The .deb package registers that script as the alternative for
a terminal emulator in the hope that various "open terminal here..."
functions in other tools will use that to detect wezterm and run
thing in the cwd.
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/2103
This is necessary for applications spawned via wezterm to be able to
generate apple events.
wezterm already had the text for the authorization prompt in its plist,
but because it was code signed with the default set of entitlements,
macOS didn't bother to prompt.
This commit introduces an explicit set of entitlements and uses those
when signing the executable.
I test this by manually codesigning on my laptop and confirmed that I
could run bbedit from inside wezterm.
I can't directly test the CI version of that flow on my laptop as it may
destroy my keychain if I got something wrong.
We'll have to see if the CI generated build works out!
refs: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/2242
h/t to https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/119787 for
clearly documenting what was needed.
I noticed that the opensuse rpms didn't show up in the latest release,
and traced it to the spec file not setting anything in the filename
to distinguish the rpm files.
This commit replaces the redhat-ish short suffix with one of our
own derived from the os info.
subst-release-info.py will need to be updated to reflect this
change, but I want to see what names are produced for the various
platforms first.
* add update-alternatives hooks for deb packages
Tested on ubuntu 20.04/21.10 and Linux Mint 20.3
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Wez Furlong <wez@wezfurlong.org>
I added this originally to see if the templating was working correctly.
With the recent changes to make it a cask, it's now much longer and
obscures some of the other more valuable output, so remove it.
Previously, we used `git describe --tags` to produce a version number
for non-released builds derived from the most recent tag + some info
such as the number of commits since that tag and then `g{HASH}`.
That always confuses people because the date portion at the front
looks old (it is typically the previous release) and the hash at
the end has that `g` in it.
This commit simplifies both the tag name used when making a release
and the computed version number take the date/time from the current
commit, and then append the hash. That way the version number always
corresponds to a commit.
This scheme doesn't help detect situations where the commit is
dirty, but I don't think the old one would have helped with that
either.
CI got broken by the termwiz release. This commit teaches the
various `git describe --tags` calls to filter to the wezterm
tags which all start with the year. We're match `20*` which should
be good for the next 79 years.
I've removed the vergen dependency as there was no way to teach it
to do the equivalent matching, and it wasn't a terrible burden
to just inline the git describe call anyway.