Linux it results in `^SPACE`. We were doing the latter instead
of the former.
Let's just be consistent with other windows apps.
closes: #1729closes: #1730
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