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A GPU-accelerated cross-platform terminal emulator and multiplexer written by @wez and implemented in Rust
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Wez's Terminal

A terminal emulator implemented in Rust.

Quickstart

  • Install rustup to get the nightly rust compiler installed on your system. https://www.rust-lang.org/en-US/install.html
  • Build in release mode: cargo build --release
  • Run it via either cargo run --release or target/release/wezterm

You will need a collection of support libraries; important to note is that your harfbuzz library must have support for hb_ft_font_create_referenced; older linux distributions don't have this!

$ sudo apt-get install -y libxcb-icccm4-dev libxcb-ewmh-dev \
    libxcb-image0-dev libxcb-keysyms1-dev libharfbuzz-dev \
    libfontconfig1-dev libfreetype6-dev

What?

Here's what I'm shooting for:

  • A terminal escape sequence parser
  • A model of a terminal screen + scrollback that is OS independent
  • Textual and GUI rendering of the model
  • A differential protocol for the model

This would manifest as a common core that could run as both a textual terminal multiplexer and a gui terminal emulator, where the GUI part could automatically provide a native UI around the remotely multiplexed terminal session.

Status / Features

These are in the done/doing soon category:

  • Runs on Linux with XCB
  • Scrollback (use mouse wheel and Shift Page{Up|Down})
  • True Color support
  • Color Emoji and font fallback
  • Paste selection via Shift-Insert (bracketed paste is supported!)
  • SGR style mouse reporting (works in vim and tmux)
  • xterm style selection of text with mouse
  • Render underline, italic, bold, strikethrough
  • Configuration file to specify fonts and colors (in progress)
  • Command line argument parsing instead of launching user shell
  • Hyperlinks see: https://gist.github.com/egmontkob/eb114294efbcd5adb1944c9f3cb5feda

There's a good number of terminal escape sequences that are not yet implemented and that will get fleshed out as the applications I use uncover them. Similarly for key mappings.

Things that I'd like to see happen and that have no immediate priority (contributions to get closer to these are welcomed!)

  • Runs on macOS
  • Sixel / iTerm2 graphics protocol support
  • Tabs
  • Textual renderer. Think tmux or screen.
  • Runs on Linux with Wayland (use XWayland for now)
  • Runs on Windows

Configuration

wezterm will look for a TOML configuration file in $HOME/.config/wezterm/wezterm.toml, and then in $HOME/.wezterm.toml.

Configuration is currently very simple and the format is considered unstable and subject to change. The code for configuration can be found in src/config.rs.

I use the following in my ~/.wezterm.toml:

font_size = 10
font = { fontconfig_pattern = "Operator Mono SSm Lig Medium" }
# How many lines of scrollback to retain
scrollback_lines = 3500

[[font_rules]]
italic = true
font = { fontconfig_pattern = "Operator Mono SSm Lig Medium:style=Italic" }

[[font_rules]]
italic = true
intensity = "Bold"
font = { fontconfig_pattern = "Operator Mono SSm Lig:style=Italic:weight=bold" }

[[font_rules]]
intensity = "Bold"
  [font_rules.font]
  fontconfig_pattern= "Operator Mono SSm:weight=bold"
  # if you liked xterm's `boldColor` setting, this is how you do it in wezterm,
  # but you can apply it to any set of matching attributes!
  foreground = "tomato"

[[font_rules]]
intensity = "Half"
font = { fontconfig_pattern = "Operator Mono SSm Lig Light" }

The default configuration will attempt to use whichever font is returned from fontconfig when monospace is requested.

Colors

You can configure colors with a section like this. In addition to specifying SVG/CSS3 color names, you can use #RRGGBB to specify a color code using the usual hex notation; eg: #000000 is equivalent to black:

[colors]
foreground = "silver"
background = "black"
cursor = "springgreen"
ansi = ["black", "maroon", "green", "olive", "navy", "purple", "teal", "silver"]
brights = ["grey", "red", "lime", "yellow", "blue", "fuchsia", "aqua", "white"]