`input_parser.decode_input_records` might not add anything to the input queue,
e.g. if the input event is one that is being ignored. In this case, we must
loop round and wait again for more input.
Remove the dance for appeasing the borrow checker. The borrow checker can
be appeased by borrowing the `input_queue` field directly.
Application cursor keys are a separate set of encodings that applications can
ask the terminal to produce for cursor keys.
Unfortunately, PuTTY generates these for shift-modified cursor keys. If an
application is to distinguish between normal and shift-modified cursor keys
on PuTTY then it will need to be able to distinguish between normal and
application cursor keys.
Add new `KeyCode` variants for application cursor keys.
Add two new `Change` variants: `ScrollRegionUp` and `ScrollRegionDown`, which
scroll part of the screen up or down by a number of lines.
On Unix, these are implemented using the `change_scroll_region` and
`parm_index`/`parm_rindex` terminfo capabilities if available. If `parm_index`
or `parm_rindex` are not available, but `scroll_forward` or `scroll_reverse`
are, then these are used repeatedly to get the same effect.
On Windows, these are implemented using `ScrollConsoleScreenBuffer`.
If the cursor has been made invisible (by setting the shape to `Hidden`),
then in order for it to be visible when it is reset to the default shape,
it must be made visible. This can be done by rendering the `CursorVisible`
sequence.
Where supported, the `CursorNormal` sequence can be rendered to do
both `CursorVisible` and `ResetCursorStyle` in one go.
This was an off-by-one issue when using scroll margins just shorter
than the screen and when scrollback is enabled.
Added a unit test to verify the behavior.
I've had mixed results with esctest; the IRM and cursor save/restore
tests fail for me in terminal.app, iterm2 and xterm, and fail in the
same way on wezterm, so I'm not sure if I'm not running those tests
correctly. However, they did encourage the discovery of some other
real issues in the wezterm emulation.
These were showing up as unrecognized sequences on my mac, and I
wondered what they were. We now parse them and do nothing with
them, other than print out the parsed form :)
I wanted to see how much work remains to enable iterm2 image
display; one of the blockers was a limit in the size of the
buffer in the vte crate, which has been removed in my fork
of vte.
As part of testing our ability to absorb that data, I found
a couple of issues with applying the image cells to the display,
so this commit also takes care of that.
We still don't have code to connect the cell image data to the
opengl render layer.
The saturating_sub was going to be an attempt at the look-back alluded
to in the TODO comment, but I decided not to implement that in this
iteration.
The effect of this was that double clicking the `m` in a sequence like
` master` would only select the `m` instead of the `master` string.
previously this just used unicode word segmentation rules, but that
is insufficient for most technical users.
Change this to look for sequences that are non-whitespace and not
enclosed by bracket/quote delimiters. This allows selecting file names
with a double click, which was my main issue.
We don't yet have any code to render them, and the vte parser seems
to truncate incoming image sequences ~1kb in size, so more work is
needed to make this useful.