We were only using block_on from it, which we can call from the
underlying async_io crate.
Notably, removing async_std from the deps avoids async-global-executor
being pulled in and spawning nproc threads that are never used by
wezterm.
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
This commit moves a bunch of stuff around such that `wezterm` is now a
lighter-weight executable that knows how to spawn the gui, talk to
the mux or emit some escape sequences for imgcat.
The gui portion has been moved into `wezterm-gui`, a separate executable
that doesn't know about the CLI or imgcat functionality.
Importantly, `wezterm.exe` is no longer a window subsystem executable
on windows, which makes interactions such as `wezterm -h` feel more
natural when spawned from `cmd`, and should allow
`type foo.png | wezterm imgcat` to work as expected.
That said, I've only tested this on linux so far, and there's a good
chance that something mac or windows specific is broken by this
change and will need fixing up.
refs: #301
This was broken by the changes in
aad493ab2a. The issue was that the
channel send didn't wakeup the receiver. I'm not sure why, and I tried
a couple of different async channel implementation.
Doing the simplistic solution here works reliably.
kindof a lot going on in this commit, unintentionally:
* Need the lua context set to be moved into the config crate
otherwise configs cannot be parsed by the server and we end
up with the default configs
* Make the server use smol for async io
* Drop the use of the daemonize crate, which I had forked anyway.
Just inline our own tighter daemonize module
* Improve daemon spawning synchronization, however, it still needs
work for windows to avoid blocking forever where we don't do
daemonizing.
The future won't ever complete if you don't connect the waker
from the context!
Prove this out by making the windowops functions async and
verifying them in the async example