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wezterm/docs/config/launch.md
Davide Mancusi 053c798bc1 docs: remove mention of SpawnTab in launch.md
SpawnTab does not accept a SpawnCommand as an argument.
2022-03-09 05:56:15 -08:00

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7.9 KiB
Markdown

## Launching Programs
By default, when opening new tabs or windows, your shell will be spawned.
Your shell is determined by the following rules:
### On Posix Systems
1. The value of the `$SHELL` environment variable is used if it is set
2. Otherwise, it will resolve your current uid and try to look up your
home directory from the password database.
`wezterm` will spawn the shell and pass `-l` as an argument to request
a login shell. A login shell generally loads additional startup files
and sets up more environment than a non-login shell.
*Since: 20210502-154244-3f7122cb*: instead of passing `-l` to the shell, wezterm
will spawn the shell as `-$SHELL` to invoke it as a login shell.
Note: if you have recently changed your shell using `chsh` and you
have `$SHELL` set in the environment, you will need to sign out and
sign back in again for the environment to pick up your new `$SHELL`
value.
### On Windows Systems
1. The value of the `%COMSPEC%` environment variable is used if it is set.
2. Otherwise, `cmd.exe`
## Changing the default program
If you'd like `wezterm` to run a different program than the shell as
described above, you can use the `default_prog` config setting to specify
the argument array; the array allows specifying the program and arguments
portably:
```lua
return {
-- Spawn a fish shell in login mode
default_prog = {"/usr/local/bin/fish", "-l"},
}
```
## Launching a different program as a one off via the CLI
If you want to make a shortcut for your desktop environment that will,
for example, open an editor in wezterm you can use the `start` subcommand
to launch it. This example opens up a new terminal window running vim
to edit your wezterm configuration:
```bash
wezterm start -- vim ~/.wezterm.lua
```
## Specifying the current working directory
If you'd like `wezterm` to start running a program in a specific working
directory you can do so via the config, CLI, and when using
[`SpawnCommand`](lua/SpawnCommand.md):
* Setting the [`default_cwd`](lua/config/default_cwd.md) via the config:
```lua
return {
default_cwd = "/some/path",
}
```
* One off program in a specific working directory via the CLI:
```bash
wezterm start --cwd /some/path
```
* The [`SpawnCommandInNewTab`](lua/keyassignment/SpawnCommandInNewTab.md),
and [`SpawnCommandInNewWindow`](lua/keyassignment/SpawnCommandInNewWindow.md)
key assignments, and the [Launcher Menu](#the-launcher-menu) described below
all accept a [`SpawnCommand`](lua/SpawnCommand.md) object that accepts an
optional `cwd` field:
```lua
{
label = "List files in /some/path",
args = {"ls", "-al"},
cwd = "/some/path",
}
```
Panes/Tabs/Windows created after the first will generally try to resolve the
current working directory of the current Pane, preferring
[a value set by OSC 7](../shell-integration.md) and falling back to
attempting to lookup the `cwd` of the current process group leader attached to a
local Pane. If no `cwd` can be resolved, then the `default_cwd` will be used.
If `default_cwd` is not specified, then the home directory of the user will be
used.
[See `default_cwd` for an easier to understand visualization](lua/config/default_cwd.md).
## Passing Environment variables to the spawned program
The `set_environment_variables` configuration setting can be used to
add environment variables to the environment of the spawned program.
The behavior is to take the environment of the `wezterm` process
and then set the specified variables for the spawned process.
```lua
return {
set_environment_variables = {
-- This changes the default prompt for cmd.exe to report the
-- current directory using OSC 7, show the current time and
-- the current directory colored in the prompt.
prompt = "$E]7;file://localhost/$P$E\\$E[32m$T$E[0m $E[35m$P$E[36m$_$G$E[0m "
},
}
```
# The Launcher Menu
The launcher menu is accessed from the new tab button in the tab bar UI; the
`+` button to the right of the tabs. Left clicking on the button will spawn a
new tab, but right clicking on it will open the launcher menu. You may also
bind a key to the [ShowLauncher](lua/keyassignment/ShowLauncher.md) or
[ShowLauncherArgs](lua/keyassignment/ShowLauncherArgs.md) action to trigger the
menu.
The launcher menu by default lists the various multiplexer domains and offers
the option of connecting and spawning tabs/windows in those domains.
You can define your own entries using the
[launch_menu](lua/config/launch_menu.md) configuration setting. The snippet
below adds two new entries to the menu; one that runs the `top` program to
monitor process activity and a second one that explicitly launches the `bash`
shell.
Each entry in `launch_menu` is an instance of a
[SpawnCommand](lua/SpawnCommand.md) object.
```lua
return {
launch_menu = {
{
args = {"top"},
},
{
-- Optional label to show in the launcher. If omitted, a label
-- is derived from the `args`
label = "Bash",
-- The argument array to spawn. If omitted the default program
-- will be used as described in the documentation above
args = {"bash", "-l"},
-- You can specify an alternative current working directory;
-- if you don't specify one then a default based on the OSC 7
-- escape sequence will be used (see the Shell Integration
-- docs), falling back to the home directory.
-- cwd = "/some/path"
-- You can override environment variables just for this command
-- by setting this here. It has the same semantics as the main
-- set_environment_variables configuration option described above
-- set_environment_variables = { FOO = "bar" },
},
}
}
```
<img src="../screenshots/launch-menu.png" alt="Screenshot">
Here's a fancy example that will add some helpful entries to the launcher
menu when running on Windows:
*since: 20200607-144723-74889cd4*: The launcher menu automatically includes WSL
entries by default, unless disabled using `add_wsl_distributions_to_launch_menu = false`.
```lua
local wezterm = require 'wezterm';
local launch_menu = {}
if wezterm.target_triple == "x86_64-pc-windows-msvc" then
table.insert(launch_menu, {
label = "PowerShell",
args = {"powershell.exe", "-NoLogo"},
})
-- Find installed visual studio version(s) and add their compilation
-- environment command prompts to the menu
for _, vsvers in ipairs(wezterm.glob("Microsoft Visual Studio/20*", "C:/Program Files (x86)")) do
local year = vsvers:gsub("Microsoft Visual Studio/", "")
table.insert(launch_menu, {
label = "x64 Native Tools VS " .. year,
args = {"cmd.exe", "/k", "C:/Program Files (x86)/" .. vsvers .. "/BuildTools/VC/Auxiliary/Build/vcvars64.bat"},
})
end
-- Enumerate any WSL distributions that are installed and add those to the menu
local success, wsl_list, wsl_err = wezterm.run_child_process({"wsl.exe", "-l"})
-- `wsl.exe -l` has a bug where it always outputs utf16:
-- https://github.com/microsoft/WSL/issues/4607
-- So we get to convert it
wsl_list = wezterm.utf16_to_utf8(wsl_list)
for idx, line in ipairs(wezterm.split_by_newlines(wsl_list)) do
-- Skip the first line of output; it's just a header
if idx > 1 then
-- Remove the "(Default)" marker from the default line to arrive
-- at the distribution name on its own
local distro = line:gsub(" %(Default%)", "")
-- Add an entry that will spawn into the distro with the default shell
table.insert(launch_menu, {
label = distro .. " (WSL default shell)",
args = {"wsl.exe", "--distribution", distro},
})
-- Here's how to jump directly into some other program; in this example
-- its a shell that probably isn't the default, but it could also be
-- any other program that you want to run in that environment
table.insert(launch_menu, {
label = distro .. " (WSL zsh login shell)",
args = {"wsl.exe", "--distribution", distro, "--exec", "/bin/zsh", "-l"},
})
end
end
end
return {
launch_menu = launch_menu,
}
```